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Albion is a six-issue comic book limited series plotted by Alan Moore, written by his daughter Leah Moore and her husband John Reppion, with covers by Dave Gibbons and art by Shane Oakley and George Freeman.
Leah Moore (born 4 February 1978) is a British comic book writer and columnist. The daughter of comics writer Alan Moore, she frequently collaborates with her husband, writer John Reppion, as Moore & Reppion.
Visions of the Daughters of Albion is a 1793 poem by William Blake, produced as a book with his own illustrations. It is a short and early example of his prophetic books, and a sequel of sorts to The Book of Thel. Frontispiece to William Blake's Visions of the Daughters of Albion (1793), which contains Blake's critique of Abrahamic values of ...
New Zealand comics historian Matt Emery has praised the story for its largely accurate representation of both the country and Māori of the time, suggesting at least one of the writer or artist were familiar with the country, speculating that Noel Cook, who had worked for Amalgamated Press and Fleetway Publications, was a candidate. [11]
John Mark Reppion (born 1978) is an English comics writer. He is married to Leah Moore, the daughter of Alan Moore, and he has worked with both on the comic Albion.. John Reppion and Leah Moore have co-writing credits on Wild Girl, a 6-part comic for Wildstorm with art by Shawn McManus and J.H. Williams III.
Alongside further stage works, One for the Road (1976) [9] and Stags and Hens (1978), Russell was a screenwriter with television films, Death of A Young Young Man (1975, BBC1), [10] Daughters of Albion (1979), [11] Our Day Out (1977) [12] and the five-part serial One Summer (1983).
The character was one of many Amalgamated Press/Fleetway/IPC characters licensed to DC Comics via WildStorm in 2005; however, Thunderbolt Jaxon did not appear in the Albion mini-series. Instead a reimagining of the hero appeared in a 2006 spin-off mini-series "from the world of Albion ", written by Dave Gibbons , who also provided covers for ...
This was later issued as part of a compilation DVD from the series. Folk Britannia was the name of a concert at the Barbican centre, and a related TV mini-series (February 2006, repeated in October). She sang "Fair Margaret and Sweet William" at the Barbican, under the heading "Daughters of Albion".