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Virgil Partch's The Captain's Gig (September 25, 1977). Later in his career, Partch drew the successful syndicated comic strip Big George [8] It was a six-day-a-week single panel cartoon about a typical husband when introduced in 1960.
Big George (1960–1990) by Virgil Partch (US) Big Nate (1991– ) by Lincoln Peirce (US) Big Sister (1928–1972) by Les Forgrave and later Bob Naylor (US) Big Top (1937–1938) by Bill Walsh and Ed Wheelan; Big Top (2002–2007) by Rob Harrell (US) Billy the Bee by Harry Smith (UK) Birdseye Centre (1927–1946) by Jimmy Frise (Canada)
This is a list of cartoonists, visual artists who specialize in drawing cartoons.This list includes only notable cartoonists and is not meant to be exhaustive. Note that the word 'cartoon' only took on its modern sense after its use in Punch magazine in the 1840s - artists working earlier than that are more correctly termed 'caricaturists',
The magazine was the source for a number of other books, including True, A Treasury of True: The Best from 20 Years of the Man's Magazine (Barnes, 1956), edited by Charles N. Barnard and illustrated by Carl Pfeufer, and Bar Guide (Fawcett, 1950) by Ted Shane and Virgil Partch. Cartoon collections included Cartoon Laffs from True, the Man's ...
Virgil Partch Dick Shaw: Produced by: Walt Disney: Starring: Clarence Nash Billy Bletcher Mary Lenihan Harry E. Lang Jack Mather Doodles Weaver [1] Music by: Oliver Wallace: Animation by: Andy Engman Hal King John Sibley Milt Kahl Fred Moore (uncredited) Al Bertino (uncredited) Marc Davis (uncredited) [1] Layouts by: Don DaGradi: Backgrounds by ...
The Captain's Gig by Virgil Partch (March 1977 [20] –c. 1984) Claire Voyant by Jack Sparling [21] (May 10, 1943 – 1948) Conchy by James Childress (1970–1977) Emily and Mabel by Emidio "Mike" Angelo (early 1950s) [22] Freddy by Robert Baldwin [23] (c. 1967–1980) — inherited from Publishers-Hall Syndicate [24] From 9 To 5 by Jo Fischer ...
Here’s a nostalgic look at classic cartoons that once ruled the airwaves. From classics in the 1950s and '60s to more recent favorites from the 1980s and '90s, these toons are sure to bring back ...
Big George by Virgil Partch (1960–1975; continued by Field Newspaper Syndicate and then eventually by King Features until 1990) [8] Bruce Gentry by Ray Bailey (1949–1955) Dateline: Danger! by John Saunders & Al McWilliams (1968–1974) David Crane by Win Mortimer and Creig Flessel (1956–1973) [9] Debbie Dean by Bert Whitman (1942–1949) [10]