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Lee Falk (/ f ɔː k /), born Leon Harrison Gross (/ ɡ r oʊ s /; April 28, 1911 – March 13, 1999), was an American cartoonist, writer, theater director, and producer, best known as the creator of the comic strips Mandrake the Magician and The Phantom. At the height of their popularity, these strips attracted over 100 million readers every day.
The Phantom is an American adventure comic strip, first published by Lee Falk in February 1936. The main character, the Phantom, is a fictional costumed crime-fighter who operates from the fictional African country of Bangalla.
The serial was released as a double-disc DVD by VCI Video in 2001 (reusing the cover box art from their previous VHS release). It featured a commentary track by writer Max Allan Collins (for Chapter One only), as well as other special features, including actor bios, photo gallery, and comic book art gallery.
This category collects images that are scans, screen captures, photos, and/or illustrations of The Phantom and related characters and intellectual properties for which the Lee Falk Estate and King Features Syndicate holds the copyright and/or trademark. This includes material originally published by other companies.
Via Vision Entertainment DVD Release 2013 (Australia) In Australia (where the popularity of Lee Falk's original Phantom comic strip has never waned), Season One was released as a four-disc DVD collection (containing the first twenty episodes of the show) by Via Vision Entertainment on 6 November 2013.
Yeah, I'll wear it,' " adds Alba — who recently helped Instagram launch its new Teen Accounts feature. "I think they both thought that they wore it better — which, by the way, they did.
Since then, dress donors and newlyweds have shared personal photos and stories from their weddings with Puccio. One such dress — a “very pretty Maggie Sottero” — belonged to a woman who ...
Falk's story "The Belt", [15] where the Phantom fights the killer of his father, was also a major influence on the story, but the name of the murderer is changed from Rama to Quill, and the 20th Phantom, played by Patrick McGoohan, is portrayed as a much older man in the film than in the comic strip. [citation needed]