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Antonio Canale, Amok : Le drame du Stormy - Comic Strip
97 

Amok : Le drame du Stormy

Comic Strip
1948
Ink
42 x 30 cm (16.54 x 11.81 in.)
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L'album (édition italienne)

Description

Page de l'histoire publiée en Italie dans Avventure e Mistero n. 36 et en France dans Aventures et Mystère n. 63 (juin 1948)

Inscriptions

Signée à droite dans la dernière case

Comment

Très belle planche signée Tony Chan, pseudonyme d'Antonio Canale (1915-1991), qui rend hommage aux comics américains de cette époque, tant au niveau des personnages/thèmes que de l'art.
Écrit par Cesare Solini (sous le nom de plume de Phil Anderson) et publié pour la première fois en Italie en 1946, Amok s'inspire clairement de Phantom, créé par Lee Falk dix ans auparavant.

Publication

  • AMOK : Le drame du Stormy
  • S.a.g.e.
  • 06/1948
  • Page 3

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About Antonio Canale

Antonio Canale was born in Monza, in the district of Milan. Canale started to draw comics very early, as Nino Pagot's assistant. He did his first works for Il Cartoccino and Il Corriere dei Piccoli, and drew his first comic, 'Piuma Verde' for Il Vittorioso in 1937. The script was by Gianluigi Bonelli, with whom Canale also made 'Sigrido' in L'Audace. In 1939, he illustrated 'Il Solitario dei Sakya' with a script by Federico Pedrocchi in Topolino. After his military service, he returned to Il Vittorioso, where he drew among others 'Valore Italico'. In 1943, he succceed Raffaele Paparella as the artist of 'Cabiria' in Topolino, and two years later, he illustrated 'I Dominatori dell'Abisso', another story scripted by Bonelli. Also in 1945, Canale and Bonelli produced 'Yorga' for Il Cow Boy. Canale remained active for Topolino, drawing an episode of 'Virus' and 'Il Mago della Foresta'. In 1946, he created 'Amok', his most famous character, scripted by Cesare Solini. For this series, Canale used the pen name Tony Chan.

More comic art by Antonio Canale :