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Félix "Une tête doit tomber" planche 10 (Samedi Jeunesse)
Ink
32.3 x 47.9 cm (12.72 x 18.86 in.)
Added on 2/25/23
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Description
Planche originale n°10 du remake de l'aventure de Félix, Une tête doit tomber. Faute de planches ou en raison de son évolution stylistique, Maurice Tillieux demande à ses assistants de redessiner certaines histoires de Félix pour la revue "Samedi Jeunesse". Cette histoire a été publiée dans le numéro 90 en avril 1965, avant une édition en album chez Deligne. A noter des traces de scotch sur les textes, indiquant une possible traduction, ainsi que plusieurs tampons de l'agence Real Presse.
Inscriptions
En haut "d'après Tillieux, FELIX - par BROUYERE"
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About Jean-Marie Brouyère
After studying at the Institut Saint-Luc in Brussels, Jean-Marie Brouyère began his professional career at International Press in 1961. His first comics work appeared in Tintin in the second half of the 1960s ('Onomatopax', 'Toutouffu'), but Brouyère did his best remembered comics work for the magazine Spirou in the 1970s. He joined the Spirou team in 1971, and started out the with comic about plumber 'Al Alo', for which he did both artwork and scenario. He also illustrated various game pages as well as the espionnage comic 'Bug 30' in 1973. Soon afterwards, Brouyère became a prolific scriptwriter for the magazine.
Still in 1971, he created the hard-boiled action series 'Archie Cash' with Malik, who modeled Archie's looks after actor Charles Bronson. Brouyère wrote this series until 1987. His other writing credits include 'L'Epervier Bleu' (with art by Sirius), 'Aymone' (by Renaud), 'Naufragés de l'Escalator' (by Antoinette Collin) and 'Coursensac et Baladin' (by Hislaire). In 1980, he made the album 'Chambre Noire pour Cristaline' for the publisher Deligne. Having left the comics field in the 1980s, Jean-Marie Brouyère passed away in December 2009.
Text (c) Lambiek