In Luc Cornillon  's collection
Mytek THE MIGHTY by Eric Bradbury - Comic Strip
1581 

Mytek THE MIGHTY

Comic Strip
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Une page angalise de Mytek, (une sorte de King Kong british,) parue dans Valiant en 1966: tous les originaux de cette série dessinée par Bradbury ont été détruites, à l'exception de quelques demi-pages comme celle-ci qui ont échappé à l'éradication: bref, dans le genre "boum" celle-ci était plutôt spectaculaire .

#explosion

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About Eric Bradbury

Eric Bradbury (4 January 1921 – May 2001) was a British comic artist who primarily worked for Amalgamated Press/IPC from the late 1940s to the 1990s. He studied at Beckenham art school from 1936, and served in the RAF as a rear gunner on bombers during the Second World War. After the war he worked for Gaumont-British Animation, alongside future comic creators Mike Western, Ron Smith, Bill Holroyd, Harry Hargreaves and Ron "Nobby" Clark. When the studio folded in 1949, Bradbury and Clarke took samples to Amalgamated Press, and were offered work at Knock-Out, edited by Leonard Matthews - Clarke writing, Bradbury drawing. He started out on humour strips like "Blossom" and "Our Ernie", but soon specialised in adventure strips, particularly westerns like "Lucky Logan", on which he alternated with former G-B colleague Mike Western,[5] and "Buffalo Bill", both in The Comet. For the same title, he drew an adaptation of the 1955 film The King's Thief.[1] From the 1960s on he developed a dark style similar to Francisco Solano López, and drew strips like "Mytek the Mighty", "The House of Dolmann" and "The Black Crow" for Valiant, "Phantom Force 5", "The Leopard from Lime Street" (inking Mike Western's pencils) and "Maxwell Hawke" for Buster, "Von Hoffman's Invasion" for Jet, and "Cursitor Doom" for Smash!.