In SupHermann  's collection
Maurice Maréchal, Mittéï, Prudence Petitpas p49&50 T3 - Comic Strip
114 

Prudence Petitpas p49&50 T3

Comic Strip
1966
Ink
29.5 x 36.5 cm (11.61 x 14.37 in.)
Chaque planche
Added on 12/15/25
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Planche 19
Page 19
Planche 20
Page publiée
Journal Tintin
Intro
Bio
Bio 1
L’auteur

Description

Prudence Petitpas
planche n°19 et 20bis (sur 30)
Les Voitures fantômes
- Pré publication dans le journal Tintin Belge 39/66 (27/09/1966)
- Publication de l’histoire dans le journal Tintin Belge 33/66 (16/08/1966) au 44/66 (01/11/1966)
- Pré publication dans le journal Tintin Français (27/10/1966)
- Publication de l’histoire dans le journal Tintin Français 937 (06/10/1966) au 944 (24/11/1966)

En album :
Gare aux ancêtres!
Planches 49 et 50
Nb. 2 histoires - “Gare aux ancêtres!" (30 pages) et "Les voitures fantômes" (30 pages)
- Tome 3, édition Lombard Collection Jeune Europe, janvier 1967
- Tome 3, édition Dargaud Collection Jeune Europe, janvier 1967
- Intégrale, Lombard mars 2008

Comment

A noter - la planche 20 est notée 20 bis. C'est une copie de sécurité faite par l'auteur surement avant la vente de la planche ayant servi à l'impression. Elle provient de ses fardes héritée par la famille.

Par son ambiance inquiétante, ses décors détaillé spécifiquement "titi" Parisien et la présence d’une Dauphine, l'auteur fait aussi un magnifique hommage à la série Gil Jourdan.

La vieille dame a maintenant 60 ans de plus et pas une ride !

Publications

  • Gare aux ancêtres!
  • Lombard
  • 01/1967
  • Page 50
  • Prudence Petitpas mène l'enquête
  • Le Lombard
  • 03/2008
  • Interior page

Thematics


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About Maurice Maréchal

Maurice Maréchal had a modest presence in the pages of the Belgian comics magazine Tintin in the 1950s and 1960s. However, he did present the magazine's readership an atypical and remarkable comic character: an elderly lady called 'Prudence Petitpas', who solved mysteries in the small village of Moucheron. Maréchal was well into his thirties when he began working as a comic artist. He was a teacher in French and Spanish languages at the grammar school of Verviers (one of his students was René Hausman), and developed the concept for his comic series in his spare time. He presented it to his neighbour, the comic artist Raymond Macherot, who published the popular animal comic 'Chlorophylle' in Tintin magazine. Macherot helped Maréchal with the sketches of the first 'Petitpas' stories, and introduced his neighbour to the editors of Tintin magazine at Éditions Le Lombard in 1957. Prudence Petitpas and her cat Stanislas made their first appearance in Tintin in that same year, first published on 8 May 1957. Maréchal found a partner in scriptwriter René Goscinny, who had a fruitful production for Tintin at the time. The character started out as somewhat of a gullible old lady, but gradually evolved into a comic book Miss Marple, who starred in short stories and gags. By 1960 Goscinny called it quits and Maréchal assumed full authorship of his comic. Text (c) Lambiek