Yahoo India Web Search

Search results

  1. Greg (cartoonist) Michel Régnier (5 May 1931 – 29 October 1999), best known by his pseudonym Greg, was a Belgian cartoonist [2] best known for Achille Talon, and later became editor of Tintin magazine.

  2. Greg Evans (born November 13, 1947) is an American cartoonist and the creator of the syndicated comic strip Luann. He received the 2003 National Cartoonists Society Reuben Award for the strip. [3] He has been nominated four other times for the same award.

  3. In 2004 I was honored with the Reuben for “Cartoonist Of The Year.”. In 2016 I received an honorary degree of Doctorate of Fine Arts from Cal State University San Marcos. In 2015, my daughter Karen, who, at age 6 inspired the strip, joined me in co-writing. Our sessions are way funnier than the end result. I live a happy life with my wife ...

  4. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Greg_CravensGreg Cravens - Wikipedia

    Greg Cravens. Greg Cravens (born July 2, 1965 in Jackson, Tennessee) is an American cartoonist . His parents are Cecil and Bonnie Cravens. Cecil was the owner of Cecil's Bandstand and invented the Straplock, which holds guitar straps to the guitar. His mother Bonnie worked at various hospital billing departments and handicraft stores, while ...

  5. Jan 2, 2024 · Michel Rgnier (5 May 1931 29 October 1999), best known by his pseudonym Greg, was a Belgian cartoonist best known for Achille Talon, and later became editor of Tintin magazine. Regnier was born in Ixelles, Belgium in 1931. His first series, Les Aventures de Nestor et Boniface, appeared in the Bel.

  6. Nov 4, 2018 · The week of Dec. 4, 2016 will be a big one for cartoonist Greg Evans. After about 15 years of courtship, Brad Degroot and Toni Daytona will finally tie the knot in his comic strip LUANN.Their slow ...

  7. SIDELIGHTS: Cartoonist Greg Evans is the creative talent behind the popular comic strip "Luann," featuring the trials and traumas of an American high school student. "Simplistically drawn, Luann remains a sympathetic record of the changing lifestyles of contemporary youth," maintained essayist Dennis Wepman in One Hundred Years of American Newspaper Comics.