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Thursday, January 16, 2014

Eddy Paape dies 1920 2012

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Yesterday one of the last remainding standing pillars of the original French-Belgian comic world passed away at the age of 91: Eddy Paape.

Born on July 3, 1920, Paape started out as an animator working at the Compagnie Belge dActualités studios in 1940 with his friends and colleagues Pierre Culliford (Peyo, creator of The Smurfs) and Maurice de Bevere (Morris, author of Lucky Luke), Andre Franquin, who would later draw Spirou (Robbedoes) and Gaston (Guust Flater) also joined in. The team of friends would later become Europes most treasured comic artists.

After WWII Paape joined publisher Dupuis and collaborated with Joseph Gillain (better known as Jijé) on his detective comic series Jean Valhardi or Les aventures de Jean Valhardi (published as Jan Kordaat in the Netherlands), which he would later take over from him with writer Jean-Michel Charlier until 1954.


Above: Beautiful classic cover and original artwork from Le Chateau Maudit, the third book in the series published in 1953 (click to enlarge).

The collaboration with Charlier resulted in another comic series for Spirou magazine about the traveling adventurer/reporter Marc Dacier (known as Flip Flink in Dutch) which resulted in 13 books, published between 1960 and 1982. In 1966 Paape and comic author Michel Regnier aka Greg started working for Spirous competitor, Tintin magazine and created a new hero within the scifi genre: Luc Orient. It was inspired by their love for the classic daily newspaper comic strips of Brick Bradford by William Ritt and Clarene Gray, published in the United States since 1933 until April 1987 (after 1952 the strip was continued by Paul Norris, who had earlier worked on Alex Raymonds Jungle Jim). Between 1969 and 1994, 18 comic books were created and published. William Vance also collaborated with Paape and Greg, and contributed artwork for the covers of books 7-10 in a more realistic approach. Volume 17, Les Spores de Nul Parts contained four stories, including Mission en 2012 which was co-written by André-Paul Duchâteau (Ric Hochet) and Andreas Martens.

The collaboration between Duchateau and Paape continued, and let to various other comic books, like Yorik in 1975 and Udolfo (La Montre aux 7 Rubis) in 1980, while Greg and Paape reunited in 1992 for Johnny Congo an adventure story that would spawn two books between 1992 and 1993: La Riviere Ecarlate (De Rode Rivier or The Red River) and La flèche des ténèbres (De Pijl van de Duisternis aka The Arrow of Darkness).


Above: cover and original for the fourth book in Paapes comic series Marc Dacier, Les Secrets de la mer de Corail, published in 1962 (click to enlarge).

Below: Three great men in 1955: writer Jean-Michel Charlier (left), Eddy Paape (middle) and publisher Georges Troisfontaines (right). Paape would often help out and actually created multiple pages for comic book series Charlier created with Victor Hunbinon, like Barbe Rouge (about the pirate Red Beard) and Buck Danny, a fighter pilot in the Pacific during WWII. Troisfontaines was one of the first editors of comic magazine Spirou and also co-authored the first story of Buck Danny, Les Japs Attaquent (The Japs attack) in 1946.

Eddy Paape will be surely missed, but his fiction and fantasy comic stories will live on and will continue to please readers for a long time coming. Im thinking he joined up with his old buddies up there, who went on before him, and is enjoying a fine glass of wine. I know I will, so heres to you Eddy, Cheers!

 

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