(via Bully Says: Comics Oughta Be Fun!)
from MAD #74 (October 1962), by Milton Caniff
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Milton Caniff - Dragon Lady Illustration Original Art (1939)
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“Caniff was well known to have prints made of Dragon Lady which he would hand-color and give out to fans requesting artwork, but this stunning piece is all hand-drawn, and was created for a very special person -- Orson Welles! The mat includes an inscription from Caniff, "For Orson Welles -- who knows how to savor melancholy," and is signed and dated, "New York, October 1939." This was one year after the famous Mercury Theater "War of the Worlds" radio program that made Welles a star. Obviously, Mr. Caniff was a fan!”
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Milton Caniff’s Dragon Lady. Ink on paper, digital colour & aging effects.
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Terry and the Pirates (1944)
by Milton Caniff
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Milton Caniff draws Miss Lace in 1947
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Milton Caniff - Terry and the Pirates Sunday 09/05/1943
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tribute to Milton Caniff by Denis Bodart
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Milton Caniff “Terry and the Pirates” Custom Drawing Original Art (1934) Source
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Milton Caniff’s Dragon Lady, inked sketch.
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Viola (via The Bristol Board)
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Milton Caniff: Terry and the Pirates
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BHOC: MARVEL TALES #98
Now this was a comic book that I had been eagerly anticipating for several months once I had realized that its reprinting was approaching in the sequence. By 1978, the demise of Gwen Stacy was established canon–even the original Clone storyline was finished by then–but the story of her death was still referenced and talked about like an acknowledged classic. I had really liked Gwen in the other…
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