Denis Lebrun

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Denis Lebrun (born 1958) is a noted comic strip artist. While he has produced his own works, he is most famous for his collaboration with Dean Young as the illustrator for the Blondie comic strip. He was born in Springfield, Massachusetts in 1958.

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[edit] Comic strips

Lebrun's first published comic strip was called "Rolling with Roger" and appeared in 1975 in the Tampa Neighbor newspaper. In 1976 Lebrun had a daily strip that appeared in the Tampa Times until 1979 called "Aw Heck". "Aw Heck" then appeared in the Clearwater Sun from 1979 until 1980.

[edit] Blondie

Lebrun originally assisted on the King Features Syndicate comic strip Blondie as early as 1977, furnishing the strip's owner Dean Young with gag scripts. [1]

In 1982, Lebrun became Blondie's assistant illustrator to head artist Mike Gersher. In this capacity, Lebrun inked the lettering, backgrounds and incidental and secondary characters of the strip [1]. Gersher left the strip in 1984 and was replaced that same year with veteran comic strip illustrator Stan Drake. Drake was the head artist of the strip until his death in 1997. Cartoonist Jeff Parker assisted with the production of the daily strip from 1996 until Lebrun's departure [2].

In May 1997, Lebrun took over full artistic responsibilities of the strip and was the lead artist until 2005. His final illustrations appeared in the Sunday July 31, 2005 edition of the strip. According to comics historian RC Harvey, Lebrun was succeeded by John Marshall, although Marshall remained uncredited until Sunday, January 7, 2007. Marshall had been assisting Lebrun and Jeff Parker on the daily version of Blondie since December 2002.

During his tenure with Blondie, Lebrun introduced many profound changes to the appearance and production of the strip. Almost immediately after taking the helm, Lebrun began to modernize it by updating Dagwood's wardrobe, replacing dial tone phones with touch tone phones, adding computer terminals to Dagwood's place of work, and replacing paper charts with digital presentations [2]. In spite of these changes, Lebrun kept the style and appearance of the strip close to the style of previous Blondie veteran artist Jim Raymond.

As early as 1985, Lebrun began to use the computer as a means to streamline and modernize the production. Originally he had used similar materials as had been used since the strip began. These included steel pen points (Originally Gillot 1290s, later Hunt 103 or 104s for the line work and filed-down Speedball A-2s for lettering), Strathmore 2-ply plate finish paper, and Pelikan drawing ink A. By January 2002, Lebrun made the strip's production fully digital, abandoning paper, pencil and ink in favor of the PowerPC G4. [2]

[edit] References

  1. ^ a b Moriaty, William. "Interview with Denis Lebrun" (Part One). La Floridiana. September 12, 2002.
  2. ^ a b c Moriaty, William. "Interview with Denis Lebrun" (Part Two). La Floridiana. September 2002.

[edit] External links