Jim Raymond

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Jim Raymond (1917-1981) was a comic strip artist and the younger brother of Flash Gordon artist Alex Raymond.

He was born in New Rochelle, New York and had his first cartoons published in his high school newspaper. In 1935 he started as an assistant on the Blondie comic strip, mostly as a replacement for Alex, who had been working on Blondie for three years before leaving to start his own strips.

At first, Raymond's responsibilities were quite minor, but by 1937, when the first son of Blondie creator Chic Young died of jaundice, Raymond was considered experienced enough to take over both writing and drawing the strip for a year.

In 1938 Chic Young returned from his sabbatical, resuming his place as the main writer of Blondie. Raymond continued to play a major role in creating the artwork, in addition to a short stint assisting his brother Alex on Jungle Jim around 1944. In 1950 Raymond permanently became the lead artist of Blondie due to Chic's diminishing eyesight, and began to develop the distinctive style that the strip uses to this day.

Chic Young died in 1973 and his son Dean, who had been assisting with the writing for about ten years, took over as head writer. Raymond continued as the artist, and began sharing a by-line credit with Dean soon after. Around 1980 Raymond's health began to fail and he died in late 1981 from cancer.

After his death he was succeeded by Mike Gersher, who had assisted him for about seventeen years. Excepting Gersher, all Blondie artists since that time have stuck very closely to the style that Jim Raymond refined, with small modifications to keep props and clothing styles contemporary.

[edit] References

  • Young, Dean & Marschall Rick (1982). Blondie And Dagwood. Arthur Barker Limited. ISBN 0-213-16830-8.