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  1. en.m.wikipedia.org › wiki › Jules_FeifferJules Feiffer - Wikipedia

    Jules Ralph Feiffer (born January 26, 1929) is an American cartoonist and author, who at one time was considered the most widely read satirist in the country. He won the Pulitzer Prize in 1986 for editorial cartooning, and in 2004 he was inducted into the Comic Book Hall of Fame .

  2. Mar 24, 2023 · Despite his dizzying array of creative undertakings—his critical history The Great Comic Book Heroes; his illustrations for The Phantom Tollbooth; and the Oscar-winning animated film Munro ...

  3. Mar 14, 2016 · Jules Feiffer, cartoon from the ‘Village Voice’ (April 1966) (all images © 2015 Jules Feiffer) (click to enlarge) “Here—gleefully roasting the idiocies of the American Sixties to a turn ...

  4. Feiffer’s first collection of cartoons, Sick, Sick, Sick (1958), was followed by Passionella, and Other Stories (1959). Passionella contains the character Munro, a four-year-old boy who was drafted into the army by mistake.

  5. Cartoon starring Feiffer's famous dancer. Jules Feiffer is widely regarded as one of the most famous and influential American satirists of the 20th century. He started his career co-writing episodes of Will Eisner 's 'The Spirit' (1940-1952) and creating his own gag comic 'Clifford' (1949-1951).

  6. Mar 19, 2010 · In 1956, the Village Voice, then just a year old, gave an ambitious but struggling young cartoonist named Jules Feiffer space for a comic strip, thereby launching an illustrious cartooning...

  7. May 19, 2015 · At 86, Jules Feiffer has drawn comic strips, written books and plays, and is now experimenting with graphic novels. A new compilation, Out of Line, takes an extensive look at his many careers.

  8. Feiffer is most famous for his cartoons for The Village Voice, which was opened for business in a Greenwich Village in October 1955 by Dan Wolf, Ed Fancher and Norman Mailer. Feiffer's cartoons, which ran in The Voice for 42 years, were syndicated to a wide variety of Sunday papers.

  9. In the army he produced animated cartoons for the Signal Corps, and began to create his famous character "Munro" - a four-year-old boy drafted into the Army by mistake. In 1956 Feiffer offered some of his cartoons to the recently-established Village Voice, and they began running his weekly socio-political strip under the title "Sick, Sick, Sick."

  10. Nov 4, 1996 · As Mr. Feiffer discussed his work the audience viewed slides of his cartoons on civil rights, poverty, economics, talk shows, children's rights and the relationship between the sexes. An accomplished author and illustrator of children's books, Mr. Feiffer has published two books for preadolescents.

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