Graham Manley is a British comic artist.
Graham Manley | |
---|---|
Born | 6 September 1946 Bournemouth, England |
Nationality | British |
Area(s) | Artist |
Notable works | Judge Dredd |
Biography
editGraham Manley has worked for a wide range of British comics, and is credited by Tony O'Donnell as inspiring the creation of Near Myths.[1]
He has drawn episodes of Juliet November and Whatever Happened To...? for the Judge Dredd Megazine. He also co-created (with writer Pat Mills) the character Rick Fortune for Diceman comic.
He has also contributed to several volumes of The Big Book of collection for the DC imprint Paradox Press. Manley has produced full colour SF and fantasy comics in The Dandy Annual for several years.
Manley worked on the opening titles of the feature film 'Electric Man' where his original drawings of the character were animated into an impressive opening sequence.
Bibliography
edit- Near Myths
- "World of the Future" (in Knockabout #1, 1981)
- Diceman: "In The Bronx, No-one Can Hear You Scream!" (with Pat Mills, in Dice Man #2, 1986)
- The Big Book of: Conspiracies: "Killing Castro" (Paradox Press, 104–106, 1995)
- Juliet November: "Phoenix Falling" (with Alan Grant, in Judge Dredd Megazine #202–204, 2003)
- Judge Dredd: "Shakedown" (with John Wagner, in Judge Dredd Megazine #207–208, 2003)
- Whatever Happened To?: "Maria" (with Gordon Rennie, in Judge Dredd Megazine #215, 2004)
- Tales From the Black Museum: "Ruddler's Cuddlers" (with Simon Spurrier, in Judge Dredd Megazine #246, 2006)
- Battle for Planet Science[permanent dead link] (an educational comic for Planet Science, 2009)
Notes
edit- ^ Ewing, Garen. Interview with Tony O'Donnell (July 1998). Originally intended for the British comics fanzine Vicious, run by Pete Ashton and Jez Higgins. Archived at GarenEwing.co.uk.
References
editExternal links
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