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We asked the directors behind these films to tell us about their own favorite fed-up characters—in movies and theater and literature—and how they inspire them to shout their own stories from ...
Usually the main Character of the books. Miffy is a little girl rabbit. Who likes to draw. And also likes to play with her friends. Nutbrown Hares Hares Guess How Much I Love You: Sam McBratney: A father hare and his son who spend a lot of time playing together throughout the seasons. Pantoufle Imaginary Rabbit Chocolat: Joanne Harris (novel)
In the book From Girls to Grrrlz: A History of Women's Comics from Teens to Zines by Trina Robbins, Katy Keene is called a Bettie Page look-alike. "... but the resemblance ended there. [ 1 ] Readers were encouraged to submit original drawings of outfits and accessories for her and her friends to wear, as well as designs for automobiles, homes ...
A hipster character, with a distinct counterculture style (usually wearing black or muted colors, turtlenecks, leotards for women, a beret, and sunglasses), loves jazz and avant-garde art and poetry, marijuana, bongo drums, and has a disdain for anything popular in mainstream culture. Judy Funnie; Maynard G. Krebs; the cast of Off Beat Cinema
Tove Jansson is best known as a book writer, but she did also write and draw comics featuring her characters, "The Moomins" in the 1950s, containing the same poetical qualities as her books. In the UK, Posy Simmonds started her career in 1979 with the weekly comic strip The Silent Three of St. Botolph's for The Guardian about the daily life of ...
Marinette's character was inspired by a young woman wearing a ladybug-themed T-shirt who once worked with Astruc. After creating a drawing that portrayed her as a ladybug-themed superheroine, Astruc felt this would be a good character, especially as he was not aware of the existence of another ladybug-related superhero.
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Sheena, Queen of the Jungle, is a fictional American comic book jungle girl heroine, originally published primarily by Fiction House during the Golden Age of Comic Books.She was the first female comic book character with her own title, with her 1941 premiere issue (cover-dated Spring 1942) preceding Wonder Woman #1 (Summer 1942).