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Ivor Lott and Tony Broke was a British strip which originally appeared in the comic book Cor!! on 6 June 1970, [1] before moving to Buster when the two comics merged in June 1974. The comic strip lasted until the final issue of Buster on 3 January 2000. [ 1 ]
The comic's most popular strip was Ivor Lott and Tony Broke, a classic tale of two boys – one rich, one poor, with the latter usually the victor of the many battles they had. The strip continued long after the comic closed, finally ending in the last edition of Buster in January 2000.
Ivor Lott and Tony Broke (from Cor!!) / Ivor Lott and Tony Broke with Milly O'Naire and Penny Less (Milly and Penny from Jackpot) – A very rich young man (Ivor) who constantly showed off his wealth to the very poor Tony, often splashing out on outlandish items to impress. However, this would normally backfire on Ivor, while Tony would end up ...
Nevertheless Dougie and Valerie marry, though Ivor's best man's speech is a drunken avalanche of bad taste before the pair leave for Torremolinos on their honeymoon. [5] While Dougie is away - and dealing with an overdose of laxatives administered by his best man as a prank - Ivor finds himself left fulfilling Shuggie's poteen orders for local ...
The comic strip centred on a snobby rich girl, Milly O'Naire, and a poor girl, Penny Less. It has often been compared to Ivor Lott and Tony Broke, a strip originally from Cor!! and subsequently Buster when they merged in 1974. When Jackpot and Buster merged in 1982, the two strips merged as well, giving us the longest Fleetway strip title ever ...
"Troubled Souls" is a British comic story. It was originally published in the adult-orientated anthology comic Crisis between 1 April and 16 September 1989. It was the first professional comics work for writer Garth Ennis, and was painted by John McCrea; the pair would go on to be regular collaborators.
J.D. Lott and his wife Britney were eating lunch with their eight kids on April 30 when he missed a call on his cellphone. The family was three years into a cross-country, homeschooling, Instagram ...
He gave up his job in 1963 and became a freelance cartoonist with some of his early work being published The Weekly News under the pseudonym Swab. [2] In 1970 Burgon began working for Fleetway drawing a number of strips including Bookworm for Whoopee!, [3] Joker for Knockout [4] and Ivor Lott and Tony Broke for Buster (comics). [5]