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Bruce Stark is an award-winning artist noted for his caricatures of entertainment and sports figures. Born in 1933 in New York, he moved with his family at age three to New Jersey. After serving with the Navy during the Korean War, he attended the School of Visual Arts, dug ditches, drove a truck and freelanced artwork, finally landing a permanent job in 1960 as a staff artist with the ''New York Daily News'', where he contributed celebrity caricatures and sports cartoons for the next 22 years, continuing to live in New Jersey with his wife Pat and two sons, Bob and Ron. During those decades, Stark also created covers for ''Time'', ''Fortune'', ''Industry Week'', ''Forbes'' and ''TV Guide'', plus numerous paperback covers. He contributed interior artwork to ''Reader's Digest'', ''Mad'', ''The Saturday Evening Post'', ''Golf Digest'' and other magazines. He died on December 29, 2012 of emphysema at the age of 79. ==Animation== He produced his own animated television special, ''The Mad, Mad, Mad Comedians'', telecast April 7, 1970 on ABC. It combined actual voices with his animated caricatures of Jack Benny, George Burns, Phyllis Diller, George Jessel, Jack E. Leonard, Groucho Marx, the Smothers Brothers, Flip Wilson and Henny Youngman. Paul Frees supplied the voices of W.C. Fields, Chico Marx and Zeppo Marx. Listed in ''Who's Who in America'' for over 20 years, Stark was a two-time winner of the National Cartoonists Society's Reuben Category Award for Best Sports Cartoonist of the Year (1966, 1975), as well as Best Special Features Cartoonist for 1968. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Bruce Stark」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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