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・ Jim Rourke
・ Jim Rowan
・ Jim Rowe
・ Jim Rowinski
・ Jim Rowlands
・ Jim Roxburgh
・ Jim Rubens
・ Jim Rudd
・ Jim Rugg
・ Jim Rukutai
・ Jim Runyon
・ Jim Rushford
・ Jim Rusk
・ Jim Russell (actor)
・ Jim Russell (baseball)
Jim Russell (cartoonist)
・ Jim Russell (ice hockey)
・ Jim Russell (journalist)
・ Jim Russell (racing driver)
・ Jim Rutenberg
・ Jim Rutherford
・ Jim Rutherford (baseball)
・ Jim Rutherford (rugby league)
・ Jim Rutledge
・ Jim Ruttle
・ Jim Ryan
・ Jim Ryan (American football)
・ Jim Ryan (Australian footballer)
・ Jim Ryan (footballer, born 1942)
・ Jim Ryan (politician)


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Jim Russell (cartoonist) : ウィキペディア英語版
Jim Russell (cartoonist)

James Newton "Jim" Russell AM MBE (26 March 1909 – 15 August 2001) was an Australian cartoonist who drew ''The Potts'' for 62 years. Jim's brother Dan Russell was also a cartoonist.
==Biography==
Russell was born in Campsie, New South Wales, the son of William John "Billy" Russell, a foreman plumber with the Sydney City Council, the president of the New South Wales Plumbers' Union, the national secretary of the Australian Plumbers and Gasfitters Employees Union, and unsuccessful labour candidate for the seats of Parkes and Canterbury, who was killed in a workplace accident in 1915. His mother Catherine Elizabeth (née Diggs), remarried in 1926〔 and was one of the first two woman members of an Australian Upper House of Parliament. Russell was educated at Tempe Technical School and Christian Brothers' High School, Lewisham〔Barnier, Cheryl (ed.) ''Notable Australians. The Pictorial Who's Who'' Paul Hamlyn 1978 ISBN 0-86832-012-9〕 In 1924 at age 14 he began work as a copy boy on the ''Daily Guardian'' before transferring later that year to ''Smith's Weekly's'' working as an art room messenger boy to Stan Cross. Russell also studied at Julian Ashton's Sydney Art School,〔 for six years, while working at various jobs, including a box office attendant at the Sydney Stadium.〔 This led to a brief boxing career, which included winning all five bouts as a welterweight at the Sydney Stadium. During this time he improved his drawing, with sketches he made of notable boxers being published in various Sydney papers. In 1926 the head artist of Fox Films offered to tutor Russell in the basics of art, for which he paid £100 and worked unpaid there for two years.〔
Russell became Australia's youngest political cartoonist, when in 1928 (at the age of nineteen)〔 he got a job as cartoonist on the ''Sydney Sunday News'' until the paper folded in 1931. Russell briefly went to the ''Referee'' as sports caricaturist until he rejoined ''Smith's Weekly'' and by 1933 was Australia's youngest daily cartoonist,〔(Man who draws the Potts ) ''Courier-Mail (Brisbane)'' 9 January 1951 p.3 accessed 28 October 2011〕 In 1939 he temporarily abandoned cartooning and accompanied the Australian Davis Cup team to the United States as a tennis writer. The team won the cup just as World War II broke out. Russell tried to enlist in the Royal Australian Air Force, unsuccessfully.
When Stan Cross left ''Smith's'' in 1940 Russell succeeded him as art editor and also took over drawing Cross's comic strips, including ''You and Me'', which he renamed ''Mr and Mrs Pott'', and from 1950, ''The Potts''. Through the war years Russell was responsible for two satirical strips, ''Adolf, Herman and Musso'' (which made fun of Adolf Hitler, Hermann Göring and Benito Mussolini) and ''Schmit der Sphy''.〔 He won 1st prize in the Voluntary Services section in the National Gallery of Victoria's 1945 "Australia at War" exhibition.〔McCulloch, Alan ''Encyclopedia of Australian Art'' 1st edition 1968 Hutchinson of London〕
Russell branched out into comic books during the 1940s when import restrictions gave Australian comics a lion's share of the market. At the beginning of 1947, Jim and his older brother, Dan, began their own publishing company, ''All-Australian Comics''. The lead title of the company was ''Tex Morton's Wild West Comics'', starring the popular country music singer. Like many Australian comics of the time, it was a copy of American material, in this case, featuring cowboy actors such as Roy Rogers and Gene Autry. Tex Morton was always featured in a lead-off story along with his mates Jacky, Shorty and Slim, drawn by Dan Russell. For the first two years companion features were Keith Chatto's ''Bunny Allen'', Les Dixon's ''Alfie the Jackaroo'' and a series of bush yarns by Jack Hemming. Early in 1949 they added another title, ''Kanga's K.O. Comics'', with the lead strip drawn by Russell, who used the pseudonym 'Mick Newton'.〔 Russell also used the pseudonym on a revised version of ''Wanda Dare'' in Tex Morton Comics (the earlier version of ''Wanda Dare'', a lady reporter, having previously been drawn by Dan).
In the middle of 1950 ''All-Australian Comics'' ran into financial difficulties due to rising production costs and the company folded by the end of the year. Russell resigned from ''Smith's Weekly'' after a dispute with the new editor, and not long after, in October 1950, ''Smith's Weekly'' folded. By a complex financial arrangement, the ''Melbourne Herald'' had acquired copyright to ''The Potts'', and he resumed drawing the strip in its new role as a daily
Russell also wrote film reviews and other articles, was a radio and television personality, a publisher of dancing and music magazines and ran two travel agencies.〔
In 1924 Russell was one of the founders of the Black and White Artists' Club. He succeeded Cross as president in 1955–57, then again in 1965–73. He won the Club's first Silver Stanley in 1985 for his contribution to black and white art, was appointed its patron in 1984 and a life member in 1991.〔 In 1993 he was elected a member of the United States National Cartoonists Society, the only Australian ever to receive this honour.〔

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