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・ Luciano Panetti
・ Luciano Pavarotti
・ Luciano Pellicani
・ Luciano Pereira Mendes
・ Luciano Pereyra
・ Luciano Petech
・ Luciano Pezzi
・ Luciano Pietronero
・ Luciano Pigozzi
・ Luciano Biondini
・ Luciano Bivar
・ Luciano Bodini
・ Luciano Borgognoni
・ Luciano Borsato
・ Luciano Borzone
Luciano Bottaro
・ Luciano Bruno
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・ Luciano Buonfiglio
・ Luciano Burti
・ Luciano Bux
・ Luciano Cabral
・ Luciano Canepari
・ Luciano Canfora
・ Luciano Caramel
・ Luciano Caravani
・ Luciano Cardenali
・ Luciano Caruso
・ Luciano Castelli
・ Luciano Castellini


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Luciano Bottaro : ウィキペディア英語版
Luciano Bottaro
Luciano Bottaro (November 16, 1931 – November 25, 2006) was an Italian comic book artist.
Bottaro's characteristic style is highly appreciated in Europe - many countries publish his comics (such as France, Germany, Greece, Spain, Portugal, and in the former Yugoslavia, as well as such far flung sites as Argentina, Australia and Brazil).
He was influenced by Otto Messmer's ''Felix the Cat'', Winsor McCay's ''Little Nemo in Slumberland'', Frederick Burr Opper's ''Happy Hooligan'', Rudolph Dirks's ''the Katzenjammer Kids'', and Barks and Gottfredson's Disney adaptations.
== Biography ==
Born jn Rapallo, he abandoned his accounting studies for cartooning in 1949. That year, he began his career for ''Lo Scolaro'', an Italian magazine, with the character Aroldo il bucaniere.
He worked for ''La Domenica del Corriere'', Edizioni Alpe and Mondadori, the Italian Disney editor: his first story was "Paperino e le onorificenze" written by Alberto Testa and published in 1952.
In the same year he began to collaborate with Guido Scala and Franco Aloisi. They were subsequently joined by Carlo Chendi. Unofficially they were called "Rapallo's School", before the birth of the "Bierrecì Studios".

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