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Luis Garcia Mozos : ウィキペディア英語版
Luis García Mozos

Luis García Mozos (born 1946) is a Spanish comic book artist.
==Career==

More widely known in English as just Luis García, he was born in Puertollano, Spain in 1946. García began his career drawing European romance comics for Fleetway. In the 1960s, he joined the well known Spanish agency Selecciones Illustradas. In 1971 García joined Warren Publishing, where he drew nine stories for ''Creepy'', ''Eerie'' and ''Vampirella''. García's first story published for Warren, ''The Men Who Called Him Monster'' (''Creepy'' #43, January 1972) is notable as having the first interracial kiss in mainstream comics. Ironically this kiss, which occurred between a black detective and a white teenager he was interviewing happened only because García misunderstood the line "This is the clincher" in writer Don McGregor's script. Another story of García's, ''Welcome to the Witch's Coven'' (''Vampirella'' #15, January 1972) won the Warren award for best art in a story for 1972.
García left Warren in 1973 to join the Franco-Belgian comics magazine ''Pilote'', where he teamed up with writer Victor Mora. Five of these stories would be reprinted in ''Vampirella'' in 1975 (''Around the Corner... Just Beyond Eternity!'', ''The Wolves at War's End'', ''Love Strip'', ''Janis'' and ''The Secret Legacy of Gaslight Lil!''). ''The Wolves at War's End'' was rated as the second best story to ever appear in a Warren magazine by David A. Roach, co-author of ''The Warren Companion''. ''Love Strip'' also appeared on his list in tenth place.
García's art would later appear in ''La Isla del Tesoro'' (1977), ''La Gran Aventura'' (1978), ''Etnocidio'' (1979) and ''Chicharras'' (1985). He was one of the founders of the magazines ''Trocha'' and ''Rambla''. After ''Rambla'' went out of business in 1985, García ended his career as a comic book artist to focus on painting.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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