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Norman Nodel (1922-2000) was an American comics-illustrator, mostly known for his work in ''Classics Illustrated''. ==Biography== Norman Nodel was born Nochem Yeshaya in 1920. The son of an Orthodox Rabbi, Nodel served as a field artist in the U.S. Army, drawing military maps during World War II.〔 During the 1940s, Nodel worked as assistant to George Marcoux, the newspaper cartoonist known for creating ''Supersnipe'', and started doing comic-book art for True Comics and Sun Publications. In ''Classics Illustrated'', a comic book series that began in 1941 and featured adaptations of literary classics, he created the illustration for many issues, such as ''Ivanhoe'', ''Faust'', ''Lion of the North'', ''Les Misérables'', and ''The Invisible Man''. In 1962, he illustrated ''Dr No'', the ''Classics'' adaptation of the eponymous James Bond spy thriller. The same year, Nodel worked on the ''Classics revised adaptation of ''The Man Who Laughs'', where his artwork showed a Gwynplaine far more disfigured than the character's appearance in either the 1928 film or the 1950, original ''Classics'' edition. He began working, in 1988, for the Tzivos Hashem organisation and ''The Moshiach Times'', a Jewish children’s magazine, creating comics for the Jewish-American market, such as "Labels for Laibel" for Hachai Publishing.〔 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「Norman Nodel」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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