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・ Tom Brown (tennis)
・ Tom Brown (trombonist)
・ Tom Brown at Oxford
・ Tom Brown of Culver
・ Tom Brown Park
・ Tom Brown's School Days
・ Tom Brown's School Days (1940 film)
・ Tom Brown's Schooldays (1916 film)
・ Tom Brown's Schooldays (1951 film)
・ Tom Brown's Schooldays (2005 film)
・ Tom Brown's Schooldays (film)
・ Tom Brown's Schooldays (TV serial)
・ Tom Brown, Jr.
・ Tom Browne
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Tom Browne (illustrator)
・ Tom Browne (trumpeter)
・ Tom Browning
・ Tom Browning (entomologist)
・ Tom Browning's perfect game
・ Tom Brownlee
・ Tom Brownlee (rugby league)
・ Tom Brownlees
・ Tom Bruce
・ Tom Bruce (cricketer)
・ Tom Bruce (rugby league)
・ Tom Bruggere
・ Tom Brumley
・ Tom Brunansky
・ Tom Bruno


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Tom Browne (illustrator) : ウィキペディア英語版
Tom Browne (illustrator)

Tom Browne born Thomas Arthur Browne (8 December 1870 Nottingham - 16 March 1910 Shooter's Hill), was an extremely popular English strip cartoonist, painter and illustrator of the late Victorian and Edwardian periods.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Tom Browne - Lambiek Comiclopedia )〕〔http://yourarchives.nationalarchives.gov.uk/index.php?title=Tom_Browne_and_his_Circle〕
Browne started earning a wage as a milliner's errand boy in 1882. From there he was apprenticed to a lithographic printer and eked out a living with freelance cartoons for London comic papers. He received 30 shillings for his first strip, published by the magazine ''Scraps'', and called ''"He Knew How To Do It"''.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=TOM BROWNE )
Comic Cuts, a British comic book was founded by Alfred Harmsworth in 1890. Cheaply printed, it proved to be the ideal medium for Browne's bold drawing style. Browne's comic strips soon became so popular that he moved to London and into a studio in ''Wollaton House'' at Westcombe Park. Here he turned out six full-page strips a week, but also managed to produce illustrations for several British magazines. His cartoons appeared in Punch, The Tatler and other highly rated periodicals of the day. The logo of Johnnie Walker whiskey, the strutting, monocled character, was created by Browne in 1908.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Dr.Whisky: February 2007 )
Browne was a founding member of the London Sketch Club, was publicly acclaimed and was made a ''Royal Illustrator''. His cycling trips took him all over the world, while illustrations of these exploits appeared in the newspapers. Returning to Nottingham, he started a colour printing firm and joined the Territorial Army.
He also created the comic strip 'Weary Willy and Tired Tim', inspired by Don Quixote and Sancho Panza, which appeared on the front page of Illustrated Chips from 1896 to 1953. Browne played a major part in the evolution of the British comic style, influencing Bruce Bairnsfather, Dudley Watkins and Leo Baxendale. His strip 'Airy Alf and Bouncing Billy' first appeared in ''The Big Budget'' around 1900, and was later continued by Ralph Hodgson aka "Yorick". His comic, Dan Leno, portrayed the Victorian English music hall comedian and appeared in ''Dan Leno's Comic Journal'' in 1898. Echoes of his impudent urchins can still be seen in The Beano and The Dandy today.〔
More of his characters were 'Little Willy and Tiny Tim', 'Mr. Stankey Deadstone and Company', 'The Rajah' and 'Don Quixote de Tintogs'. Browne died after surgery for cancer at the age of 39. He was buried with military honours at Shooter's Hill.
==Gallery==

File:Geochaite.jpg|Caricature of George Charles Haité
File:Tom Browne07.jpg|Johnnie Walker logo


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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