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{{Infobox_Real_Person|image = Tony Strobl.jpg|born = Anthony Joseph Strobl<br>[[May 12]], [[Pre-1922#1915|1915]]<br>Cleveland, [[Ohio]], [[United States]]|died = [[December 29]], [[1991]] (aged 76)<br>Ohio, United States|nationality = [[File:Flag of the United States.png|20px]] American|occupation(s) = Comics artist, animator}}'''Anthony Joseph''' "'''Tony'''" '''Strobl''' was an American comics artist and animator. He was born in Cleveland, [[Ohio]] and attended Cleveland School of Art from [[1933]]<nowiki/>–[[1937|1937]], with Jerry Siegel and Joe Shuster, who actually got some help from Strobl creating Superman. Gerard Jones in his book ''Men of Tomorrow'' reveals at one point Jerry Siegel contemplated ending his partnership with Joe Shuster in developing what became Superman and work with someone else instead. Strobl was among those approached but he respectfully declined, feeling his more cartoony artstyle was ill suited for such a serious character.
[[File:Tony_Strobl.jpg|thumb|250px]]
 
'''Anthony Joseph (Tony) Strobl''' (May 12, [[Pre-1922#1915|1915]] &ndash; December 29, [[1991]]) was an American comics artist and animator. He was born in Cleveland, [[Ohio]] and attended Cleveland School of Art from 1933–37, with Jerry Siegel and Joe Shuster, who actually got some help from Strobl creating Superman. Gerard Jones in his book ''Men of Tomorrow'' reveals at one point Jerry Siegel contemplated ending his partnership with Joe Shuster in developing what became Superman and work with someone else instead. Strobl was among those approached but he respectfully declined, feeling his more cartoony artstyle was ill suited for such a serious character.
 
   
After finishing his education, Strobl became impressed enough by ''[[Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs (1937 film)|Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs]]'' to seek a job at [[Walt Disney Studios]]. After a refusal, he eventually was hired in 1938. He worked as an animator on ''[[Fantasia (film)|Fantasia]]'', ''[[Dumbo]]'', and ''[[Pinocchio (1940 film)|Pinocchio]]'' before he left the studio to fight in World War II.
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After finishing his education, Strobl became impressed enough by ''[[Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs]]'' to seek a job at [[Walt Disney Studios]]. After a refusal, he eventually was hired in 1938. He worked as an animator on ''[[Fantasia]]'', ''[[Dumbo]]'', and ''[[Pinocchio]]'' before he left the studio to fight in World War II.
   
In 1942, Strobl saved a seven year old girl from drowning while working for an Army propaganda unit. He returned to animation after the war, but moved over to the comics field, and after a few commercial artist jobs, he started working for Western Publishing in 1947.
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In 1942, Strobl saved a seven-year-old girl from drowning while working for an Army propaganda unit. He returned to animation after the war but moved over to the comics field, and after a few commercial artist jobs, he started working for Western Publishing in 1947.
   
 
At Western, he illustrated primarily Disney comics, especially from the [[Duckburg|Duck universe]]. Starting with a [[Bucky Bug]] story for ''Walt Disney's Comics and Stories'' #100 in 1949, Strobl had a long and impressive production of Disney comics. He did comic book stories for Western until 1968, and for the Disney Studio Program from 1963 to his retirement in 1987. Although during his career he primarily illustrated stories written by others, he wrote some of his stories himself. Strobl also illustrated some stories written by [[Carl Barks]] after the latter's 1966 retirement. The most significant of these is "King Scrooge the First" ([[Uncle Scrooge]] #71).
 
At Western, he illustrated primarily Disney comics, especially from the [[Duckburg|Duck universe]]. Starting with a [[Bucky Bug]] story for ''Walt Disney's Comics and Stories'' #100 in 1949, Strobl had a long and impressive production of Disney comics. He did comic book stories for Western until 1968, and for the Disney Studio Program from 1963 to his retirement in 1987. Although during his career he primarily illustrated stories written by others, he wrote some of his stories himself. Strobl also illustrated some stories written by [[Carl Barks]] after the latter's 1966 retirement. The most significant of these is "King Scrooge the First" ([[Uncle Scrooge]] #71).
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* [http://coa.inducks.org/creator.php?c=TS Tony Strobl] at the [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/INDUCKS INDUCKS]
 
* [http://coa.inducks.org/creator.php?c=TS Tony Strobl] at the [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/INDUCKS INDUCKS]
 
* [http://art-bin.com/art/strobleng.html "Here's the classic Donald Duck of Tony Strobl", a lengthy essay]
 
* [http://art-bin.com/art/strobleng.html "Here's the classic Donald Duck of Tony Strobl", a lengthy essay]
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[[Category:1915 births]]
 
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{{Comic writers and artists}}
[[Category:1991 deaths]]
 
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Strobl, Tony}}
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[[da:Tony Strobl]]
 
[[Category:1910s births]]
 
[[Category:Males]]
 
[[Category:Males]]
 
[[Category:Deceased]]
 
[[Category:Deceased]]
[[Category:Humans]]
 
 
[[Category:People]]
 
[[Category:People]]
 
[[Category:Animators]]
 
[[Category:Animators]]
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[[Category:American animators]]
 
 
[[Category:Pinocchio]]
 
[[Category:Pinocchio]]
 
[[Category:Fantasia]]
 
[[Category:Fantasia]]
 
[[Category:Dumbo]]
 
[[Category:Dumbo]]
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[[Category:Donald Duck]]
 
[[Category:1990s deaths]]
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[[Category:Illustrators]]
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[[Category:People from Ohio]]
 
[[Category:Artists]]
 
[[Category:American people]]
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[[Category:Disney Golden Age]]

Revision as of 13:03, 12 May 2020

Anthony Joseph "Tony" Strobl was an American comics artist and animator. He was born in Cleveland, Ohio and attended Cleveland School of Art from 19331937, with Jerry Siegel and Joe Shuster, who actually got some help from Strobl creating Superman. Gerard Jones in his book Men of Tomorrow reveals at one point Jerry Siegel contemplated ending his partnership with Joe Shuster in developing what became Superman and work with someone else instead. Strobl was among those approached but he respectfully declined, feeling his more cartoony artstyle was ill suited for such a serious character.

After finishing his education, Strobl became impressed enough by Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs to seek a job at Walt Disney Studios. After a refusal, he eventually was hired in 1938. He worked as an animator on Fantasia, Dumbo, and Pinocchio before he left the studio to fight in World War II.

In 1942, Strobl saved a seven-year-old girl from drowning while working for an Army propaganda unit. He returned to animation after the war but moved over to the comics field, and after a few commercial artist jobs, he started working for Western Publishing in 1947.

At Western, he illustrated primarily Disney comics, especially from the Duck universe. Starting with a Bucky Bug story for Walt Disney's Comics and Stories #100 in 1949, Strobl had a long and impressive production of Disney comics. He did comic book stories for Western until 1968, and for the Disney Studio Program from 1963 to his retirement in 1987. Although during his career he primarily illustrated stories written by others, he wrote some of his stories himself. Strobl also illustrated some stories written by Carl Barks after the latter's 1966 retirement. The most significant of these is "King Scrooge the First" (Uncle Scrooge #71).

In addition to Disney, Strobl illustrated comics with several other characters, such as Bugs Bunny and Woody Woodpecker.

In the Hall of Fame series of hardcover books devoted to the greatest Duck (and Mouse) comics artists, published in Norwegian, Danish and Swedish by Egmont, Volume 15 (2006) is dedicated to Strobl's work.

External links

Template:Comic writers and artists