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  1. 30 de ago. de 2010 · Jules Feiffer, Sketchy Character The award-winning 81-year-old cartoonist talks about kids’ books, his troubled childhood, and his still-sharp satire. Clara Jeffery Editor-in-Chief Bio | Follow.

  2. www.imdb.com › name › nm0270547Jules Feiffer - IMDb

    Jules Feiffer. Writer: Popeye. Jules Feiffer, the Pulitzer-Prize and Oscar-winning cartoonist, playwright and screenwriter, was born on 1929 in the New York City borough The Bronx. During the 1940s, the young Jules apprenticed with comic strip artist Will Eisner on his "The Spirit" strip at the Quality Comics Group. The strip had floundered during the war, after Eisner had been drafted in 1942 ...

  3. Hold Me! (1962) by Jules Feiffer. Members: Reviews: Popularity: Average rating: Mentions: 77: 1: 343,296 (4.4) 1: THE STORY: Blending together a series of sketches, skits and vignettes, this delightful revue peoples the stage with the engaging and all-too-human characters made famous through the author's renowned cartoons.

  4. 17 de sept. de 2018 · Sept. 17, 2018. The finale of Jules Feiffer’s “Kill My Mother” trilogy, THE GHOST SCRIPT (Liveright, $26.95), plunges into the world of 1950s Hollywood and its infamous blacklist. Feiffer ...

  5. Feiffer also wrote satirical revues, such as The Explainers (1961) and Hold Me! (1962), and a one-act play, Crawling Arnold (1961). His full-length plays— Little Murders (1967), The White House Murder Case (1970), and Grown Ups (1981)—like his cartoons, blend farce and biting social criticism. Other literary efforts included the novels ...

  6. 23 de nov. de 1977 · Feiffer's 'Hold Me!'. By Judith Martin. November 22, 1977 at 7:00 p.m. EST. Reprinted from yesterday's late editions. Life is never fair to Jules Feiffer characters. They are always working hard ...

  7. In 1979 Feiffer released ‘Tantrum’, an all-new book that amounted to a cartoon novel. His ‘Jules Feiffer’s America’ was published in 1982. Feiffer also wrote satirical revues, such as ‘The Explainers’, first performed in 1961, and ‘Hold Me!’ (1977, based on his 1962 book), and a one-act play, ‘Crawling Arnold’ (1961).