Nisha Rathode (Editor)

Roger Leloup

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Nationality
  
Belgian

Name
  
Roger Leloup

Awards
  
full list


Notable works
  
Area(s)
  
artist, writer

Role
  
Novelist

Roger Leloup Swiss Aircraft Limited Colibri Daddy Cool VII The

Born
  
17 November 1933 (age 90) Verviers, Belgium (
1933-11-17
)

Books
  
L'ecume de l'aube, La Fille du vent, Le Pic des tenebres, La Pagode des brumes, El junco celeste

Roger Leloup ([ləlu]; born 17 November 1933) is a Belgian comic strip artist, novelist, and a former collaborator of Hergé, who would rely upon him to create detailed, realistic drawings and elaborate decoration for The Adventures of Tintin. He is most famous for the Yoko Tsuno comic series.

Contents

Roger Leloup Roger Leloup and the language of the heart

Biography

Roger Leloup Roger Leloup Person Comic Vine

Roger Leloup was born in Verviers, Belgium in 1933. Fascinated by trains and planes since his youth, he studied Decoration and Publicity at the Institut Saint-Luc in Liège. By accident, he came into contact with the Franco-Belgian comics scene when his neighbour, Jacques Martin, told him that he desperately needed a colourist. Leloup got the job and started colouring the Alix album L'ïle maudite in 1950.

Roger Leloup wwwauracancomInterviewsLeloupLELOUPportraitjpg

Jacques Martin was one of the main artists of the Franco-Belgian comics magazine Tintin, and when Hergé was looking for someone to help him with the drawings of vehicles for a series, Martin brought him in contact with Leloup. From 15 February 1953 on, Leloup worked for several years at Studios Hergé, where he drew detailed backgrounds and vehicles for Hergé's comics series The Adventures of Tintin. His work is seen in a wide variety of drawings, such as the Genève-Cointrin airport in The Calculus Affair and the impressive swing-wing supersonic business jet, the Carreidas 160 in Flight 714 to Sydney.

Roger Leloup Le rire d39Herg aux oreilles de Roger Leloup premire

Leloup worked for both Jacques Martin, with Alix and Lefranc, and for Hergé, but as the production at the Studios Hergé slowed down, and Leloup came into contact with other artists. He worked for a period with Francis, and also collaborated with Peyo on his less well-known series Jacky and Célestin. Here, he created a Japanese female character that would later become the inspiration for his own series.

Roger Leloup Roger Leloup avant Yoko Tsuno BDZoomcom

On 31 December 1969, Leloup left Studios Hergé to work full-time on his own series, Yoko Tsuno, with a focus on technology and science fiction. The character Yoko Tsuno, a Japanese woman living in Brussels, is one of the leading examples of the female-fronted comics that appeared in the European juvenile magazines during this period. All Yoko Tsuno stories first appeared in Spirou magazine and later as an album series published by editions Dupuis.

Roger Leloup Yoko Tsuno L39amiti au bout du rve Article L

He has an adopted Korean daughter, who inspired him to draw the character Morning Dew, the little Chinese girl from Le Dragon de Hong Kong, who was adopted by Yoko Tsuno.

Awards

  • 1972, European SF special award for Belgian comics for Yoko Tsuno at the first Eurocon in Trieste, Italy
  • 1974: Prix Saint-Michel, Brussels, Belgium, for Best Comic
  • 1990: Grand Prix de la Science Fiction Française, category "Youth", for his novel Le pic des ténèbres, France
  • References

    Roger Leloup Wikipedia