- Melinda Gebbie
-
Melinda Gebbie
Melinda Gebbie at The Amazing Meeting in London in 2010Born San Francisco, California Nationality American Area(s) Writer, Penciller, Inker Notable works Lost Girls
CobwebMelinda Gebbie is an American comics artist and writer, probably best known for Lost Girls, the three-volume graphic novel she produced in collaboration with writer (and now husband) Alan Moore, published by Top Shelf.
Contents
Biography
Melinda Gebbie was born in San Francisco. She became interested in comics in 1973, when she met writer/artist Lee Marrs at a publishers' fair. Formerly a fine artist, she contributed her first comic strip to Wimmen's Comix #3, the seminal all-women anthology published by Last Gasp. She wrote and drew short stories for Wimmen's Comix and many other anthologies, including Tits & Clits Comix, Wet Satin, and Anarchy Comics. In 1977 she completed her own solo book, Fresca Zizis.
In 1984 she moved to England to work on the animated film adaptation of Raymond Briggs' When the Wind Blows. Following this, she worked in a variety of illustration and office jobs and continued making short stories for anthologies such as Strip AIDS and Heartbreak Hotel. During this time she was briefly involved in an obscenity trial when Knockabout Comics was prosecuted by the UK's customs agency over the importation of 'pornographic' comics, including her Fresca Zizis. The verdict was that all the comics should be confiscated and burned; Fresca Zizis was made illegal to possess in the UK.
In the early 1990s, Moore and Gebbie began collaborating on Lost Girls, a story in which the female protagonists of Peter and Wendy, Alice's Adventures in Wonderland, and The Wonderful Wizard of Oz meet and share sexual stories and experiences. Moore wrote the story, and Gebbie illustrated it. The story was finished in 2006. Meanwhile, she and Moore created Cobweb, a mysterious heroine who appeared in twelve issues of the Moore-written anthology Tomorrow Stories between 1999 and 2002.
Gebbie married Moore on 12 May 2007.
Bibliography
Comics work includes:
- Fresca Zizis (Last Gasp Publishing, 1977)
- Lost Girls (with writer Alan Moore, Top Shelf Productions, 2006, ISBN 1-891830-74-0)
Anthologies
Work in comics anthologies include:
- Cobweb (with writer Alan Moore, in Tomorrow Stories #1-8, America's Best Comics/Wildstorm, 1999–2002)
- Heartbreak Hotel
- Strip AIDS
- "The Cockpit" (in Wet Satin #1, Last Gasp Publishing)
- "My Three Swans", in Young Lust #6 (Last Gasp Publishing)
- Wimmen's Comix #4-7 (Last Gasp Publishing)
- Anarchy Comics (Last Gasp Publishing)
Notes
References
- Melinda Gebbie at the Grand Comics Database
- Melinda Gebbie at the Comic Book DB
- Melinda Gebbie at Lambiek's Comiclopedia
External links
Interviews
- Lost Girls artist Melinda Gebbie, SuicideGirls.com, June 6, 2006
- Melinda Gebbie Interview at ReadySteadyBook, September 11, 2006
Underground comix cartoonists Air Pirates · Peter Bagge · Joel Beck · Vaughn Bodé · Roger Brand · Robert Crumb · Kim Deitch · Joyce Farmer · Shary Flenniken · Melinda Gebbie · Richard "Grass" Green · Justin Green · Roberta Gregory · Rick Griffin · Bill Griffith · Gary Hallgren · Rory Hayes · Rand Holmes · Greg Irons · Jack Jackson (Jaxon) · Jay Kinney · Denis Kitchen · Aline Kominsky · Bobby London · Jay Lynch · Lee Marrs · George Metzger · Victor Moscoso · Diane Noomin · Dan O'Neill · Ralph Reese · Ted Richards · Trina Robbins · "Spain" Rodriguez · Fred Schrier · Dori Seda · Gilbert Shelton · Dave Sheridan · Art Spiegelman · Frank Stack · Steve Stiles · Larry Todd · Larry Welz · Robert Williams · Skip Williamson · S. Clay Wilson
Categories:- American comics artists
- American comics writers
- Comics inkers
- People from San Francisco, California
- Female comics artists
- Female comics writers
- Alan Moore
- Living people
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.