Modesty Blaise Daily Strip #734 (Original)

Modesty Blaise Daily Strip #734 art by Jim Holdaway

Modesty Blaise Daily Strip #734 (Original)


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Artist: Jim Holdaway
Medium: Pen & Ink on Paper
Size: 20" x 6" (500mm x 160mm)
Date: 1965
Code: HoldawayMB734

This is the unique original Pen & Ink drawing by Jim Holdaway.

Willie launches rocks at his enemies in this original pen and ink Modesty Blaise strip.

This strip is #734 of the Modesty Blaise series and was published in 1965. It forms part of the story 'Uncle Happy'.

Modesty Blaise was Peter O'Donnell's most famous literary creation and has appeared in many popular novels and newspaper strips for nearly 40 years.


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  • Artist Biography

    Jim Holdaway (28 May 1927 - 18 February 1970; Barnes, London, UK)
    Jim Holdaway was born in 1927 in Barnes Common, London. On completing schooling in New Malden, Surrey, Holdaway attended the Kingston School of Art. After spending two years of National Service from 1945 with the East Surrey Regiment, Holdaway went to Italy, Austria and Greece before returning to art school on an ex-Serviceman's grant.

    His first full length stories were for Gallant Detective in 1952, and then went on to strips for Comic Cuts, and Swift. His first newspaper strip was Romeo Brown in the Daily Mirror. Sadly none of the original art for this strip has survived. This association with Peter O'Donnell led to the creation of Modesty Blaise which he drew from 1963 until his untimely death in 1970.

    Jim Holdaway eventually left to work in France where he did advertising work. Returning to England soon to take care of his widowed mother, Holdaway went to work for Scion Books in Kensington, doing a variety of artwork, book jackets, comic books and advertising. He then became a freelance illustrator, working from home in 1950, working for publishers such as Odhams and Farrington Press. He worked on all types of artwork, adverts, cartoons, book illustrations and covers.

    He was drawing for Odhams and Farringdon Press doing 64-page comics including Captain Vigour, The Football Comic, Steve Samson, Dick Hercules, Reveille, Tit-Bits, Comic Cuts, Junior Express (The Red Rider and Joanna of Bitter Creek, 1955), Mickey's Weekly (Davy Crockett, 1956), and Swift (The Red Rider, 1956).

    In 1957, Holdaway replaced the artist Alfred Mazure on the strip Romeo Brown, leading to the key association of his career with writer Peter O'Donnell. The two were a perfect match and in 1963 Holdaway started drawing for O'Donnell's Modesty Blaise comics strips.

    Jim Holdaway died in 1970 from a heart attack midway through illustrating the Modesty Blaise story The Warlords of Phoenix, leaving his wife, Audrey and daughter, Joanna. O'Donnell enlisted Enrique Badia Romero to complete the strip and Romero succeeded Holdaway as the strip's full-time artist. Years later, a painting of Modesty Blaise by Holdaway was used as the cover art for O'Donnell's final Modesty Blaise literary collection, Cobra Trap.

    Holdaway's work on the Modesty Blaise strip has been reprinted on many occasions, most recently between 2003 and 2005 in reprint volumes published by Titan Books.


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