. . "9047"^^ . "1950"^^ . . . . . . . . . . . . . "Inker"@en . . "John Byrne is a writer and artist, whose most notable works include several titles for DC Comics and Marvel. For DC, Byrne is perhaps most well known for establishing Superman's mythos following Crisis on Infinite Earths. He also served a run on Wonder Woman from 1995 to 1998, beginning with Wonder Woman v2 101 and ending with Wonder Woman v2 136. During this time, he created the characters of Cassandra Sandsmark and her mother Helena Sandsmark. In 1997, he also wrote the novel, Wonder Woman: Gods and Goddesses."@en . . . . . "His cartoons feature regularly in a wide range of newspapers and magazines. He has also worked for the Christian Herald, Private Eye, the BBC\u2019s in-house magazine Ariel, Voluntary Sector magazine and for many industry and trade magazines. His \u2018live cartoons\u2019 show - a combination of stand up comedy, art class and audience participation - has been performed at festivals, school and library and at corporate events all over the UK. He has also demonstrated cartooning on TV for the BBC, Nickelodeon and Channel 5. He writes joke books, children's books, and books on professional creative development, including Drawing Cartoons that Sell, Learn to Draw Cartoons, Learn to Draw Comics, and Cartooning: The Best One-Stop Guide to Drawing Cartoons, Caricatures, Comic Strips, and Manga, as well as A Dancer's Guide to Getting Work and A Singer's Guide to Getting Work. He has taught creative skills at third level and adult educational institutions, including the Guildhall School of Music and Drama and The National Museum of Cartoon Art, and does private coaching work in the creative professions. He writes the \"Dear John\" advice column for The Stage newspaper and website. For a time in the 1980s he was Communications Officer for UNICEF in Malawi."@en . . . . . . . . . . . . . "John Byrne is a comic book artist and writer notable for his work on Marvel Comics' Fantastic Four and X-Men, and DC Comics' Superman. In 1983, Byrne worked on the first issue of The Further Adventures of Indiana Jones as writer and artist. He provided pencils for the second but frustrations with the editorial process saw him leave the book. Byrne's pin-up art for an unpublished story, \"The Sentinel\", was included in The Complete Making of Indiana Jones."@en . . . . . . . . "American"@en . "His cartoons feature regularly in a wide range of newspapers and magazines. He has also worked for the Christian Herald, Private Eye, the BBC\u2019s in-house magazine Ariel, Voluntary Sector magazine and for many industry and trade magazines. His \u2018live cartoons\u2019 show - a combination of stand up comedy, art class and audience participation - has been performed at festivals, school and library and at corporate events all over the UK. He has also demonstrated cartooning on TV for the BBC, Nickelodeon and Channel 5. For a time in the 1980s he was Communications Officer for UNICEF in Malawi."@en . "He wrote and provided all of the artwork for the final issue in IDW's Star Trek: Alien Spotlight comic series, \"Alien Spotlight: Romulans\". This was his first major foray into the Star Trek universe despite his being a long-time fan of the series. He originally contributed some artwork to the DC \"Who's Who in Star Trek 1\" and \"Who's Who in Star Trek 2\". According to Byrne, \"First, I was just tracing photographs. That's okay, and works well when we're dealing with a limited number of images, but it doesn't work for whole issues. Second, there did not have to be approvals from \"on high\". Nobody had to sign off on their likenesses. The upcoming Romulan book is the same, which is one of the things that enticed me into doing it.\" [1] When asked about getting involved with the Star Trek license, Byrne stated, \"when IDW contacted me about doing some TOS work, I was at first strongly resistant, until Chris Ryall, the head honcho there, came up with something that could be relatively smooth sailing, the single Romulans issue for their ALIEN SPOTLIGHT miniseries. That allowed me to try a toe in the water, and from there expand my involvement as those waters showed themselves set for smooth sailing.\" [2] Byrne also wrote and illustrated the Star Trek: Assignment: Earth and Star Trek: Crew miniseries, and developed an extended arc following on from his Alien Spotlight issue, spanning Star Trek: Romulans - The Hollow Crown and Star Trek: Romulans - Schism. This arc was collected in the Star Trek: Romulans trade paperback, which featured an additional story from Byrne, adapting \"Balance of Terror\" from the Romulan perspective. Byrne's next project was the 2010 miniseries, Star Trek: Leonard McCoy, Frontier Doctor. Byrne, like Dave Cockrum, was referenced in the script for the final Gold Key TOS issue, \"Trial By Fire\", as the names of two security guards. Byrne's IDW Star Trek work was collected in the Star Trek: The John Byrne Collection in April 2013 . In December 2013 , his \"Strange New Worlds\" photonovel was released as a \"Star Trek Annual\"."@en . . "Colorist"@en . . "John Byrne"@en . . . . . . . . . . "Writer; Penciler; Inker; Letterer; Cover Artist"@en . . . . . . . . . . . . "Canadian Writer/Penciller/Inker. Has worked for Marvel, DC, and many other comic book companies. One of the best known and influential comics creators (and at one point, among the best paid as well.) He's also fairly controversial, due to his attitudes both with comics fans and pros. There's a reason his last TV Tropes page was entirely nuked. \n* On Marvel, together with Chris Claremont, was responsible for what many consider the formative run on Marvel's Uncanny X-men book, with their storylines still reverberating through the Marvel Universe (specially the Dark Phoenix Saga.) He helped expand Wolverine's past into a full Super Team, Alpha Flight, which he then wrote and drew in their own series for many years. His work on Fantastic Four redefined many of its characters and helped him earn his gig on Superman (see below.) Other Marvel series he worked for include Spider-Man, She Hulk (to which he gave an unusual fourth-wall-breaking humorous twist- this was before Deadpool), Sub-Mariner, and others. \n* On DC, he reinvented Superman for the 80's after the company-wide Retcon of Crisis on Infinite Earths. He recycled some of his ideas for the character Gladiator (a Superman Captain Ersatz he drew in X-Men and Fantastic Four) for this series. He also worked on Wonder Woman briefly. \n* He also created some original series of his own, such as the Next Men, for other companies."@en . . . . "6"^^ . . . "X-men, Fantastiska fyran, Spindelmannen, St\u00E5lmannen med flera."@sv . . . . . . . . . . "* During \"Assistant Editor's Month\", John Byrne appeared in an issue of Fantastic Four as the Chronicler. The [[W:C:marvel:Uatu"@en . . "Dark Horse Comics, DC och Marvel"@sv . "John Byrde; No_Image_Male.jpg"@en . . . "* John Byrne/Gallery\n* Byrne Robotics \n* John Byrne article at the DC Database Project\n* John Byrne at Wikipedia\n* The John Byrne Forum\n* John Byrne's IMO - An opinion column at the UGO web portal.\n* Lambiek Comiclopedia\n* Byrne interview on his early career, Comic Book Artist #12, 2001\n* Roger Stern interview re: Byrne, Comic Book Artist #12, 2001\n* Interview with Top Two Three Films for Adventures Into Digital Comics\n* Adventures Into Digital Comics Official Web Site"@en . . . . . . . . . "__NOEDITSECTION__ Image:Information-silk.png|Character Template rect 0 0 20 20 Staff Template desc none John Byrne File:John Byrne.jpg Gallery Real Name John Lindley Byrne Pseudonyms John Byrne; Johnny Redbeard; the Chronicler Employers [[|]][[Category: Staff]], [[|]][[Category: Staff]], [[|]][[Category: Staff]], [[|]][[Category: Staff]], [[|]][[Category: Staff]], [[|]][[Category: Staff]], [[|]][[Category: Staff]], [[|]][[Category: Staff]], [[|]][[Category: Staff]], [[|]][[Category: Staff]], [[|]][[Category: Staff]], [[|]][[Category: Staff]], [[|]][[Category: Staff]], [[|]][[Category: Staff]], [[|]][[Category: Staff]], [[|]][[Category: Staff]], [[|]][[Category: Staff]], [[|]][[Category: Staff]], [[|]][[Category: Staff]], [[|]][[Category: Staff]], [[|]][[Categ"@en . "John Lindley Byrne (born July 6, 1950) is a British-born Canadian-American author and artist of comic books. Since the mid-1970s, Byrne has worked on nearly every major American superhero. Byrne's best-known work has been on Marvel Comics\u2019 X-Men and Fantastic Four and the 1986 relaunch of DC Comics\u2019 Superman franchise. Coming into the comics profession exclusively as a penciler, Byrne began co-plotting the X-Men comics during his tenure on them, and launched his writing career in earnest with Fantastic Four (where he also started inking his own pencils). During the 1990s he produced a number of creator-owned works, including Next Men and Danger Unlimited (which introduced Dr. Robert Carson and The Torch of Liberty). He also produced a number of Star Trek comics for IDW Publishing."@en . . . . . . . . . . . . . "Medf\u00F6rfattare till f\u00F6rsta miniserien med Hellboy i huvudrollen, Hellboy: Seed of Destruction"@sv . . . "John Lindley Byrne was a writer and artist whose work included several Angel comics for IDW Publishing."@en . . . . . . "John Lindley Byrne"@en . . . "Staffordshire"@en . . . "616"^^ . . . . . "Byrne is a very well-known figure in the comics field, having worked as artist and co-plotter on the historic Dark Phoenix Saga during his tenure on the Uncanny X-men for Marvel comics in the 1980s. Byrne has had a prolific and influential comics career beyond his X-Men work, as well, including work for virtually every major publisher including industry leaders Marvel, DC Comics, Image Comics, Dark Horse and others on dozens of titles."@en . . . "John Byrne"@en . "John Byrne (born June 6, 1950) is a comic book creator who drew a cover for the Marvel Star Wars series. Byrne's earliest professional work was in 1975 for Charlton Comics, but he soon found regular work at Marvel Comics and in 1977 began pencilling Uncanny X-Men which would become a runaway success for Marvel. His other notable works include writing and illustrating the Fantastic Four and revamping DC Comics' flagship title Superman during the 1980s. In the 1990s Byrne went to Dark Horse Comics to produce his creator-owned title Next Men."@en . . . . . "John Lindley Byrne"@en . . . . "John Byrne f\u00F6ddes 1950 i England, v\u00E4xte upp i Kanada, men \u00E4r sedan flera \u00E5r amerikansk medborgare. Han \u00E4r i f\u00F6rsta hand serietecknare, men skriver \u00E4ven sina egna manus. Framf\u00F6r allt har han verkat inom superhj\u00E4ltegenren p\u00E5 f\u00F6rlagen Marvel och DC. Av de otaliga titlar han har arbetat p\u00E5 kan n\u00E4mnas: X-Men, Fantastiska Fyran, Spindelmannen, St\u00E5lmannen, Avengers, Captain America, Wonder Woman, Jack Kirby's Fourth World, Doom Patrol och The Demon. Av hans egna skapelser \u00E4r \"Next Men\" den som r\u00F6nt st\u00F6rst popularitet."@sv . "England"@en . . . . . . . . "West Bromwich, West Midlands, UK"@en . . . "He wrote and provided all of the artwork for the final issue in IDW's Star Trek: Alien Spotlight comic series, \"Alien Spotlight: Romulans\". This was his first major foray into the Star Trek universe despite his being a long-time fan of the series. He originally contributed some artwork to the DC \"Who's Who in Star Trek 1\" and \"Who's Who in Star Trek 2\". According to Byrne, \"First, I was just tracing photographs. That's okay, and works well when we're dealing with a limited number of images, but it doesn't work for whole issues. Second, there did not have to be approvals from \"on high\". Nobody had to sign off on their likenesses. The upcoming Romulan book is the same, which is one of the things that enticed me into doing it.\" [1]"@en . . . "Penciller"@en . . . . . "Male"@en . . "Charlton; Dark Horse; DC; Marvel; Skywald Publications; Star Comics"@en . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . "John Byrne"@nl . . . . . "Byrne's first contribution to Star Trek comics was in 1987 when he provided illustrations for the articles on Harry Mudd, Sarek, David Bailey, Hortas, Iotians and Khan Noonien Singh in DC Comics\u2019 Star Trek reference work, Who's Who in Star Trek. Byrne currently has three further Star Trek series green-lit by IDW. One of these will conclude at about the time Robert April takes command of the USS Enterprise, and the final of the three will be a second Assignment: Earth series.[2][3]"@en . . . . . "John Byrne f\u00F6ddes 1950 i England, v\u00E4xte upp i Kanada, men \u00E4r sedan flera \u00E5r amerikansk medborgare. Han \u00E4r i f\u00F6rsta hand serietecknare, men skriver \u00E4ven sina egna manus. Framf\u00F6r allt har han verkat inom superhj\u00E4ltegenren p\u00E5 f\u00F6rlagen Marvel och DC. Av de otaliga titlar han har arbetat p\u00E5 kan n\u00E4mnas: X-Men, Fantastiska Fyran, Spindelmannen, St\u00E5lmannen, Avengers, Captain America, Wonder Woman, Jack Kirby's Fourth World, Doom Patrol och The Demon. Av hans egna skapelser \u00E4r \"Next Men\" den som r\u00F6nt st\u00F6rst popularitet. Anv\u00E4nde ibland pseudonymen Bjorn Heyn (anagram p\u00E5 John Byrne) n\u00E4r han tuschade sina egna serier."@sv . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . "Byrne is a very well-known figure in the comics field, having worked as artist and co-plotter on the historic Dark Phoenix Saga during his tenure on the Uncanny X-men for Marvel comics in the 1980s. Byrne has had a prolific and influential comics career beyond his X-Men work, as well, including work for virtually every major publisher including industry leaders Marvel, DC Comics, Image Comics, Dark Horse and others on dozens of titles. Byrne was the writer on DC Comics reboot of Superman in 1986 and Wonder Woman in the 1990s. His other Marvel work has included noted runs as writer/artist on She-Hulk, Fantastic Four, Avengers, Alpha Flight, Namor, Spider-Man and others. He wrote the first few issues of Hellboy for Dark Horse and also produced his creator-owned series The Next Men for the company in the 1990s. Earth Angel has been Byrne's only foray into the Aliens universe, but Byrne also provided art for one of the pin-up/trading card images for inclusion in the first Batman versus Predator series."@en . . . . "John Byrne; Johnny Redbeard; the Chronicler"@en . . "Canadian Writer/Penciller/Inker. Has worked for Marvel, DC, and many other comic book companies. One of the best known and influential comics creators (and at one point, among the best paid as well.) He's also fairly controversial, due to his attitudes both with comics fans and pros. There's a reason his last TV Tropes page was entirely nuked."@en . . . "__NOEDITSECTION__ Image:Information-silk.png|Character Template rect 0 0 20 20 Staff Template desc none John Byrne File:John Byrne.jpg Gallery Real Name John Lindley Byrne Pseudonyms John Byrne; Johnny Redbeard; the Chronicler Employers [[|]][[Category: Staff]], [[|]][[Category: Staff]], [[|]][[Category: Staff]], [[|]][[Category: Staff]], [[|]][[Category: Staff]], [[|]][[Category: Staff]], [[|]][[Category: Staff]], [[|]][[Category: Staff]], [[|]][[Category: Staff]], [[|]][[Category: Staff]], [[|]][[Category: Staff]], [[|]][[Category: Staff]], [[|]][[Category: Staff]], [[|]][[Category: Staff]], [[|]][[Category: Staff]], [[|]][[Category: Staff]], [[|]][[Category: Staff]], [[|]][[Category: Staff]], [[|]][[Category: Staff]], [[|]][[Category: Staff]], [[|]][[Category: Staff]], [[|]][[Category: Staff]] , [[|]][[Category: Staff]] , [[|]][[Category: Staff]] , [[|]][[Category: Staff]] , [[|]][[Category: Staff]] , [[|]][[Category: Staff]] , [[|]][[Category: Staff]] , [[|]][[Category: Staff]] , [[|]][[Category: Staff]] , [[|]][[Category: Staff]] Job Titles Writer; Penciler; Inker; Letterer; Cover Artist Gender Date of Birth July 6, 1950 Place of Birth Walsall, Staffordshire, England First publication Unknown"@en . . . . . . . . "* Byrne Robotics"@en . . . . "John Byrne (born June 6, 1950) is a comic book creator who drew a cover for the Marvel Star Wars series. Byrne's earliest professional work was in 1975 for Charlton Comics, but he soon found regular work at Marvel Comics and in 1977 began pencilling Uncanny X-Men which would become a runaway success for Marvel. His other notable works include writing and illustrating the Fantastic Four and revamping DC Comics' flagship title Superman during the 1980s. In the 1990s Byrne went to Dark Horse Comics to produce his creator-owned title Next Men."@en . . . "West Bromwich, West Midlands, United Kingdom"@en . . . "John Lindley Byrne"@en . . . . . . . "Walsall"@en . . . . . . . . "Serieskapare"@sv . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . "John Byrne; John Byrne.jpg"@en . . . . . "John Byrne is a Canadian artist well-known for his work on X-Men, Fantastic Four, and Superman."@en . . . . . . . . . . . . "John Byrne is a comic book artist and writer notable for his work on Marvel Comics' Fantastic Four and X-Men, and DC Comics' Superman. In 1983, Byrne worked on the first issue of The Further Adventures of Indiana Jones as writer and artist. He provided pencils for the second but frustrations with the editorial process saw him leave the book. Byrne's pin-up art for an unpublished story, \"The Sentinel\", was included in The Complete Making of Indiana Jones."@en . . . . . . . . . . . "Byrne's first contribution to Star Trek comics was in 1987 when he provided illustrations for the articles on Harry Mudd, Sarek, David Bailey, Hortas, Iotians and Khan Noonien Singh in DC Comics\u2019 Star Trek reference work, Who's Who in Star Trek. Byrne had long been a fan of Star Trek, however during his career Byrne had a number of bad experiences with likeness approval on various TV and move tie-in comic franchises and became wary on working such comics. However in 2007 IDW Publishing editor Chris Ryall managed to convince Byrne to work on his first full Star trek comic, \"Alien Spotlight: Romulans\", which with its focus on Aliens rather than any of the primary cast of the Star Trek series freed Byrne from the concerns of likeness approval. That first foray \"removed the cork from the bottle, and allowed the genii to escape\" and Byrne has gone on to produce numerous Star Trek comics for IDW.[1] Byrne has so far produced five series for IDW; Assignment: Earth, focusing on Gary Seven; Romulans: The Hollow Crown and Romulans: Schism, sequels to his Romulan Alien Spotlight story (which collectively have been published in the omnibus Romulans: Pawns of War; Crew, a TOS prequel focusing on Number One; and Leonard McCoy, Frontier Doctor, a series featuring Doctor McCoy set prior to Star Trek: The Motion Picture. Byrne currently has three further Star Trek series green-lit by IDW. One of these will conclude at about the time Robert April takes command of the USS Enterprise, and the final of the three will be a second Assignment: Earth series.[2][3] Another idea Byrne had but has yet to develop, having pushed it back behind his other Star Trek series, is a miniseries exploring the adventures of Balok and David Bailey.[4] One idea Byrne will not be able to realize was a crossover between Assignment: Earth and the series Doctor Who; unfortunately the BBC, who own the Doctor Who franchise, were not willing to go ahead with this.[5] Elsewhere in IDW's output, the artist J.K. Woodward created an homage to John Byrne's cover for the Uncanny X-Men comic \"Days of Future Past\" for his own cover for \"Do Not Close Your Eyes\", the first issue of the The Last Generation miniseries."@en . . "John Byrne"@en . "--07-05"^^ . . "-1970.0"^^ . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . "John Byrne is a writer and artist, whose most notable works include several titles for DC Comics and Marvel. For DC, Byrne is perhaps most well known for establishing Superman's mythos following Crisis on Infinite Earths. He also served a run on Wonder Woman from 1995 to 1998, beginning with Wonder Woman v2 101 and ending with Wonder Woman v2 136. During this time, he created the characters of Cassandra Sandsmark and her mother Helena Sandsmark. In 1997, he also wrote the novel, Wonder Woman: Gods and Goddesses."@en . . . . . . . . . . . . "July"@en . . . . "--07-08"^^ . . "John Byrne is a Canadian artist well-known for his work on X-Men, Fantastic Four, and Superman."@en . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . "John Lindley Byrne was a writer and artist whose work included several Angel comics for IDW Publishing."@en . . "1950-07-06"^^ . . . . . "John Byrne"@sv . . "1950-06-06"^^ . . . . . . "John Lindley Byrne (born July 6, 1950) is a British-born Canadian-American author and artist of comic books. Since the mid-1970s, Byrne has worked on nearly every major American superhero. Byrne's best-known work has been on Marvel Comics\u2019 X-Men and Fantastic Four and the 1986 relaunch of DC Comics\u2019 Superman franchise. Coming into the comics profession exclusively as a penciler, Byrne began co-plotting the X-Men comics during his tenure on them, and launched his writing career in earnest with Fantastic Four (where he also started inking his own pencils). During the 1990s he produced a number of creator-owned works, including Next Men and Danger Unlimited (which introduced Dr. Robert Carson and The Torch of Liberty). He also produced a number of Star Trek comics for IDW Publishing."@en . . . . . . . . . . . "Writer"@en . . "USA"@sv . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . "John Byrne"@sv . . . . . . . "1950-07-06"^^ . .