Last year's Asterix comic book, The Chieftain's Daughter, was the best-selling comic book in the world. And while Asterix fans settled down for the good long wait until the next, it appears they won't ...
A painter works during the preparation of an exhibition on Comics and Immigration at the Museum of the History of Immigration in Paris, Monday Oct. 14, 2013. The exhibition takes place from Oct. 16 to ...
Translated from the French, and in the context of the former director of the show from 2003 to 2013 leaving, Trondheim cites "the opacity of the accounts, the story of the rape of this dismissed ...
Albert Uderzo, the celebrated French illustrator and writer who created the beloved “Asterix” franchise with René Goscinny more than 60 years ago, has died. He was 92. Uderzo’s family told the French ...
Asterix and Obelix are well known names, but sometimes the main characters of the best-selling comic series were creatively renamed in translation. Who are Yali, Witblix and co? Find out here. When ...
PARIS — Albert Uderzo, one of the two creators of the beloved comic book character Asterix, who captured the spirit of the French of the 1960s and grew a reputation worldwide, died Tuesday in a suburb ...
Albert Uderzo, the co-creator of the Asterix comics series, has died. He was 92-years-old. The artist’s family announced that the French artist died at home from a heart attack. “He died in his sleep ...
New adventures take comic figures Asterix and Obelix to cold Sarmatia. In an interview, author Jean-Yves Ferri reveals why everything is different this time around. Freezing cold, a fearsome ...
While a virus outbreak with origins in the Chinese city of Wuhan marches out into the world in the new decade of 2020, a character in a 2017 Asterix comic series was actually called Coronavirus!
NEW YORKNEW YORK — Americans have long adored things from France, like its bread, cheese and wine. But they’ve been stubbornly resistant to one of France’s biggest imports: “Asterix.” The bite-sized, ...
Superman and Asterix have more in common than meets the eye, according to a new exhibit at Paris' Immigration History Museum. Comic sketches and magazines from 1913 to the present show how comic books ...