Leslie Cabarga | |
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Born | 1954 (age 62–63) New York City, U.S. |
Occupation | Author, Illustrator, Cartoonist, Animator, Font designer, Publication designer |
Notable credit(s) |
The Fleischer Story; in the Golden Age of Animation The Logo, Font & Lettering Bible |
Website | http://lesliecabarga.com |
Zavier Leslie Cabarga (b. 1954 in New York), popularly known as Leslie Cabarga, is an American author, illustrator, cartoonist, animator, font designer, and publication designer. A participant in the underground comix movement in the early 1970s, he has since gone on to write and/or edit over 40 books. His art style evokes images from the 1920s and 1930s, and over the years Cabarga has created many products associated with Betty Boop. His book The Fleischer Story in the Golden Age of Animation, originally published in 1976, has become the authoritative history of the Fleischer Studios.
At age 14, Cabarga began selling cartoons to underground newspapers such as the East Village Other, Rat Subterranean News, Screw, and Gothic Blimp Works. He left high school at 15 to pursue a cartooning career, at first self-publishing minicomics, and then, after relocating to San Francisco, publishing comics in San Francisco Comic Book, Yellow Dog, Comix Book, and many other comix of that era. His most prolific period in the milieu of underground comix was from 1971–1976. His cartoons were also published in the National Lampoon issues #60, 62, 66, all released in 1975.
By the mid-1970s, Carbaga was working in publication design, serving as an assistant art director at such publications as Rolling Stone, Outside, and Rock Magazine. He published his first book, a history of the Fleischer Studios called The Fleischer Story in the Golden Age of Animation, in 1976.