Jorge Longarón
Jorge Longarón, born Jordi Longarón i Llopart on 1 February 1933 in Barcelona, Spain, was a versatile illustrator whose career spanned comic strips, magazine covers, and fine art. He began drawing professionally in the 1940s and 1950s, contributing to Spanish publications such as *Chispa*, *Garabatos*, and *Hazañas Bélicas*. His early comic work included strips like *Arsénico Lupin* and *Chan-Chu-Llo*.
Longarón is best known for co-creating the groundbreaking newspaper strip *Friday Foster* with writer Jim Lawrence. Launched on 18 January 1970 for the *Chicago Tribune* and New York News Syndicate, the strip followed a young female photographer and was syndicated until 1974, with Gray Morrow handling the final year's art. The strip was adapted into a 1975 film starring Pam Grier. Longarón also produced numerous cover illustrations for American magazines and painted landscapes of Catalonia and the American Southwest.
His clean, dynamic linework influenced later artists such as Cliff Chiang. Longarón died on 10 May 2019 in Barcelona.
Known for
Full bibliography · 24 series
Original biography and editorial content © comicbooks.com™. Information drawn in part from Wikipedia and the Grand Comics Database. Cover thumbnails shown under fair use, each linking to its issue.
![Commando: Call of Battle #[nn]](https://comicbooks-covers-449901518064-us-east-2.s3.us-east-2.amazonaws.com/covers/isbndb/9781862007567.jpg)