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Template:Short description Template:Use American English Template:Use mdy dates Template:Infobox writer

Felipe Smith (born 1978) is an American comic book writer and artist of Jamaican and Argentine descent.[1][2] He is the creator, co-designer, and writer of Robbie Reyes Ghost Rider,[3] and the author of Peepo Choo, a manga series debuting in 2009 in Kodansha's Morning 2 monthly magazine. It is the first manga created and serialized in Japan by a Western creator before being licensed for an English-language release.[4][5]

Early life

When Smith was five years old, he moved with his family to Buenos Aires, Argentina, where he studied at an international school.[1][2] Smith's artistic ambitions were sparked at an early age; as he grew up, he became known for his talent in art, and the attention surrounding his work motivated him to keep it up. As Smith completed high school in Buenos Aires, he decided to have art be the focus of his professional life, and he returned to the U.S. for college. After graduating from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago (SAIC), Smith moved to Los Angeles to pursue a career in animation.[6][7]

Career

Smith began his career in comics in 2005 and was living in Los Angeles when he wrote and drew his first three-volume graphic novel series, the semi-autobiographical MBQ.[4][8] As the buzz about his series reached Japan, he was contacted by a prominent book agent who was interested in representing him in that country. Together they organized a meeting at San Diego Comic-Con in 2007 with an editor in chief from Kodansha, the largest Japanese publishing company at the time.[1][6][9] Template:Multiple image As a result, in 2008 Smith moved to Tokyo to publish his second three-volume graphic novel series, Peepo Choo, one of the first manga titles created by a non-Japanese native and initially serialized by Kodansha for a Japanese audience before it was later released in English by Vertical Inc.[4][10] Smith worked four years in the Japanese market; when he returned to L.A. in 2012, he joined Nickelodeon's Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles animated TV series, first in the storyboard department and then as a full-time character designer.[9][11] Template:Multiple image In 2014 Marvel Comics announced Smith as the writer of monthly All-New Ghost Rider and creator of its protagonist, Robbie Reyes.[12] From the start, Smith was given complete freedom to create the character's personality and background and the setting in which events in the series take place;[13] he also sketched the preliminary visual designs.[14] Smith's co-creation for Marvel crossed over from publishing to television in 2016, when Robbie Reyes made his first appearance in Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D..[9][15]

References

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Bibliography

External links

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