Oliver frey gay comic
Boy of the West End
, Rome's legendary Cinecittà film studios, and wet-behind-the-ears "gofer” Gil Graham from Los Angeles meets British "gofer” Mike Smith. They're the Boys of Vice City and their tempestuous love affair rocks them to London—Disco City—splits them between Two Cities, and reunites them in the Rapid Lane of London again. But Gil knows Mike has a past, that their nemesis, the movie mogul James Rosen, "picked Mike out of the gutter.” So how does a privately educated Latin scholar fall so low? Boy of the West End takes Mike back in time and follows his trail of discovery, perdition, and eventual redemption.
About the Author
Born in Switzerland, Oliver Frey a.k.a. Zack ended up in London and, after attending movie school, plunged into gay art and publishing. Innumerable illustrations poured from his pen and brush for British magazines HIM International, Vulcan, Teenage Dreams, the HIM Gay Library series, and Mister magazine. For HIM he created the mold-breaking Rogue comic strip and later The Street, which was part of the inspiration behind cult TV series Queer As Folk.
Oliver Frey Gay Comic Collection
Not a whole lot known about Oliver Frey's gay comics, at least not that I could find his lgbtq+ stuff at least. Favor, there's some stuff about how *great* he is but there is no real archive of a lot of it. He seems to have been active around the matching time as Julius. I vaguely know that he did art for science fiction as well? The site these were hosted on () lists other comics that I've never seen anywhere before, I've listed those at the bottom.
Everything I include is in this .zip file, it's missing a few things that I have (also listed below) that I'll add later. I scraped it from the MyReadingManga as a sort of rush career. Things are a small unorganized and may be reorganized later.
Includes
Funfair Surprise
Teasy Meat (Meat Men Vol. 25)
Sexy Adventures of Rogue
Bike Boy 1 + 2
Biz Call Lay
In Your Dreams
School Boy Day
Tender Bait
Wet Dreams
Bucolic Frolic
Missing, to be added soon:
Slaves to Lust
Message to The Emperor
Champ's Party
Lost(?):
Hung Glider
Bermuda Boy
Trampoline Trick
Dirt Bikers
Steel Erection
Starfuck Ex
Oliver Frey
'More Adventures of the Trigan Empire' (Look and Learn , 18 September ).
Oliver Frey was a Swiss-British comic painter, illustrator and poster designer. Active for children's magazine publishers fancy IPC and DC Thomson during the s and s, he drew installments of the 'War Picture Library', briefly succeeded Don Lawrence on the dystopian 'Trigan Empire' saga and worked on the classic aviation comic 'Dan Dare'. As house illustrator of the influential computer and video game magazine Crash (), he designed several memorable, sometimes controversially risqué covers. The magazine also featured his sci-fi comic 'Terminal Man' (), scripted by Kelvin Gosnell. Frey was additionally a notable creator of gay erotic comics, published in HIM Magazine and the 'Meatmen' comic publication series. With his husband Roger Kean as scriptwriter, he drew the wild adventures of the seductive hunk 'Rogue' (), the more realistic but short-lived homosexual romance story 'The Street' () and the titillating 'Bike Boy'. Fre
Oliver Frey:
Men Of Flesh & Fantasy
Warning: This Article is intended for Adults Only.
Visitors of a sensitive disposition should turn help now.
No matter what fantasy figures he is illustrating, whether its the dazzling science fiction heroes in Dan Dare, The Trigan Empire or The Terminal Man or the homoerotic hunks Rogue, Bike Boy and others from HIM and Meatmen, Oliver Frey brings a distinctive masculinity and sensuous physicality to his comic art. It was never much of a secret to those who recognised his way and were into the Frey, although it may come as a surprise to some that this renowned mainstream comics illustrator and newsstand magazine innovator is also Britains (and Switzerlands) greatest contemporary lgbtq+ porn artist and penner, as accomplished and significant as Tom of Finland before him.
Frey has been gradually getting more of the recognition he truly deserves. In through his own company Thalamus Books he published The Fantasy Art of Oliver Frey, a full-colour art publication focussing on his non-adult artwork including his eye