Advertisement

Nicholas Dimitrievitch “Meetrich” Afonsky

Advertisement

Nicholas Dimitrievitch “Meetrich” Afonsky

Birth
Kaunas City Municipality, Kaunas, Lithuania
Death
16 Jun 1943 (aged 51)
New York, USA
Burial
Maspeth, Queens County, New York, USA Add to Map
Memorial ID
View Source
(Russian: Николай Дмитриевич «Митрич» Афонский)
Nicholas was born in Kovno, Russia.

Nicholas Afonsky was a Russian artist, who worked for American newspaper comics from 1925. Born in Kovno in 1892, he studied art under Selesneff and Pimonenko. He was wounded five times during World War I, and became a criminal lawyer after passing the graduation examination at the University of Moscow while still a soldier. An artist from the court of Czar Nicholas II, he went to Constantinople after the Russian Revolution of 1917. There, he worked for Greek, Turkish, Armenian and French newspapers and magazines, before boarding a ship to the USA in July 1923.

Afonsky did his first comics work for the Wheelan-Nicholson Inc. syndicate under the pen name Meetrich. These include works like 'The Adventures of Vivian Vanity' (1925-1926) and the 'Great Mystery and Adventure Series' (1925-1926), both with N. Brewster Morse as writer. He subsequently drew Edgar Wheelan's 'Minute Movies' strip from 1929 to 1934, until he was employed by William Randolph Hearst to work in the King Features Syndicate bullpen (according to Wheelan, Hearst did this to spite him, since he left King a few years earlier).

In 1934, he started out drawing the 'Little Annie Rooney' Sunday page, that was created by Ed Verdier and Brandon Walsh in 1927. He worked on the feature until 1943, and added the toppers 'Fablettes' and, most notably, 'Ming Foo'. The oriental character Ming Foo was introduced in the strip in 1934, and he got his own companion feature in 1935. Walsh's adventurous storytelling and Afonsky's engaging artwork resulted in a strip that ran for almost a decade. Other features Afonsky worked on for King Features were 'Heroes of American History' (1936) and Alex Raymond's 'Secret Agent X-9' (1938). He passed away in 1943, and was succeeded on 'Little Annie Rooney' by Darrell McClure.

Afonsky was survived by his daughter Anastasia.





(Russian: Николай Дмитриевич «Митрич» Афонский)
Nicholas was born in Kovno, Russia.

Nicholas Afonsky was a Russian artist, who worked for American newspaper comics from 1925. Born in Kovno in 1892, he studied art under Selesneff and Pimonenko. He was wounded five times during World War I, and became a criminal lawyer after passing the graduation examination at the University of Moscow while still a soldier. An artist from the court of Czar Nicholas II, he went to Constantinople after the Russian Revolution of 1917. There, he worked for Greek, Turkish, Armenian and French newspapers and magazines, before boarding a ship to the USA in July 1923.

Afonsky did his first comics work for the Wheelan-Nicholson Inc. syndicate under the pen name Meetrich. These include works like 'The Adventures of Vivian Vanity' (1925-1926) and the 'Great Mystery and Adventure Series' (1925-1926), both with N. Brewster Morse as writer. He subsequently drew Edgar Wheelan's 'Minute Movies' strip from 1929 to 1934, until he was employed by William Randolph Hearst to work in the King Features Syndicate bullpen (according to Wheelan, Hearst did this to spite him, since he left King a few years earlier).

In 1934, he started out drawing the 'Little Annie Rooney' Sunday page, that was created by Ed Verdier and Brandon Walsh in 1927. He worked on the feature until 1943, and added the toppers 'Fablettes' and, most notably, 'Ming Foo'. The oriental character Ming Foo was introduced in the strip in 1934, and he got his own companion feature in 1935. Walsh's adventurous storytelling and Afonsky's engaging artwork resulted in a strip that ran for almost a decade. Other features Afonsky worked on for King Features were 'Heroes of American History' (1936) and Alex Raymond's 'Secret Agent X-9' (1938). He passed away in 1943, and was succeeded on 'Little Annie Rooney' by Darrell McClure.

Afonsky was survived by his daughter Anastasia.






Sponsored by Ancestry

Advertisement

  • Created by: R.C.
  • Added: Apr 17, 2019
  • Find a Grave Memorial ID:
  • Find a Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/198411332/nicholas_dimitrievitch-afonsky: accessed ), memorial page for Nicholas Dimitrievitch “Meetrich” Afonsky (17 Feb 1892–16 Jun 1943), Find a Grave Memorial ID 198411332, citing Mount Olivet Cemetery, Maspeth, Queens County, New York, USA; Burial Details Unknown; Maintained by R.C. (contributor 47303570).