Giorgio Cavazzano was born on 19 October 1947 in
Venice, Italy. At the age of twelve, Cavazzano started to work with his cousin, the cartoonist
Luciano Capitanio, helping him ink comics for the publishers
Mondadori and
Dardo, as well as a comic story published in the magazine
Voci d’Oltremare. Still a teenager, he started his apprenticeship with the renowned Italian cartoonist
Romano Scarpa, and at the age of 15, from issue #70 of
Topolino (December 1962) ‑ he was Scarpa's personal inker. Cavazzano made his debut as a cartoonist in 1967 with the story "Paperino e il singhiozzo a martello", while his first script was on "Zio Paperone e il cambio della guardia", in 1985. At the beginning of his career, his style was affected by
Romano Scarpa's style and the prevailing tradition of comic drawing of
Carl Barks. Later, Cavazzano developed his own distinctive style, which marks a watershed between the traditional and the modern way of drawing Disney ducks and mice. In his career, he has co-created numerous characters, including
Queen Reginella,
Humphrey Gokart,
O.K. Quack,
Pandy Pap (Italian name), and the most recent one,
Brick Boulder. With
Tiziano Sclavi, the creator of
Dylan Dog, Cavazzano drew the saga of
Altai & Jonson in 1975. He also partnered with
Bonvi, the creator of
Sturmtruppen, to produce "Maledetta galassia" and "La Città", published by Sergio Bonelli Editore. Cavazzano has contributed to the Italian tradition of "
Le Grandi Parodie Disney", a series of parodies of literary works, theatre, opera and cinema masterpieces. Cavazzano has drawn parodies of the films
Casablanca,
La Strada,
1900 and
The Man Without a Past. In 2017,
Topolino published Bruno Enna and Giorgio Cavazzano's homage to
Hugo Pratt's
Corto Maltese:
Topo Maltese: Una ballata del topo salato. In addition to comics, Cavazzano has produced a vast amount of illustrations and advertising material, among others for Eldorado,
Fiat and
Xerox. ==References==