Nick Brennan

Biography

Nick Brennan is a British cartoonist who works mainly for D. C. Thomson & Co. Ltd. He started drawing for the company in 1993 in collaboration with his wife, Fran Brennan, who is the colourist for Nick's artwork. Initially Nick drew a revival of Peter Piper from The Dandy, revived from The Magic Comic, but with a departure from Watkins' creation, with Peter instead sporting an Elvis-like hairdo and purple jumper. January 1994 saw his next work Blinky, a revamp of the nephew of Colonel Blink from The Beezer who had first appeared in the merged Beezer and Topper in 1990. In 1997, Nick drew a comic strip for a vote for The Beano which was called "Crazy for Daisy", and, along with Tim Traveller by Vic Neill, won the vote, followed by another strip, Pinky's Crackpot Circus, in 2004, and in 2006, a revival of "Brassneck" and "Noah's Ark". These last three are all from The Dandy. He also drew Sneaker for The Dandy plus a number of other less well-known characters such as Frawg. In the 2000s, Nick occasionally ghosted Nicky Nutjob, and contributed to the Fun Size Dandy/Fun Size Beano comics. In addition, he was the artist for Billy Whizz in the Beano from autumn 2009 until 2012. Nick Brennan appeared a few times in The Dandy after its October 2010 revamp drawing Watch this Space and Professor Cheese's Olympic Wheezes. Reprints of Blinky, Pinky's Crackpot Circus, Brassneck and Sneaker were also used during 2012. In the final print edition of The Dandy, Nick drew Blinky, Peter Piper and Pinky's Crackpot Circus. A reprint of one of Nick's Hyde and Shriek strips was also used. In the relaunched Digital Dandy, Nick produced Blinky and Sneaker with both stories being animated by his wife, Fran. Nick's work appears in the Dandy Annual each year, with his newer characters, 'The Wrestlers', featuring in more recent editions. Since late 2025 Nick has drawn Calamity James 'the unluckiest boy in the world' for the Beano, with the first of these weekly strips appearing in mid January

Bio from Wikipedia

Discography

Records they worked on — most-collected first.

Credited work

72 releases · 31 albums · active 2001–2022

  • Performance · 65
  • Production · 58
  • Engineering · 16
  • Other credits · 9
  • Mastering · 8

Studios: Foxglove Studios, London · The Treehouse (5) · B.M. Digital · Beta Lab

Frequent collaborators

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