Jackie Estrada Explained

Birth Date:10 September 1946
Nationality:American
Letter:y
Edit:y
Publish:y
Notable Works:Exhibit A Press
Awards:Harvey Award
Inkpot Award (1977)[1]
Subcat:American

Jackie Estrada (born September 10, 1946)[2] is an American comic-book convention organizer, book editor, co-publisher of Exhibit A Press, administrator of the Will Eisner Comic Industry Awards, and past president of Friends of Lulu.

A San Diego resident since the 1950s, Estrada got involved in helping to put on San Diego Comic-Con in the mid-1970s. In addition to having edited nine of the Con's program books over the years, she helped start the Robert A. Heinlein annual blood drive, created the position of pro liaison, and created (and was the first coordinator of) artists’ alley at the Comic-Con. She has been administrator of the Eisner Awards (the "Oscars" of the comics industry) since 1990, and she chairs the Con's guest committee and awards committee.

As a professional editor, Estrada has edited hundreds of books, the majority of them college texts. Most recently she edited Comics: Between the Panels, a lavish four-color coffee table book from Dark Horse Comics. The book features more than one hundred of her photos, taken of various comics professionals over the past twenty-plus years. Estrada was one of the founders of the San Diego Professional Editors’ Network (SD/PEN), and has taught editing at the University of California, San Diego.

With husband Batton Lash, Estrada co-founded Exhibit A Press in 1994 to publish Lash's comic book, Wolff & Byrd, Counselors of the Macabre (now called Supernatural Law). Estrada edits all of the company's comics and books, does the lettering for the comic book, and handles the public relations.

In 2011, Estrada complained that she and her husband Batton Lash were the targets of abuse and threats after cartoons by her husband appearing on BigGovernment were criticized for being racist attacks against President Obama and first lady Michelle Obama.[3]

In early 2014 Estrada ran a successful Kickstarter campaign to publish Comic Book People: Photographs from the 1970s and 1980s, a hardcover book published by Exhibit A Press featuring her photos from that period.[4] The book was released in September 2014. In 2015, she ran a second successful Kickstarter campaign to finance another book of photographs from the 1990s.[5]

In 2018, the Harvey Awards honored her with their first annual Comics Industry Pioneer Award.[6] [7]

External links

Notes and References

  1. https://www.comic-con.org/awards/inkpot Inkpot Award
  2. Web site: Miller . John Jackson . Comics Industry Birthdays . . June 10, 2005 . December 12, 2010 . https://web.archive.org/web/20110218031356/http://cbgxtra.com/knowledge-base/for-your-reference/comics-industry-birthdays . February 18, 2011 . dead .
  3. Web site: Cavna . Michael . Comic Riffs – 'OBAMA NATION' artist decries MSNBC rant about 'racist obscenity' cartoon . Voices.washingtonpost.com . 2011-02-18 . 2022-06-30.
  4. Web site: Comic Book People: Photographs from the 1970s and 1980s.
  5. Web site: Comic Book People 2: Photographs from the 1990s.
  6. Web site: GIBBONS, SAKUISHI, CHAST, ESTRADA Win Special HARVEY AWARDS. Newsarama. en. 2020-01-26.
  7. Web site: MacDonald . Heidi . Heidi MacDonald . 2018 Harvey Award Winners Announced. Comics Beat. October 6, 2018.