Herge - Anna Ralphs Extra Quality

Anna returned to England, married, and became a textile designer under her married name. She never spoke of Tintin again.

In the quiet, book-lined study of a Brussels townhouse, a young graphic designer named Anna Ralphs made a discovery that would reshape how the world saw one of its most beloved artists. The year was 1998, and she was cataloging a donation of vintage Le Petit Vingtième newspapers—the youth supplement where a certain boy reporter first appeared. herge anna ralphs

For reasons lost to time—perhaps a salary dispute, perhaps a clash of egos—Anna Ralphs left Hergé’s studio in late 1937. Her name was erased from all credits. Hergé never mentioned her publicly. When he fled Brussels during the Nazi occupation, many of her original inkings were left behind or destroyed. Anna returned to England, married, and became a

Georges Remi, known to the world as Hergé, was a meticulous but overwhelmed artist by the mid-1930s. Tintin in the Congo and Tintin in America had made him a celebrity in Belgium, but his deadlines were crushing. His studio, though small, needed help. History remembers his later assistants—Edgar P. Jacobs, Bob de Moor—but before them, there was a shadow figure: a young woman named Hermine “Anna” Ralphs. The year was 1998, and she was cataloging