Renzo Barbieri was an author and editor of Italian comics as well as the founder of the publishing houseEdifumetto. In 1980 he wrote Il Manuale del Playboy, a textbook about where European playboys live, what cars they drive, and other lifestyle tips.
Biography
The Beginning
Barbieri was born in Milan, Italy. In the early 1960s he started collaborating with comics publishers like Editoriale Dardo and Edizioni Alpe. He was also a journalist for the tabloid La Notte. In the mid-1960s, after reading a rather violent White Cartoon French book, he decided to open a publishing house in Milan and developed the idea of "pocket comics", also known as a digest. This was a time when the adult black comics genre, a series of paperback featuring graphic violence and scantily-clad women, was at its peak. In 1966 he created Editore 66, inspired by film and literary subjects of the time and developed the plots of his first two comics books, Isabella and Grendizer. Initially slightly erotic in terms of contents, the books became progressively more pornographic towards the end of the 1970s, reflecting the sexual revolution and the increasing permissiveness in the press and in film taking place in Italy at the time. Images like a bare breast which in the mid-1960s would have been scandalous suddenly looked almost chaste and innocent.
Erregi
In 1967 Barbieri partnered with Giorgio Cavedon, and together they founded the publishing house ErreGi. They went on to create other sexy-heroines like Jacula, Lucrezia, Messalina, Hessa, De Sade, Lucifera, Jolanda, Vartan, Walalla, Yra, Jungle and Bonnie. In 1972, as a result of creative differences and the need to reinvest the capital to cope with the rising competition in erotic comics, Barbieri and Cavedon separated and formed their own companies. Cavedon retained all the popular existing titles and renamed ErreGi Ediperiodici. Barbieri founded Edifumetto.
Edifumetto
Under the new banner of Edifumetto, Barbieri created some of the most notable titles of the horror and soft porn comics genre, including Zora la Vampira, Rolando del Fico, Cimiteria,Vampiro, Scheletro, SukiaBelzeba, Playcolt, Mafia, Poppea, Necron, and dozens of other characters. Their success was due in large part to the covers painted by classically trained artists such as Alessandro Biffignandi, Emanuele Taglietti, Roberto Molino, Pino Dangelico, Enzo Sciotti, and Carlo Jacono. Within a few years Edifumetto was publishing a new edition almost every day. To diversify the brand, Barbieri created other publishing ventures, including Edizioni GEIS, SEGI, Il Vascello, Centroedizioni, Squalo Comics, Renzo Barbieri Editore, and produced time-sensitive comics like Il Paninaro, Skate Map and Il Leghista. Barbieri's last company, Edifumetto 3000, folded in the early 2000s.