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Comic-Con founder, OB resident dies

Sheldon Dorf, on the set of "Dick Tracy" with Warren Beatty. (Courtesy photo)

Sheldon Dorf, on the set of "Dick Tracy" with Warren Beatty. (Courtesy photo)

Sheldon “Shel” Dorf, the man who founded the now- world famous San Diego Comic-Con International, died Tuesday. He was 76.

Dorf, a resident of Ocean Beach, succumbed to diabetes-related complications at Sharp Memorial Hospital, according to The San Diego Union- Tribune.

Dorf moved to San Diego from his native Detroit in 1970, the same year he founded Comic-Con. He spent the next 15 years as a leader of the annual convention, which promotes comics and related popular art forms, including sci-fi movies and animated TV shows.

“The guy just lived and breathed comics his whole life,” Mark Evanier, a TV and comic book writer told the Union-Tribune. “The Con was built on his passion and his cheerleading.”

See related: Pow! San Diego fights other cities to keep Comic-Con

Dorf attended the Art Institute of Chicago and worked as a freelance art designer in New York before coming to San Diego. The first Comic-Con was called the Golden State Comic-Con and was held at the U.S. Grant Hotel. Today, the event draws 125,000 attendees annually to the San Diego Convention Center.

In a 2006 interview, Dorf told the Union-Tribune he had no idea Comic-Con would ever grow into what it is today, the largest convention held in San Diego.

Dorf is survived by his brother. Funeral services are scheduled for 1 p.m. at the Home of Peace cemetery, 3668 Imperial Ave.

This story was been written and edited by City News Service staff.

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