Raina Telgemeier

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Raina Telgemeier is a well-known American cartoonist. Her autobiographical webcomic ‘Smile,’ as well as its sequel ‘Sisters,’ among her most well-known works. She is also known for her graphic novel ‘Drama,’ which she wrote. ‘The Baby-sitters Club’ graphic novel adaptations, ‘Take-Out,’ and ‘X-Men: Misfits’ are among her other well-known works. For her art, Telgemeier has earned numerous prizes, distinctions, and nominations. The Friends of Lulu’s Kimberly Yale Award for ‘Best New Talent’ was given to her in 2003. She won the Eisner Award for Best Writer/Artist in 2015. The talented cartoonist has been nominated for the Web Cartoonists’ Choice Awards on two occasions. Not only that! She has also been nominated for an Ignatz Award. Telgemeier’s books have also received numerous awards. Her graphic novel ‘Smile,’ based on her webcomic of the same name, earned the Boston Globe-Horn Book Award in 2010 and was named a Kirkus Reviews Best Book of the Year in 2010. It was also named a 2011 ALA Notable Children’s Book and won the Eisner Award for Best Publication for Teens in 2011. The title of her fiction novel ‘Drama’ was chosen for the 2013 Stonewall Book Award. ‘Sisters,’ her second autobiographical novel, was named a New York Times Editor’s Choice for 2014.

Childhood and Adolescence

Jones was born in Watford, Hertfordshire, England on January 5, 1965 to Peter Jones and Glenda Harris. His father worked as a keeper of game.He attended Dollis Junior School in Mill Hill in the north of England, where he got close to his Headteacher, Sir Derek Heasman, who was awarded the OBE.

Even after reaching renown, Jones would return to the institution to meet Heasman. He attended Chan cellor’s School in Brookmans Park after his family relocated to Hertfordshire. He began playing football as a young lad, and from 1975 to 1977, he was a member of Bedmond Football Club.

Career in Football

In 1984, he joined Wealdstone F.C, an English association football team that competes in the ‘Alliance Premier League.’ Simultaneously, he worked as a hod carrier on construction sites. He played for IFK Holmsund, a Swedish club, for a season in 1986, and helped the squad win Division 3.

Wimbledon F.C. paid Wealdstone £10,000 to take him on as a full-time professional player in 1986. He was a member of the club until 1989. When he was videotaped clutching the testicles of player Paul Gascoigne during a 0-0 draw between Wimbledon and Newcastle United at Plough Lane in October 1987, he garnered media attention.

He moved to Leeds United F.C. in 1989, when he was promoted from the Second Division to the old Division One. During the 1990-91 season, he departed the club, but returned in 2006 for the testimonial of South African footballer Lucas Radebe.

Jones was signed to Sheffield United F.C. by Dave Bassett, who was the club’s manager at the time. In 1991, he was sold to Chelsea F.C. after a year with the club. His combative on-field demeanor earned him the moniker “hard guy” over time. He was sent off twelve times during his soccer career. He holds the record for being yellow-carded (booked) after only three seconds of play.

This happened in an FA Cup fixture between Chelsea and Sheffield United in 1992, when he fouled Dane Whitehouse. In 1992, he was incorporated back into Wimbledon after a spell at Chelsea. He became embroiled in a dispute over the video ‘Soccer’s Hard Men,’ which was published on October 19, 1992.

He was the host of a film that featured various soccer tough guys. It was heavily chastised, with charges that it glorified dirty play and included tips and methods for aspiring “hard men” of the game on how to frighten their opponents.

While Wimbledon chairman Sam Hammam referred to Jones as “a mosquito brain,” he was fined a record £20,000 and given a six-month suspension (suspended for three years) by the Football Association for “bringing the game into disgrace.” During his time at Wimbledon, he helped the team equal its best ever league finish in 1993-94 and scored the winning goal in a 1-0 victory over Arsenal F.C. at Highbury in the 1996-97 season.

Meanwhile, he made his Wales debut under Mike Smith on December 14, 1994, in a Euro 96 qualifying match against Bulgaria, which Bulgaria won 3-0. Through his maternal grandfather, who was born in Ruthin, he qualified for the Wales squad in December of that year.

From 1994 to 1997, he played in nine matches for Wales, the last of which was a World Cup qualifying match against Belgium on March 29, 1997, which Belgium won 2-1. In early 1998, he left Wimbledon to join Queens Park Rangers as a player/coach, appearing in nine games for the team until 1999. Jones announced in a news release in June 2010 that he was donating his 1988 FA Cup winning medal to A.F.C. Wimbledon supporters.

Acting and Other Interests

Jones began his acting career in the British crime comedy film ‘Lock, Stock and Two Smoking Barrels,’ which was released on August 28, 1998. He played Big Chris, a mafia enforcer, in the film, which was critically and commercially successful, earning him worldwide prominence and opening the door for subsequent wicked and fiery parts.
In 1998, he wrote his autobiography, ‘Vinnie: The Autobiography,’ which he reissued in 1999 with new facts. In 1998, GQ Magazine named him “Man of the Year.”
Jones made his TV debut in 2005, playing himself in the British sitcom ‘Extras’, while also appearing in numerous other films such as ‘Snatch’ (2000), Swordfish (2001), and EuroTrip (2004). Over the years, he has appeared in a number of other TV shows, including ‘The Cape’ (2011), ‘Mind Games’ (2014), and ‘Galavant’ (2015-16).

He was a contestant on Celebrity Big Brother 7, a British reality television show, where he came in third place. In the 2017-18 season of the American TV crime procedural program ‘Deception,’ he will play Gunter Gastafsen.

Cain Marko/Juggernaut, a fictitious super villain from the superhero film ‘X-Men: The Last Stand,’ based on Marvel Comics’ introduced X-Men superhero team, was one of his most noteworthy cinematic performances. ‘X-Men: The Last Stand,’ starring Hugh Jackman and Halle Berry, was released in May 2006 and became the seventh highest grossing film of the year. It is the fourth highest grossing picture in the series to date.

In the American-British family comedy film ‘Garfield: A Tail of Two Kitties’ (2006), he voiced Rommel, and in the American 3D computer-animated comedy film ‘Madagascar 3: Europe’s Most Wanted,’ he voiced Freddie The Dog (2012).

Jones played the vicious and violent character of Drake in the action-thriller film ‘Escape Plan,’ which was released in October 2013 and starred Sylvester Stallone and Arnold Schwarzenegger. ‘She’s the Man’ (2006), ‘Fractured’ (2013), ‘Redirected’ (2014), and ‘The Midnight Man’ (2016) are only a handful of Jones’ other projects.
‘Madness in the Method’ and ‘Kingsman: The Golden Circle’ are two of his future flicks.

Personal History and Legacy

He married Tanya Terry in Watford on June 25, 1994. His son is a Life Guard in the British Army.
He openly declares his support for the Conservative Party.

His “hard guy” reputation followed him off the field as well, landing him in legal trouble on several occasions, including being convicted of criminal damage and assault occasioning actual bodily harm in June 1998 following an altercation involving a neighbor in November 1997. In November 2013, it was revealed that he and his wife were both undergoing skin cancer therapy. Between 2014 and 2015, they were healed of their disease.

Estimated Net Worth

Let us now discuss Raina Telgemeier’s net worth. Her fortune is enormous. After looking up Raina Telgemeier’s net worth on the internet, we discovered that she has a net worth of $5 million dollars.