Saturday, April 16, 2022

Today in Comics History, April 16: Happy birthday, Kim DeMulder!

Born on this day, Kim DeMulder, comic book inker (Batman, Detective Comics, Doom Patrol, House of Mystery, Incredible Hulk, The Defenders, The New Mutants and much more) and illustrator!



from Marvel Age #52 and 88 (Marvel, July 1987 and April 1991); text by Mike Carlin (#53) and Chris Eliopoulis and Barry Dutter (#88); pencils and inks by Ron Zalme; colors by Paul Becton (#53) and Gregory Wright (#88)

Happy birthday, Kim!


from Sensational She-Hulk graphic novel (Marvel, 1985)

Today in Comics History, April 16, 1917: The Red Baron beefs up his resumé


from "Red Knight!" in Two-Fisted Tales #29 (EC, September 1952), script by Harvey Kurtzman, pencils and inks by John Severin, colors by Marie Severin, letters by Ben Oda

Today in Comics History, April 16: Kindly old couple mistakenly signs up for The Crime Boat


from "The Great Ocean-Liner Robbery!' in Gang Busters #39 (DC, April 1954), pencils by Curt Swan, inks by Ray Burnley (?)

Today in Comics History, April 16, 1910: Mr. Carter verbally ripostes that Mr. Benton might be ever so kind as to possibly oblige him to stuff it


from "The Train That Wasn't There!" in Journey into Mystery #27 (Marvel/Atlas, October 1955), pencils and inks by Bob Powell

Friday, April 15, 2022

Today in Comics History, April 15: Happy birthday, Jerry Grandenetti!

Born on this day in 1926: comic book artist, and advertising art exec Jerry Grandenetti! He was a member of the Eisner Studio; in the 1950s Grandenetti was penciling The Spirit as a ghost-artist, under Eisner's byline.

Before that, however, Eisner drew Grandenetti and letterer Abe Kanegson into the strip as the criminal trio Bellows, Dapperish, and Slippery Eall. The boys are back in town! I mean jail. (L-R in the panel: Grandenetti as Dapperish, Kanegson as Bellows, and Eisner as Slippery Eall.



from The Spirit (1980 series) #25 (Kitchen Sink, November 1986); reprinting "A River of Crime" (aka "Slippery Eall") from The Spirit (Register and Tribune Syndicate, November 30th, 1947); script, pencils, and inks by Will Eisner; additional inks by Jerry Grandenetti; letters by Abe Kanegson




Today in Comics History, April 15: Let's make fun of Nikita Khrushchev on his birthday!

This is a much-expanded and updated version of the post previously titled "Khrushchev asserts his hatred of dogs," originally published April 15, 2015.

Born on this day in 1894, so you just know he's out of touch: Nikita Sergeyevich Khrushchev, head of Communist Russia, shoe-banger, subject of a song by Elton John!


from "This Godless Communism" in Treasure Chest of Fact and Fun v.17 #16/322 (Pflaum, April 12, 1962), creators unknown




Today in Comics History, April 15, 1972: Vietnam War is not going well, thanks to the Army's controversial use of white lettering on black blackground


from "Yankee Station" in The 'Nam #77 (Marvel, February 1993), script by Don Lomax, pencils and inks by Wayne Vansant, colors and letters by Phil Felix

Meanwhile, back in the States...


from "Stateside: Reunion" in The 'Nam #77; script by Don Lomax, pencils by Mike Harris, inks by Frank Percy, colors by John Kalisz, letters by Mike Higgins

Today in Comics History, April 15, 1931: Opening of new Spaghetti Warehouse marred by gunplay


from "Bullet-Man of the Bowery" in Crime Must Pay the Penalty #2 (Ace, June 1948), pencils and inks by Sid Greene

Today in Comics History, Good Friday: Swamp Thing crossover narrowly averted



from "Dirty Job" in Our Army at War #241 (February 1972), script by Bob Haney, pencils and inks by Alex Toth, colors by Jack Adler, letters by John Costanza

Today in Comics History, April 15: The following blog post may be unsuitable for those of a nervous nature or little bulls


from "The Hands of Don José" in Adventures into Darkness #9 (Pines, April 1953), pencils by Alex Toth, inks by Mike Peppe




Today in Comics History, April 15: Happy birthday, Tom Sutton!

Born on this day in 1937: Tom Sutton, comics artist (and sometimes writer!) for DC (House of Mystery, Star Trek, Weird War Tales), Marvel (Warlock, Marvel Comics Presents, Doctor Strange, Planet of the Apes), Charlton (Ghost Manor, The Many Ghosts of Dr. Graves, Haunted), First (Starslayer, Grimjack), Skywald (Nightmare, Psycho), Warren (Creepy, Eerie), and he's a co-creator of Vampirella!


from FOOM #16 (Marvel, December 1976), text by Warren Reece

Here he is introducing a spooky story! oooh, it is scary! (I'll be behind the sofa if you need me.)


from "To Sneak...Perchance to Scream!" in Tower of Shadows #4 (Marvel, March 1970); plot, pencils, and inks by Tom Sutton, script by Denny O'Neil, letters by Jean Simek Izzo

And here is is telling us what happens "When Freuds go Amok!"



from Chamber of Darkness #4 (Marvel, April 1970); plot, pencils, and inks by Tom Sutton; script by Denny O'Neil; letters by Jean Simek Izzo

Happy birthday, Tom!


from FOOM #19 (Marvel, September 1977)

Today in Comics History, April 15, 1986: I dunno, some kind of timey-wimey stuff




from Back to the Future (2015 series) #14, 16, and 17 (IDW, November 2016, January 2017, and February 2017), script by John Barber, pencils and inks by Emma Vieceli, colors by Jose Luis Rio, letters by Shawn Lee

Today in Comics History, April 15, 1865: Man sitting in front of Lincoln's bed is so traumatized all the color drains from his face


from Picture Stories from American History #4 (EC, Summer 1947), script by Jerry Coleman, pencils and inks by Allen Simon

Today in Comics History, April 15, 1912: "Hello, I'm the Titanic! You may remember me from such blog features as last's month's 'Liberty Bell March.'"


from Time Bandits #1 one-shot (February 1982), script by Steve Parkhouse, pencils by David Lloyd, inks by John Stokes, colors by Don Warfield, letters by Irving Watanabe

(Here, to be specific. Where you can read more about the Time Bandits comic!)

Today in Comics History, April 15, 1912: Iceberg sticks around to taunt the Titanic


from "A Voyage into Forever!" in Strange Journey #3 (Farrell, February 1958), cover: artist uncredited, interior: pencils by H.C. Kiefer, inks by the Iger Shop

Today in Comics History, April 15, 1912: And no, they both wouldn't have fit on that door



from "The Tragedy of the Titanic" in Real Fact Comics #7 (DC, March 1947); script by Jack Schiff, Mort Weisinger, and/or Bernie Breslauer; pencils by Curt Swan (?)

Today in Comics History, April 15, 1912: Well, maybe they shouldn't have steered straight for the iceberg


from "Scoops...Pictures to Remember" in Real Fact Comics #3 (DC, July 1946); script by Jack Schiff, Mort Weisinge, and/or Bernie Breslauer; pencils and inks by George Roussos

Today in Comics History, April 15, 1973: The Day the Earth Stood Bored

This is an expanded and updated version of a post originally published April 15, 2015.

'Twas midnight on tax day, and suddenly this dude
Came up from the ground like a-bubblin' crude



from "The Monster!" in Adventures into Weird Worlds #12 (Marvel/Atlas, November 1952), pencils and inks by Ed Winiarski

(But where does it say it's in '73?
Well, it does in the reprint and that's good for me.)



from "It Came From Beneath the Earth!" (reprint) in Weird Wonder Tales #1 (Marvel, December 1973)

He tried to scare kids, but it wasn't no fun
'Coz in this world, Steve Rogers carried a gun



He faced off with a cop but escaped getting flack
Good thing he was green instead of being black.



He tried to scare women; she showed him no mercy
'Coz this real bad-ass dame hailed from down home in Joisey.



So the monster discovered his attacks were quite futile
Ha ha! It's a comment that mankind is brutal.



Thursday, April 14, 2022

Today in Comics History, April 14, 1912: You just know that guy has money invested in driftwood


from "The Tragedy of the Titanic" in Real Fact Comics #7 (DC, March 1947); script by Jack Schiff, Mort Weisinger, and/or Bernie Breslauer; pencils by Curt Swan (?)

Today in Comics History, April 14, 1912: The haunting siren song of Celine Dion leads men to their doom




from "A Voyage into Forever!" in Strange Journey #3 (Farrell, February 1958), cover: artist uncredited, interior: pencils by H.C. Kiefer, inks by the Iger Shop

Today in Comics History, April 14, 1865: Oh, you jerk Booth, look at his hands, he'd already surrendered


from Picture Stories from American History #4 (EC, Summer 1947), script by Jerry Coleman, pencils and inks by Allen Simon

Today in Comics History, April 14: Dazzler time-travels from the seventies, apparently


from Children of the Atom #2 (Marvel, June 2021), script by Vita Alaya, pencils and inks by Bernard Chang, colors by Marcelo Maiolo, letters by Travis Lanham

Today in Comics History, April 14: Happy birthday, Dave Gibbons!

Born today, so wish him a happy birthday as you cycle down the lane: Dave Gibbons, comics writer, artist, and letterer (2000 AD, Watchmen, the Martha Washington series, Doctor Who, Green Lantern, World's Finest, The Secret Service, "For the Man Who Has Everything," and much more!


from Power Comics #3 (Eclipse/Acme, July 1988)

Did I mention Watchmen? Let me mention Watchmen again.



from Comic Book Comics #5 (Evil Twin, March 2011); script by Fred Van Lente; pencils, inks, and letters by Ryan Dunlavey

Here's Dave as Tornado super-editor Big E! And League of Extraordinary Gentlemen artist Kevin O'Neill as "Billy!"! (No ID yet on Percy or Sam — let us know if you know!)


cover of Tornado #8 IPC, 12 May 1979)

Happy birthday, Big E! You too, Dave!

Today in Comics History, April 14: Happy birthday, Joe Rosas!

Born on this day: comics colorist Joe Rosas (X-Men, Uncanny X-Men, Wolverine, Hulk, Excalibur, Force Works, Fanatastic Four, etc.)!


from Marvel Age #100 (Marvel, April 1991); text by Chris Eliopoulis and Barry Dutter; pencils and inks by Ron Zalme, colors by Renee Witterstaetter; image mildly edited to correct typo

Happy birthday, Joe!

Today in Comics History, April 14: Jennifer is skeptical


from She-Hulk Annual (2019 series) #1 (Marvel, October 2019), script by Alexandra Petri, pencils and inks by Andy MacDonald, colors by Matt Milla, letters by Joe Caramagna