Showing posts with label June 11. Show all posts
Showing posts with label June 11. Show all posts

Sunday, June 11, 2023

Today in Comics History, June 11: Happy birthday, Steve Moore!

Today in 1949 was born Steve Moore, the visionary British comics who taught Alan Moore how to write comics scripts, but it's his birthday and we won't hold that against him. The co-creator with Alan M. of Axel Pressbutton, S. Moore also wrote several series for 2000 AD including Dan Dare, Tharg's Future Shocks, Red Fang and his own creation, Tales of Telguuth. Sadly, despite dozens of Telguuth stories within the pages of the UK's thrillpower overloaded comic, it appears that it never once got the cover feature. Boo! For Marvel UK, Steve wrote Doctor Who, the Hulk, Captain Britain, and Nick Fury, and for Moore (A's) America's Best Comics contributed scripts for Tom Strong and Jonni Future. So closely has his comics career been connected to Alan Moore that if anybody was actually going to write Watchmen Babies: V for Vacation, it likely woulda been Steve Moore!

Here's the first couple pages of an extensive interview with Steve Moore from the pages of Warrior magazine. Please not that interviewer "Pedro Henry" is Steve Moore!

from Warrior #15 (Quality Communications, November 1983)
(Click picture to pressbutton-size)

Following Steve's early death in 2014, Rebellion/2000 AD has republished some of his classic Tales of Telguuth stories in trade paperback. I highly recommend 'em! More info here.


Happy birthday, Steve. You're much missed.

Today in Comics History, June 11, 1944: I-Day, right? (counts on hoofs) Yep, I-Day.

And things aren't any better than yesterday!


from "Every Day Is D-Day!" in All-American Men at War (1952 series) #74 (DC/National, October 1959), script by Hank Chapman, pencils and inks by Jack Abel

Let's give Private Bad Predictions a few days off, shall we? Catch up with him here on June 16!

This post was suggested by faithful reader and frequent commenter Blam, who's provided a lot of date references in comics that I'll spotlight throughout 2023 in this series. Thanks, Blam!

Today in Comics History, June 11: Happy birthday, Roger Bresnahan!

Born on this day in 1879: Major League baseball catcher and manager Roger Bresnahan, nicknamed "The Duke of Tralee," for his parents' hometown in Ireland, and also his habit of singing "Tra-lee! Tra-lee!" as he ran around the bases.


from "Oddities in Sports" in True Sport Picture Stories v.3 #7 (Street and Smith, May 1946); text, pencils, and inks by Thornton Fisher

Happy birthday, Roger!

Today in Comics History, June 11: Happy birthday, John Dokes!

Born on this day: John Dokes of the 1990s Marvel Editorial Planning Department (thank you, narrative caption) and Senior Vice President of Marvel's Integrated Sales and Marketing! And a comic book character as well — here he is carryin' the Big Red Book of Mighty Marvel Miracles:


from 101 Ways to End the Clone Saga #1 one-shot (Marvel, January 1997), script by Mark Bernardo, pencils by Ben Herrera, inks by Mike Christian, colors by Kevin Tinsley, letters by Janice Chiang

He's also a fan of, letter writer to, and reference poser for the beautiful Black Panther!


from letter column of Black Panther (1998 series) #2 (Marvel, December 1998

Here's more about John. And join me in wishing him a happy birthday!

Today in Comics History, June 11: Happy birthday, Ben Jonson!

Born on this day (or around it, I'm not gonna be too fussy) in 1572: Ben Jonson, one of the original Jo(h)nson boys, poet and playwright (Every Man in His Humour, Volpone, or The Fox, The Alchemist, and Bartholomew Fair, all Elizabethan/Jacobean-era plays that John, who majored in this stuff, has read and told me about). He was a pal and contemporary of William Shakespeare (hey, who wasn't), and this adventure of Blake and Mortimer suggests he helped cover up Shakespeare's supposed death in 1616, which is, at the very least, speculative fiction even more preposterous than What If...? Sgt. Fury Fought World War II in Space? This comic at least does make fun of Oxfordians, who are the criminals of the story. Oxfordians are those who believe that Edward de Vere, 17th Earl of Oxford was the true author of Shakespeare's plays (no, he wasn't), and to prove how wretched Oxfordians are in ways supported by comic books, John Byrne is an Oxfordian. See? You don't want to be in that company, do you?



from The Adventures of Blake & Mortimer Vol. 24: The Testament of William S. (Cinebook, March 2017), script by Yves Sente, translation by Jerome Saincantin, pencils and inks by André Juillard, colors by Madeleine DeMille, letters by Design Amorandi

Jonson's famous deication in the First Folio is thus revelaed to be a cryptic reference to Shakespeare still living! Well, that's definitely ironclad proof.


Ben Jonson makes a guest appearance...I think...in this Superman tale where Lois and Clark are zapped back in space and time to London in the Elizabethan era! And, because Lois knows Clark is there and Superman keeps showing up, Clark has to resort to silly gaslighting with Clark dummies and super-speed. You'd think he'd get William Shakespeare, who figures out Clark's secret identity, to pose as him. No, but Shakespeare blackmails Superman until Supes recites Macbeth for him to copy down and claim as his own, which raises the question: who wrote Macbeth in the first place?

Anyway, Clark spots Jonson in a tavern, but he doesn't even identify which of these Other Guys™ he is. Nice cameoing, Jonson! (snicker)


from "Shakespeare's Ghost Writer!" in Superman (1939 series) #44 (DC/Superman Inc., January 1947), script byt Don C. Cameron, pencils by Ira Yarbrough, inks by George Roussos (?)

This is supposedly the first Superman time travel story, before writers added his ability to fly hecka fast and go forwards or backwards through the years, so it's dependant on a crazy scientist and his time contraption. Luckily, at the end, Lois and Clark return to Metropolis and the office of cranky Perry White while Superman assures us, the readers, that Superman got back too. Somehow. Don't think too hard about it.


Happy birthday, Ben Jonson!

Saturday, June 11, 2022

Today in Comics History, June 11: Happy birthday, Bettie Ringma!

Born on this day: Marvel Production Paste-Up Manager in the early '90s, Bettie Ringma!


from Marvel Age #90 and 102 (Marvel, July 1990 and July 1991), text by Chris Eliopoulis and Barry Dutter, pencils and inks by Ron Zalme, colors by Renee Witterstaetter

Happy birthday, Bettie!

(Was she the same Bettie Ringma who took great photos of the punk scene in Europe and at NYC's CBGB during the 1970s? LMK in the comments if you're sure!)

Today in Comics History, June 11: Happy birthday, Rich Margopoulos!

Born on this day: comics writer Rich Margopoulos (Creepy, Eerie, What If?, Haunt of Horror, and dozens and dozens of Archie Comics)!



from (top) EERIE (1966 series) #43 (Warren, November 1972), and
New Talent Showcase (1984 series) #2 (DC, February 1984)




Today in Comics History, June 11, 2015: Oh god, no, don't


from Yellow Cab (IDW, May 2022), by Christophe Chabouté, based on the novel by Benoît Cohen

Today in Comics History, June 11, 1988: Royalties on "Ring of Fire" are finally paid


from Spectacular Spider-Man (1976 series) #144 (Marvel, November 1988), script by Gerry Conway, pencils and inks by Sal Buscema, colors by Bob Sharen, letters by Rick Parker

Today in Comics History, June 11, 1942: Roy Thomas slows time to a crawl across three entire comics




from Young All-Stars #23 (top), 24 (middle), and 25 (bottom) (DC, March-May 1989); script by Roy Thomas and Dann Thomas; pencils by Ron Harris; inks by Bob Downs; colors by Gene D'Angelo (#23), Shelley Eiber (#24-25), letters by Helen Vesik (#24), Jean Simek and Albert T. De Guzman (#25-26)

Today in Comics History, June 11, 1998: This modern-dress version of the Book of Genesis is weird


from (top) "V for Vendetta: Book Two, Chapter Seven: Visitors" in Warrior #21 (Quality Communications, August 1984), script by Alan Moore, pencils and inks by David Lloyd; and
(bottom) V for Vendetta #5 (DC, Winter 1988); colors by David Lloyd, Siobhan Dodds, and Steve Whitaker; letters by Jenny O'Connor

Today in Comics History, June 11, 1903: Dean Wormer lets "Kegger" MacArthur graduate just to get rid of him


from General Douglas MacArthur one-shot (Fox, 1951), creators uncredited and unknown

Today in Comics History, June 11, 1998: Cue the Benny Hill music


from (top) "V for Vendetta: Book Two, Chapter Seven: Visitors" in Warrior #21 (Quality Communications, August 1984), script by Alan Moore, pencils and inks by David Lloyd; and
(bottom) V for Vendetta #5 (DC, Winter 1988); colors by David Lloyd, Siobhan Dodds, and Steve Whitaker; letters by Jenny O'Connor

Today in Comics History, June 11, 1948: Sports exposition subtly deployed


from "Bob Mathias: The World's Greatest Athlete" in True Comics #79 (Parents' Magazine Press, October 1949), creators uncredited and unknown

Today in Comics History, June 11, 1962: Enterprise is cancelled




from Quantum Leap #1 (top) and 2 (middle and bottom) (Innovation, September 1991); script by George Broderick; pencils and inks by Mark Jones; colors by Scott Rockwell; letters by Vickie Williams

Sunday, June 11, 2017

Today in Comics History: Happy Birthday, Catherine Turley


from Batman (2016 series) #15 (March 2017); script by Tom King; pencils, inks, and colors by Mitch Gerads, letters by Clayton Cowles

Today in Comics History, June 11, 1882: Under promise of anonymity, Chicken Little finally spills his story


from Providence #5 (Avatar, August 2015), script by Alan Moore, pencils and inks by Jacen Burrows, colors by Juan Rodriguez, letters by Kurt Hathaway

Saturday, June 11, 2016

Today in Comics History, June 11, 1982: Another slow news day in the Marvel Universe



from Marvel Two-in-One Annual #7 (Marvel, 1982); script by Tom DeFalco; pencils by Ron Wilson; inks by Bob Camp, Mike Esposito, Frank Giacoia, Dan Green, Armando Gil, and Chic Stone; colors by George Roussos; letters by Jim Novak

Wednesday, June 11, 2014

Today in Comics History, June 11, 1983: It's Rabbit Season Duck Season


from Ambush Bug #3 (DC, August 1985), plot and pencils by Keith Giffen, script by Robert Fleming, inks by Bob Oksner, colors by Tony Tollin, letters by John Costanza

Saturday, June 08, 2013

Today in Comics History, June 8, 1938: Not these guys again


from "The Death-Cheaters of Gotham City!" in Batman (1940 series) #72 (DC, August 1952), script by David Vern, pencils and inks by Jim Mooney, letters by Ira Schnapp

Yep: John Grant, who, according to that panel above, died today, June 8...


OH COME ON STORY IT'S THE VERY NEXT PANEL