Tag Archives: DC Comics

Too Organized

From 1957 to 1965, John Romita worked for DC Comics. Although he dreamed of working on any of their more recognizable adventure titles, he found himself stuck in DC’s romance comic department. Years later, of course, he would become the architect of the “Marvel style” and go on to have some 35 successful years, working on characters like Daredevil and Spider-Man.

Editors at DC were very territorial. They had their own stable of creators whom they never shared with other editors. A freelancer could lose their job if their editor found out they were working with someone else.

Freelancers who needed more money, or who wanted to work on different types of books, took to using fake names to avoid the backlash. A lot of these, like Romita, were artists languishing in DC’s romance department. They all began to quietly seek work from Stan Lee.

Says writer and former Marvel Comics EIC, Roy Thomas:

“Gil Kane was “Scott Edward,” and Werner Roth was “Jay Gavin,” both named for their kids. “Mickey Demeo” was Mike Esposito, and Frank Giacoia was “Frankie Ray.” Stan [Lee] and I would chuckle about how DC had had all these great hero artists buried in their romance department. It wasn’t that DC was disorganized. It’s more like they were too organized to utilize their artists well.”

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Ben 10!

I should mention that CARTOON NETWORK ACTION PACK #58 is out now, featuring a full-color cover by me and 17 interior pages that I penciled, inks by Dan Davis, story by Marc Bernardin.

It’s the first time I colored my own work on one of these stories, other than the covers. I thought it all came together pretty well.

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Joe Sinnott

One of my all-time favorite comic book artists gives an overview of his career.

Interview with comics legend Joe Sinnott, Part 1 from The Comic Archive on Vimeo.

Interview with comics legend Joe Sinnott, Part 2 from The Comic Archive on Vimeo.

A couple years ago, I had the great pleasure of hiring Joe to ink this variant cover, penciled by Sal Buscema, another comics legend himself, for “The Life and Times of Savior 28” issue # 1, the series I co-created with J.M. DeMatteis. Colors by Andrew Covalt.

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The Brave and the Bold

“Mort [Weisinger] and I got along with in a business way, but it was an awful time. If you shook in your boots, especially in those days, they would jump all over you. When he was very rude to [Jerry] Siegel, I told him, “You wouldn’t be sitting behind that desk if he hadn’t created Superman, you know.” I never kept my voice down. When they wanted me to do something over I would say, “Whatever I give you is the best I can do.” My attitude was, they’re not bosses, they’re editors.”

-Al Plastino (Golden/Silver Age “Superman” artist extraordinaire)
from an interview with Jim Kealy & Eddy Zeno
Alter Ego fanzine #59

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BEN 10 and CURSES, FOILED AGAIN!

Last year, May 2010, First Second Books published the graphic novel “FOILED”, my collaboration with writer Jane Yolen. Jane has written the sequel, “CURSES, FOILED AGAIN!”. I’ve thumbnailed the whole thing, and I’m now about 20 or so pages into penciling.

At the same time, I’m still penciling “BEN 10” stories for DC Comics’ CARTOON NETWORK ACTION PACK comic book series.

I like getting to bounce back-and-forth between the two. “BEN 10” has to be on-model with the design of the animated T.V. show it’s based on, while “FOILED” can be weird and loose. They both provide a nice change of pace from each other.

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