Thursday, January 6, 2011

PASSAGES 2010 - THE COMICS

Cartooning must be a good job to have if you want to live a long time. With a few exceptions, most of the guys on this list average out in their 80s. Not a bad run. Here we celebrate these creators and the work they left behind. Thanks to D.D. Degg who created the more comprehensive list on which this entry is partly based.

2/3 Barry Blair, 55
- independent comics publisher/founder of Aircel Comics (1985-92)
- writer/artist who did many of his own titles and later work on the Elfquest line of books


2/11 Marvin Stein, 85
- comic artist for Timely and DC in the ‘40s, Feature & Atlas in the ‘50s and Archie & Gold Key in the ‘60s
- comic strips: Funnyman (194http://comicsdc.blogspot.com/2011/01/2010-comics-deaths-comic-riffs-and.html8-49), McGurk’s Mob (1965-68)



2/19 Jerry Grandenetti, 83
- assistant on “The Spirit” (1948-51)
- 17 years at DC, drawing for all Big 5 war titles
- Contributor to Warren magazines, 1966-72




3/6 Don Sherwood, 79
- assistant to George Wunder on “Terry & the Pirates” (1961-62)
- creator of “Dan Flagg” (1963-67)
- artist of “Dick Clark’s Rock Roll and Remember” strip (1994-95)
- artist on “The Partridge Family” comic for Charlton



3/27 Dick Giordano, 77
- DC: Editor (1968-71, 1980-83); VP Executive Editor (1983-93)
- Editor-in-chief for Charlton 1965-68
- Mainstay inker/artist for DC during editing tenure and as a freelancer
- Co-founder of Continuity Associates with Neal Adams





4/4 Henry Scarpelli, 80
- Artist for Archie Comics and the “Archie” comic strip
- Freelancer for other comic book companies (1960s/70s)



5/3 Peter O’Donnell, 90
- creator of “Modesty Blaise”, which he wrote 1963-2001



5/10 Frank Frazetta, 82
- fantasy artist who influenced all who followed him
- comic book artist in the Golden Age & 1950s
- assistant to Al Capp on “Li’l Abner” in the 1950s
- drew his own strip “Johnny Comet” (1952)
- move posters/book covers in the 1960s
- Album covers/fantasy art in the 1970s
- Will Eisner and Jack Kirby Hall of Famer





5/21 Howie Post, 83
- comic book artist: funny animal artist for DC in the Golden Age, Atlas in the ‘50s
- Harvey Comics artist, early 1960s
- Creator of “Anthro” for DC (1968-69)
- comic strip: “The Dropouts” (1968-81)




6/2 Tony DiPreta, 88
- comic strip artist: “Joe Palooka” (1959-84), “Rex Morgan, M.D.” (1994-2000)
- comic book artist: Timely/Atlas, Quality, Lev Gleason




6/12 Al Williamson, 79
- comic strip artist: “Secret Agent Corrigan” (1967-80), “Star Wars” (1981-83), assistant on “Rip Kirby” (1960-63)
- comic book legend: “Flash Gordon” for King/Whitman, science fiction stories for EC
- drew the comic book adaptation of “The Empire Strikes Back” as well as original Star Wars comics
- spent the bulk of his last 25 years as an inker
- a closer look at his "ESB" comic can be found here





6/23 Joe Messerli, 79
- designer of the “Twilight Zone” logo
- comic book artist for Western (1960s-‘80s), specializing in cartoon characters



7/12 Harvey Pekar, 70
- comic book writer; pioneer in autobiographical comics with American Splendor (1976-2008)
- subject of the film “American Splendor” (2003)
- frequent, contentious guest on Letterman





9/4 Paul Conrad, 86
- Editorial cartoonist for the L.A. Times (1963-93)
- Pulitzer prize winner 1964, 1971 and 1984




9/19 Howard Brodie, 94
- Combat artist from WWII to Vietnam
- Courtroom artist for the Manson, Ruby & Chicago 7 trials
- Illustrator for Yank Magazine during WWII



9/19 Stoo Hample, 84
- comic strip artist – “Inside Woody Allen”
- read Hample's story behind the strip here


10/19 Jonny Rench, 28
- colorist for Wildstorm (2006-10), including Welcome to Tranquility, Red Menace and Claw, the Unconquered


10/22 Alex Anderson, 90
- creator of Rocket J. Squirrel, Bullwinkle, Dudley Do-Right and Crusader Rabbit




10/23 Leo Cullum, 68
- Cartoonist who had 819 cartoons published in the New Yorker from 1977-2010




10/24 Mike Esposito, 83
- Mainstay Marvel & DC inker 1950s-2000s, primarily partnered with artist Ross Andru
- DC: Big 5 war titles, Wonder Woman, Flash
- Marvel: Amazing Spider-Man (1966-79)
- Will Eisner Comic Book Hall of Famer




11/28 Jon D’Agostino, 81
- Comic book artist; drew from the Golden Age to 2010
- Best known as an inker, primarily for Archie Comics and Charlton
- Letterer of the historic Amazing Spider-Man #1


12/14 Adrienne Roy, 57
- DC colorist from the 1970s-‘90s; staggering 15 & 16 year runs on Batman and Detective Comics, respectively
- Also long tenures on Robin, New Teen Titans, Warlord


Wednesday, January 5, 2011

TV DEATHS 2010

You start to feel old when the people who made the shows you grew up on are dying off in greater numbers. The '70s and '80s stuff is where my love affair with TV began. Here is a list of folks who passed last year that created the shows I've watched over the years. Mr. C, Trapper John, Arnold, Sgt. Dietrich...you were part of my strange family.

[click on "Fullscreen" or the "TV 2010 pdf" link to bring up a larger version of the document]

TV 2010 pdf