Batman: The Silver Age Newspaper Comics, Vol. 1: 1966 - 1967 Preview
Batman: The Silver Age Newspaper Comics, Vol. 1: 1966 - 1967 Preview
Batman: The Silver Age Newspaper Comics, Vol. 1: 1966 - 1967 Preview
BRINGING UP FATHER
BY
CANIFF: A VISUAL BIOGRAPHY CARTOON MONARCH: OTTO SOGLOW AND THE LITTLE KING CHUCK JONES: THE DREAM THAT NEVER WAS THE FAMILY CIRCUS BY BIL KEANE FLASH GORDON AND JUNGLE JIM BY ALEX RAYMOND GASOLINE ALLEY BY KING AND MOORES GENIUS, ISOLATED AND GENIUS, ILLUSTRATED THE LIFE AND ART OF ALEX TOTH
BY
KING AROO BY JACK KENT LIL ABNER BY AL CAPP LITTLE ORPHAN ANNIE BY HAROLD GRAY LOAC ESSENTIALS:
BARON BEAN 1916 BY GEORGE HERRIMAN THE GUMPS 1929 BY SIDNEY SMITH POLLY AND HER PALS 1933 BY CLIFF STERRETT ALLEY OOP 1939 BY V.T. HAMLIN
MISS FURY BY TARP MILLS POLLY AND HER PALS BY CLIFF STERRETT RIP KIRBY BY ALEX RAYMOND AND JOHN PRENTICE SCORCHY SMITH AND THE ART OF NOEL SICKLES SECRET AGENT CORRIGAN BY AL WILLIAMSON & ARCHIE GOODWIN SKIPPY BY PERCY CROSBY STAR TREK BY THOMAS WARKENTIN, SHARMAN DIVONO, RON HARRIS, ET AL. STEVE CANYON BY MILTON CANIFF SUPERMAN BY JERRY SIEGEL, WAYNE BORING, CURT SWAN, ET AL. TARZAN BY RUSS MANNING TERRY AND THE PIRATES BY MILTON CANIFF
LETTERING BY BEN ODA AND MILT SNAPINN THE LIBRARY OF AMERICAN COMICS
EDITED AND DESIGNED BY ASSOCIATE EDITOR
DEAN MULLANEY
Special thanks to Dale Crain for dailies restoration, and to Dan Davis, Jackson Glassey, Joseph Ketels, Dave Anderson, the Billy Ireland Cartoon Library and Museum at the Ohio State University, Art Cloos, Saul Ferris, Mike Karberg, Martin O'Hearn, Ivan Tabac, Matt Tauber, Roy Thomas, and Mike Tiefenbacher.
ISBN: 978-1-61377-845-6 First Printing, February 2014 Published by: IDW Publishing
a Division of Idea and Design Works, LLC
Signs reproduced on this page and opposite top were used in newspaper vending machines and display racks.
Neither Ellsworth nor Moldoff were credited on the strip at the time, which, like the Batman comic books, carried Bob Kane's signature. Bob was always interested, Moldoff explained. He didnt walk away from Batman. He wasnt hands on but hed oversee. He liked to be there. He would come in and he might say to me, maybe that should be closer, or something like that. He would make suggestions. He didnt divorce himself from the comic. Ben Oda, who was a regular letterer for DC, lettered the strip. He lived in my neighborhood, in Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey, and he did jobs for me. When I did a commercial job, for an advertising company, or I did The Little Woman, and stuff like that, he did my lettering.
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The eighth week of completed dailies were submitted on May 31st, just two days after the strip premiered. Less than a month later, however, change was in the air. The eleventh week of dailies, submitted June 22nd, was only penciled and lettered, and was completed by the DC staff. The twelfth week, along with Sundays for weeks thirteen and fourteen, had only been penciled and were submitted to DC around the end of the month. Ledger wasn't happy, recalled Moldoff. [The strip] wasn't selling the way it was supposed to sell. Bob said, Theyre going to change the artist on it. I said, Why dont they change the writer? You know, they always pull that; they always change the artist. Change the writer!
Above: Front and back of the 14.5 x 22 Ledger Syndicate brochure, which opens to a massive 29 x 22 and reproduces the original, uncorrected, first three weeks of dailies.
Opposite: Ad in the Minneapolis T ribune , May 15, 1966, two weeks before the premiere.
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Below: Ad in the Minneapolis T ribune , May 29, 1966, the day of the strips premiere. Left: Ad from the Cincinnati Enquirer comic section, May 29, 1966. Opposite top: Front and back of a membership card from the Batman Club established in conjuction with the strip by the O klahoman newspaper. Opposite bottom: The New Look begins, Detective C omics #327, May 1964.
What Ledger actually wanted was for the strip to look the same as the comic books. What brought about that look has its genesis nearly three years earlier. Batmans New Look In the fall of 1963, a change of creative staff ushered in a new approach to the character. That October, Julius Schwartz replaced Jack Schiff as editor of Batman and Detective Comics . Because of my success in reviving The Flash and Green Lantern recalled Schwartz, when I took over Batman, they allowed me to do anything I wanted. When I was asked to [assume control], which I was reluctant to do because I hadnt read Batman [stories], I said Ill do it if I can use Carmine Infantino on the art. However, Executive Vice President Irwin Donenfeld indicated that Bob Kane would continue to provide pages to DC, so Schwartz compromised by having Carmine do every other story in Detective Comics [and] he did the covers. Schwartzs new staff was responsible for shaping the New Look, which was heralded on the cover of Detective Comics #327 (May 1964). Penciler Infantino introduced a more angular and graphic style to the series. Inker Joe Giella provided consistency, since some stories were penciled by Infantino while others continued to be drawn by Sheldon Moldoff. Covers were inked by Giella, and sometimes by Murphy Anderson. Schwartz was responsible for numerous innovations. When [the assignment] was given to me, he recalled, I said, okay, but Im going to change things around; Im going to update him. Im going to give him a new Batmobile, a new way to get down to the Batcave. That Batsignal he has on his uniform can hardly be seen; Im going to surround it with a yellow ellipse. That was my idea. It happened to be in conjunction with the twenty-fifth anniversary of Batman. Clearly, Schwartz was overseeing a vastly different Batman, although the Rogues Gallery of villains continued in full force as he and his staff mined the classic archenemies. That I decided to do right off the bat, he joked. I simply returned to the ones Schiff had been neglecting to use in the past: Joker, Catwoman, Penguin. Schwartz also developed new villains, introduced new logos, heightened Batmans detective skills, and established the Hot-Line to Police Commissioner Gordon. Schwartz placed an automatic elevator in the Batcave and modified the exterior Batcave exit that had existed since the early 1950s to now have a camouflaged doorway which resembled the surrounding hillside. I [also] kill[ed] off Alfred in my second story because I wanted to get a woman in, and that turned out to be Aunt Harriet, Schwartz added. Faithful butler Alfred gave his life to protect Batman in Detective Comics #328 (June 1964), the same issue which introduced overprotective, middle-aged Aunt Harriet. She did not appear in this newspaper strip. Hollywood Needs Alfred Alfreds death soon proved problematic. During a meeting in early 1965 between Donenfeld, editor Mort Weisinger, and representatives of the TV series (probably producer William Dozier and possibly others), a need for Alfred surfaced. Mort and I helped create the family in the Batman show,
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recalled Donenfeld. For instance, we needed his house, Wayne Manor. In the comic books it just existed and they left it. In the Batman show, we created the idea of an Aunt and a butler. We needed somebody in the house to create the situation for them to leave, and for them to talk to somebody other than themselves. It wasnt the first time Hollywood affected Alfreds role in comic books. The 1940s heavyset butler was changed to match the slim servant seen in the 1943 movie serial and 1943 newspaper strip. They came to me, recalled Schwartz, and said, Youve got to bring Alfred back to life, and so editor Schwartz figured out a way to bring him back from the dead. In a storyline spread over several issues and with hints dropped along the way in letter columns, Alfred eventually reappeared in Detective Comics #356 (October 1966). By this time, the New Look had been in place for slightly more than two years. Moldoff and Infantino were penciling Batman stories published in Detective Comics and Batman, and almost every story was inked by Joe Giella, with occasional assignments given to inker Sid Greene. Giella also inked covers until he began working on the strip. It would have been Giellas finishes that executives at the Ledger Syndicate saw and most likely expected when looking at the comic books. Carmines Close Encounter Carmine Infantinos part in Schwartzs successful reincarnation of Flash and then Batman did not go unnoticed by the competition, specifically Stan Lee at Marvel Comics. Stan wanted me to come over, recalled Infantino. Stan was courting me, so DC put me on salary right away. With Infantino in the office and already working on Batman stories, he would have been a logical choice for the newspaper strip. Donenfeld thought the strip was slipping, recalled Infantino. So he called me in. He says, I want you on the strip.So thats when they stuck me on it. Then they were very happy.
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Above: Alan Napier as Alfred with Ethel Merman as Lola Lasagne from "A Horse Of Another Color," episode #99 of the Batman TV series, first broadcast October 12, 1967. Left: Minneapolis Tribune ad.
I didnt do that many of them, actually. They offered me the whole thing. I was on salary at that point. I was doing the Flash, Flash covers, I was doing that one Detective a month, all the Batman covers. Thats a lot of stuff, then this was on, so I couldnt handle it because I didnt have the time. I was very fast. But the licensing really broke my back, because Murphy and I were doing all the [art for the] licensing. All kinds of stuff. They didnt want anybody else to touch it, so I had to drop [the strip]. I got a call from the syndicate, I remember that. They were irritated. I said, Listen, Im out of it. I dont care what you do. He says, Well, you're freelance. I says, Im not freelance, Im a salaried employee. What Ledger Really Wanted Ledger wanted the artist they were accustomed to seeing on Batman [comic books], recalled Joe Giella,
Above: Pencil sketches of Batgirls head and cowl by Carmine Infantino, made while developing the character. Top left: Promotional article in the Madison (Wisconsin) Capital Times. Left: Advertising mats provided subscribing newspapers with ready-to-use layouts in several sizes for promoting the comic strip. Made of thick, compressed paper, ad mats were part of the printing process, requiring only an additional line or two of typesetting by the newspaper.
and that was me. The final finish, the inking, is whats reproduced and thats what they were interested in. Mort Weisinger asked me if I wanted to try out for the strip, Giella continued. I did some pencil samples at the beginning, and then I did some penciling and inking samples. Giellas first published work on this newspaper comic was the August 8, 1966 daily. During most of his nineteen-month involvement with the strip, he continued to ink Batman comic book stories, and kept busy with several other assignments. However, records kept by editor Schwartz indicate a lull in comic book work given Giella in late-1967,
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perhaps due to the strips workload. On October 16th, Giella was given a twenty-two-page story to ink, and returned it November 22nd. On November 27th, he only picked up a ten-page story to ink, returning it December 21st. His next story assignment did not come until February 5, 1968, a point when Giella likely had already left the strip (his last daily was published March 16, 1968). My letterer was Milt Snapinn, recalled Giella. Milty. He lived about ten, fifteen minutes from here. He would come over and pick up [penciled pages]. It was a mutual thing; sometimes Id drop it off. Snapinn worked at the DC offices and this arrangement freed Giella from having to make frequent drives from his home on Long Island into Manhattan. Giella also sent work to DC by messenger. Giella also enjoyed working with writer Whit Ellsworth. He was the gentleman, a terrific guy, Giella said, fondly recalling Whit. Once in awhile hed call me up and say, you know, in that third panel, I want to make a change. Or Id call him because I wasnt clear on the verbiage or something. Whit was a good writer and I enjoyed working on [his scripts]. Everything was a lot of action, a lot of color, and it really moved. He really was into it. I sent the strip up to DC, said Giella, and from there, they did what they had to. Put the labels on. They took care of the mechanics of it. I think it was colored at DC by Sol Harrison or Eddie Eisenbergone of those two. Daily strips did not need a color guide for the engraver, but to provide some illusion of color and depth, gray shading was applied. The early dailies by Moldoff used Zip-a-tone, an adhesive-backed sheet with black dots printed on front. After the artwork was inked, Zip-a-tone was applied wherever needed (such as Batmans costume), with any excess areas carefully trimmed with a knife and removed. When Giella took over penciling, he used Craftint Singletone drawing board, which had a nearly invisible dot pattern pre-printed on one side. After the artwork was inked, a liquid developer was applied to the surface with a
brush, darkening the dots. They supplied me with Craftint paper, Giella pointed out. It's a good way to work; a very good quality paper. The only problem [is] its not a kid finish. Its more of a slick finish. When you erase or when you pencil, it has a tendency to smudge. And when youre inking, the paper doesnt absorb the ink. It sits on top because its like a plate. But the ink flowed beautifully on there with a pen, and penciling on it was no problem. I used an H pencil, Giella continued, sometimes an F. On the brush, a Winsor Newton Series 7. We use a lot of pens. 659 Gillotts, 291s, the cartoon pen You have to be ahead [on deadlines], explained Giella, for both comic books and syndicated strips. Julie Schwartz never gave you a phony deadline. He used to kid the other artists: you could set your clock on when Joe will come in. I never missed a deadline, except when my dad died. And so we had a good rapport. DC was fine and I had no problems with Irwin Donenfeld. He also was a friend of mine. In fact, me and Carmine used to go on his boat on weekends. He was a nice guy. About six months after Giella started on the Batman strip, Ledger editor John Higgins offered him additional work. I was a little skeptical because I thought, I dont have time to do much anything else other than what Im doing now. He said, How about [drawing] a one-panel cartoon, Giella recalled. Its called Character Clues . [Things like,] What does it mean if a guys got protruding ears or a long nose, or hes bald. A humorous daily. So I did this gag cartoon for the Ledger Syndicate while I had Batman. It was written by this woman that worked up at the syndicate.
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Assistance, Not Assistants When I was in the comics, I was [also] doing work for advertising agencies. Many times they gave me a project which required additional help. Notoriously, their deadlines [were] unbelievable. And a lot of times youre going to have to get help, otherwise youre not going to get the job. So [if ] it would pertain to a comic deal, I would hire guys who were in comicsMike Sekowsky would give me a hand, or Gil Kane. [Sometimes] Id get involved with a comic book job and Id find myself getting behind with the strip. Or if I had to go somewhere. Usually it arose when Julie gave me a job. When I needed the help, I got it. They may have taken my layouts and maybe tightened them up. I dont want to give the impression that these guys were assistants on the strip, because they werent. The finish had to be mine. Nobody but me. Giella continued, I had Bob Powell help me out. Maybe three or four weeks. He never did any of the dailies, just a few Sunday pages. The way it worked with Bob, when I got behind a little bit, Id call him up. Id say Bob, can you do me a favor? He says, Well I don't know, Joe, let me see what I can do. You know, he never turned me down. He always worked with me. I had to go to a wedding one time. I was in the wedding party, I think I was Best Man, and I was getting behind, because you got to go to the church, the rehearsal, the whole bit. Powell had a cartoony style. The way he helped me out wasnt really that much help. He did some layouts on a tissue overlay, and then I would either rub it down or just redraw it on the original. He never worked on the original, always on the tissue. Werner Roth helped me out a few times, too, noted Giella. It may have been tightening my layouts. At one point Giella asked DC to suggest someone to assist with penciling, and they linked him up with Superman artist Curt Swan. They gave me the right guy, said Giella. I went to see him at his home in Connecticut. When Swan gave me back the art, let me tell you, it was just like Superman in the comic books; the drawing was all there. But he only helped me a few weeks. I wish he would have done more. Stay tuned for more of this fascinating history in our next Bat-Volume!
Above: The Sacramento Union , which carried the newspaper strip, ran a cross-promotion with a local TV station, offering Bat Bills. A serial number would be shown during the Batman television program. If a viewers Bat Bill number matched what was shown on TV, or was printed in the newspaper, there was a $10.00 prize. Note that the front is signed by B.W. Robin and A.W. Batman.
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Originally, the Sunday strips contained storylines separate from the daily continuity. The Sundays-only stories from May 29 - December 18, 1966 begin on the following page.
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JUNE 5, 1966
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JULY 3, 1966
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