Namora #1 (Aug/48) |
By 1947, Bill Everett returned to Timely as a freelancer drawing his Sub-Mariner once again as well as Namora in the waning hero titles. When these finally passed he moved right over into the nascent horror titles, one of the earliest being "Spectacles of Doom!" in Marvel Tales #94 (Nov/49). As romance comics flooded the newsstands during the glut of 1949-1950, Everett would join just about "everyone" else in helping to fill these titles with story art. From 1949 to 1957, he would draw 21 stories and contribute to about 5 covers. The bulk of the romance work was done for Atlas in late 1951 and 1952, following tenures on Marvel Boy and Venus.
About 2 years ago I completed a collecting task that I'd guess very few people in the world have been able to accomplish, that is, track down "every" single romance comic book published by Martin Goodman between the years 1948 and 1963, a collection of over 500 issues. As the years dragged on trying to accomplish this, I went through every single issue with a fine-toothed comb, indexing the contents and recording creator data into a massive database. The results were wonderfully surprising as hundreds of unsigned stories were credited properly not only at the initial time of indexing, but in scores of later re-indexing attempts armed with additional years of repeated study of artist styles from a wide variety of sources. I approached this task as seriously as if I was learning a new language.
One of the happy results was the below list of heretofore unknown Bill Everett work in a genre mostly ignored.
Here are the 19 issues containing 21 romance stories with Everett work:
BEST LOVE #35,36
GIRL COMICS #3
GIRL CONFESSIONS #13,16,17,18
LOVE ADVENTURES #9
LOVE ROMANCES #15
LOVE TALES #50(2), 51, 69
LOVERS #41(2)
MY OWN ROMANCE #25
ROMANCE TALES #8
SECRET STORY ROMANCES #1
TRUE SECRETS #6,22
TRUE TALES OF LOVE #25
And here are the 5 covers he drew or contributed to:
LOVE ROMANCES #70 (Aug/57)
MY OWN ROMANCE #58 (July/57)
SECRET STORY ROMANCES #5 (Mar/54)
STORIES OF ROMANCE #8 (Sept/56)
TRUE SECRETS #20 (July/52)
And one minor footnote for completeness sake, an illustration by Everett was used as a letter-page illustration in:
LOVELAND #2 (Feb/50)
Let's start at the beginning now. At the time of the Timely staff firing, job numbers were jumbled and often printed well out of order. Stories appeared often later in books up to two years after the time the job number would approximately indicate. For this reason, I'll start with "cover date" as we examine the oldest stories. By 1952, the job numbers will match the order of cover date.
Only 6 of the 21 stories fall under the "Timely" designation, by which I mean :
A) Produced by Timely in 1949.
B) Produced immediately after the staff was let go in January 1950 utilizing Timely era scripts.
C) Produced by Timely in 1949 but held over as inventory and not published until 1950-51.
Anything beyond the above will be Atlas romance stories and dealt with in another post.
So this is what we have today:
#6438 "Death Was My Rival" (7 pages) in ROMANCE TALES #8 (Jan/50)
#6490 "I Learned What it Meant to be Jilted!" (7 pages) in BEST LOVE #35 (Jan/50)
#6763 "I Craved His Kisses!" (7 pages) in Best Love #36 (Apr/50)
#7252 "Once In A Love-Time" (9 pages) in Girl Comics #3 (Apr/50)
#6589 "The Wasted Years!" (7 pages) in True Secrets #6 (June/51)
#6957 "Don't Cry, My Heart!" (8 pages) in Love Romances #15 (Mar/51)
The two earliest Bill Everett romance stories for Timely were both cover dated Jan/50 and on the newsstands in the fall of 1949.
#6438 "Death Was My Rival" (7 pages) in ROMANCE TALES #8 (Jan/50)
#6490 "I Learned What it Meant to be Jilted!" in BEST LOVE #35 (Jan/50)
The second story above has additional important historical significance because it was scripted by Natalie Krigstein, the wife of famed artist Bernie Krigstein. Natalie wrote romance scripts from 1949 up through the mid 1950's all around the industry, having been given her start by Stan Lee in 1949 (2). This is one of two of her Timely romance scripts I know of. The story titles of both were given to me by historian Robin Snyder as he had access to some of Natalie Krigstein records (3). I immediately was able to link them to published stories and in what titles/issues they appeared.
Romance Tales was a three issue run appearing in the midst of the Timely romance glut. While most of these new romance titles started with #1, a handful did not. Romance Tales started with #7 and lasted through #9, before cancellation. As I showed in my previous blog post on Amazing Detective Cases, there is a reason this title started with #7. Unfortunately, I haven't deciphered it yet. Some postulate Western Winners #6 (Aug/49) as a precursor to Romance Tales #7 (Oct/49) but the fact there is a Western Winners #7 (Dec/49) makes me doubtful. For now, the jury is still out and I'm betting on a magazine connection.
Look for Bill Everett's own inking and lettering below. The story is standard over-the-top romance fare where a woman secretly thinks her boyfriend has a heart condition that could kill him at any minute, and the disaster that becomes of their relationship because of this knowledge. Everett's artwork is fantastic, slickly inked and tightly rendered. The opening title splash has a skeletal specter of death drawn as only Everett can, foreshadowing his wonderful upcoming work as one of the industry's top pre-code horror artists:
#6438 p.1, panel 1 |
The climax has a raging storm and a river rescue, perfect for the master of the "water action scene" on the four-color page. This panel below is at the height of the action:
#6438 p.7, panel 1 |
Here's the story in its entirety. Script unknown, pencils, inks and lettering by Bill Everett:
ROMANCE TALES #8 (Jan/50) |
#6438 p.1 |
#6438 p.2 |
#6438 p.3 |
#6438 p.4 |
#6438 p.5 |
#6438 p.6 |
#6438 p.7 |
The second Everett romance story this month, the Natalie Krigstein scripted tale, was published in Best Love #35 (Jan/50), a four issue run from #33 to #36, and another title whose numbering continued from the just cancelled Sub-Mariner title, #32. There was also an earlier 1940's Goodman "pulp" with the same title. This particular issue also has stories penciled by Mike Sekowsky and Pete Tumlinson.
Natalie Krigstein's story is a whirlwind of back and forth heartbreak, enough to make your head spin!. Try to keep the storyline straight and follow this...
Claire is jilted by her fiance`, Lon, who falls for another gal, ending their engagement. Claire vows to never love again, changes jobs and goes to work for a handsome new boss, Mark, who runs a photo magazine. Enter a beautiful model, Billie, who makes a play for Mark and add in an "accidental" kiss of Claire by the Mark in a darkroom (thinking it was Billie), and now the emotional turbulence starts! Claire starts to fall for Mark, while resenting Billie, Mark has his eyes on Claire, who still won't thaw her heart since she was jilted by Lon. Billie then goes to Hollywood allowing Claire and Mark to start platonic dating. Out of the blue Lon shows up asking Claire to take him back, Claire refuses and professes her love to Mark. Then Billie returns from Hollywood and tells Claire that Mark has been phoning her every day and begging her to return to him. Claire quits, heartbroken again, returns home and calls Lon, but when he arrives she realizes it's still over between them. Just then, Mark bursts in and wants to know why Claire left, telling her that Billie was lying all along and they fall into an embrace as poor old Lon realizes he'd better leave. Whew!
Everett's art is a bit stiffer as there are more talking heads in this story than anything else. It's still beautiful though, and the lettering may be Everett's also. This second story has a lot less detail and I suppose I cannot be 100% certain this second story is all Everett. A comparison of the the hair of the females shows the first story has finely detailed hair inking while the second story has almost no detail whatsoever.
Lucy (#6438) [story 1] |
Claire (#6490) [story 2] |
It certainly is within the realm of possibility that there is another pencil artist on this story with Everett supplying a fast inking job.
Here's the second story, script by Natalie Krigstein. See what you think:
BEST LOVE #35 (Jan/50) |
#6490 p.1 (Natalie Krigstein script) |
#6490 p.2 (Natalie Krigstein script) |
#6490 p.3 (Natalie Krigstein script) |
#6490 p.4 (Natalie Krigstein script) |
#6490 p.5 (Natalie Krigstein script) |
#6490 p.6 (Natalie Krigstein script) |
#6490 p.7 (Natalie Krigstein script) |
Our third story from this Timely period is in the very next and final issue of Best Love, #36 (Apr/50). This issue is a Timely/Atlas goldmine as in addition to the Everett story below, you will find splash panels to the other stories by a trio of Atlas titans, Syd Shores, Mike Sekowsky and even Joe Maneely, who drew the splash panel "only" to a story penciled by Gene Colan! I don't want to give too much away because I plan to do a blog post about Best Love in the future where I will highlight all these artists.
BEST LOVE #36 (Apr/50) |
#6763 p.1 |
What's immediately noticeable above is that the splash panel is "not" by Bill Everett, instead a generic splash by a generic Timely staff artist. As I mentioned, this was a company policy for a short time in late 1949, early 1950. An artist would get a script and staff artists would start every story with a splash, possibly directed by an editor. The story artist would then pencil the rest of the story. The whole idea seems kind of silly to me.
non-Everett generic Timely splash |
This particular issue, #36, is rife with this. The 1st story is completely unknown to me. Syd Shores draws the splash for the 2nd story and an unidentified artist draws the actual story. Mike Sekowsky draws the splash for the 3rd story and another artist draws the actual story. Joe Maneely draws the splash for the 4th story (some of the earliest Timely work in his career) and Gene Colan pencils the actual story. Finally, an unknown artist draws the splash for the 5th story and Bill Everett draws the actual story.
Here are the rest of the pages. Probable pencils, definitely inks and perhaps lettering by Everett once again. The story is another primer on "true love conquers all" and while heart-warming, a bit dated and idealistic in its depictions of relationships. Everett's art is again sweetly beautiful in a simplistic manner. His young ladies are so darn cute! Very little action is shown other than the obligatory lover's clinch.
#6763 p.2 |
#6763 p.3 |
#6763 p.4 |
#6763 p.5 |
#6763 p.6 |
#6763 p.7 |
Our next story has quite possibly never been seen, primarily because it's found in what may be the scarcest Timely/Atlas comic I know, Girl Comics #3. I don't completely understand why Girl Comics #3 is so scarce and in such demand but a possible reason is that then child film star Elizabeth Taylor is featured prominently on the cover in a scene from the MGM film The Conspirators . Since the fetching Miss Taylor was featured prominently on hundreds of movie magazine covers at this time, including an early issue of Goodman's Miss America Magazine, Vol 4, #3 (July/46) [seen below], as well as the second to last issue of Goodman's spin-off Miss America Young Life magazine, Vol 1, #2 (Winter/49), it seemingly makes no sense why this one is so sought after. It's not because of the Bill Everett story.
MISS AMERICA Vol 4, #3 (July/46) |
MISS AMERICA YOUNG LIFE #2 (Winter/49) |
Why Girl Comics #3 should be special continues to amaze. There has been no bump in price on the other Elizabeth Taylor covers I mentioned above. Copies of #3 do come up for sale but often sell for 10 times more than any concurrent Timely romance issue, usually not bought by a romance collector, but by someone hoping to acquire a perceived trophy. I sincerely doubt it's actually any scarcer than #2 or #4 and I wish "trophy" collectors would just eave them for the romance collectors.
I do know it was the very last Timely/Atlas romance issue I needed for quite a while. I was continually out-bid on eBay for this book for years because I refused to be gouged, before I finally was able to acquire a copy thanks to the generosity of my pal Tom Lammers, the Atlas historian, author of the seminal work on the Atlas Implosion Tales of the Implosion, and Professor of Botany, who traded it to me for several other books he needed, knowing it was my last holy grail. (I also threw in a specimen of Ajuga reptans, my favorite wild medicinal plant "Carpetweed", which I notoriously identified back in college as Oligochae rugoleum during a Bart Simpson-esque moment on a Botany practical exam. Incredibly, it was marked correct!!)
GIRL COMICS #3 (Apr/50) |
Girl Comics was a neat little run of 12 issues. The first 4 issues were standard romance fare with photo covers. By #4 it changed slightly to adventure type intrigue stories featuring women and then changed title to Girl Confessions, a strict romance title, up through #35 (Aug/54). Artists in the first 5 issues include John Buscema, Mike Sekowsky, Gene Colan, Joe Maneely, Bill Everett, Werner Roth and Russ Heath.
The Everett story here is the extra long 9-pager "Once in a Love-Time", #7252, but I don't believe he lettered this one. Everett usually drew his own word balloons and they are somewhat evident in the first 3 stories above. These word balloons are of standard Timely design as is seemingly the lettering, which appears just slightly smaller in font size. I'm curious as to whether others agree.
The artwork is slick and beautiful, the story intense and formulaic. But another problem arises. I've studied this story inside out and I'm starting to think, yet again, someone else is penciling this. Since Everett is such an overwhelmingly stylistic artist, when inking, it's very hard to see "anyone" on a story except Everett. You have to go by the actual figures in the panels. Everett is a veteran of exciting storytelling. The first Timely story above has many exciting, riveting panels that imply Everett penciled as well as inked. This Girl's Comics #3 story, once again, is nothing but talking heads slickly inked by Everett. Further, a close examination of all the heads and faces, especially on the females (including their head positions), leads me to wonder if the hidden pencil artist under all of the Everett inking is in fact Timely staff artist
#7525 p.1 |
#7525 p.2 |
#7525 p.3 |
#7525 p.4 |
#7525 p.5 |
#7525 p.6 |
#7525 p.7 |
#7525 p.8 |
#7525 p.9 |
Having seen the entire story above, I'm going to do a little bit of comparison. Below I will list panels by Everett (?) / Everett and panels by Sitton / ? and see if you feel
EVERETT (?) / EVERETT
GIRL COMICS #3 (Apr50) p.1, panel 2 |
GIRL COMICS #3 (Apr50) p.4, panel 5 |
GIRL COMICS #3 (Apr50) p5, pan. 1 |
GIRL COMICS #3 (Apr50) p.9, panel 5 |
GIRL COMICS #3 (Apr50) p.8, panel 6 |
SITTON / ?
Sitton #6374 MISS AMERICA vol 7, #32 (Mar50) p.1, panel 2) |
LOVE TALES #39 (Dec49) p.1, panel 6 |
Sitton (Fawcett) ROMANTIC SECRETS #6 (May50) p.2, panel 2 |
Sitton (Quality) RANGE ROMANCES #5 (Aug50) p.1 splash |
Sitton (Quality) RANGE ROMANCES #5 (Aug50) p.3, panel 4 |
Sitton (Close-Up) DARLING LOVE #5 (June-July50)p.2, panel 4 |
Sitton (Quality) RANGE ROMANCES #5 (Aug50) p.6, panel 2 |
Sorry about the haphazard appearance of the Sitton panels above. I tried to arrange them in groups of 2 and 3 for easy viewing and blogger makes it extremely hard to do so. Either that or I just don't know how to easily do it.
Wondering about what I may be seeing, I sent this story to Timely artist Marion Sitton for his opinion. His answer was :
"Michael, I looked at the story that you sent in Girl Comics #3 that Bill Everett worked on and I'm pretty sure that I may have done the penciling on this one. The figures, the actions and the composition of the panels (always full), was the way I worked. Overall, it looks like my penciling. You have a sharp eye!"
Does this prove Marion was the pencil artist? No, but it is one more step in the investigative process as we consider the stylistic differences between pencil and ink artists and run it by who was there at the time and could be possible suspects.
The next story is a bit of an enigma. The job number of #6589 places the script back into the late 1949 Timely bullpen. The story though, was published in True Secrets #6 (June/51), just before the appearance of the Atlas globe in the post staff period.
TRUE SECRETS #6 (June/51) |
True Secrets was an odd little title. It began with #3 (Mar/50) as a possible continuation of the short-lived Our Love #1-2, where it died as a one-shot along with a score of other romance titles canceled in the romance glut of 1949-50. But lo and behold, it continued again 11 months later with a 4th issue dated Feb/51, continuing up through #21 (Aug/52), when it was canceled again. Or was it? 18 months later it continued again with #22 (Feb/54) and it ran until a final death with #40 (Sept/56). The only other Timely/Atlas romance title with such a stop/start history was Love Tales, which ended with #58 (Aug/52) and then picked up again with #60 (Feb/55), skipping #59 in the process.
The first 4 issues of the revived True Secrets, #4-7, all had stories with job #'s from the Timely era of 1949. Either these were inventoried stories resulting from the romance glut cancellations or they were old scripts from the same period now newly drawn in 1951. Issue #6 here, in addition to the Bill Everett tale, had a story by Russ Heath also.
Right away this story, "The Wasted Years", starts off with an anomaly. The splash panel is actually page 3, panel 2! And it doesn't look like the entire work of Bill Everett either, even though the mid-right side has a "Photos by Everett" sneak under the woman's left arm. At the very least, this splash almost looks Chris Rule inked. What I think happened was that a splash was needed for this story, perhaps for the same reason many of the 1949-50 stories had splashes by different artists from the main story artist. Instead of a new artist drawing a new splash, page 2, panel 3 was chosen as the splash, a panel carrying a lot of climaxed action, and Christopher Rule went over the panel, adding details including drawing the table at the bottom and giving the woman a right hand.
#6589 p.1 |
#6589 p.1 splash (ink and detail assisted by Chris Rule ?)
|
#6589 p.3, panel 2 |
The rest of the story occasionally looks like Everett had another hand in it and Everett's artwork is the least cartooney we've seen it here, the men looking very plain, very un-Everett like, while the woman look purely Everett. For a while I thought I found a clue on the splash. I pointed out the "Photos by Everett" sneak above but if you look at the poster on the wall, you will see "Layout - Dixon" sneak also. The only problem with this is I cannot account for any artist named Dixon.
#6589 p.2 |
#6589 p.3 |
#6589 p.4 |
#6589 p.5 |
#6589 p.6 |
#6589 p.7 |
At the end of the story on page 7, we see the classic "Bill Everett" signature, the first time we see it on a romance story. This clinches the story's genesis to 1951 rather than inventory from 1949 and likely also corroborates the story being all Everett. It would seen strange for the inker to sign the story, although not impossible.
#6589 p.7, panel 6 |
The next job number in series, #6957, appeared three months earlier in Love Romances #15 (Mar/51). The story "Don't Cry, My Heart!", lacks Everett's signature and like the previous story in True Secrets #6, likely hails back to early 1950. Love Romances was Timely/Atlas/Marvel's longest running romance comic, lasting 102 issues from #5, cover dated March, 1949 (titled Ideal - Love & Romance) through #106, cover dated July, 1963. The book spans the length from Timely, through Atlas, past the implosion and into the early Marvel age.
LOVE ROMANCES #15 (Mar/51) |
The cover to issue #15 above looks to be primarily by Christopher Rule. The corner boxes are 100% Rule but the main cover "could" possibly be penciled by someone else, perhaps Mike Sekowsky. Rule's inks are so overwhelmingly distinctive that it almost impossible to tell who, if anyone, was underneath.
#6957 p.1 |
This story poses another "is it all-Everett?" problem to me. Look at the entire story. Bill Everett's hand is unmistakable, especially page 7 below. But the rest of the story has a decided feel that there is another hand involved. It's either that or Everett (whose work often "did" vary in refinement from story to story in the mid Atlas period) just stripped down the art, penciling and inking in a simplistic manner. I think a more likely scenario is that Everett is inking a penciler once again.
Love Diary #9 (Oct/50) (Our Publishing) [solo Everett] |
Page one above in our Love Romances #15 story has a splash panel where the blond man on the right side, if I didn't know better, I would swear was drawn by Joe Maneely and then inked over by Everett. That, of course, makes no sense, Maneely only penciling a single figure in a splash. But perhaps Maneely penciled the entire splash, Everett inked it and the only remaining possible evidence of Maneely's involvement is now the single head-shot of the man on the right.
Joe Maneely drew several splash panels for other artist's stories in 1950. In fact, we can find him in one of the books already mentioned above, the classic Girl Comics #3. The story artist is unknown to me but it's in the style of Jack Kamen circa 1950. The splash, which I'll crop below, is Joe Maneely!
#7164 p.1 |
#7164 p.1 splash (Joe Maneely) |
Now looking at the rest of the Everett Love Romances #15 story, the panels switch from seemingly Everett inked to pure Everett figures therein. To me, the female figures below just do not look like Everett penciled them.
#6957 p.2 |
#6957 p.3 |
#6957 p.4 |
#6957 p.5 |
#6957 p.6 |
#6957 p.7 |
Yet look at the last panel above. Pure Bill Everett, pencils and inks.
#6957 p.7, panel 6 |
#6957 p.8 |
Now way back up top I mentioned that I spied a Bill Everett illustration that was used in a romance issue letter page. The book was Loveland #2 (Feb/50). Here is the book, the page and a close-up of the illustration:
Loveland #2 (Feb/50) |
Loveland #2 (Feb/50) (letter page) |
Loveland #2 (Feb/50) (Bill Everett letter page illustration) |
So where did it come from? Go back and look at the very first Bill Everett Timely romance story above in Romance Tales #8 (Jan/50) from the previous month, page 2, panel 1. I'll pull it up cropped below:
Romance Tales #8 (Jan/50) p.2, panel 1 |
Lucy, swapping colors with her blouse, went from a red-head to a blonde, and from wearing a yellow blouse to a red one. But she can't fool us! It's the same old Lucy!
And lastly, since this is a romance post, let's close with some of Bill Everett's best lover's clinches from the above stories, penciled, inked or otherwise:
Romance Tales #7 (Jan/50) p.7, panel 7 |
Best Love #35 (Jan/50) p.7, panel 6 |
Best Love #36 (Apr/50) p.7, panel 5 |
Girl Comics #3 (Apr/50) p.2, panel 6 |
Girl Comics #3 (Apr/50) p.5, panel 6 |
True Secrets #6 (June/51) p.3, panel 1 |
Love Romances #15 (Mar/51) p.2, panel 2 |
Love Romances #15 (Mar/51) p.8, panel 5 |
Thus ends the Timely period of Everett's romance work, stories drawn in late 1949, while the Timely bullpen was still extant and the staff humming away. Everett was a freelancer and never worked on staff in the Empire State Building, taking his scripts from Stan Lee (or whoever was the romance line's editor at that time) drawing and/or inking them at home and delivering completed work in person. Two stories also appeared in early 1951 with mysterious 1949 era job numbers. After the last of the staff was let go in January 1950, Timely house styles and boringly familiar panel grids would vanish as more expressive and personal freelance work replaced the assembly-line piecemeal story art. Signatures, rarely seen since the immediate post-war period, will begin to make a return as freelance artists felt more pride in identifying their work, usually done as full art, which improves tremendously.
Next up we we segue into the Atlas period.
FOOTNOTES / SOURCES:
- Vassallo, Michael J.. Every scan and iota of Timely-Atlas data above.
- Sadowski, Greg. B. Krigstein Vol 1 1919-1955, (Natalie Krigstein foreword), Fantagraphics Books, 2002
- Snyder, Robin. Natalie Krigstein romance script data