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Posted at 09:25 AM ET, 01/20/2014

MLK DAY: As we celebrate Martin Luther King Day, here are civil-rights books worth checking out

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CONGRESSMAN John Lewis recalls vividly how he first met Martin Luther King.

“Are you the boy from Troy?”

Lewis is re-creating that moment, those first words, during our conversation last year.

“Are you the boy from Troy? Are you John Lewis?”

It was 1958, and Lewis wanted to attend college at Troy State, near his parents’ home, but as he says, “No black student was allowed.” He sought help, he says in his memoir, by writing to “the only person who I thought could understand what I was trying to do.” So he began his letter: “To Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. ... ”

Young John Lewis exchanged letters with the Rev. Ralph Abernathy, as well as Dr. King’s attorney, Fred Gray, who had also represented Rosa Parks. Weeks later, he was boarding a Montgomery-bound bus. Upon his arrival, the teenager entered a church, and Martin Luther King rose, extending a hand and a question:

“Are you the boy from Troy? Are you John Lewis?...


(Top Shelf Comics)
“Who is this young man who wants to desegregate Troy State?”

That pivotal scene — and Lewis’s ultimate decision to head to Nashville instead — is evocatively recounted in the Georgia Democrat’s recently published graphic-novel memoir, “March: Book One” (Top Shelf), which recounts the “Boy from Troy’s” rise to nonviolent protester and civil-rights icon. Just five years after that meeting, Lewis would appear on the same bill and world stage as King, as the youngest speaker (age 23) at the March on Washington.

(To hear more about John Lewis’s story, and learn more about his graphic memoir, here’s my interview with him last August, upon the March’s 50th anniversary.)

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By  |  09:25 AM ET, 01/20/2014 |  Permalink  |  Comments ( 0)
Tags:  martin luther king, john lewis

Posted at 10:22 AM ET, 01/18/2014

Batman’s ‘secret’ co-creator died 40 years ago today. What’s it take to get him some credit? *(A.: Author hopes Google can help.)

BATMAN will enjoy tributes as loud and thunderous as Gotham this year, as the Caped Crusader celebrates his 75th anniversary.

The man who helped form Batman’s origin, however — the late cartoonist who so crucially aided the acclaimed Bob Kane — may receive only the most muted of memorials this year, upon would what have been his 100th birthday.

Not that author Marc Tyler Nobleman isn’t trying to do something about it, as he aims to shine a public Bat-light on Bill Finger, who died 40 years ago today in New York.

In 2012, Nobleman saw the publication of his book, “Bill the Boy Wonder: The Secret Co-Creator of Batman” (illustrated by Ty Templeton), in which he lays out the case of Finger’s crucial early contributions to the Bat universe — from “concept to costume to character.” The author spoke at bookstores and libraries and comic conventions, illuminating the rightful place of Finger, whose full role — like Batman himself — often lurked only in the shadows.

Now, Nobleman is hoping Google will help take up the case in one of the most public ways possible — by featuring Finger next month in a home-page birthday Doodle. (The cartoonist would have turned 100 on Feb. 8.) The campaign is a reflection not only of the reach of Google’s digital “billboard,” but also of the author’s commitment to seeing Finger receive his public due.

Comic Riffs recently caught up with Nobleman to talk about his years-long fight on behalf of Finger:


(Marc Tyler Nobleman and Ty Templeton / CHARLESBRIDGE 2012 )

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By  |  10:22 AM ET, 01/18/2014 |  Permalink  |  Comments ( 0)
Tags:  batman, bill finger, marc tyler nobleman

Posted at 03:05 PM ET, 01/17/2014

Legendary artist Russ Heath reacts to 2014 NCS Caniff honor: ‘It’s very humbling’

THE LAST MIDCENTURY was a rocky time for comics, as superhero and horror stories came under attack, romance and satire were on the rise, and then a new wave of war stories gained traction. To weather such tumultuous times, it helped to have the virtuosic versatility of a Jack Kirby or Jerry Robinson — illustrators who could deftly do it all.

Russ Heath is one such artist.

Heath broke into comics as a teenager during World War II, and showed an early flair for Western, but as Congress and comics code began to alter the industry, Heath pivoted nimbly to sci-fi and crime, adventure to humor (including MAD) — and ultimately has become best known as a master of DC war stories like G.I. Combat.

This week, the National Cartoonists Society announced that Heath will receive its career Milton Caniff Award, which goes to great cartoonists who have not won the group’s Reuben Award for outstanding cartoonist of the year.

“It’s very humbling to put your best effort into something for so many years, and not really know if it's appreciated,” Heath tells Comic Riffs, “and then to find out that people have been paying attention and following what you've been doing.

“To know that my peers in the NCS have noticed my work, and are giving me this award is really a great honor,” adds Heath, e-mailing from the Los Angeles area where he’s based.


Russ Heath’s artistic flair has graced everything from swordsmen to soldiers, divers to gunfighters. (RUSS HEATH / Self-Portrait - courtesy of the NCS )

In announcing the award, the NCS cites Heath’s stature within the industry, as well as his amazing range.

“To refer to Russ heath as merely a ‘legend’ in comics is a gross understatement,” NCS President Tom Richmond tells Comic Riffs. “It's hard to imagine an artist who did more influential more in more different aspects of comic art. ...

“This honor is very well-deserved.”

The Caniff prize will be presented at the NCS Reuben Awards banquet, May 24 in San Diego.

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By  |  03:05 PM ET, 01/17/2014 |  Permalink  |  Comments ( 0)
Tags:  ncs reuben awards, russ heath

Posted at 02:33 PM ET, 01/09/2014

STAN LEE’s ‘MIGHTY 7’: Marvel legend on his first starring role in new animated Hub movie: ‘I’ve finally made it!’

“I’VE finally made it!”

So jokes Stan Lee, but the comics legend is seriously excited when he says that at age 91, he’s at last hit a career milestone.

“After years of doing cameos, I’m actually one of the stars of an animated movie!” the Marvel mastermind tells Comic Riffs on Thursday, as part of the project’s unveiling. “It’s called ‘The Mighty 7,’ and it’s the world’s first reality superhero story because it involves real people, like yours truly, as well as new, colorful superheroes.”


Stan Lee to star in new animated show. (“Stan Lee's Mighty 7” - Hub Network)
The Hub Network announced Thursday in Los Angeles that “Stan Lee’s Mighty 7” — which will premiere Feb. 1 at 8 p.m. — will be a network Original Family Movie as part of a planned trilogy.

The rest of the “Mighty 7” main cast will be voiced by Sean Astin, Jim Belushi, Mayim Bialik, the musician Flea, Armie Hammer, Teri Hatcher, Michael Ironside and Christian Slater.

According to the Hub Network, Lee portrays “an animated version of himself, a legendary superhero creator, who teaches a crew of alien prisoners and their jailers, who have crash-landed on Earth, how to work together and use their powers to be superheroes.”

Created by Lee, “Mighty 7” is produced by Stan Lee Comics as a joint venture with Genius Brands International, Stan Lee’s POW! Entertainment and Archie Comics. The Hub Network is a partnership of Discovery Communications and Hasbro.

Lee — the co-creator of such iconic and lucrative characters as Spider-Man and Iron Man, Thor and the Fantastic Four — turned 91 last month.

As for his first starring role in animation, he tells Comic Riffs: “I’ve already written my acceptance speech for the Oscars and Emmys.”

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By  |  02:33 PM ET, 01/09/2014 |  Permalink  |  Comments ( 0)
Tags:  stan lee, the hub network, animation

Posted at 11:45 PM ET, 01/07/2014

‘Afterlife With Archie’: The Walking Jughead? The art of bringing zombies to Riverdale High

IT ISN’T SUCH a far creative leap, apparently, from Jughead to the Undead.

Archie Andrews and the rest of the eerily eternal youngsters at Riverdale High have been deftly riding the trends for more than 70 years — from burgers and shakes at Pop Tate’s, to texting and tweeting on smartphones. Now it’s only natural that they sink their teeth into...zombies.

In “Afterlife With Archie,” perhaps the most popular redhead in comics has more to worry about than choosing between Betty and Veronica — assuming Archie’s favorite gal-pals make it out of this series alive.

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By David Betancourt  |  11:45 PM ET, 01/07/2014 |  Permalink  |  Comments ( 0)
Tags:  archie comics

 

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