Tag Archives: obituary

Jerry Fine, Who Brought Siegel and Shuster Together, Passes Away

superman-75-years-logo-310513The world might have never had Superman if it wasn’t for Jerome Fine. Jerry Fine, passed away on December 25 in Cleveland Heights at the age of 97.

The story goes that at some point in the 1930s, Fine heard that his friend Joe Shuster was transferring the Glenville High School in Cleveland, Ohio. Fine had known Shuster from elementary school and even did a comic strip with him called Jerry The Journalist where Fine was depicted as a grasshopper.

Fine was also a cousin to Jerry Siegel, and encouraged Shuster to team up with Siegel when he arrived. The rest become history as the two would create an icon.

Fine’s brother, Irving, carries on the family legacy as a founding member of the Siegel and Shuster Society, a non-profit group formed to honor the two men and their creation.

Here is Fine’s obituary from the Cleveland Jewish News:

Jerome Fine, age 97, died Dec. 25, 2013. World War II Army Air Corps veteran.  Beloved husband of the late Gladys Fine (nee Dworkin); devoted father of Jeff (Sandie) Fine, Michael (Claire) Fine of Calif., and Karen (Michael) Weinberger of Akron, Ohio; loving grandfather of Chad (Andrea) Fine, Jason (Genelle) Denzin, Brandon (Edyta) Halprin, Evan (Brandy) Halprin, Troy, Kasey, Darcy and Daniel Fine, and Erin (Rabbi Matthew) Cohen; loving great grandfather of seven; dear brother of Irving (Gloria) Fine and the following deceased: Ruth Stein, Annabel Fine and Mildred Kaplan.

Services will be held at Berkowitz-Kumin-Bookatz Memorial Chapel, 1985 S. Taylor Rd., Cleveland Hts. Sunday, Dec. 29 at 1 p.m.  Interment Bet Olam Cemetery. Family will receive friends at the Jeff and Sandie Fine residence, 6801 Silkwood Ln., Solon Sunday following interment until 9 p.m. and Monday from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m.  Friends will be received at the Karen and Michael Weinberger residence in Akron Tuesday from 1-4 pm only.

Donations to charity of choice.

This site has a connection to this story, as Chad Fine, mentioned above is a cousin of mine. My, and our, thoughts go out to him and his family.

(via Cleveland.com)

Fantagraphics Co-Publisher Kim Thompson, RIP

We received the following from Fantagraphics on the passing of co-publisher Kim Thompson. Posted without edits.

Fantagraphics co-publisher Kim Thompson died at 6:30 this morning, June 19. “He was my partner and close friend for 36 years,” said Gary Groth.

Thompson was born in Denmark in 1956. He grew up in Europe, a lifelong comics fan, reading both European and American comics in Denmark, France, and Germany. He was an active fan in his teen years, writing to comics — his letters appeared in Marvel’s letter columns circa early 1970s — and contributing to fanzines from his various European perches. At the age of 21, he set foot, for the first time, on American soil, in late 1977. One “fanzine” he had not contributed to was The Comics Journal, which Groth and Michael Catron began publishing in July of 1976. That was soon to change.

“Within a few weeks of his arrival,” said Groth, “he came over to our ‘office,’ which was the spare bedroom of my apartment, and was introduced by a mutual friend — it was a fan visit. We were operating out of College Park, Maryland and Kim’s parents had moved to Fairfax, Virginia, both Washington DC suburbs. Kim loved the energy around the Journal and the whole idea of a magazine devoted to writing about comics, and asked if he could help. We needed all the help we could get, of course, so we gladly accepted his offer. He started to come over every day and was soon camping out on the floor. The three of us were living and breathing The Comics Journal 24 hours a day.”

Thompson became an owner when Catron took a job at DC Comics in 1978. As he became more familiar with the editorial process, Thompson became more and more integral to the magazine, assembling and writing news and conducting interviews with professionals. Thompson’s career in comics began here.

In 1981, Fantagraphics began publishing comics (such as Jack Jackson’s Los Tejanos, Don Rosa’s Comics and Stories, and, in 1982, Love and Rockets). Thompson was always evangelical about bandes dessinées and wanted to bring the best of European comics to America; in 1981, Thompson selected and translated the first of many European graphic novels for American publication — Herman Huppen’s The Survivors: Talons of Blood (followed by a 2nd volume in 1983). Thompson’s involvement in The Comics Journal diminished in 1982 when he took over the editorship of Amazing Heroes, a bi-weekly magazine devoted to more mainstream comics (with occasional forays into alternative and even foreign comics). Thompson helmed Amazing Heroes through 204 issues until 1992.

Among Thompson’s signature achievements in comics were Critters, a funny-animal anthology that ran from 50 issues between 1985 to 1990 and is perhaps best known for introducing the world to Stan Sakai’s Usagi Yojimbo; and Zero Zero, an alternative comics anthology that also ran for 50 issues over five years — between 1995 and 2000 — and featured work by, among others, Kim Deitch, Dave Cooper, Al Columbia, Spain Rodriguez, Joe Sacco, David Mazzuchelli, and Joyce Farmer. His most recent enthusiasm was spearheading a line of European graphic novel translations, including two major series of volumes by two of the most significant living European artists — Jacques Tardi (It Was the War of the Trenches, Like a Sniper Lining up His Shot, The Astonishing Exploits of Lucien Brindavoine) and Jason (Hey, Wait…, I Killed Adolf Hitler, Low Moon, The Left Bank Gang) — and such respected work as Ulli Lust’s Today Is the Last Day of the Rest of Your Life, Lorenzo Mattotti’s The Crackle of the Frost, Gabriella Giandelli’s Interiorae, and what may be his crowning achievement as an editor/translator, Guy Peelaert’s The Adventures of Jodelle.

Throughout his career at Fantagraphics, Thompson was active in every aspect of the company, selecting books, working closely with authors, guiding books through the editorial and production process. “Kim leaves an enormous legacy behind him,” said Groth, “not just all the European graphic novels that would never have been published here if not or his devotion, knowledge, and skills, but for all the American cartoonists he edited, ranging from Stan Sakai to Joe Sacco to Chris Ware, and his too infrequent critical writing about the medium. His love and devotion to comics was unmatched. I can’t truly convey how crushing this is for all of us who’ve known and loved and worked with him over he years.”

Thompson was diagnosed with lung cancer in late February. He is survived by his wife, Lynn Emmert, his mother and father, Aase and John, and his brother Mark.

kim-eisners

Around the Tubes


Bookmark and Share

It’s Saturday, yay!  Here’s the news you might have missed including the passage of a legend.

Around the Blogs:

The Source – Gene Colan (1926-2011)

When Comic Books Ruled the Earth – Gene Colan 1926-2011

MTV Geek – A Legend Passes: Comic Book Artist Gene Colan (1926-2011)

Bleeding Cool – The Ken Penders/Archie Comics Lawsuit ContinuesSeems to be a hell of a lot of these going around.

Comicvine – Daredevil Returns To New York This July!Should be interesting….

Bleeding Cool – No Such Word As Superhero – DC’s Retailer Roadshow Hits Baltimore – Collectors Cornered #2Some more info about the DC relaunch/reboot.

Con Coverage:

Bleeding Cool – San Diego Comic Con Exclusive T-Shirts – And Where They Came From

The Beat – SLG to demo digital comics at Comic-Con

Southeast Missourian – In its sixth year, Cape Comic Con continues to grow as it celebrates comics and games

CBR – Marvel Announces Creator Lineup for 2011 New York Comic Con

Around the Tubes


Bookmark and Share

The week is up and here’s tons of reviews for you to decide what to pick up this week.

Around the Blogs:

ICv2 – Filming Begins on ‘The Dark Knight Rises’I’m still waiting for my call as far as my casting…. just saying….

The Beat – Jeffrey Catherine Jones: “The fear has left me”The comic book industry lost a talent yesterday.

Graphic Novel Reporter – American Library Association Annual Conference, June 23-28, 2011Libraries are embracing the comic book format, and the various panels at this upcoming conference shows it.

Around the Tubes Reviews:

IGN – Alpha Flight #0.1

IGN – The Amazing Spider-Man #661

IGN – Astonishing X-Men #38

IGN – The Avengers #13

Comic Book Resources – Avengers #13

IGN – Avengers Academy #14

IGN – Batman #710

IGN – Batman and Robin #23

Graphic Novel Reporter – Cat Eyed Boy, Vol. 2

IGN – DC Universe Online: Legends #8

IGN – DMZ #65

Graphic Novel Reporter – DMZ, Vol. 1: On the Ground

IGN – Fables #105

IGN – G.I. Joe: Snake Eyes #1

IGN – Herc #3

IGN – Hulk #33

IGN – Invincible Iron Man #504

Alternative Magazine Online – Lenore: Cooties

Graphic Novel Reporter – Luthor

Comicsgirl – Mal and Chad Vol. 1: The Biggest, Bestest Time Ever!

IGN – Malignant Man #2

Good Comic Books – Moriarty: The Dark Chamber #1

Ely Standard – Noche Roja

IGN – Rocketeer Adventures #1

Comic Book Resources – Rocketeer Adventures #1

IGN – Sigil #3

IGN – Silver Surfer #4

IGN – Star Wars: Jedi – The Dark Side #1

IGN – Supergirl #64

IGN – T.H.U.N.D.E.R. Agents #7

IGN – Thunderbolts #157

IGN – Ultimate Comics Avengers vs. New Ultimates #4

IGN – Ultimate Comics Spider-Man #158

Graphic Novel Reporter – Unwritten, Vol. 2: Inside Man

Graphic Novel Reporter – The Very Best of Dick Tracy: Bullets, Battles & Bad Guys

IGN – Witchblade #144

IGN – X-Men Giant-Size #1

IGN – X-Men: Prelude to Schism #2

IGN – Comic Book Reviews for 5/18/11

Dwayne McDuffie Remembered


Bookmark and Share

Yesterday the shocking news of Dwayne McDuffie‘s sudden passing quickly spread throughout the comics industry and beyond.  We thought it best to let the people who knew him best and his fans speak out in their praise through their tweets they posted when learning the news.

http://twitter.com/#!/Alex_Farb/status/40204610350223361

http://twitter.com/#!/Morgan_LeFey/status/40215400230830080

Harvey Pekar Has Passed Away


Bookmark and Share

Harvey PekarHarvey Pekar opened his life to all of us through comic books.  He was one of two comic book legends to come from the “mistake by the lake,” the other being Superman.  His autobiographical comic book series American Splendor chronicled his life, warts and all.  Pekar passed away earlier this morning.

Pekar, 70, was found dead shortly before 1 a.m. today by his wife, Joyce Brabner, in their Cleveland Heights home, said Powell Caesar, spokesman for Cuyahoga County Coroner Frank Miller. An autopsy will be conducted to determine the cause of death.

A Cleveland institution, Pekar began his comics career after being inspired by R. Crumb in 1972 and began to publish annually in 1976.  Crumb described Pekar as “the soul of Cleveland.”

He won the American Book Award in 1987 for American Splendor and was a regular guest on the David Letterman show.  Pekar also won a Peabody Award and saw his life on the big screen in a film adaptation of American Splendor which won the Grand Jury Prize for dramatic films at the prestigious Sundance Film Festival.

Cleveland.com has further coverage of the life and times of Harvey Pekar, a true original.

Pekar in a Letterman appearance from July 31, 1987.

Comics Legend Al Williamson Passes


Bookmark and Share

Word spread throughout the comic community today of the passing of comic book legend Al Williamson at the age of 79.  His career spanned five decades and might be best known for his work on Star Wars comics during the 80’s, having been personally chosen George Lucas due to Williamson’s work on Flash Gordon.

In the 1950’s Williamson illustrated comics for Marvel’s predecessor Timely Comics for series such as Kid Colt and The Ringo Kid.  He also worked for EC on various horror, crime and sci-fi stories.

His last profile comic was in honor of the Sub-Mariner’s 70th anniversary and most recent work included Spider-Girl, Spider-Man 2099, Daredevil and Atomic Age which won him seven Harveys and three Eisners.

Comic Strip Artist Tony DiPreta Has Passed


Bookmark and Share

Tony DiPreta best known for Joe Palooka and Rex Morgan, M.D., passed away this past Wednesday at the age of 88.  DiPreta died of respiratory and cardiac arrest, according to his son, Richard DiPreta, a Greenwich, CT. attorney.

In a 2007 interview DiPreta said he got into cartooning after reading in The Advocate of Stamford that a cartoonist named Webster made $50,000 a year.  He began his career after high school by working for Quality Comics as a colorist.  He the went on to letter for cartoonist Lyman Young while Young went out to play golf.

He then moved to New York City where he met Stan Lee who then had him ink Porky Pig. From 1945 to 1955 DiPreta worked on Mickey Finn.  In 1959 he began to work on Joe Palooka and eventually Rex Morgan, M.D.

DiPreta is predeceased by his wife of 41 years, Frances DiPreta, who died Sept. 26, 2009. In addition to his son Richard DiPreta, he is survived by brothers Joe DiPreta of North Kingston, R.I., and Leonard DiPreta of Stamford; daughter Janet DiPreta, of Anchorage, Alaska; son Edward DiPreta of St. Simons, Ga.; and grandson Christopher DiPreta.

Frank Frazetta


Bookmark and Share

Today saw the passing of the great Frank Frazetta at the age of 82 from a stroke.  According to one of his business managers, Rob Pistella, Frazetta fell ill after a Mother’s Day dinner.  Emergency medical services were called and Mr. Frazetta was rushed to the hospital, where he died.

Frazetta broke into the industry draw for comic strips like Al Capp’s Lil’ Abner and comic books like Famous Funnies in the 1940’s and 50’s.  He famously contributed a series of covers depicting Buck Rogers.  In 1952 and 53 he produced his own newspaper strip called Johnny Comet.  In 1964 he drew the poster for the movie What’s New Pussycat? and then went on to depict such characters as Conan and Death Dealer.

His style was unmistakable and there’s many a vans that depict his style on their sides.  His painted covers reach to such heavy metal albums like Molly Hatchet’s Flirtin’ With Disaster and Nazareth’s Expect No Mercy.

Most recently his family was in a dispute over his art legacy and November the cover artwork for Conan the Conqueror went to an unnamed collector for $1 million.

His impact was huge and many of today’s artists were inspired by him.  There was only one Frank Frazetta and he will be missed.

« Older Entries Recent Entries »