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Chaykin Stevens

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Everything posted by Chaykin Stevens

  1. Looking at a scan of the issue online, only the Glory/Angela: Angels In Hell #1 side seems to have an indicia.
  2. Colon drew a couple of issues of Savage Sword of Conan, but I don't recall him drawing Claw the Unconquered. Are you mixing him up with Ernie Chan?
  3. USAgent, War Machine and Thunderswipe appeared together in Avengers: the Terminatrix Objective by Mark Gruenwald and Mike Gustovich.
  4. GCD says Kane pencilled and inked the cover (apart from the Green Goblin's face by Romita) from a layout by Marie Severin.
  5. I don't think Jimmy Olsen was DC's lowest seller. It says in American Comic Book Chronicles: the 70s that it had monthly sales of 333,000, and that Kirby took it because it was reportedly the only DC title that had no regular creative team. link
  6. Flippa Dippa was said to be based on a character named Foxtrot, played by Cleavon Little in a 1967 off-Broadway play called Scuba Duba.
  7. Kirby did 15 issues of Jimmy Olsen: #133-139 & 141-148.
  8. That story, in Avengers Wast Coast #61, was written by Roy and Dann Thomas. Byrne had fallen out with Tom DeFalco and quit after AWC #57. link
  9. Miller also drew Doc in Amazing Spider-Man Annual #14, which was nicely inked by Tom Palmer.
  10. Grell's wife at the time, Sharon Wright, ghosted the scripting of most or all issues from #53 to 71. https://www.cbr.com/comic-book-urban-legends-revealed-167/
  11. Ronin #1-6 by Frank Miler Breathtaker #1-4 by Mark Wheatley and Marc Hempel Foolkiller #1-10 by Steve Gerber and JJ Birch The Nazz #1-4 by Tom Veitch and Bryan Talbot Enigma #1-8 by Peter Milligan and Duncan fegredo
  12. Your drawing is by Syd Shores and Frank Giacoia from Daredevil #102. Shores sadly passed away a couple of months after this was published.
  13. Agree with you about both of those, Another underrated Len Wein single issue is Incredible Hulk #189, "None Are So Blind."
  14. First Star-Lord was Marvel Preview #4.
  15. Sal Buscema's DD cover dates from 1971, which would make it Bronze Age.
  16. I was shocked to discover this character wasn't created by Garth Ennis.
  17. So someone whose name contained a mnemonic for the colours of the rainbow went on to become the Rainbow Raider - what are the chances of that?
  18. According to GCD, the cover to Iron Fist #14 was based on a design by Dave Cockrum (coincidentally also the designer of the Black Cat's costume), which may explain why it looks better than most of Al Milgrom's work.
  19. According to GCD, Wrightson drew the cover and a nine page story. Sergio Aragones, Jack Sparling, Win Mortimer and Alex Nino drew the rest of the issue.
  20. The Marvel Chronology Project says The One Above All (the leader of the Celestials) was "behind the scenes" in Eternals #7 & 13. His first actual appearance may be in Thor #287 by Roy Thomas and Keith Pollard. Confusingly, there's a similarly named character One-Above-All, who is the Living Tribunal's master. The Tribunal is said to have referred to him at some point in one of his appearances in Strange Tales. The first actual appearance of One-Above-All may be in Doctor Strange #13 by Steve Englehart and Gene Colan.
  21. I think Nowlan also painted covers for Doctor Zero #3, Powerline #3, St. George #3, Nick Fury vs. S.H.I.E.L.D. #5, Penthouse Comix #5, Batman: Legends of the Dark Knight #101, Legends of the DC Universe #10, 11 & 39 and Hulk Smash #1 & 2.
  22. The full unedited image by Sienkiewicz appears as a pin-up inside that issue.
  23. If you can find this one cheaply, it's worth picking up for a six-pager drawn by Berni Wrightson.