List of comics creators appearing in comics
Appearance
Several comic book and comic strip writers, artists, and others have appeared within the fictional world of comics, both their own and others'. Some appear as simple characters in the story, some appear as characters who break the fourth wall and address the reader directly, and some make cameo appearances in framing sequences to introduce a story and sometimes to have a last word.
" * " = "behind the scenes" stories not in regular continuity
A
[edit]- Sgt Fury and His Howing Commandos #164 (June 1981)
- The Inferior Five #6 (Jan.-Feb. 1968): "How to Make a Bomb!"
- Superman's Girl Friend Lois Lane #117 (December 1971):"Rose and the Thorn: The Ghost with Two Faces" (as "Zack Adler")
- Excalibur: Mojo Mayhem (December 1989)
- FF vol 2 #10 (September 2013): "Paint it Black"
- Sea Devils #13 (September-October 1963): "The Secrets of Three Sunken Ships!"
- Wonder Woman #158 (November 1965): "The End -- Or the Beginning!"
- The Brave and the Bold #124 (January 1976): "Small War of the Super Rifles"
- Jon Sable, Freelance #33 (July 1986)
- Stan Aschmeier (aka Stan Asch, Stan Josephs)
- Flash Comics #71 (May 1946): "Johnny Thunder"
- Sgt. Fury and his Howling Commandos #22 (September 1965): "Don't Turn Your Back on Bull McGiveney!"
- Sgt. Fury and his Howling Commandos Special #4 (Aug. 1968): "Gary and Dick Up Front!"
- Sgt. Fury and his Howling Commandos Special #6 (Aug. 1970): "Through the Past Darkly"
- Sgt. Fury and his Howling Commandos #100 (July 1972): "100th Anniversary!"
B
[edit]- David Baldeón
- Gwenpool Strikes Again #3 (Oct. 2019)
- The Flash #228 (Aug. 1974): "The Day I Saved The Flash!"[1]
- Justice League of America #123 (Oct. 1975): "Where on Earth Am I?"[2]
- Justice League of America #124 (Nov. 1975): "Avenging Ghosts of the Justice Society!"[3]
- Captain America #267 (March 1982): "The Man Who Made a Difference!"
- The New Teen Titans #20 (June 1982): "A Titanic Tale of Titans' Tomfoolery!"[4]
- normalman-Megaton Man Special #1 (August 1994): "Lest No Bridge Be Unburned"
- Comic Cavalcade #6 (Spring 1944): "They Are Invincible!"
- Shazam #1 (Feb. 1973): "In The Beginning"
- Target Comics vol. 2, #4 (June 1941): "Target and the Targeteers: The Case of the Cartoon Crimes"
- Crime Does Not Pay #30 (November 1943): "Inside Story"
- Pep Comics #400 (May 1985): "Pep 400"
- Detective Comics #70 (December 1942): "Air Wave: Who Rubbed Out the Editor?"
- The Inferior Five #6 (Jan.-Feb. 1968): "How to Make a Bomb!"
- The Doom Patrol #121 (Sept./Oct. 1968): "The Death of the Doom Patrol?"
- The Brave and the Bold #124 (January 1976): "Small War of the Super Rifles"
- Brian Bondurant
- Duck-Girl #0 (Aug. 2000): "Made in Japan."
- The Masked Man #9 (April 1986): "The End"
- FF vol 2 #10 (September 2013): "Paint it Black"
- The Inferior Five #6 (Jan.-Feb. 1968): "How to Make a Bomb!"
- Prize Comics #30 (April 1943): "Frankenstein"
- Detective Comics 343 (September 1965): "The Secret War of the Phantom General"
- Sub-Mariner #19 (November 1969): "Support Your Local Sting-Ray!"
- What If? #11 (Oct. 1978): "What if the Fantastic Four Were the Original Marvel Bullpen?"
- Eliot R. Brown
- Uncanny X-Men Annual #7 (1983): "Scavenger Hunt"
- Iron Man #72 (January 1975): "Convention of Fear!"
- Dime Comics #27 (May 1946): "Lank The Yank"
- Astonishing Tales #25 (Aug. 1970): "Deathlok The Demolisher"
- Brian Buniak
- Thunder Bunny #1 (Jan. 1984), "The Greatest Story Ever Told"
- Marvel Mystery Comics #34 (Aug. 1942): "The Human Torch"
- Strange Tales #123 (Aug. 1964): "The Birth of the Beetle"
- The Avengers vol. 3, #14 (March 1999): "Hi, Honey... ...I'm Hooooome!" *
- E-Man #6 (Charlton, January 1875): "Rog 2000 in That Was No Lady" (as "Burns")
- Iron Fist #8 (October 1976): "Like Tigers in the Night!"
- Iron Fist #15 (Sept. 1977): "Enter the X-Men"
- X-Men #121 (May 1979): "Shoot-Out At The Stampede!"
- Fantastic Four #216 (March 1980): "Where There Be Gods!"
- E-Man #2 (First Comics, 1982)
- Destroyer Duck #2-6 (1982) - parody character "Booster Cogburn"
- The Complete Rog 2000 (1982): "The Coming of the Gang"
- Fantastic Four #262 (January 1984): "The Trial of Mr. Fantastic"
- The Thing #7 (January 1984): "What Th'!?"
- The Star Brand #11 (Jan. 1988): "Celebrity"
- The Star Brand #12 (Mar. 1988): "The White Event Explained!" – "killed" in an explosion at a Pittsburgh-area comic book convention
- The Sensational She-Hulk #41 (July 1992): "Rock & Ruin"
- The Sensational She-Hulk #50: (April 1993): "He's Dead?!"
- Hulk #1 (April 1999): "Everything You Ever Wanted To Know About The Hulk (But Were Afraid To Ask!)"
C
[edit]- Pin-Up (1995 – )
- X-Men Annual #7 (1983): "Scavenger Hunt"
- Captain America #289 (Jan. 1984): Cover and "Bernie America, Sentinel of Liberty"
- Li'l Abner (April 1951): 16. and 17. April daily strips
- Action Comics #55 (Dec. 1942): "A Goof Named Tiny Rufe"* (as "Al Hatt")
- Concrete Eclectica #2 (1993)
- Astonishing #4 (June 1951): "The Nightmare"
- Marvel Premiere #24 (Sept. 1975): "Summerkill"
- X-Men #98 (April 1976): "Merry Christmas, X-Men..."
- X-Men #105 (June 1977): "The Flame, The Frenzy... and Firelord", pp. 10 and 11
- Iron Fist #15 (Sept. 1977): "Enter the X-Men"
- Man-Thing vol. 2, #11 (July 1981): "Hell's Gate"
- X-Men Annual #7 (1983): "Scavenger Hunt"
- Excalibur: Mojo Mayhem (December 1989)
- normalman-Megaton Man Special #1 (August 1994): "Lest No Bridge Be Unburned"
- Howard The Duck #10 (October 2016): "...Hell If I Know..." (as "Ta-Nehi-C")
- X-Men #105 (June 1977): "The Flame, The Frenzy... and Firelord", pp. 10 and 11
- Iron Fist #15 (Sept. 1977): "Enter the X-Men"
- E-Man #2 (First Comics, 1982)
- Iron Fist #15 (Sept. 1977): "Enter the X-Men"
- Sea Devils #13 (September-October 1963): "The Secrets of Three Sunken Ships!"
- Daredevil Special #1 (Sept. 1967): "At the Stroke of Midnight" *
- Ghostly Weird Stories #120 (September 1953): "Night-Monster" (as comic book editor "L.B.")
- Crack Comics #33, 34 (August 1943): "Inkie"
- Harley Quinn #0 (2013): "Picky Sicky"
- Harley Quinn #27 (2017): "Master of Her Domain"
- Batman #237 (Dec. 1971): "Night of the Reaper"[7]
- Justice League of America #103 (Dec. 1972): "A Stranger Walks among Us!"[8][9][10][11]
- Amazing Adventures #16 (Jan. 1973): "And the Juggernaut Will Get You... If You Don't Watch Out!"[8][9][10][11]
- Thor #207 (Jan. 1973): "Firesword!"[8][9][10][11]
- Fantastic Four #176 (Nov. 1976): "Improbable As It May Seem – The Impossible Man Is Back in Town!"[12]
- Tales From The Crypt #31 (August-September 1952):"Kamen's Kalamity!"
- Uncanny X-Men Annual #7 (1983): "Scavenger Hunt"
D
[edit]- Nicholas Da Silva aka ZOOLOOK
- X-Men Forever 2 #11 (November 10, 2010): "The Gathering Storm", pp. 1, 2, 3 and 5
- The Incredible Hulk #418 (June 1994) "We are Gathered Here"
- Excalibur #24 (July 1990) "Tempting Fates"
- Tales From The Crypt #31 (August-September 1952):"Kamen's Kalamity!"
- Pep Comics #400 (May 1985): "Pep 400"
- Millie the Model #77 (April 1957): untitled story
- Pep Comics #400 (May 1985): "Pep 400"
- Pep Comics #400 (May 1985): "Pep 400"
- Amazing Spider-Man #275 (April 1986): "The Return of the Hobgoblin!"
- The Sensational She-Hulk #50: (April 1993): "He's Dead?!"
- Captain America #289 (Jan. 1984): Cover
- Harley Quinn Invades Comic-Con International San Diego #1 (Sept 2014)
- Harley Quinn Invades Comic-Con International San Diego #1 (Sept 2014)
- The Amazing Spider-Man Annual #1 (1964): "How Stan Lee and Steve Ditko Create Spider-Man"
- Dr Strange #55 (1982): "To Have Loved... And Lost" (under the anagram name of "Ted Tevoski")
- The Inferior Five #6 (Jan.-Feb. 1968): "How to Make a Bomb!"
- Dragon's Teeth #1 (1983): "Inspiration"
- Pep Comics #400 (May 1985): "Pep 400"
- Not Brand Echh #11 (December 1968): "Dark Moon Rise, Heck Hound Hurt"
- Crystar #5 (January 1984): "The Story They Said Couldn't Be Done!"
E
[edit]- Iron Man #85 (April 1976): "...And The Freak Shall Inherit the Earth"
- Archie #2 (Spring 1943): "Bumble the Bee-tective"
- The Spirit (June 8, 1947)
- The Spirit (December 31, 1950), "Happy New Year"
- The Spirit (January 13, 1952), "Last Day of the Planet Earth"
- The Spirit (July 20, 1952), "Marry the Spirit"
- The Spirit #17 (1977) and #30 (1981)
- Cerebus Jam #1 (April 1985), "Cerebus v The Spirit"
- The Dreamer (1986)
- Dark Horse Presents #66 (Sept. 1992): "Concrete: Byrdland's Secret"
- Justice League of America #89 (March 1971): "The Most Dangerous Dreams of All"
- normalman-Megaton Man Special #1 (August 1994): "Lest No Bridge Be Unburned"
- Lois Lane, Girl Reporter comic strip #8 (1944): untitled
- Justice League of America #103 (Dec. 1972): "A Stranger Walks among Us!"[8][9][10][11]
- Master of Kung Fu #17 (April 1974): "Lair of the Lost"
- Amazing Adventures #16 (Jan. 1973): "And the Juggernaut Will Get You... If You Don't Watch Out!"[8][9][10][11]
- Thor #207 (Jan. 1973): "Firesword!"[8][9][10][11]
- Fantastic Four #333 (Mid-Nov. 1989): "The Dream is Dead Part Two" (under his pen name John Harkness)
- Black Lightining #1 (April 1977)
- Sea Devils #13 (September-October 1963): "The Secrets of Three Sunken Ships!"
- Wonder Woman #158 (November 1965): "The End -- Or the Beginning!"
- The Inferior Five #6 (Jan.-Feb. 1968): "How to Make a Bomb!"
- Sub-Mariner #19 (November 1969): "Support Your Local Sting-Ray!"
- Marvel Mystery Comics #34 (Aug. 1942): "The Human Torch"
- Sub-Mariner #19 (November 1969): "Support Your Local Sting-Ray!"
F
[edit]- The Phantom: Mystery of Cape Cod (1986), The Triads (1994)
- The Phantom: September 3, 2023
- The Spirit (January 13, 1952), "Last Day of the Planet Earth"
- The Spirit (December 31, 1950), "Happy New Year"
- The Haunt of Fear #17 (September-October, 1950): "Horror Beneath the Streets!"
- Weird Fantasy #14 (1952)
- Modern Love #8 (1952), "The Love Story to End All Love Stories!"
- Tales From The Crypt #31 (August-September 1952):"Kamen's Kalamity!"
- Man-Thing vol. 2, #11 (July 1981): "Hell's Gate"
- Marvel Preview #23 (black and white magazine format, Fall, 1980): "Annie Mae"
- All-Flash #14 (Spring 1944)
- Strange Adventures #140 (May 1962), "The Strange Adventure That Really Happened"
- Detective Comics #347 (January 1966), "The Strange Death of Batman!"
- Captain Carrot and His Amazing Zoo Crew #14 (April 1983), "Crisis on Earth-C!"
- Feature Comics #48 (September 1941): "Poison Ivy, The Mighty Mite"
- FF vol 2 #10 (September 2013): "Paint it Black"
- Amazing Spider-Man #275 (April 1986): "The Return of the Hobgoblin!"
- The Inferior Five #6 (Jan.-Feb. 1968): "How to Make a Bomb!"
- Sgt. Fury and his Howling Commandos Special #4 (Aug. 1968): "Gary and Dick Up Front!"
- Sub-Mariner #19 (November 1969): "Support Your Local Sting-Ray!"
- Sgt. Fury and his Howling Commandos Special #6 (Aug. 1970): "Through the Past Darkly"
- Sgt. Fury and his Howling Commandos #100 (July 1972): "100th Anniversary!"
- Justice League of America #89 (March 1971): "The Most Dangerous Dreams of All"
- Iron Man #72 (January 1975): "Convention of Fear!"
G
[edit]- Marvel 1602 #5 (Feb 2004) *
- Wolff & Byrd, Counsellors of the Macabre #4 (Nov. 1994):"A Host of Horrors"
- normalman-Megaton Man Special #1 (August 1994): "Lest No Bridge Be Unburned"
- The Haunt of Fear #17 (September-October, 1950): "Horror Beneath the Streets!"
- Weird Fantasy #14 (1952)
- Modern Love #8 (1952), "The Love Story to End All Love Stories!"
- Tales From The Crypt #31 (August-September 1952):"Kamen's Kalamity!"
- Hulk #1 (April 1999): "Everything You Ever Wanted To Know About The Hulk (But Were Afraid To Ask!)"
- Man-Thing (1974 series) #22: "Pop Goes the Cosmos!"
- Howard the Duck #16: "Zen and the Art of Comic Book Writing"
- Sub-Mariner #19 (November 1969): "Support Your Local Sting-Ray!"
- Mr. Monster #7 (December 1986): "Mr. Monster's Bedtime Story"
- You Are Deadpool #1
- The New Teen Titans #20 (June 1982): "A Titanic Tale of Titans' Tomfoolery!"[4]
- Pep Comics #400 (May 1985): "Pep 400"
- Pep Comics #400 (May 1985): "Pep 400"
- Pep Comics #400 (May 1985): "Pep 400"
- Jon Goldwater
- Stan Lee's Mighty 7: issue 1 (May, 2012): "How It All Began"
- Pep Comics #400 (May 1985): "Pep 400"
- Marvel Mystery Comics #34 (Aug. 1942): "The Human Torch"
- Sgt. Fury and his Howling Commandos #100 (July 1972): "100th Anniversary!"
- Fantastic Four #176 (Nov. 1976): "Improbable As It May Seem – The Impossible Man Is Back in Town!"[12]
- Ms. Marvel vol 1. #15 (Mar. 1978): "The Shark is a Very Deadly Beast!"
- Freedom Fighters # 9 (Aug 1987), "Blitzkrieg at Buffalo"
- Pep Comics #400 (May 1985): "Pep 400"
- Asterix and the Class Act (2003)
- Asterix and the Missing Scroll (2015)
- Strange Adventures #140 (May 1962), "The Strange Adventure That Really Happened"
- The Green Lama #6 (August 1945): "An American Story"
- Thunder Bunny #1 (Jan. 1984), "The Greatest Story Ever Told"
- Pep Comics #400 (May 1985): "Pep 400"
- Marvel Two-In-One #60 (Feb. 1980): "Happiness is a Warm Alien"
- Marvel Preview #23 (black and white magazine format, Fall, 1980): "Annie Mae"
- The Sensational She-Hulk #50: (April 1993): "He's Dead?!"
- X-Men Annual #7 (1983): "Scavenger Hunt"
- The Star Brand #11 (Jan. 1988): "Celebrity"
- The Star Brand #12 (Mar. 1988): "The White Event Explained!" – "killed" in an explosion at a Pittsburgh-area comic book convention
H
[edit]- X-Men Annual #7 (1983): "Scavenger Hunt"
- Cerebus Jam #1 (April 1985), "The Defense of Fort Columbia"
- Cerebus Jam #1 (April 1985), "The Defense of Fort Columbia"
- The Brave and the Bold #124 (January 1976): "Small War of the Super Rifles"
- Crystar #5 (January 1984): "The Story They Said Couldn't Be Done!"
- Harley Quinn Invades Comic-Con International San Diego #1 (Sept 2014)
- Detective Comics #482 (February–March 1979): "Bat-Mite's New York Adventure"[13][14]
- The Warlord #35 (July 1980): "Gambit"[15]
- Lee Harris
- Mystery Men Comics #2 (September 1939): "Real Life Personal Interviews with Famous Detectives - Detective Ben Rosenberg"
- Detective Comics #70 (December 1942): "Air Wave: Who Rubbed Out the Editor?"
- The Inferior Five #6 (Jan.-Feb. 1968): "How to Make a Bomb!"
- Pep Comics #400 (May 1985): "Pep 400"
- Gwenpool Strikes Back #4 (Nov. 2019)
- Sub-Mariner #19 (November 1969): "Support Your Local Sting-Ray!"
- The Spirit #30 (Kitchen Sink Press, 1981)
- The Omega Men #3 (June 1983): "Assault on Euphorix"
- Howard the Duck #10 (October 2016): "...Hell If I Know..." (as "Air-Icka")
- Sub-Mariner #19 (November 1969): "Support Your Local Sting-Ray!"
- All-Flash #14 (Spring 1944)
- Michael Higgins
- Fantastic Four #262 (January 1984): "The Trial of Mr. Fantastic"
- The Star Brand #11 (Jan. 1988): "Celebrity"
- Carl Hubbell
- Pep Comics 31 (September 1942): "Sgt. Boyle"
I
[edit]- Tales From The Crypt #31 (August-September 1952):"Kamen's Kalamity!"
- Marvel Premiere #21 (Mar. 1975): "Daughters Of The Death-Goddess"
J
[edit]- Since his 1942 one-shot story Un marinaio nella stratosfera ("A Sailor into the Stratosphere") published by Edizioni A.V.E. until his death in 1997, Jac has very often portrayed himself in his own comics, or at least was referenced by various characters, usually interacting with them.
- Groo the Wanderer vol. 2, #2 (April 1985): "Dragon Killer!"
- The New Avengers #7–10 (July–Oct. 2005): "The Sentry"
- Marvel Premiere #21 (Mar. 1975): "Daughters Of The Death-Goddess"
K
[edit]- Wonder Woman vol. 2, #8 (September 1987), p. 20: "Time Passages"
- Marvel Premiere #24 (Sept. 1975): "Summerkill"
- Tales From The Crypt #31 (August-September 1952):"Kamen's Kalamity!"
- Green Lantern vol. 2 #29 (June 1964): "Half a Green Lantern is Better than None!" *
- Green Lantern #45 (June 1966): "Prince Peril's Power Play"
- Judgment Day: Aftermath (March 1998)
- House of Mystery #180 (1969): "His Name is Kane"
- Wonder Woman #158 (November 1965): "The End -- Or the Beginning!"
- The Inferior Five #6 (Jan.-Feb. 1968): "How to Make a Bomb!"
- Action Comics #476 (March 1977): "Clark Kent's Lonely Christmas!"
- The Inferior Five #6 (Jan.-Feb. 1968): "How to Make a Bomb!"
- Gary Kato
- Thunder-bunny #5 (Feb. 1986): "Moonlight Miss"
- Boy Commandos #1 (Winter 1942–43): "Satan Wears a Swastika"
- Headline Comics #37 (Sep/Oct 1949): Cover[17]
- Modern Love #8 (1952), "The Love Story to End All Love Stories!"
- The Fantastic Four #10 (Jan. 1963): "The Return of Doctor Doom"
- Fantastic Four Special #5 (Nov. 1967): "This is a Plot?" *
- Sub-Mariner #19 (November 1969): "Support Your Local Sting-Ray!"
- X-Men #98 (April 1976): "Merry Christmas, X-Men..."
- Iron Man #85 (April 1976): "...And The Freak Shall Inherit the Earth"
- What If? #11 (Oct. 1978): "What if the Fantastic Four Were the Original Marvel Bullpen?"
- Thunder Bunny #1 (Jan. 1984), "The Greatest Story Ever Told"
- The Dreamer by Will Eisner (1986)
- The Spirit #30 (Kitchen Sink Press, 1981)
- Marvel 1602 #5 (Feb 2004)
- Whack 2 (December 1953): "The 3-D-T's: A Look Behind the Scenes at America's Screwiest Industry!"
- The Sea Devils 13 (September-October 1963): "The Secrets of Three Sunken Ships!"
- Harley Quinn Invades Comic-Con International San Diego #1 (Sept 2014)
- Sub-Mariner #19 (November 1969): "Support Your Local Sting-Ray!"
L
[edit]- La Plume Japonaise (2006), previously serialized in Mensuhell #57–77 (Aug. 2004– April 2006)
- Pep Comics #400 (May 1985): "Pep 400"
- The Complete Rog 2000 (1982): "The Coming of the Gang"
- Harley Quinn Invades Comic-Con International San Diego #1 (Sept 2014)
- All Winners Comics #2 (Fall 1941): "Winners All" (two-page text story)
- Mystic Comics #10 (August 1942): "Red Skeleton" (as "Stanley Dee")
- Astonishing #4 (June 1951): "The Nightmare"
- Adventures into Terror #5 (August 1951): "Find Me! Find Me! Find Me!" (as 'Lee Stanton')
- Mystery Tales #24 (December 1954): "Cast of Characters!"
- Millie the Model #77 (April 1957): untitled story
- The Fantastic Four #10 (Jan. 1963): "The Return of Doctor Doom"
- The Amazing Spider-Man Annual #1 (1964): "How Stan Lee and Steve Ditko Create Spider-Man" *
- Strange Tales #123 (Aug. 1964): "The Birth of the Beetle"
- Sgt. Fury and his Howling Commandos #22 (September 1965): "Don't Turn Your Back on Bull McGiveney!"
- Daredevil #29 (June 1967): "Unmasked"
- Daredevil Special #1 (Sept. 1967): "At the Stroke of Midnight" *
- Fantastic Four Special #5 (Nov. 1967): "This is a Plot?" *
- The Amazing Spider-Man Special #5 (Nov. 1968): "Here We Go-a-Plotting" *
- Sub-Mariner #19 (November 1969): "Support Your Local Sting-Ray!"
- Chamber of Darkness #2 (Dec. 1969) "The Day of the Red Death" (host)
- Sgt. Fury and his Howling Commandos Special #6 (Aug. 1970): "Through the Past Darkly"
- Sgt. Fury and his Howling Commandos #100 (July 1972): "100th Anniversary!"
- X-Men #98 (April 1976): "Merry Christmas, X-Men..."
- Iron Man #85 (April 1976): "...And The Freak Shall Inherit the Earth"
- Fantastic Four #176 (Nov. 1976): "Improbable As It May Seem – The Impossible Man Is Back in Town!"[12]
- What If? #11 (Oct. 1978): "What if the Fantastic Four Were the Original Marvel Bullpen?"
- Peter Parker, The Spectacular Spider-Man #54 (May 1981): "To Save the Smuggler!"
- Dr Strange #55 (1982): "To Have Loved... And Lost" (under the anagram name of "Les Tane")
- Stan Lee Meets Superheroes (five issues from Nov. 2006)
- Stan Lee's Mighty 7: issues 1-3 (May, July and September 2012)
- Marvel Universe Avengers and Ultimate Spider-Man#1 (October 2012): "...Ultimate Peter Parker"
- Patsy Walker A.K.A. Hellcat! issues 7-8 (August and September 2016)
- Legion of Super-Heroes #297 (March 1983)
- normalman-Megaton Man Special #1 (August 1994): "Lest No Bridge Be Unburned"
- The Amazing Spider-Man Special #5 (Nov. 1968): "Here We Go-a-Plotting" *
- Sub-Mariner #19 (November 1969): "Support Your Local Sting-Ray!"
- Sgt. Fury and his Howling Commandos Special #6 (Aug. 1970): "Through the Past Darkly"
- Marvel Team-Up 74 (Oct. 1978): "Live From New York It's Saturday Night"
- Peter Parker, The Spectacular Spider-Man #54 (May 1981): "To Save the Smuggler!"
M
[edit]- The Star Brand #11 (Jan. 1988): "Celebrity"
- Marvel Two-In-One #60 (Feb. 1980): "Happiness is a Warm Alien"
- Dick Malmgren
- Pep Comics #400 (May 1985): "Pep 400"
- Howard the Duck #5 (black and white magazine format, May 1980): "The Tomb of Drãkula!"
- Marvel Premiere #24 (Sept. 1975): "Summerkill"
- Rich Margopoulos
- Pep Comics #400 (May 1985): "Pep 400"
- Whack 2 (December 1953): "The 3-D-T's: A Look Behind the Scenes at America's Screwiest Industry!"
- All-Flash #14 (Spring 1944)
- Comic Cavalcade #6 (Spring 1944): "They Are Invincible!"
- Man-Thing vol. 2, #11 (July 1981): "Hell's Gate"
- normalman-Megaton Man Special #1 (August 1994): "Lest No Bridge Be Unburned" - as "Zot McSchool"
- Static Shock Special (2011)
- Suske en Wiske: "De Speelgoedspiegel" (1989), alongside his character Marcel Kiekeboe from De Kiekeboes.[20]
- Detective Comics #482 (February–March 1979): "Bat-Mite's New York Adventure"[13][14]
- Master of Kung Fu #17 (April 1974): "Lair of the Lost"
- Marvel Premiere #24 (Sept. 1975): "Summerkill"
- The Flash 80 Page Giant #1 (Aug. 1998): "Your Life Is My Business"
- Simpsons Comics #88 (Nov. 2003): "Licence to Kilt"
- Moebius (Jean Giraud)
- Werewolf By Night #17 (May 1974): "The Behemoth!"
- Doctor Strange – Sorcerer Supreme #9 (Nov. 1989): "That Was Then... This Is NOW"
- The Inferior Five #6 (Jan.-Feb. 1968): "How to Make a Bomb!"
- Master of Kung Fu #64 (May 1978): "Deadly Lesson: Like Father, Like Son...?"
- Bob Montana
- Archie #2 (Spring 1943): "Bumble the Bee-tective"
- Jack Morelli
- X-Men Annual #7 (1983): "Scavenger Hunt"
- Archie #2 (Spring 1943): "Bumble the Bee-tective"
- Animal Man #26 (Aug. 1990): "Deus Ex Machina"
- Doom Patrol #58 (Oct. 1991): "Suicide Attack"
- Simpsons Comics #88 (Nov. 2003): "Licence to Kilt"
N
[edit]- X-Men Annual #7 (1983): "Scavenger Hunt"
- The Incredible Hulk #291 (January 1984): "Old Soldiers Never Die!"
- The Thing #7 (January 1984): "What Th'!?"
- Howard the Duck #10 (October 2016): "...Hell If I Know..." (as "Ry-N")
O
[edit]- Batman #237 (Dec. 1971): "Night of the Reaper"[7]
- Detective Comics #487 (Dec. 1979/Jan. 1980): "The Perils of Sergius" (O'Neil often used the pen name Sergius O'Shaugnessy)
- James Owsley (Christopher Priest)
- Amazing Spider-Man #275 (April 1986): "The Return of the Hobgoblin!"
P
[edit]- Harley Quinn #0 (2013): "Picky Sicky"
- Harley Quinn #27 (2017): "Master of Her Domain"
- X-Men Annual #7 (1983): "Scavenger Hunt"
- Fantastic Four #176 (Nov. 1976): "Improbable As It May Seem – The Impossible Man Is Back in Town!"[12]
- Marvel Two-In-One #60 (Feb. 1980): "Happiness is a Warm Alien"
- The New Teen Titans #20 (June 1982): "A Titanic Tale of Titans' Tomfoolery!"[4]
- The Avengers vol. 3, #14 (March 1999): "Hi, Honey... ...I'm Hooooome!" *
- Wonder Woman vol. 2, #8 (September 1987), p. 20: "Time Passages"
- Ghost Rider #14
- Teen Titans vol. 2, #21
- E*Man Comics #17 (1984): "Smeltquest"
- The Dreamer by Will Eisner (1986)
- Fantastic Four #193 (Apr. 1978): "Improbable As It May Seem – The Impossible Man Is Back in Town!"[12]
- The Doom Patrol #121 (Sept./Oct. 1968): "The Death of the Doom Patrol?"
Q
[edit]- Critters #50 (March 1990): "X-Mass Blitz-Kringle"
- Joe Quinones
- Howard the Duck #10 (October 2016): "...Hell If I Know..." (as "Jho")
R
[edit]- The Green Lama #6 (August 1945): "An American Story"
- He often drew himself in some stories of Bulletje en Boonestaak.[21]
- Super-Duper Comic (1946): "Electro Girl Battles 'The Gremlin's Post-War Plot"
- Ghostly Weird Stories #120 (September 1953): "Night-Monster"(as comic book artist "Raymond Alexander")
- Wonder Woman #5 (1989): "Logo"
- The Amazing Spider-Man Special #5 (Nov. 1968): "Here We Go-a-Plotting" *
- Sub-Mariner #19 (November 1969): "Support Your Local Sting-Ray!"
- Iron Man #85 (April 1976): "...And The Freak Shall Inherit the Earth"
- Star Spangled War Stories #202 (Oct./Nov. 1976): "The Cure"
- Uncle Scrooge #319 (July 2003): "The Dutchman's Secret"
- Target Comics vol. 2, #4 (June 1941): "Target and the Targeteers: The Case of the Cartoon Crimes"
- The New Teen Titans #20 (June 1982): "A Titanic Tale of Titans' Tomfoolery!"[4]
- Tales of the Teen Titans #50 (February 1985): "We Are Gathered Here Today"
- Action Comics #476 (March 1977): "Clark Kent's Lonely Christmas!"
- Edward Ryan
- Target Comics vol. 4, no. 1 (March 1943): "Target and the Targeteers"
- Amazing Spider-Man #275 (April 1986): "The Return of the Hobgoblin!"
S
[edit]- Active Comics #21 (1945): "Some Panthers Don't Wear Skates"
- Whack 2 (December 1953): "The 3-D-T's: A Look Behind the Scenes at America's Screwiest Industry!" (as "Mr. St. Peter")
- The Amazing Spider-Man newspaper strip, March 23, 2019
- Pep Comics #400 (May 1985): "Pep 400"
- The Inferior Five #6 (Jan.-Feb. 1968): "How to Make a Bomb!"
- Strange Adventures #140 (May 1962), "The Strange Adventure That Really Happened"
- The Inferior Five #6 (Jan.-Feb. 1968): "How to Make a Bomb!"
- The Flash #179 (May 1968): "Flash – Fact Or Fiction"[22]
- Justice League of America #103 (Dec. 1972): "A Stranger Walks among Us!"[8] (mentioned, not seen)
- Detective Comics #453 (November 1975): cover
- X-Men #98 (April 1976): "Merry Christmas, X-Men..."
- Action Comics #476 (March 1977): "Clark Kent's Lonely Christmas!"
- Superman #411 (Sept. 1985): "The Last Earth-Prime Story"
- Action Comics #565 (March 1985): "Ambush Bug in '$ellout' or 'Manna from Mando'"
- Ambush Bug #3 (Aug. 1985): "The Ambush Bug History of the DC Universe"
- Ambush Bug #4 (Sept. 1985): "Whoops"
- DC Comics Presents Hawkman #1 (Sept. 2004): "Secret Behind the Stolen Super-Weapons"
- DC Comics Presents Justice League of America #1 (Oct. 2004): "Visitors Day"
- Sgt. Fury and his Howling Commandos Special #4 (Aug. 1968): "Gary and Dick Up Front!"
- Sgt. Fury and his Howling Commandos Special #6 (Aug. 1970): "Through the Past Darkly"
- Sub-Mariner #19 (November 1969): "Support Your Local Sting-Ray!"
- Fantastic Four #176 (Nov. 1976): "Improbable As It May Seem – The Impossible Man Is Back in Town!"[12]
- Ms. Marvel vol 1. #15: "The Shark is a Very Deadly Beast"
- Sgt Fury and His Howing Commandos #164 (June 1981)
- Superman's Pal Jimmy Olsen #144 (Dec. 1971): "A Big Thing in a Deep Scottish Lake"
- Iron Man #123 (June 1979): "Casino Fatale"
- Howard the Duck #5 (black and white magazine format, May 1980): "The Tomb of Drãkula!"
- X-Men Annual #7 (1983): "Scavenger Hunt"
- Pep Comics 31 (September 1942): "Sgt. Boyle"
- Archie #2 (Spring 1943): "Bumble the Bee-tective"
- Pep Comics #400 (May 1985): "Pep 400"
- Boy Commandos #1 (Winter 1942–43): "Satan Wears a Swastika"
- Modern Love #8 (1952), "The Love Story to End All Love Stories!"
- Justice Traps the Guilty #56 (Nov. 1953): Cover
- Man-Thing vol. 2, #11 (July 1981): "Hell's Gate"
- X-Men Annual #7 (1983): "Scavenger Hunt"
- New Mutants #21 (November 1984): "Slumber Party!" (page 2)
- Fantastic Four #176 (Nov. 1976): "Improbable As It May Seem – The Impossible Man Is Back in Town!"[12]
- Marvel Preview #23 (black and white magazine format, Fall, 1980): "Annie Mae"
- The Adventures of Nero: He made countless cameo appearances in several of his albums, sometimes even directly interfering with his own characters.[23]
- The Complete Rog 2000 (1982): "The Coming of the Gang"
- Detective Comics #482 (February–March 1979): "Bat-Mite's New York Adventure"[13][14]
- X-Men Annual #7 (1983): "Scavenger Hunt"
- Supernatural Law Big First Amendment Issue (2005)
- Not Brand Echh #11 (December 1968): "Dark Moon Rise, Heck Hound Hurt"
- Star Reach #1 (1974): "Death Building"
- Master of Kung Fu #17 (April 1974): "Lair of the Lost"
- Sub-Mariner #19 (November 1969): "Support Your Local Sting-Ray!"
- What If? #11 (Oct. 1978): "What if the Fantastic Four Were the Original Marvel Bullpen?"
- The Complete Rog 2000 (1982): "The Coming of the Gang"
- The Thing #7 (January 1984): "What Th'!?"
- Dark Horse Presents # 100-3 (August 1995): "Concrete: The Artistic Impulse"
- Superman Annual # 9 (1983): "I Flew With Superman"
T
[edit]- The New Teen Titans #20 (June 1982): "A Titanic Tale of Titans' Tomfoolery!"[4]
- Jean Thomas
- Sub-Mariner #19 (November 1969): "Support Your Local Sting-Ray!"
- The Avengers #83 (Dec. 1970): "Come on In... The Revolution's Fine!"
- Fantastic Four Special #5 (Nov. 1967): "This is a Plot?" *
- The Amazing Spider-Man Special #5 (Nov. 1968): "Here We Go-a-Plotting" *
- Sub-Mariner #19 (November 1969): "Support Your Local Sting-Ray!"
- The Avengers #83 (Dec. 1970): "Come on In... The Revolution's Fine!"[25]
- Marvel Feature #2 (March 1972): "Nightmare on Bald Mountain"[26]
- Iron Man #72 (January 1975): "Convention of Fear!"
- Iron Man #85 (April 1976): "...And The Freak Shall Inherit the Earth"
- Fantastic Four #176 (Nov. 1976): "Improbable As It May Seem – The Impossible Man Is Back in Town!"[12]
- Thunder Bunny #1 (Jan. 1984), "The Greatest Story Ever Told"
- Freedom Fighters # 9 (Aug 1987), "Blitzkrieg at Buffalo"
- Sgt. Fury and his Howling Commandos Special #6 (Aug. 1970): "Through the Past Darkly"
- Sgt. Fury and his Howling Commandos #100 (July 1972): "100th Anniversary!"
- Strange Tales featuring Warlock #181 (Aug. 1975): "1000 Clowns"
- The Amazing Spider-Man newspaper strip, March 23, 2019
- Cerebus the Aardvark #3 (Apr–May 1978): "Song of Red Sophia"
- Thunder Bunny #1 (Jan. 1984), "The Greatest Story Ever Told"
- Harley Quinn Invades Comic-Con International San Diego #1 (Sept 2014)
- Kathe Todd
- Those Annoying Post Brothers #27 (1992), "Con Job"
- Anthony Tollin
- Sub-Mariner #19 (November 1969): "Support Your Local Sting-Ray!"
- Marvel Premiere #24 (Sept. 1975): "Summerkill"
- The Dreamer by Will Eisner (1986)
U
[edit]- Asterix and the Class Act (2003)
- Asterix and the Missing Scroll (2015)
V
[edit]- Suske en Wiske: "De Zeven Snaren" (1968),[28] "De Belhamel-bende" (1982).[29]
- Marvel Premiere #24 (Sept. 1975): "Summerkill"
- Iron Man #85 (April 1976): "...And The Freak Shall Inherit the Earth"
- Invincible #15 (July 2004)
- Ex Machina #40 (February 2009): "Ruthless"
- Sub-Mariner #19 (November 1969): "Support Your Local Sting-Ray!"
- Iron Man #85 (April 1976): "...And The Freak Shall Inherit the Earth"
- Fantastic Four #176 (Nov. 1976): "Improbable As It May Seem – The Impossible Man Is Back in Town!"[12]
- The Complete Rog 2000 (1982): "The Coming of the Gang"
- Crystar #5 (January 1984): "The Story They Said Couldn't Be Done!"
W
[edit]- Pep Comics #400 (May 1985): "Pep 400"
- Bill Walton
- Uncanny Tales #28 (January 1955): "Wiped Out!"
- Justice League of America #103 (Dec. 1972): "A Stranger Walks among Us!"[8][9][10][11]
- Amazing Adventures #16 (Jan. 1973): "And the Juggernaut Will Get You... If You Don't Watch Out!"[8][9][10][11]
- Thor #207 (Jan. 1973): "Firesword!"[8][9][10][11]
- Werewolf By Night #9 (September 1973): "Terror Beneath the Earth!"
- Marvel Premiere #24 (Sept. 1975): "Summerkill"
- Batman #237 (Dec. 1971): "Night of the Reaper"[7]
- Justice League of America #103 (Dec. 1972): "A Stranger Walks among Us!"[8][9][10][11]
- Amazing Adventures #16 (Jan. 1973): "And the Juggernaut Will Get You... If You Don't Watch Out!"[8][9][10][11]
- Thor #207 (Jan. 1973): "Firesword!"[8][9][10][11]
- Werewolf By Night #9 (September 1973): "Terror Beneath the Earth!"
- Marvel Premiere #24 (Sept. 1975): "Summerkill"
- Iron Man #85 (April 1976): "...And The Freak Shall Inherit the Earth"
- Fantastic Four #176 (Nov. 1976): "Improbable As It May Seem – The Impossible Man Is Back in Town!"[12]
- Freedom Fighters #9 (Aug 1977), "Blitzkrieg at Buffalo!"
- Peter Parker, The Spectacular Spider-Man #48 (November 1980): "Double Defeat!"
- The New Teen Titans #20 (June 1982): "A Titanic Tale of Titans' Tomfoolery!"[4]
- Wonder Woman vol. 2, #8 (September 1987), p. 20: "Time Passages"
- Action Comics #55 (Dec. 1942): "A Goof Named Tiny Rufe"
- The Inferior Five #6 (Jan.-Feb. 1968): "How to Make a Bomb!"
- Batman #237 (Dec. 1971): "Night of the Reaper"[7]
- Big Shot Comics vol. 8, #81 (September 1947): "The Skyman"
- Man-Thing vol. 2, #11 (July 1981): "Hell's Gate"
- Popeye #E14 (1972): "Popeye and Fine Arts and Humanities Careers"
- Patsy Walker A.K.A. Hellcat! issues 7-8 (August and September 2016)
- The Thing #7 (January 1984): "What Th'!?"
- Sensational She-Hulk #40 (April, 1992)
- Sensational She-Hulk #43 (September, 1992): "Battle? Why?"
- Sensational She-Hulk #50: (April 1993): "He's Dead?!"
- Sensational She-Hulk #60 (December, 1993): "Bug Hunt"
- Wilbur #13 (June 1947): "Katy Keene The Pin-up Queen"
- Wilbur #19 (June 1948): "Katy Keene"
- Katy Keene #1 (1949): "Congratulations to Katy Keene..."
- Katy Keene #8 (1952): "The Candy Kid"
- Katy Keene #14 (1954): "A Short Pig Tale"
- Fantastic Four #176 (Nov. 1976): "Improbable As It May Seem – The Impossible Man Is Back in Town!"[12]
- Freedom Fighters # 9 (Aug 1987), "Blitzkrieg at Buffalo"
- The New Teen Titans #20 (June 1982): "A Titanic Tale of Titans' Tomfoolery!"[4]
- Marvel Premiere #24 (Sept. 1975): "Summerkill"
- Crime Does Not Pay #30 (November 1943): "Inside Story"
- Weird Science 22 (1953): "My World"
- Batman #237 (Dec. 1971): "Night of the Reaper"[7]
Y
[edit]- Pep Comics #400 (May 1985): "Pep 400"
- Miracleman #8 (June 1986)
- The Spirit #30 (Kitchen Sink Press, 1981)
Z
[edit]- Ron Zalme
- Uncanny X-Men Annual #7 (1983): "Scavenger Hunt"
- Howard the Duck #10 (October 2016): "...Hell If I Know..." (as "Chipp")
- Captain America #289 (Jan. 1984): Cover
References
[edit]All appearances sourced from original or reprinted comics, unless otherwise noted.
- ^ Bates, Cary (w), Novick, Irv (p), Blaisdell, Tex (i). "The Day I Saved the Life of the Flash" The Flash, no. 228 (July–August 1974). DC Comics.
- ^ a b Bates, Cary; Maggin, Elliot S. (w), Dillin, Dick (p), McLaughlin, Frank (i). "Where on Earth Am I?" Justice League of America, no. 123 (October 1975). DC Comics.
- ^ a b Bates, Cary; Maggin, Elliot S. (w), Dillin, Dick (p), McLaughlin, Frank (i). "Avenging Ghosts of the Justice Society!" Justice League of America, no. 124 (November 1975). DC Comics.
- ^ a b c d e f g Wolfman, Marv (w), Pérez, George (p), Tanghal, Romeo (i). "A Titanic Tale of Titans' Tomfoolery!" The New Teen Titans, no. 20 (June 1982).
- ^ Schuddeboom, Bas; Knudde, Kjell (eds.). "B. C. Boyer". Keese Kousemaker's Comiclopedia, lambiek.net. Retrieved August 29, 2024.
- ^ Spiegelman, Art (April 11, 1999). "Forms Stretched To Their Limits". The New Yorker. ISSN 0028-792X. Retrieved March 14, 2024.
- ^ a b c d e f A Rutland Halloween Parade tale by writer Denny O'Neil, featuring Tom Fagan and a number of DC creators.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m A Rutland Halloween Parade story. The 1972 parade was featured in three stories split between Marvel and DC, which could be read separately but in fact made up a bizarre cross-company crossover mingling real and fictional characters. Marvel's Amazing Adventures #16 by Steve Englehart featured minor plot strands that were picked up on in DC's Justice League of America #103 by writer Len Wein. The same plot feature (revolving around Englehart's car) was then continued in Thor #207 by writer Gerry Conway. All stories featured Tom Fagan, Englehart, Conway, Wein and his first wife, Glynis Wein. See: Thomas, Roy (ed.) Alter Ego: The Comic Book Artist Collection Raleigh, North Carolina: TwoMorrows Publishing, March 2001, pp. 79–80
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Larnick, Eric (October 30, 2010). "The Rutland Halloween Parade: Where Marvel and DC First Collided". ComicsAlliance. Archived from the original on January 11, 2012. Retrieved December 5, 2011.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Cronin, Brian (October 1, 2010). "Comic Book Legends Revealed #280". Comic Book Resources. Archived from the original on January 16, 2012. Retrieved December 5, 2011.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Amazing Adventures #16 (Jan. 1973), Justice League of America #103 (Dec. 1972), and Thor #207 (Jan. 1973) at the Grand Comics Database
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Thomas, Roy (w), Pérez, George (p), Sinnott, Joe (i). "Improbable As It May Seem--The Impossible Man Is Back in Town!" Fantastic Four, no. 176 (November 1976).
- ^ a b c d e f g Rozakis, Bob (w), Golden, Michael (p), Smith, Bob (i). "Bat-Mite's New York Adventure!" Detective Comics, no. 482 (February–March 1979).
- ^ a b c d e f g Riley, Shannon E. (July 2014). "It Came from the Fifth Dimension! The Life and Times of Bat-Mite, Batman's Most Annoying Sidekick". Back Issue! (73). Raleigh, North Carolina: TwoMorrows Publishing: 27–28.
- ^ a b c Daudt, Ron E. (2010). "Jack C. Harris Interview (Pt. 2)". TheSilverLantern.com. Archived from the original on September 1, 2012. Retrieved March 20, 2011.
the Warlord goes into a sort of parallel world where it's like a Dungeons and Dragons game and at the end of the story we pull back and the two guys playing Dungeons and Dragons are me and Grell. Which I thought was great and as we're playing the game this other guy comes in to scold us for not doing our work and it's Joe Orlando.
- ^ Jack Kirby (as a character) at the Appendix to the Handbook of the Marvel Universe
- ^ "Jack Kirby: Headline Comics #37 - September/October 1949 😄 |Two Girls, A Guy, and Some Comics". June 28, 2017.
- ^ "The Man Who Flew 35 Kamikaze Missions – JimShooter.com". jimshooter.com. Retrieved March 14, 2024.
- ^ Stan Lee (as a character) at the Appendix to the Handbook of the Marvel Universe
- ^ "Cameo-estafette 12: Guus Slim Caesar en Josientje Bollie en Billie". Familietroch.be. January 28, 2006. Archived from the original on August 26, 2016. English language translation at Google Translate
- ^ "George van Raemdonck". Lambiek Comiclopedia. April 8, 2012. Archived from the original on March 4, 2016.
- ^ McAvennie, Michael; Dolan, Hannah, ed. (2010). "1960s". DC Comics Year By Year A Visual Chronicle. London, United Kingdom: Dorling Kindersley. p. 130. ISBN 978-0-7566-6742-9.
Trapped on 'Earth-Prime', the Flash knew only one man could possibly help him: DC Comics editor Julius Schwartz.
{{cite book}}
:|first2=
has generic name (help)CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - ^ "60 Jaar Nero". Stripspeciaalzaak.be. n.d. Archived from the original on July 1, 2016. English language translation at Google Translate
- ^ Christiansen, Jeff (January 3, 2004). "Danette". The Appendix to the Handbook of the Marvel Universe. Archived from the original on November 10, 2013.
- ^ The first Rutland, Vermont Rutland Halloween Parade real-life crossover tale. Featuring Tom Fagan, Thomas and Thomas' then-wife Jean
- ^ Thomas, Roy (w), Andru, Ross (p), Buscema, Sal (i). "Nightmare On Bald Mountain!" Marvel Feature, no. 2 (March 1972).
- ^ Groth, Gary (March 15, 2021). "The Frank Thorne Interview". The Comics Journal. Retrieved March 14, 2024.
- ^ "De zeven snaren" (in Dutch). Suskeenwiske. 2016. Archived from the original on July 1, 2016. English language translation at Google Translate
- ^ "De Belhamel-bende" (in Dutch). Suskeenwiske. n.d. Archived from the original on June 28, 2013. English language translation at Google Translate
- ^ Nodell, Jacque (October 20, 2009). "Interview with Irene Vartanoff!". Sequential Crush.