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Superman (comic strip)

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The daily Superman newspaper comic strip began in January 6, 1939, and a separate Sunday strip was added on November 5, 1939. These strips ran continuously until May 1966. In 1941, the McClure Syndicate had placed the strip in hundreds of newspapers. At its peak, the strip was in over 300 daily newspapers and 90 Sunday papers, with a readership of over 20 million. File:Supermandaily.jpg

Writers and Artists

Over the years, there have been a number of different writers and artists on the Superman newspaper strips.

Originally, the strip was drawn by Joe Shuster. As Superman became more and more popular and the workload kept increasing, Shuster turned over many duties to his studio assistants. Paul Cassidy was the first in a line of ghost artists on the strip, and took over the inking and detail work in 1939. In September 1940 Leo Nowak replaced Cassidy on the strip. Other assistants during this time included Dennis Neville, John Sikela (beginning in 1940), Ed Dobrotka (beginning in 1941), Paul J. Lauretta, and Jack Burnley (beginning in 1941). Sikela and Dobrotka often traded penciling and inking duties between each other. Lauretta primarily inked and did backgrounds on the strips. Burnley eventually left to work on his own comic book Starman, but did return to pencil the Superman Sundays in 1943. The Superman strips during this early period of shop work ended up being a team effort, with multiple artists working on different parts of the same strip.

This early period ended with the start of WWII. Jerry Siegel was drafted in 1943. Early that same year Leo Nowak and John Sikela were drafted as well. In 1943 Stan Kaye took over the inking. Wayne Boring, who had been another early assistant to Joe Shuster, had left the Shuster studio in 1942 to directly draw the daily strip for DC. Boring and Kaye would dominate the daily strip’s artwork throughout most of the 1940’s. The two of them would also provide the artwork for the Sunday strip between 1940 and 1966.

In the middle of 1949, Win Mortimer took over the daily strip from Wayne Boring. Stan Kaye continued inking Mortimer’s work, until Kaye temporarily left, and Mortimer inked his own work until he himself left DC in 1956 to publish his David Crane strip.

Curt Swan took over the daily strip on June 18, 1956, along with Stan Kaye. Swan would continue on the strip until November 12, 1960.

File:Daily1.jpg

As for the stories in the Superman strips, Jerry Siegel originally wrote them until he was drafted as well in 1943. Alvin Schwartz first started writing for the Superman strip in October of 1944. Between 1947 and 1951, Schwartz was the only writer on the Superman strip.

Original Storylines

The daily strip was host to a slew of storylines, unique from the regular Superman comic series. The early years consisted of great Siegel-era Superman stories, much of which have yet to be republished. The strips contained the first appearance of a bald Lex Luthor, the first appearance of Mr. Mxyzptlk, and the first telephone booth costume change in comics. Other stories that are of note include Superman saving Santa Claus from the Nazis, great WWII-era stories of Superman protecting the American home front, and Clark Kent marrying Lois Lane. The artwork, as mentioned above, include great runs by famed Superman artists Wayne Boring and Curt Swan.

Superman appeared in the newspapers again in 1978, with the newspaper strip "The World's Greatest Superheroes," which lasted until 1985. Between these two comic strip series, Superman appeared in almost 12,000 unique newspaper strips.

References