Paul Kupperberg on March 1st, 2020

The second of my Phantom Stranger scripts for Action Comics Weekly to be drawn by the legendary (even then!) Jose Luis Garcia-Lopez. “Tommy’s Monster” in ACW #641 (March 7, 1989) is an unabashed homage to one of my earliest comedy influences, the television and absurdist humor writer Jack Douglas‘ “The Boy Who Cried Dinosaur” from his first short story collection, My Brother Was an Only Child (Dutton, 1959), which, for your entertainment pleasure, follows the PS tale in this post.

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Paul Kupperberg on February 29th, 2020

Following a four-issue miniseries, Phantom Stranger landed in the pages of Action Comics Weekly as a regular, rotating feature. The Stranger has always attracted top tier artistic talent (Carmine Infantino, Neal Adams, Jim Aparo, Mike Mignola, to name a few), and the trend continued in his ACW strip, including two tales drawn by probably the top talent of the day, the amazing Jose Luis Garcia-Lopez. “The Devil Was a Baby” from ACW #623 (October 25, 1988) was the first.

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , ,

Paul Kupperberg on February 20th, 2020

That’s it. That’s all you need to know. “Joe Orlando, Artist.”

Comics throws the word “legend” around an awful lot, but Joe (April 4, 1927 – December 23, 1998) is the real deal. A Wally Wood assistant who was soon drawing for William C. Gaines’ fabled EC Comics (including the landmark “Judgment Day” in Weird Fantasy #18, April 1953), Joe went on to work for MAD Magazine, was a founding artist and editor for Jim Warren’s Creepy and Eerie magazines, scripter of newspaper strips, an editor/writer/artist/executive for DC Comics, and associate publisher of MAD. And the artist of one of my Phantom Stranger back-up stories.

I had the pleasure of working for and with Joe many times. He was my direct report in 1982 when I was on staff at DC Comics doing public relations, and I would write several projects for him over the years as my editor, including the Superman syndicated newspaper strip, a Super Powers miniseries, and some custom comics jobs.

And working with Joe was a pleasure because Joe was, to put it bluntly, evil. But evil in a good way. He had a wicked, pointed sense of humor, and I recall several plotting sessions that took way longer than they should because we were too busy laughing. And it was usually Joe who started it. Like the time when Joe kept sending an assistant off to do and redo some ridiculous little art correction over and over again; the more pissed the assistant got, the harder Joe laughed after the guy left his office. Joe had an infectious giggle, and in spite of myself, soon I was laughing at the poor guy too.

Finally I asked him, “Why are you busting the guy’s balls?” And between giggles, Joe said, “I want to see how long it takes him to tell me to go fuck myself!”

From Action Comics Weekly #617 (July 26, 1988), the Phantom Stranger in “Channel Switching,” written by me, penciled by Joe Orlando, inked and lettered by Fred Carrillo, colored by Petra Scotese, and edited by Renee Witterstaetter.

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Paul Kupperberg on February 18th, 2020

Part 2 of “One Among the Stars,” a Tale of the Green Lantern Corps from Green Lantern #158 (November 1982), courtesy of me, penciler Irv Novick, inker and letterer Bruce Patterson, colorist Tom Zuiko, and editor Ernie Colon.

Tags: , , , , , , , , ,

Paul Kupperberg on February 16th, 2020
The legendary Joe Giella and me, at the 2019 Terrificon.

This is one of those stories that always makes the little fan inside of me giggle in happiness and delight. It has nothing to do with the script I’d written and everything to do–as my fellow fans of a certain age will surely understand–with the two men who drew it: Penciller, Irv Novick and inker, Joe Giella. Between the two of them, they had worked on a good chunk of the comics I’d read and loved growing up. Now they were working on mine. So, from Green Lantern #157 (October 1982) and with a little help from letterer Phil Felix, colorist Tom Zuiko, and editor Len Wein, “One Among the Stars, Part 1.”

Tags: , , , , , , , , ,

Paul Kupperberg on February 15th, 2020

Ripped from the pages of Green Lantern #156 (September 1982)… “The Gladiator’s Apprentice,” another Tale of the Green Lantern Corps, this one by me, artists Paris Cullins and Pablo Marcos, letterer Adam Kubert, the mighty Jerry Serpe on colors, and, as always, editor Dave Manak.

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , ,

Paul Kupperberg on February 6th, 2020

For editor Julie Schwartz, I wrote the alliteratively titled “Secret of the Shooting Star,” an 8-page Wally West/Kid Flash back-up for The Flash #265 (September 1978). Art was by Alex Saviuk and Bob Smith, lettering by Milt Snappin, and coloring by Mario Sen.

Don’t pollute, kids!

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Paul Kupperberg on February 3rd, 2020

Apparently, I wrote a secret origin for House in the second Dollar Comics sized issue of House of Mystery #252 (May-June 1977), for which I also wrote the 5-page introduction sequence (with art by John Calnan and Romeo Tanghal), with pages 1-3 opening the book, followed by the 8-page “The Devil Strikes at my Old Kentucky Home!” (art by Don Perlin and Tanghal), with the other two intro pages spread across the rest of the issue.

Don’t forget to lock up on your way out!

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Paul Kupperberg on February 2nd, 2020

When you’ve written about a thousand and a half of these things over 45 years, only a relative handful are likely to stand out in your memory. One of the standouts for me was the time I spent writing the Phantom Stranger, the supernatural hero created by John Broome and Carmine Infantino that first appeared in DC Comics’ The Phantom Stranger #1 (August-September 1952).

In 1986, I wrote a four-issue Phantom Stranger miniseries (October 1987 – January 1988), featuring art by Mike Mignola and P. Craig Russell, and followed that up with a series of short stories that appeared in the ill-fated Action Comics Weekly. The first was “Kenny and the Demon!” an eight-pager drawn by Kyle Baker, lettered by Bert Workman, colored by Petra Scotese, and edited by Mike Carlin.

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Paul Kupperberg on January 25th, 2020

Talk about scoring a hit! “Congratulations, Mr. Bates–It’s a Warlock!” was a short story I wrote that was inspired by the 1979 film Kramer vs. Kramer, that appeared in House of Mystery #294 (July 1981). The hit came in editor Karen Berger’s assignment of the art to a pair of legendary artists, George Tuska and Tony De Zuniga. Add lettering by Todd Klein and coloring by Jerry Serpe, and an average little “mystery” tale turns into a thing of beauty!

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,