REVEALED! The Brave Veterans Who Beat the REAL MARTIAN INVASION of 1938
A special Veterans Day MORRISON MONDAYS!
A MORRISON MONDAYS anniversary special! — NOTE: The original Bat-Girl turns 65! For Peter Bosch’s groovy history and celebration of the character, click here. PLUS: Check out Peter’s inspired BATMANIA ’61: What if the 1960s BATMAN Show Began Five Years Earlier. — Dan — By BILL MORRISON Bat-Girl, we hardly knew ye! As much as I love Barbara Gordon, I’ve always had a soft spot for Betty Kane and wish she could have stayed around in the Silver Age for more than three years. So, in honor of the original Bat-Girl’s first appearance on the cover and in the pages of Batman #139 — which hit the racks 65 years ago, on February 23, 1961 — here is the result of my “what if” musings about a return for Betty to the pages of Batman comics during the 1960s Batmania! Special thanks to Wallopin’ Walt Grogan for turning my drawing into a full-fledged fantasy cover! — Want more MORRISON MONDAYS? Come back next week! Want a commission? See below! — MORE — SUPERMAN, BARTMAN and the Enduring Inspiration of CURT SWAN. Click here. — If FRAZETTA Did FUTURAMA. Click here. — Eisner winner BILL MORRISON has been working in comics and publishing since 1993 when he co-founded Bongo Entertainment with Matt Groening, Cindy Vance and Steve Vance. At Bongo, and later as Executive Editor of Mad Magazine, he parodied the comics images he loved as a kid every chance he got. Not much has changed. Bill is on Instagram (@atomicbattery) and Facebook (Bill Morrison/Atomic Battery Studios), and regularly takes commissions and sells published art through 4C...
A MORRISON MONDAYS (early) birthday tribute! By BILL MORRISON Tomorrow, Feb. 17, is the birthdate of the artist who was most identified with Superman during the Silver-Age of comics, Curt Swan. As a DC Comics-loving kid in the Swingin’ ’60s, Curt’s covers for Action Comics, Adventure Comics, Superman, World’s Finest, and Superman’s Pal, Jimmy Olsen jumped out at me from the spinner rack of our local bookstore in Lincoln Park, Michigan, and much of my weekly allowance of a dollar was spent on those books (especially when there were no new Batman comics on sale!) One memorable cover for me was the one he drew in 1967 for Superman #201, inked by George Klein. With so many great Swan covers to choose from, it’s hard to say which one is my favorite, but this one stands out for me. Back in 1993 when Steve Vance, Cindy Vance, Matt Groening, and I were launching Bongo Comics, I was asked to come up with an image for an ashcan-size comic that would reprint our Bartman story from the pre-Bongo Simpsons Comics and Stories #1. The mini-comic, Bartman and Radioactive Man, was to be a promotional insert in an issue of Hero Illustrated magazine. In this story, Bartman doesn’t team up with Radioactive Man, but the Irradiated Crusader is there in a big way, as inspiration for the fledgling hero. So, I wanted to draw a cover that featured Radioactive Man prominently without showing the two characters interacting. Without much pondering that I can recall, Mr. Swan’s Superman #201 cover with its large hero figure looming in the background came to mind. The story we were reprinting, “Lo, there shall come a Bartman,” was, as the title suggests, an origin story, and not about Bartman giving up on being a superhero. (That would come later in Bartman #4, when I paid homage to John Romita’s iconic Amazing Spider-Man #50 cover.) No, Bartman was just getting started, but I decided to ignore the concept of a hero calling it quits, and embrace the cover’s design. It was, I felt, the perfect solution for what I wanted to communicate. With this finished cover, along with my original pencils, I celebrate the greatness of Curt Swan and thank him for many years of artistic inspiration. — Want more MORRISON MONDAYS? Come back next week! Want a...
A special Veterans Day MORRISON MONDAYS!