PAUL KUPPERBERG: My 13 Favorite Collaborations With CARMINE INFANTINO

DIRECT COMMENTS: The celebrated Mr. K pays tribute to one of the all-time greats — the late Carmine Infantino…

UPDATED 5/24/22: The late, great Carmine Infantino was born 97 years ago! Perfect time to re-present this piece from 2021. And for this year’s 13 COVERS birthday salute, click here. Dig it. — Dan

Paul Kupperberg — comics writer, novelist, historian and 13th Dimension columnist — has a spectacular new publication out: Direct Comments, collecting about two dozen never-completely-published interviews from the ’70s to the ’90s, mostly with some of DC’s greatest creators. We’re talking folks like John Byrne, Denny O’Neil, Jerry Ordway, Jim Aparo, Dick Giordano and many, many more.

You can order the $16 paperback through Amazon — and to spotlight this treasure trove of comics-history gold, we’re running a weekly series in which Paul pays tribute to his favorite works by 13 of these creators. (The series mostly runs weekends, with a few exceptions.)

Last installment it was Jerry Robinson. (Click here.) This time: Carmine Infantino. — Dan

By PAUL KUPPERBERG

“My very first published story was a strip called ‘Jack Frost,’ which I did with my friend and classmate, Frank Giacoia. We sold that to Marvel Comics, which was called Timely in those days. Strangely enough, I was the inker and Frank was the penciller. There would be a complete reversal of the roles over the years. I didn’t get into comics to be an inker, but you took whatever you could get in those days; a job was a job. We didn’t really care that much. I don’t know why Frank penciled and I inked that one, but Frank was very good, very good as a penciller. I don’t know how good I was as an inker. I can’t remember back that far.”

­— Carmine Infantino, from Direct Comments: Comic Creators In Their Own Words

Long before fans embraced the concept of superstar artists, Carmine Infantino (May 23, 1925–April 4, 2013) was a superstar artist. I remember reading somewhere Carmine saying that by the 1960s, he was more interested in the design of his pages than the accuracy of the anatomy or perspective in his art. I think he was being somewhat disingenuous (or maybe not; Carmine wasn’t a particularly modest individual), but his work did stand out from the largely homogenous DC house style. I loved his work in the early 1960s, from the Flash to Adam Strange to Batman and wherever else it popped up. Infantino was the first artist I ever learned to identify by sight.

I first met Carmine in 1971. The last time I spoke to him was at a 2010 New York comic con, both of which I related in a 2013 memorial post. He was sitting alone at his table during a lull in the signings, so I went over, stuck out my hand, and said, “Hi, Carmine. How are you? It’s good to see you again.”

Carmine looked slowly up at me with a suspicious glare. “Are you still working for those sons of bitches?” he growled.

“Those sons of bitches” was DC Comics, the company for which he had worked since 1947 as a freelance artist, and on staff, rising to the position of publisher until he was “let go” in 1976. Though he returned to freelancing for DC in 1981, he never gave up the grudge he held over his dismissal and never again set foot in the company’s offices.

“I left staff in 2006. I’m strictly freelance these days,” I told him.

“OK,” he nodded. Apparently, I had gotten the secret password right because he smiled and only then took my hand. “How you doin’, Paul?”

Here then, MY 13 FAVORITE COLLABORATIONS WITH CARMINE INFANTINO, in (mostly) chronological order:

Green Lantern #151 (April 1982). Despite having worked with many of the best inkers in the business, I think Carmine would rather have been inking his own stuff, as he was allowed to do with this Tales of the Green Lantern Corps feature, “E’Sprit de Corps.” His longtime editor Julie Schwartz once told me he hated Carmine’s inking, calling it “scratchy and ugly,” although he would indulge the artist on the occasional back-up feature such as Detective Chimp or Elongated Man. I loved Carmine’s inks; I thought they were raw and powerfully captured his intent.

Green Lantern #152 (May 1982). Ditto the above for “Paradise World.” Panels four and five: ’Nuff said!

Green Lantern #153 (June 1982). “The Choice” is the second part of the previous story but inked by Frank Chiaramonte. I felt as though I was reaping the rewards from Infantino’s long run on Star Wars for Marvel.

The Daring New Adventures of Supergirl #1 (Nov. 1982). That girl! Editor Schwartz teamed Carmine with Bob Oksner as inker for “A Very Strange and Special Girl,” only her second eponymous series since her 1959 debut and her first since 1972. It was an artistic match made in comic book heaven.

The Daring New Adventures of Supergirl #8 (June 1983). In my ongoing efforts to keep the dream of a Doom Patrol revival alive, I guest-starred them in “The Stand-Ins for Supergirl,” also inked by Oksner, allowing me to not only play with some favorite characters but see them drawn by a favorite artist.

Supergirl #15 (Jan. 1984). In case you were wondering why Carmine designed so many of DC’s covers in the late 1960s and early 1970s. “Starrfall,” inked by Bob Oksner.

Superman #404 (Feb. 1985). As his editorial stint on the Superman books was drawing to a close, Schwartz was more willing to let writers wander off the beaten path and do some of the stories he had previously passed on. “Born to Be Superman,” inked by Oksner (why break up a winning team?), was a straight up old school “imaginary story,” a “what if?” scenario that posited a future after Superboy lost his superpowers at the age of 16.

DC Double Comics Starring Superboy and Supergirl #1 (UNPUBLISHED). Scheduled for 1986, DC Double Comics was cut short by the cancellation of the existence of its headliners, Supergirl and Superboy in the upcoming Crisis on Infinite Earths. The two were to share the title, alternating between 24-page lead stories and 16-page back-ups.

The first two issues were scripted, and the first installments penciled and lettered before the ax fell, taking each character off in new directions, with new art teams, Supergirl to be taken over by Eduardo Barreto and Oksner, and Superboy by Carmine and Klaus Janson. A glimpse of what might have been! (A look at the story directions can be found in The Unpublished Comic Book Scripts of Paul Kupperberg, available everywhere on Amazon.

Who’s Who: The Definitive Directory of the DC Universe #18 (Aug. 1986). A pin-up of Psi, Supergirl foe, from her Who’s Who profile, inked by Oksner.

Star Trek #30 (Sept. 1986). Oh, he’s so spaced out! Carmine does Trek in “Uhura’s Story,” a tale I wrote spotlighting the Enterprise’s communications officer, inked by Ricardo Villagran. Thrill #1: Carmine drew another one of my stories! Thrill #2: In 2016, I got it Nichelle Nichols approved!

Super Powers #1 (Sept. 1986). This was my second go at a Super Powers miniseries (based on the now legendary Kenner toy line), the first being 1985’s six-issue series that was penciled by none other than Jack “King” Kirby. I followed it up with this four-issue mini, this time penciled by Carmine and inked by Pablo Marcos. Needless to say, I wasn’t disappointed.

Super Powers #3 (Nov. 1986). In the race to funky fashions, please note that I beat Chris Claremont putting Darkseid in a silly hat and topcoat (Sovereign 7 #1, July 1995) by nine years. “Machinations,” inked by Marcos.

Super DC Con 1976 Program Book (Feb. 1976). … Which brings us all the way back to my very first, albeit unofficial collaboration with Carmine, a lovely little illustration of his that accompanied my article, “Comic Collecting: Hints for a New Hobbyist” appearing in the program book for 1976’s Super DC Con, aka the leap year “Superman’s February 29th Birthday Celebration” or “TwinkieCon.” (More about it on my website.)

NEXT: The Man Who Would Draw The Brave and the Bold. Click here.

“After I graduated high school, my dad had wanted me to be a teacher, but I nixed that idea. I was still interested in art. I had a lot of jobs after high school, I did a lot of manual labor, in stores, in factories, I worked on machines, I did all kinds of things. When I clipped a little piece of my finger off in a machine I thought, ‘Oh-oh, this is not for me anymore!’ On my right hand yet. Today it doesn’t bother me, it’s all right, but I thought if I’d stayed there, my art career was going to be all over.”

— Jim Aparo, Direct Comments: Comic Creators In Their Own Words

MORE

— PAUL KUPPERBERG: My 13 Favorite JERRY ROBINSON Creations. Click here.

— The Complete INDEX of DIRECT COMMENTS Features. Click here.

Direct Comments is available now at Amazon. Click here.

Paul Kupperberg has been writing comic books from Archie to Zatanna for 45 years at DC, Archie, Charlton, Marvel, Bongo and others. He is also the author of Paul Kupperberg’s Illustrated Guide to Writing Comics (Charlton Neo Press); I Never Write for the Money… But I Always Turn in the Manuscript for a Check (Comics Career); the comic book industry-based murder mystery The Same Old Story, the short-story collection In My Shorts: Hitler’s Bellhop and Other StoriesJSA: Ragnarok, and his latest, the YA fantasy/time travel adventure Emma’s Landing, all from Crazy 8 Press and all available on Amazon, or signed and personalized direct from Paul (email him at pkupps55@yahoo.com for details).

Author: Dan Greenfield

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4 Comments

  1. Great piece, Paul. I’m delighted to see your pic from DNAOS #1 is the same page I’m forever tweeting out, I love it so much. No one drew a cleaner, prettier Linda Danvers and Supergirl than Carmine Infantino with Bob Oksner. The optimism and grace in that final panel is beautiful.

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  2. Wonderful piece. The world and internet can never get enough Paul Kupperberg stories!

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  3. Would love to see that once scheduled “DC Universe” book of Carmine Infantino’s works finally get published. I would assume some of these collaborations or similar were set to be included.

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  4. I’m sure there are lots of shelved, finished pieces out there in DC’s archives–they would be smart to put out a few annual “Christmas Collections” of these now (relatively speaking) out of continuity stories as a present for old-time fans (perhaps as hardcover collections, like Bizarro Stories were). You listening, Marie Jarvis?

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