PAUL KUPPERBERG: My 13 Favorite JOE GIELLA Stories

Paying tribute to the late artist, whose career spanned the Golden, Silver and Bronze Ages…

Detective Comics #327, The Flash #123, Green Lantern #25

UPDATED 3/22/23: Joe Giella has died at the age of 94, his family announced Wednesday. This piece ran on his birthday in 2022, in slightly different form. We present it again today. — Dan

By PAUL KUPPERBERG

Joe Giella (born 94 years ago on June 27, 1928) seemed to be the inker of practically every DC comic book I loved as a kid and later, after I had achieved adulthood (according to the calendar anyway), he was assigned to ink a number of stories I wrote. He’s listed on Mike’s Amazing World of Comics (http://www.mikesamazingworld.com/mikes/index.php) as comics’ 11th most prolific inker even though he was largely retired from regular work by 1984, 38 years ago (my Adventures of Superboy looks to be his last regularly assigned book).

Joe got his start in 1947, long before I was aware that either he or comic books even existed, inking features like Black Canary, Johnny Thunder, Wildcat, Jimmy Wakely, the JSA, King Faraday (in Danger Trail), the Trigger Twins, Knights of the Galaxy, the Phantom Stranger, Captain Comet, Detective Chimp, Hopalong Cassidy… not to mention scores of one-off science fiction, war, Western, and other genre stories.

Joe Giella and Paul Kupperberg

There were a couple of constants throughout Joe’s career. One was that he did 98 percent of his work for DC Comics, with a few Marvel jobs scattered over the years, some Archie Comics work (on their Mighty Heroes line in the ’60s), and credits on a handful of stories for Tower Comics. Another was that probably 60 percent of the work he did at DC he did for editor Julie Schwartz, and likely 50 percent of those jobs was his inking over Carmine Infantino.

You can learn more about the fascinating life of this comics legend (who I was fortunate enough to meet on a couple of occasions at Terrificon) here, but the best way for his fans to celebrate his 94th birthday is by celebrating his work!

Here then, MY 13 FAVORITE JOE GIELLA STORIES:

The Flash #123 (Sept. 1961). As I’ve noted often in this space, “The Flash of Two Worlds” is one of the most important stories of DC’s Silver Age, introducing the concept of the Multiverse into the DCU. It’s also the story that forever cemented my love of comic books in general, DC in particular, when I saw that the Multiverse and I shared the same birthday: June 14. Joe Giella’s inks over Carmine Infantino’s pencils (from a script by Gardner Fox) will forever hold a special place in my heart.

(And on my wall; several years ago, John Byrne reproduced the panel for me as a birthday gift.)

The Brave and the Bold #45 (Dec. 1962/Jan. 1963). Sports have never played a role in my life; I’ve never watched or played them, just like my daddy afore me, and there is not a single sporting event the world over about whose outcome I give even the remotest damn. And yet, I have a certain fondness for stories and films about sports (and no, Rudy does not make me tear up), go figure. And comic book sports stories with a science fiction bent like Julie Schwartz’s experimental Strange Sports Stories were right up my alley, especially as drawn by Infantino and Giella!

Green Lantern #25 (Dec. 1963). Giella inks Gil Kane on “War of the Weapon Wizards” (by Fox)! I always loved that spotty thing Joe did to give texture to metal and fabric.

Detective Comics #327 (May 1964). This is another pivotal Silver Age tale, Schwartz’s editorial debut on the “New Look” Batman titles, a shocking change from the previous cartoony take on the Dark Knight by artists like Shelly Moldoff. Page 2 of “Mystery of the Menacing Mask,” by John Broome, Infantino and Giella, is one of my favorite non-costumed comic book pages of all time. The layout and pencils are perfect, and Joe pulls Carmine’s (notoriously) sketchy pencils together for a magnificently evocative scene.

T.H.U.N.D.E.R. Agents #12 (April 1967). Joe was no stranger to inking Mike Sekowsky, a fellow DC regular, and just like at DC, he serves his penciller well on this Steve Skeates-written story “Speed Demon,” featuring Tower Comics speedster Lightning.

The Justice League of America #79 (March 1970). Dick Dillin does action and Giella makes it pop in “Come Slowly Death, Come Slyly!” written by Denny O’Neil.

Adventure Comics #463 (Feb. 1978). I was too young and too stupid to realize how vastly outclassed I was by every other name in that credit box… Don Heck, Joe Giella, Ben Oda, Gene D’Angelo, Ross Andru!

Steel the Indestructible Man #1 (March 1978). A more memorable Heck/Giella collaboration, “From Hell is Forged… a Hero!” written by Gerry Conway.

Weird War Tales #86 (April 1980). Joe could ink anybody, including the guys who were usually best served being their own inkers, like Jack Sparling. “Into Thin Air,” written by Jay Zilber, also proves that despite all those open, bright superhero stories he worked on, Joe could also deliver the dark and moody.

Detective Comics #504 (July 1981). Another one written by me (settle down! there’s a few more to come), “A Day in the Life of a Cop” teams Joe with Jose Delbo.

Superman Family #216 (March 1982). Another another one by me. (I warned you!) “The Comic Strip Avenger” stars Jimmy Olsen investigating murder among cartoonists and penciller Delbo chose to model one of those artists after Joe Kubert, a reference inker Giella caught and carried out.

The New Adventures of Superboy #53 (May 1984). What’s the next best thing to having Kurt Schaffenberger ink himself? Having Joe Giella on the job!

Superman Album #11 (1984). You’ve probably never seen this story… unless you were a reader of the DC Comics published by European publisher Ehapa in the 1980s! Long story short, the appetite for Superman stories in the European market had out-paced DC’s monthly output, so Schwartz’s office was charged with creating new 46/48-page graphic novels (or albums as they’re known there).

There would be a total of 25 new stories produced, almost 1,100 pages of story and art, of which I wrote nine, close to 400 pages, including “The Sun-Stealer of Space” with art by Irv Novick and Giella. This wasn’t one of the nine stories reprinted as specials, annuals, or two-parters in Superman and/or Action Comics*. (I wrote about these “lost Superman stories” in Back Issue #134 (April 2022) in “Truth, Justice, and the European Way: The Untold Tale of 25 Superman Tales Untold… in the U.S.”)

*By the way, just saying, tossing this out there for discussion, but does anyone else see the potential for an Omnibus Edition of these stories (1,084 pages in total, 720 of which never saw print in the U.S.) from DC? Somebody should bombard them postcards and letters or whatever the heck it is you kids send demanding it!

(Dan adds: I’m with you, Paul!)

MORE

— 13 COVERS: A JOE GIELLA Tribute. Click here.

— The Day JOE GIELLA Met BATMAN. Click here.

PAUL KUPPERBERG was a Silver Age fan who grew up to become a Bronze Age comic book creator, writer of Superman, the Doom Patrol, and Green Lantern, creator of Arion Lord of Atlantis, Checkmate, and Takion, and slayer of Aquababy, Archie, and Vigilante. He is the Harvey and Eisner Award nominated writer of Archie Comics’ Life with Archie, and his YA novel Kevin was nominated for a GLAAD media award and won a Scribe Award from the IAMTW. Now, as a Post-Modern Age gray eminence, Paul spends a lot of time looking back in his columns for 13th Dimension and in books such as Direct Conversations: Talks with Fellow DC Comics Bronze Age Creators and Direct Comments: Comic Book Creators in Their own Words, available, along with a whole bunch of other books he’s written, by clicking the links below.

Website: https://www.paulkupperberg.net/

Shop: https://www.paulkupperberg.net/shop-1

Author: Dan Greenfield

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8 Comments

  1. I love how clean the backgrounds were for Silver Age comics.

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  2. Mr. Giella is my favourite inker on Carmine Infantino’s and Gil Kane’s pencils. I know Sid Greene has a lot of fans but I’m not one of them.

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  3. THE FLASH was the comic that hooked me into super-hero comic books. I can appreciate what Mr. Giella brought to the finished art…especially over Infantino. Made me realize what the inker did. Wish I was a good an overall artist as Joe, but I did become an inker, too!

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  4. When Carmine Infantino stated his second run on The Flash in 1981, I always thought it was a crime that DC didn’t reunite Infantino with Giella on that book. What could have been!

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  5. Joe is a Silver Age Legend. He does Great work and those collector’s Fortunate enough to get a commission from him will have a Wonderful ” Keepsake” from a Legend !! Happy Birthday Joe !!

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  6. Let’s not forget Joe’s work on The Phantom newspaper strip. While he was not the “name” artist on the feature, he did work at times with Sy Barry on the strip.

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    • Joe inked The Phantom for 17 years . I was Joe’s rep.

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  7. I agree that DC should publish all those European stories in an Omnibus edition!

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