The Amazing HALLOWEEN Comic That Wasn’t: SHAZAM! vs. DRACULA — by GENE COLAN

With Tom Palmer and Jerry Ordway!

UPDATED 10/26/23: Some things just cry tradition. This first ran in October 2022 but I can see “reprinting” it every Halloween season for years to come. It’s that great. Dig it. — Dan

Walt Grogan has been a semi-regular here at 13th Dimension over the last year or so because I’m really taken with the top-notch work he’s done coloring commissions of comics characters, in particular the original Captain Marvel and the Earth-Two Robin — both of whom are the subjects of Facebook groups that he runs. (Click here for Robin and here for the Marvel Family.)

Frequently, I’ll see something that Walt’s posted online and say to myself, “Dang! I’d love that for a story!” So I asked him whether he wanted to do a piece for us where he could debut some of his work. Not only did he say yes, he even got topical on us with a great Halloween cover that should have been, featuring his beloved Captain Marvel teamed with Marvel’s Dracula. By Gene Colan. And Tom Palmer. And Jerry Ordway.

Whaaaaat? Yeah, you’ll dig this:

By WALT GROGAN

More than 20 years ago, back in 2001, Captain Marvel super-fan Mike Mikulovsky commissioned a truly inspired piece of artwork from the legendary Gene Colan. Colan was well-known for his work at Marvel Comics penciling Daredevil, Iron Man and Howard the Duck, but perhaps best known for his pencils on The Tomb of Dracula with Tom Palmer providing inks.

As noted, Mike is a huge Captain Marvel fan, and when I say Captain Marvel I mean the original “Shazam!”-shouting Fawcett/DC hero and no other! Mike didn’t just want good ol’ Cap drawn in a heroic pose, he wanted Colan to craft a cover featuring the Big Red Cheese battling the premier vampiric lord for the life of the World’s Mightiest Mortal’s unrequited love, Beautia Sivana. And what a piece it is!

Not content with getting an awesome Gene Colan piece, however, Mike in 2003 commissioned Palmer to ink it.

So that got me thinking — what if Captain Marvel had fought Dracula in a Marvel comic — way back in 1975? What would it have looked like and what comic would it have appeared in? And wouldn’t it make a perfect piece to color for the haunted month of October?

Well, it didn’t make sense for DC’s Captain Marvel to just pop up in The Tomb of Dracula. I couldn’t imagine anyone twisting Marv Wolfman’s arm to make that happen and spoil the epic story he was telling. But what if there was another Dracula comic that Cap might have guest-starred in?

Gil Kane pencils, Tom Palmer inks

It hit me — maybe Giant-Size Dracula was a candidate! Sure, Giant-Size Dracula wasn’t a team-up book like Giant-Size Spider-Man but maybe for one issue, the lord of vampires could borrow the web-slinger’s format and team up with/battle a superhero!

And what if that superhero was purposefully transported to the Marvel 616 universe by the World’s Maddest Scientist, Dr. Thaddeus Bodog Sivana, who accidentally also transported his  daughter there as well? Does it have to make sense? No — but that’s the fun of comics.

Now normally, I don’t create faux covers for Marvel titles as I’ve been a DC fan for over 60 years. Not that I have anything against the House of Ideas — they were always in my reading pile. It’s just that my allegiance swings toward the Distinguished Competition. So, when I decided to tackle the task of coloring this piece, I knew that I had to do it in the Mighty Marvel style of the time!

After settling on Giant-Size Dracula as the title, I started to color Gene and Tom’s masterpiece. The coloring had to be dark and moody to fit in with The Tomb of Dracula milieu. I settled on various shades of gray and dark blue and I set the scene at night. Since this was Dracula’s book, the battle had to take place on his home turf when he would be most powerful! I elected to color the three main characters in their respective primary hues to make them pop off the cover as much as possible.

Once I finished with the coloring, it was time to drop in some trade dress which, although time-consuming, is my favorite thing to do. Giant-Size Dracula ended with Issue #5, so had it continued, this would have been the sixth issue. I decided that the publication month would be October as it seemed most appropriate.

It would only be natural to call out the guest star on the cover but due to the limitation of the logo placement at the top, I had to move it to the bottom. In a moment of inspiration, I thought maybe, just maybe, because this was a Marvel book, Stan would have allowed the Captain Marvel logo to adorn the cover! Face front, True Believers!

I had to get DC’s name out there too, and the DC Bullet designed by Michael Uslan fit perfectly where Cap’s Fawcett bullet resided in the Golden Age. Since this was a battle to end all battles, I dropped in one of my favorite pieces of lettering, the “vs” from the Superman vs The Amazing Spider-Man treasury edition.

There was only one last thing to do, which was to add a call-out box trumpeting the plot of the story. With the gorgeous Beautia Sivana on the cover, it had to be about Dracula’s lust to make her his vampire bride.

I really like the way the colors turned out. They matched the mood established by Gene’s pencils which were, in turn, enhanced by Tom Palmer’s inks.

That said, everyone knows there’s no right way to ink Gene Colan, and, OK, maybe there are some wrong ways to ink him but there’s only one Ordway to do it! What if Joltin’ Jerry Ordway inked the same piece in his own inimitable style?

You don’t have to imagine it: Here’s where super-fan Mike Mikulovsky came through again. Back in 2001, before getting Tom Palmer to ink Gene’s pencils, he asked Da Ordster to ink the same piece on a lightbox and Jerry came through like a thunderbolt! It’s not often that you get to see Gene Colan’s moody, distinctive style inked with a more traditional superhero approach, and seeing Jerry’s inks on this is definitely a Halloween treat.

Remember that in the ‘80s, Gene did a stint at DC Comics drawing Batman, Wonder Woman, Nathaniel Dusk, and Night Force among others — so Jerry inking Gene wouldn’t be that unusual, especially on Captain Marvel.

For this piece, I colored the main three characters using the same scheme as the Giant-Size Dracula cover but because this would be DC’s turn at hosting the team-up, the castle walls, the light coming in and the castle floor had to be brighter. In fact, because Jerry’s inking on the columns and interior suggested daylight, in this Earth-S universe, the battle would take place at sunup when Dracula would be at a distinct disadvantage.

With the tone of the piece decided upon, I had to choose a trade dress but Captain Marvel has never had a team-up book at DC. In fact, discounting mini-series and one-shots, the Big Red Cheese has only ever had four ongoing series at DC for a total of 119 issues across 50 years. That meant I had to take some creative license.

It didn’t make sense for Cap to take over Batman’s team-up book, The Brave and the Bold, since he never guest-starred in it but what if the World’s Mightiest Mortal headlined one issue of DC Comics Presents Annual? After all, he did guest-star in DC Comics Presents Annual #3, as well as Issues #33, 34 and 49 of the regular series.

Because of DC Comics Presents’ banner style, I knew that I had to use The Tomb of Dracula logo on the cover but I decided to eschew “The Tomb of” and just stick with Dracula. Still, there was nothing to indicate that this was Marvel’s Dracula and then it hit me — just add “Marvel’s” to the Dracula logo!

Then all I had to do was add the traditional SHAZAM! logo to finish it off — this was a DC book, after all, so there was no way Marvel was going to let DC use the words “Captain Marvel” on the cover! And Holy Moley, it looked just like a DC Comics cover of the time!

I worked on these off and on for about a week and by the end, I was experiencing a bit of a Mandela Effect. I almost started to think they were real comic books!

It was a lot of fun creating these two mock covers from the fantastic artwork of Gene Colan, with incredible inks by Tom Palmer and Jerry Ordway, and coloring them and trade-dressing them in two different styles. I don’t know if I’ll come across a scenario like this again.

MORE

— A Nifty Page Turn and the Quiet Genius of GENE COLAN. Click here.

— Dig This INSIDE LOOK at JERRY ORDWAY’s Never-Published BATMAN ’66 Story. Click here.

Author: Dan Greenfield

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15 Comments

  1. Wow, these are great covers..and the October cover date is an Easter Egg, or should we say, a Halloween Treat. Now let’s see a Treasury Edition!

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  2. Wow! Both were fantastic, and I think I still have them in my collection! Walt, I love all your work, and these were some of your best.

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  3. Masterpieces, all of them! The 1970s and 1980s ruled for me as a comics fan and those trade dresses bring back the magic. Gene and Jerry’s Beautia Sivana is positively gorgeous! Thanks for sharing these excellent homages, Walt!

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  4. What would CCBeck think of Dracula in Capt Marvel comic book?

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  5. This is a “what-if” crossover that ANYONE would’ve consumed, even me. Thank you so very much for shedding light on Shazam (Captain Marvel) and Marvel’s Dracula.

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  6. Walt, These pieces came out great! Love each version made even better with different inkers.

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  7. Holy Moly! I love it! I wonder how the magic “Shazam” lightning would have affected Dracula? But if it had no effect on the vampire lord, it might have left Billy Batson as vampire kibble…

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  8. This was a real treat, and Walt’s holding his own with the greats.

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  9. As a huge original Captain Marvel/Shazam! fan, I heartily approve of both! Fantastic work!

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  10. Great article Walter, back then. Growing up a total DC & Marvel FANatic. I was also a huge monster movie fan. So I loved both DC & Marvel’s monster/supernatural hero comics. My dream project was a DC/Marvel cross over. Four issues of a different monster vs Capt.Marvel. Drawn by the artist/inker from each of those iconic titles/runs from the mid 1970’s. Like Frankenstein’s monster, the Werewolf by Night, Man-thing by Mike Ploog. Maybe the Zombie by Pablo Marcos and maybe a team up in these stories too. With the Ghost Rider, Brother Voo Doo, the Scarecrow and the Man-Thing. It’s a shame DC & Marvel didn’t keep their businesses friendly with each other. I would had loved to seen like a bi monthly cross over title. Shared by both companies. Like the Brave & the Bold/Marvel Team Up. Dr.Fate & Dr.Strange, Man-Thing & the Swamp Thing. Art by Jim Apairo, Neal Adams, Bernie Wrightson, etc.

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  11. Nice job on the two covers! I prefer the DC version, I think because the setting stands out a little more. While mklvsky is imagining other crossovers with Marvel monsters, I’m thinking about what an issue of Shazam/Captain Marvel would have been like if he had been acquired by other comics companies, including Marvel.

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  12. Interesting. Mash ups have their moments. I can easily see a story evolving out of the covers in the article. But my preference would be to bring Dracua or a vaimpire into the Fawcett world and encounter the Big Red Cheese in a story written in a Binder style with art of course in a CCBeck style. A CMA 147 style cover could be paired with the interior story The Vampire Burglar rather then the story it originally leeds to The Thief From Past in that issue. Beck did pencils for both stories in that book.

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