Donald L. Heck[1](January 2, 1929 – February 23, 1995[2][3]) was anAmericancomics artistbest known for co-creating theMarvel ComicscharactersIron Man,theWasp,Black Widow,HawkeyeandWonder Manand for his long runpencilingthe Marvelsuperhero-team seriesThe Avengersduring the 1960sSilver Age of comic books.
Don Heck | |
---|---|
Born | Donald L. Heck January 2, 1929 Queens,New York City, U.S. |
Died | February 23, 1995 Centereach, New York,U.S. | (aged 66)
Area(s) | Penciller |
Notable works | The Avengers Iron Man Ant-Man |
Signature | |
Biography
editEarly life and career
editHeck was born in theJamaicaneighborhood ofQueens,New York City, the son of Bertha and John Heck, ofGermandescent.[4]Heck learned art throughcorrespondence coursesas well as atWoodrow WilsonVocational High School in Jamaica and at acommunity collegeinBrooklyn.[5]He continued with an impromptu art education in December 1949[6]when at the recommendation of a college friend he landed a job atHarvey Comics.There he repurposednewspapercomic stripPhotostatsinto comic-book form – including the work of Heck's idol, famed cartoonistMilton Caniff.
Heck remained at Harvey, where one co-worker in the production department was future comics artistPete Morisi,[5]for two-and-a-half years. When a Harvey employee, Allen Hardy, broke off “to start his own line, Media Comics [sic; actuallyComic Media], in 1952, "Heck recalled in 1993, Hardy “called me up and asked me to join."[7]Heck's first known comics work appeared in two Comic Media titles bothcover-datedSeptember 1952: thewar comicWar Fury#1, for which hepenciledandinkedthe cover and the eight-page story "The Unconquered", by an unknown writer; and the cover and the six-page story "Hitler's Head", also by an unknown writer, in thehorror comicWeird Terror#1.[8]Heck's work continued to appear in those titles and in the horror anthologyHorrific,for which he designed the logo;[9]the adventure-drama anthologyDanger;theWesternanthologyDeath Valley;and other titles through the company's demise in late 1954.[8]
Heck also did freelance assignments forQuality Comics,Hillman Comics,andToby Press.[5]For publisher U.S. Pictorial in 1955, he drew the one-shotCaptain Gallant of the Foreign Legion,a TV tie-in comic based on the 1955–57syndicated,live-actionkids' showof that name.[10]
Atlas Comics
editThrough his old Harvey Comics colleague Pete Morisi, Heck in 1954 metMarvel Comics’Stan Lee,then editor-in-chief and art director of Marvel's 1950 predecessor,Atlas Comics.As Heck recalled
Pete Morisi, who worked at Media at the same time [I did], had been to Stan Lee's office, and he had brought his [art portfolio]. One of my stories was in there. and Stan kept going back to my story, saying, "This is the way you should have done it." Pete said. "Look, if you want Don Heck to come up here, he's looking for work, too. I'll tell him you're interested." Stan said, "Well, if he happened to walk up here, I might have a story for him." So I went up there on a Wednesday afternoon. Stan never saw anybody on Wednesdays, and he never saw anybody in the afternoon. But he came out. He looked at the first two pages and said, "Aw, hell, I know what your stuff looks like. Come on in. I got a story for you."[7]
Heck became an Atlas staff artist on September 1, 1954;[11]his first known work for the company was the five-page horror story "Werewolf Beware" inMystery Tales#25 (Jan. 1955),[8]though Heck in 1993 recalled, "The first job I did was about a whale breaking a ship apart. Then I did [the submarine-crew feature] 'Torpedo Taylor' forNavy Combat,"[7]drawing that five- or six-page feature in issues #1–14 and 16 (June 1955–Aug. 1957, Feb. 1958) and, oddly, doing one page of a five-page story finished byJoe Maneelyin issue #19 (Aug. 1958).[8]Until Atlas' 1957 business retrenchment – when it let go of most of its staff and freelancers and Heck spent a year drawingmodel airplaneviews forBerkeley Models[12]– Heck contributed dozens ofwar comicsstories andWesternsplus a smattering of jungle andscience-fiction/fantasytales.
Atlas began revamping in late 1958 with the arrival of artistJack Kirby,a comics legend whose career was also in need of revamping, and who threw himself into the anthological science fiction, supernaturalmystery,and giant-monster stories of what would become known as "pre-superhero Marvel."Heck returned alongside other soon-to-be-famous names of Marvel Comics' 1960s emergence as apop culturephenomenon,[13]making his first splash with the cover ofTales of Suspense#1 (Jan. 1959), one of the very few Atlas/Marvel covers of that time not drawn by Kirby. In the years immediately preceding the arrival of theFantastic Four,Spider-Man,and the other popular heroes of Marvel's ascendancy, Heck gave atmospheric rendering to numerous science fiction / fantasy stories in that comic as well as in sister publicationsStrange Tales,Tales to Astonish,Strange Worlds,World of Fantasy,andJourney into Mystery.Heck also contributed to such Atlas/Marvelromance comicsasLove RomancesandMy Own Romance.[8]
Comics artistJerry Ordway,describing this era of Heck's work, called the artist "truly under-appreciated... His Atlas work (pre-Marvel) was terrific, with a clean sharp style, and an ink line that wouldn't quit."[5]
Silver Age
editDuring the period fans and historians call theSilver Age of Comic Books,Iron Manpremiered inTales of Suspense#39 (March 1963) as a collaboration among editor and story-plotter Lee, scriptwriterLarry Lieber,story-artist Heck, and Kirby, who provided the cover pencils and designed the first Iron Man armor.[14]Kirby "designed the costume," Heck recalled, "because he was doing the cover. The covers were always done first. But I created the look of the characters, likeTony Starkand his secretaryPepper Potts."[15]Comics historian and former Kirby assistantMark Evanier,investigating claims of Kirby's involvement in the creation of both Iron Man andDaredevil,interviewed Kirby and Heck on the subject, years before their deaths, and concluded that Kirby
...definitely did not do full breakdowns as has been erroneously reported about... the first 'Iron Man'. [In the early 1970s], Jack claimed to have laid out those stories, and I repeated his claim in print – though not before checking with Heck, who said, in effect, 'Oh, yeah. I remember that. Jack did the layouts'. We all later realized he was mistaken.... Both also believed that Jack had contributed to the plots of those debut appearances – recollections that do not match those of Stan Lee. (Larry Lieber did the script for the first Iron Man story from a plot that Stan gave him.) Also, in both cases, Jack had already drawn the covers of those issues and done some amount of design work. He came up with the initial look of Iron Man's armor...[16]
Heck himself recalled in 1985 that while some sources claimed then "that Jack Kirby did breakdowns,"
...that's not true. I did it all. They just didn't bother to call me up and find out when they wrote up the credits. It doesn't really matter. Jack Kirby created the costume, and he did the cover for the issue. In fact the second costume, the red and yellow one, was designed bySteve Ditko.I found it easier than drawing that bulky old thing. The earlier design, the robot-looking one, was more Kirbyish.[9]
Heck was the artist co-creator of several new characters in the "Iron Man" feature. TheMandarindebuted inTales of Suspense#50 (Feb. 1964) and would become one of Iron Man's major enemies.[17]Hawkeye,Marvel's archer supreme, first appeared inTales of Suspense#57 (Sept. 1964),[18]following the introduction offemme fataleCommunist spy and future superheroine andS.H.I.E.L.D.agent theBlack Widowin #52 (April 1964).[19]He drew the feature "Iron Man" through issue #46 (Oct. 1963), after which Spider-Man artistSteve Ditkointroduced the familiar red-and-gold Iron Man armor and drew three issues. Heck returned with #50 and continued through #72 (Dec. 1965).
Concurrent with drawing Iron Man, Heck succeededJack Kirbyas penciler on the superhero team seriesThe Avengerswith issue #9 (Oct. 1964), the introduction ofWonder Man.[20]TheCount Nefariacharacter was introduced by Lee and Heck four issues later.[21]Heck, who inked his own pencils for many years, transitioned to the "Marvel method"of doing comics—in which thepencilerplotted and paced the details of a story based on a synopsis or plot outline from the writer, who would afterward add dialog—and was assigned the help of an inker for the first time. He successfully made this adjustment, and went on to makeThe Avengers,which he drew through issue #40 (May 1967), plus the 1967annual,one of his signature series. He inked his own pencil work in issues #32–37. Heck would return toThe Avengersone final time to co-plot and pencil issue #45, with inks by Vince Colletta.
During this run, Heck co-created characters including the supervillain and eventual hero theSwordsman,in #19 (Aug. 1965);[22]the supervillainPower Man,who years later became the hero Atlas, in #21 (Oct. 1965);[23]the cosmic entitythe Collectorin #28 (May 1966);[24]the supporting character Bill Foster, who much later became the superheroBlack Goliath,in #32 (Sept. 1966); and the supervillain theLiving Laserin #34 (Nov. 1966).[25]During the next comics era, theBronze Age,he co-created another cosmic entity,Mantis,in issue #112 (May 1973).[26]
Elsewhere during the 1960s, Heck penciledThe X-Men#38–42 (Nov. 1967 – March 1968) and introduced the new X-MenLorna Danein issue #49 (Oct. 1968)[27]andHavokin #54 (March 1969).[28]Heck drew, overJohn Romitalayouts,The Amazing Spider-Man#57–64 and 66 (Feb.–Sept and Nov. 1968). Heck would also draw issues ofCaptain MarvelandIron Man,theWorld War IIwar comicCaptain Savageand his Battlefield Raiders,horror stories inChamber of DarknessandTower of Shadows,and, once more, love stories, in theromance comicsOur Love StoryandMy Love.[8]
From 1966 to 1971, Heck was an uncredited "ghost artist"onLee Falk’sThe Phantomdaily newspapercomic strip,[2]and later on theTerry and the Piratesdaily strip.[citation needed]
Move to DC
editBy 1970, however, Marvel work became less frequent, and Heck obtained assignments from rivalDC Comics,beginning with a short story in the supernatural anthologyHouse of Secrets#85 (May 1970). He did his first DC superhero work withThe Flash#198 (June 1970), illustrating a backup story of the super-speedster, and eventually garnered additional work including romance comics, and the backup features "Batgirl"and"Jason Bard"[29]inDetective Comics,and "Rose and the Thorn"inSuperman's Girl Friend, Lois Lane.[30]He began a short run onWonder Womanwith issue #204 (Feb. 1973), in which the character's powers and traditional costume wererestored after several years,[31]and he also freelanced for the short-lived publisherSkywald Comics.[8]
Heck still occasionally worked at Marvel, penciling the odd issue ofDaredevil,Sub-Mariner,Ghost Rider,The Avengersand others in the mid-1970s. He drewGiant-Size Avengers#4 which featured the wedding of theVisionand theScarlet Witch.[32]WriterTony Isabellaand Heck launched the new superhero team bookThe Championsin October 1975.[33][34][35]But in 1977, he began working almost exclusively for DC. Heck explained in 1985, "I left Marvel for a change of pace. I kept getting all the new inkers. Everyone who walked in, I got them. A bad inker can kill artwork. I once got some pages back from inking and I just tore them up, that's how bad they were."[9]
With writerGerry Conway,Heck co-created the DC cyborg heroSteel, the Indestructible Manin the premiere issue (March 1978) of the titular comic.[36]After that series' cancellation, Heck became regular artist onThe Flash,and in 1982 reunited with Conway to draw theJustice League of America,including that year's crossover with theAll-Star Squadron.[37]Heck then returned toWonder Womanand drew the title until its cancellation in 1986.[8]Later that same year, he was one of the contributors to theDC Challengelimited series.[38]
Later career
editIn the late 1980s and early 1990s, Heck returned to Marvel, where his work included features for the superhero anthologiesMarvel Comics PresentsandMarvel Fanfare.The artist even returned to two signature characters: he inkedHawkeyestories inSolo Avengers#17–20 and the subsequentAvengers Spotlight#21–22 (April–Sept. 1989) – both penciling and inking a second Hawkeye story in that last issue – and he drew Iron Man, inking pencilerMark Bright's eight-page "The Other Way Our" inMarvel Comics Presents#51 (June 1990), and both penciling and inking the one-page featurette "Tony Stark, The Invincible Iron Man" inIron Man Annual#12 (Sept. 1991) and a pinup inMarvel Super-Heroesvol. 2 #13 (April 1993).
Heck also did a smattering of work for suchindependent comicsasTopps Comics'NightGlider,[39]Hero Comics'Mr. Fixit,Vortex'sNASCARAdventures,andMillennium Publications'H. P. Lovecraft's Cthulhu: The Whisperer in Darkness.His final DC work was penciling and inking overJoe Quesada's layouts forSpelljammer#11 (July 1991), and his last known comics work was the 10-page "The Theft ofThor's Hammer ", by writerBill Mantlo,inMarvel Super-Heroesvol. 2 #15 (Oct. 1993).[8]
Marvel one-time editor-in-chiefRoy Thomassaid of the artist
Don was unlucky enough, I think, to be a non-superhero artist who, starting in the sixties, had to find his niche in a world dominated by superheroes. Fortunately, as he proved first with Iron Man and then with the Avengers, Don could rise to the occasion because he had real talent and a good grounding in the fundamentals. He amalgamated into his own style certain aspects of Jack Kirby's style, and carved out a place for himself as one of a handful of artists who were of real importance during the very early days of Marvel[5]
Heck died oflung cancerin 1995.[5]He was living inSuffolk County, New York,onLong Island,at the time of his death.[40]
Bibliography
editDC Comics
edit- Action Comics#517-520 (1981)
- Adventure Comics#424, 462-465, 482-484, 486-487 (1972-1981)
- Adventures of the Outsiders#38 (1986)
- All-Star Squadron#8-9, 65 (1982-1987)
- Batman Family#8, 14, 16-17, 20 (1976-1978)
- Blue Beetle#23-24 (1988)
- Centurions#1-4 (1987)
- Checkmate#4 (1988)
- DC Challenge#9 (1986)
- DC Comics Presents#38 (1981)
- Detective Comics#408-425, 427, 429, 431, 433, 481-482, 485-486, 489 (1971-1980)
- The Flash#198, 280-295 (1970-1981)
- Ghosts#86 (1980)
- Green Lantern#120-122, 185 (1979-1985)
- Heart Throbs#101 (1966)
- House of Mystery#192 (1971)
- House of Secrets#85, 89, 95 (1970-1972)
- Justice League of America#187-188, 198-199, 201-205, 207-209, 213-216 (1981-1983)
- My Greatest Adventure#49 (1960)
- Our Army at War#36 (1955)
- Secret Origins#33 (1988)
- Steel, The Indestructible Man#1-5 (1978)
- Supergirl#2-4 (1973)
- Superman Family#187, 194-198 (1978-1979)
- Superman Movie Special#1 –Superman IV: The Quest for Peace(1987)
- Superman's Girl Friend, Lois Lane#123-130 (1972-1973)
- Teen Titans#50-52 (1977)
- The Witching Hour#6, 17, 20 (1970-1972)
- Wonder Woman#199, 204-206, 233-234, 287, 301, 306-309, 311-317, 319-329 (1972-1986)
Marvel Comics
edit- Amazing Adventures(vol. 1) #5 (1961)
- Amazing Adventures(vol. 2) #6-8 (1971)
- Amazing Spider-Man#57, 59-63, 66,Annual#3 (1966-1968)
- Avengers#9-15, 17-40, 45, 108-112, 145-146, 157,Annual#1-2 (1964-1977)
- Avengers Spotlight#22 (1989)
- Captain AmericaAnnual#10 (1991)
- Captain Marvel#5-10, 16 (1968-1969)
- Captain Savage and his Leatherneck Raiders#12-16 (1969)
- Chamber of Chills#3, 13 (1973-1974)
- Chamber of Darkness#1-2, 8 (1969-1970)
- Champions#1-2, 5 (1975-1976)
- Daredevil#103-106, 118 (1973-1975)
- Fear#29 (1975)
- Ghost Rider(vol. 1) #2 (1967)
- Ghost Rider(vol. 2) #22-25 (1977)
- Giant-Size Avengers#4 (1975)
- Giant-Size Defenders#4-5 (1975)
- Giant-Size Dracula#3-4 (1974-1975)
- Giant-Size Spider-Man#2 (1974)
- Invaders#35, 38 (1978-1979)
- Iron Man#26-31, 33-37 (1970-1971);Annual#12 (1991)
- Journey into Mystery#37, 44, 50, 53, 55-65, 67-68, 73-74, 76-77, 79-80, 82-86, 88, 98-100 (1956-1964)
- Jungle Tales#6-7 (1955); later becomesJann of the Jungle#8-11, 14-17 (1955-1957)
- Ka-Zar#2-5, 11 (1974-1975)
- Kid Colt, Outlaw#99-100, 104-105, 135 (1961-1967)
- Marvel Comics Presents#12, 32, 40, 49, 51, 63 (1989-1990)
- Marvel Fanfare#56 (1991)
- Marvel Feature#1 (1971)
- Marvel Premiere#29-30 (1976)
- My Love#14 (1970)
- Mystery Tales#25, 30 (1955)
- Mystic#46, 55 (1956-1957)
- Navy Combat#1-16, 19 (1955-1958)
- Our Love Story#4 (1970)
- Psi-Force#22 (1988)
- Rawhide Kid#17, 20-22, 27, 30-31, 55 (1960-1966)
- Strange Tales#67, 69, 71-83, 87-88, 90-92, 95-96, 98-101, 103, 105, 108, 140, 145-148 (1959-1966)
- Strange Worlds#1-2, 5 (1958-1959)
- Sub-Mariner#64-68 (1973-1974)
- Tales of Suspense#1, 3, 6-13, 15-19, 22, 24, 26, 29-36, 38-39, 42, 44-46, 50-72 (1959-1965)
- Tales to Astonish#2, 4-5, 7-17, 19, 21-25, 27, 30, 32-35, 37-39, 41-43, 45-48, 53-54 (1959-1964)
- Tower of Shadows#2, 4, 9,Annual#1 (1969-1971)
- Two-Gun Kid#45, 58 (1958-1961)
- X-Men#38-42, 44-49, 52, 54-55, 64 (1967-1970)
References
edit- ^Donald L. Heckat theSocial Security Death Index.Retrieved on September 23, 2012.Archivedfrom the original on September 23, 2012.
- ^ab"Don Heck".Lambiek Comiclopedia.December 5, 2008.Archivedfrom the original on May 18, 2012.
- ^Miller, John Jackson(June 10, 2005)."Comics Industry Birthdays".Comics Buyer's Guide.Iola, Wisconsin. Archived fromthe originalon February 18, 2011.RetrievedDecember 12,2010.In print issue #1650 (February 2009), p. 107
- ^Coates, John (2014)."Formative Years".Don Heck: A Work of Art.Raleigh, North Carolina: TwoMorrows Publishing. p. 9.ISBN978-1605490588.
- ^abcdefEvanier, Mark(March 24, 1995)."Don Heck".(Obituary) P.O.V. Online. Archived fromthe originalon November 24, 2002.RetrievedMarch 15,2006.
- ^Heck inMurray, Will(September 1993). "Iron Man: Almost 44 Years Later, Don Heck Is Still Drawing Comics, Part One".Comics Scene.No. 37. Starlog Group Inc. pp. 54–55.
- ^abcHeck,Comics Scene#37, p. 55
- ^abcdefghiDon Heckat theGrand Comics Database
- ^abcHeck, quoted inPeel, John (March–April 1985). "A Signing Session with Don Heck".Comics Feature.No. 34. p. 18.
I started onHorrificandDanger.... I did the covers, and they also let me do the lettering onHorrific– like the logo.
- ^Captain Gallant of the Foreign Legionat the Grand Comics Database.
- ^Murray,Comics Scene#37, p. 55
- ^Brevoort, Tom(2008). "1950s". In Gilbert, Laura (ed.).Marvel Chronicle A Year by Year History.London, United Kingdom:Dorling Kindersley.p. 72.ISBN978-0756641238.
Editor Stan Lee had assembled a small but steady pool of creative talent to produce the company's output, in addition to himself. This group of artists included Jack Kirby, Steve Ditko, Don Heck, Larry Lieber, Paul Reinman, Stan Goldberg, Al Hartley, and Dick Ayers.
- ^DeFalco, Tom"1960s" in Gilbert (2008), p. 91
- ^Daniels, Les(1991).Marvel: Five Fabulous Decades of the World's Greatest Comics.New York City:Harry N. Abrams.p. 99.ISBN0-8109-3821-9.
- ^Evanier, Mark(n.d.)."The Jack FAQ".P.O.V. Online. Archived fromthe originalon December 28, 2009.
- ^DeFalco "1960s" in Gilbert (2008), p. 99: "Following the tradition of Sax Rohmer's Fu Manchu and Atlas' own Yellow Claw, the Mandarin first appeared inTales of Suspense#50 in a story written by Stan Lee and illustrated by Don Heck. "
- ^DeFalco "1960s" in Gilbert (2008), p. 101: "A case of mistaken identity led the police to assume {Hawkeye] was part of [a criminal] gang. The Black Widow saved him from capture but also tricked him into fighting Iron Man"
- ^DeFalco "1960s" in Gilbert (2008), p. 100: "The Black Widow was a Russian spy assigned to capture American industrialist Tony Stark...Her story was plotted by Stan Lee, written by...Don Rico, and drawn by Don Heck."
- ^DeFalco "1960s" in Gilbert (2008), p. 102
- ^DeFalco "1960s" in Gilbert (2008), p. 106: "Europe's wealthiest nobleman, Count Nefaria, had a terrible secret: he was also the most powerful crimelord on Earth. Created by Stan Lee and Don Heck, Nefaria secretly ran the worldwide criminal organization called the Maggia."
- ^DeFalco "1960s" in Gilbert (2008), p. 109: "Created by Stan Lee and artist Don Heck, the Swordsman tried to join Earth's mightiest heroes, but after being refused, he began working for the criminal mastermind, the Mandarin."
- ^DeFalco "1960s" in Gilbert (2008), p. 110: "[Stan Lee] and Don Heck brought back the machine responsible for creating Wonder Man to produce a brand new super-villain inThe Avengers#21. "
- ^DeFalco "1960s" in Gilbert (2008), p. 116
- ^DeFalco "1960s" in Gilbert (2008), p. 119
- ^Sanderson, Peter"1970s" in Gilbert (2008), p. 159: "Writer Steve Englehart and artist Don Heck introduced Mantis, a mistress of the martial arts."
- ^DeFalco "1960s" in Gilbert (2008), p. 132: "Lorna Dane's green hair marked her as a mutant...inThe X-Men#49, an issue written by Arnold Drake and illustrated by Don Heck and Werner Roth. "
- ^DeFalco "1960s" in Gilbert (2008), p. 135: "Alex [Summers] was the younger brother of the X-Man Scott 'Cyclops' Summers. He appeared inThe X-Men#54, by writer Arnold Drake and artist Don Heck. "
- ^Wells, John (May 2013). "The Master Crime-File of Jason Bard".Back Issue!(64). Raleigh, North Carolina:TwoMorrows Publishing:39–43.
- ^Cassell, Dewey (May 2013). "A Rose By Any Other Name...Would Be Thorn".Back Issue!(64). Raleigh, North Carolina: TwoMorrows Publishing: 28–32.
- ^McAvennie, Michael (2010). "1970s". In Dolan, Hannah (ed.).DC Comics Year by Year a Visual Chronicle.London:Dorling Kindersley.p. 154.ISBN978-0-7566-6742-9.
After nearly five years of Diana Prince's non-powered super-heroics, writer-editor Robert Kanigher and artist Don Heck restored Wonder Woman's... well, wonder.
- ^Sanderson "1970s" in Gilbert (2008), p. 169: "Writer Steve Englehart and veteranAvengersartist Don Heck presented the grand finale of the long-running 'Celestial Madonna' saga... Immortus presided over the double wedding of Mantis to the resurrected Swordsman, and the android Vision to the Scarlet Witch. "
- ^Sanderson "1970s" in Gilbert (2008), p. 171: "Created by writer Tony Isabella and artist Don Heck, the Champions consisted of Angel, Iceman, Hercules, the Black Widow, and Ghost Rider."
- ^Markstein, Don (2009)."The Champions".Don Markstein's Toonopedia.Archived fromthe originalon May 25, 2024.RetrievedJanuary 20,2013.
- ^Walker, Karen (July 2013). "'We'll Keep on Fighting 'Til the End': The Story of the Champions ".Back Issue!(65). Raleigh, North Carolina: TwoMorrows Publishing: 17–23.
- ^McAvennie "1970s" in Dolan, p. 177
- ^Thomas, Roy(2000). "The Justice League-Justice Society Team-Ups".The All-Star Companion.Raleigh, North Carolina: TwoMorrows Publishing. pp. 191–192.ISBN1-893905-05-5.
Justice League of America#207–209 (Oct.–Dec. 1982) andAll-Star Squadron#14–15 (Oct.–Nov. 1982)
- ^Greenberger, Robert(August 2017). "It Sounded Like a Good Idea at the Time: A Look at theDC Challenge!".Back Issue!(98). Raleigh, North Carolina: TwoMorrows Publishing: 41.
- ^Sources disagree on its spelling, sometimes even within the same source: The cover of the single issue itself appears to spell it "NightGlider". The cover ofVictory#1 likewise spells it as one word, though in an all-caps typeface. TheGrand Comics Database entryspells it as both "Nightglider" and "Night Glider". The archived pulldown title-search menu at the Jack Kirby Museum site spells it "Night Glider":"archived pulldown title-search menu".Archived fromthe originalon March 3, 2009.RetrievedSeptember 9,2012.
- ^"Donald L. Heck".United States Social Security Death Index.RetrievedFebruary 2,2018– viaFamilySearch.org.
External links
edit- Best, Daniel (May 10, 2011)."Original Art Stories: Don Heck - In His Own Words".20th Century Danny Boy.Archivedfrom the original on September 14, 2012.RetrievedSeptember 13,2012.
- The American Artist Bluebook: Don Heck
- "DC Profiles #73: Don Heck"at the Grand Comics Database
- Don HeckatIMDb
- Don HeckArchivedAugust 12, 2018, at theWayback Machineat Mike's Amazing World of Comics
- Don Heckat the Unofficial Handbook of Marvel Comics Creators