Paul Reinman

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Paul Reinman (born 2 September 1910, Germany, died 27 September 1988) is an American comic book artist best known as one of Jack Kirby's Silver Age inkers, including on the first issues of The Incredible Hulk and The X-Men.

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[edit] Early career

The Incredible Hulk #1 (May 1962). Cover art by Jack Kirby and inker Reinman
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The Incredible Hulk #1 (May 1962). Cover art by Jack Kirby and inker Reinman

Reinman entered the field in the 1940s at All-American Comics, one of the companies that later merged into DC Comics, working on such characters as the Golden Age Green Lantern and Wildcat before succeeding series creators Ben Flinton and Jon Kozlak on The Atom from 1947-49. Other Golden Age characters he drew include Starman and Wonder Woman.

Reinman also worked for MLJ, the company that would become Archie Comics, on characters including the Black Hood, the Hangman and the Wizard. His Golden Age work for Timely Comics, the 1940s predecessor of Marvel, included Human Torch and Sub-Mariner stories in Captain America Comics and elsewhere.

He went on to pencil horror, science fiction, Bible stories, war fiction and other genres for Marvel's 1950s predecessor, Atlas Comics.

[edit] The Silver Age

With the late-1950s return of comics legend Jack Kirby to Atlas/Marvel, Reinman became a frequent inker of Kirby's work in such "pre-superhero" monster anthologies as Strange Tales and Journey into Mystery, as well as on the espionage series Yellow Claw.

Reinman would eventually ink Kirby on numerous landmark Marvel books, including The Incredible Hulk #1 (May 1962), The X-Men #1-5 (Sept. 1963 - May 1964) and The Avengers #2, 3 & 5 (Nov. 1963, Jan. & May 1964), giving a dark, scratchy moodiness distinct from the full, fleshy inks of Dick Ayers, the bold, blocky thickness of George Roussos, or the arid, tapestry-like flatness of Vince Colletta, to name three other frequent Kirby inkers of that era.

In 1965, Reinman and Jerry Siegel created The Mighty Crusaders for Archie Comics' short-lived superhero line. Reinman also worked with Siegel on the company's version of The Shadow, based on the famous radio and pulp magazine character.

The prolific Reinman's other work includes numerous issues of Adventures into the Unknown and Forbidden Worlds for the small American Comics Group (AGC) in the 1950s and 1960s. He and Richard E. Hughes co-created the spy character John Force in ACG's Magic Agent #1 (Jan-Feb 1962).

[edit] Other work

Outside comics, Reinman drew the Tarzan syndicated comic strip in 1949 and 1950.

Reinman remained active through at least the mid-1970s, penciling Ka-Zar #1 (Jan. 1974) and assisting John Romita on the pencils of The Amazing Spider-Man #132 (May 1974).

[edit] References