Greg Theakston

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Greg Theakston
Birth name Greg Allan Theakston
Born November 21, 1953 (age 53)
Detroit, Michigan
Nationality
American
Area(s) Colorist
Inker
Penciller
Publisher
Pseudonym(s) Earl P. Wooton

Greg Theakston (born November 21, 1953) is an American comics artist and illustrator.

Greg Theakston was born in Detroit, Michigan as the second oldest of five boys. He attended Ella Fitzgerald Elementary School (along with Stevie Wonder), Post Junior High School, East Junior High School, Farmington High School, Danial Boone High School (Orlando, Fl.), and Redford High School. He graduated in 1971 and immediately went to work with Comic artist, Jim Steranko for the better part of a year. Theakston then quickly went into low-brow illustration for various mens' magazines. As he eventually began to build his portfolio, Theakston began working for lower-tier paperback companies, eventually working his way up the illustration ladder. These companies include work for Berkley Books, Dell, Ace, DAW, Zebra, Warner, Ballentine Books, Belmont-Tower, IF and Galaxy, and many others. Among various assignments were jobs for Marvel Comics, DC Comics, Image, Warren, Personality, The New York Daily News, Archie Comics, as well as periodicals and magazines such as National Lampoon, The New York Times, Kitchen Sink, Playboy, TV Guide, and Rolling Stone. He was a regular illustrator at Mad Magazine for over ten years and has worked regularly with numerous comics publishers on projects such as Omega Men, Super Powers, DC Presents, DC's Who's Who, Hunger Dogs, Planet of the Apes, and various others.[1] He has over 400 published paintings to his credit, scores of storyboards, and too many convention sketches to remember.

Movie poster work includes The Return of the Swamp Thing, Invaders From Mars, Silk Stockings, B'Wani Junction, The Four Horsemen of the Apocolyps, The Jungle Book, and Mogombo. Theakston has seven lithographs in the permanent collection of The Museum of Modern Art.

Greg has run Pure Imagination, a comic book, magazine, and comics-related book publisher since 1975. His biographical work includes an estimated 100,000 words on Jack Kirby, his long-time friend and work associate, and 250,000 words on Bettie Page, and numerous pieces on great Comic book artists.

His name has been given to a process called "Theakstonizing", named by DC editor-in-chief, Dick Giordano, which bleaches color from old comics pages, used in the restoration of Comics for reprinting [2] An example of this is noted in No Time for Sergeants. To date, he has reconstucted over 10,000 pages of Comic Art, including work on Superman, Batman, Captain America, Green Lantern, The Flash, Porky Pig, The Spirit, All-Winners, The Human Torch, Sub-Mariner, Archie, Dick Tracy, Torchy, Pogo, and various collections of popular Comics artists, including Jack Kirby, Alex Toth, Basil Wolverton, Steve Ditko, Jack Cole, Lou Fine, Wallace Wood, and many others.

Theakston co-founded and produced the Atlanta Burlesque troupe Dames A'Flame in 1996-2001 with Eve Wynne-Warren A.K.A Torchy Taboo, one of only five regulary performing Burlesque companies in the U.S. at the time. His Betty Pages magazine (1987-93) spawned a world-wide fad for the Tease From Tennessee, and was followed-up by Tease! magazine.

He is the father of three children, and resides in Brooklyn, New York as of 2001.

Other professional work includes paper-boy, short-order cook, carpenter, printer, private investigator, Comic book inker, artist, and colorist, photo archivist, and photographer.

[edit] References

Deadline: So Much to Do and So Litle Time (Pure Imagination, 2007)

  1. ^ http://www.comicbookdb.com/creator.php?ID=2874
  2. ^ Michigan State University Libraries, Reading Room Index to the Comic Art Collection refers to an article on "Theakstonizing". Page retrieved 24 October 2004.