Win Mortimer
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
James Winslow "Win" Mortimer (born May 1, 1919, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada, died January 11, 1998) is a comic book and comic strip artist best known as one of the major illustrators of the DC Comics superhero Superman. He additionally drew for Marvel Comics, Gold Key, and other publishers.
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[edit] Biography
[edit] Early life and career
Trained as an artist by his father, who worked for a lithography company, and at the Art Students League in New York City, Win Mortimer found work as an illustrator after a short stint in the Canadian Army during World War II. Discharged in 1943, Mortimer found worked designing posters.
[edit] Superman
Mortimer began working for DC Comics in 1945 and quickly became a cover artist for comics featuring Superman, Superboy and Batman. His first known comics work is as the uncredited penciler and inker of the 12-page lead Batman story, "The Batman Goes Broke" by writer Don Cameron, in Detective Comics #105 (Nov. 1945).
He succeeded Wayne Boring on the Superman newspaper strip in 1949, leaving it in 1956 to create the adventure strip David Crane for the Prentice-Hall Syndicate. Following his run on that series, Mortimer produced the Larry Brannon strip for the Toronto Star from 1961 to 1968.
During the same period, Mortimer returned to DC and worked on a large variety of comics, ranging from humor (Stanley and His Monster, Scooter, Fat Albert) to superhero (features starring The Legion of Super-Heroes and Supergirl)..
[edit] Later life and career
By the early 1970s, Mortimer was also freelancing for other publishers, including Marvel (on Spider-Man, Night Nurse, and other characters) and Gold Key (Boris Karloff Tales of Mystery, The Twilight Zone). He left comics in 1983 to do advertising and commercial art for Neal Adams' studio, Continuity Associates, beginning in 1983.
Mortimer's last superhero art was the four-issue DC miniseries World of Metropolis (Aug.-Nov. 1988), plus some character drawings for the reference Who's Who in the Legion of Super-Heroes #7 (Nov. 1988). His final comics work was pencil layout for Triad Comics' The Honeymooners #11 (June 1989). He had previously drawn issues #3-9 (late-1987 to July 1988) of that series based on the 1950s TV comedy.
[edit] Awards and honors
In 2006, Mortimer was inducted into the Joe Shuster Canadian Comic Book Creator Hall of Fame.