Mark Verheiden
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Mark Verheiden is an American television, movie, and comic book writer. He currently is co-executive producer and writer for the Battlestar Galactica TV series, and has written the screenplay for a feature film project with Bruce Campbell called My Name is Bruce.
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[edit] Biography
Mark Verheiden was born on March 26, 1956. His introduction into writing comics came in June 1987, when he penned The American, which was published by Dark Horse Comics in its second year of operation. Starting in March of the following year, he wrote what was to be the first of many Verheiden/Dark Horse comics based on the 20th Century Fox film-series Aliens, and comics based on the simililarly-licenced-property Predator soon followed.
In January 1989, he wrote the fist of several stories featuring Superman for DC Comics' then-weekly title Action Comics, from #635. He has also written stories featuring popular icons like The Phantom, and contributed to the lauded A1 anthology.
Verheiden has also contributed to scripts for the feature films The Mask, Timecop (he also wrote the Dark Horse comics adaptation of the film) and for the Smallville television-show. He was also supervising, then co-executive producer for Smallville during the first three seasons, as well as one of the writers on DC's Smallville comic, based on the series.
Verheiden was also the creator/writer and supervising producer on the ABC television series Timecop, and consulting producer on the UPN series The Strip.
His Phantom stories featured in a 13-issue maxi-series from DC Comics (following a 4-issue Peter David written mini-series) and took on 'real-world issues', such as poisoning, illegal weapon trading, racism, and toxic dumping. The stories usually took a more psychological approach than the Lee Falk written comic strips. Luke McDonnell was the regular artist.
[edit] Recent work
A character in the film Alien vs. Predator was named after him. He was played by Tommy Flanagan.
Verheiden has been a writer and co-executive producer on the television series Battlestar Galactica since season two, and has written nine episodes of the Peabody Award winning series.
In 2007, Verheiden began work on the live-action screenplay for a Teen Titans film for Warner Bros., as well as an adaptation of his own Ark (written for Dark Horse Presents in the mid-1990s) with Sony Pictures.[1]
In the mid-2000s, Dark Horse Comics gained the Evil Dead comics licence, and from January-April 2008, Verheiden wrote the four-issue miniseries based on the Sam Raimi movie, with art by John Bolton. Verheiden was no stranger to the Evil Dead team, having previously worked with Raimi on Time Cop, written a pilot for Rob Tapert and produced the screenplay for Bruce Campbell's My Name is Bruce.[2]
[edit] References
- ^ Eric Moro & Scott Collura "SDCC 07: Exclusive: Verheiden Talks Ark", June 26, 2007. Accessed March 19, 2008
- ^ Writer Mark Verheiden on the 'Evil Dead' comic book and 'My Name is Bruce' at FEARnet, February 29, 2008. Accessed March 19, 2008