Mike Grell

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Mike Grell

Grell sketching at Bell Con 2007 in Bellingham, Washington.
Born 1947
Nationality American
Area(s) Comic book penciller; inker; writer
Notable works Superboy and the Legion of Super-Heroes
The Warlord
Jon Sable Freelance
Green Arrow
Iron Man

Mike Grell (born 1947) is a comic book writer and artist.

Grell studied at the University of Wisconsin-Green Bay, the Chicago Academy of Fine Art, and took the Famous Artists School correspondence course in cartooning. His entry into the comics industry was in 1972, as an assistant to Dale Messick on the Brenda Starr comic strip.

Contents

[edit] Career Beginning: Superboy and the Legion of Super-Heroes

In 1973 Grell moved to New York, and began his long relationship with DC Comics. His first assignment at DC was on Superboy and the Legion of Super-Heroes (SATLOSH), a high profile assignment for an artist with no prior experience illustrating a monthly comic book. Grell says he got that job because he was walking in the editor's door to ask for work, literally, as the previous artist was walking out the door, having just quit. These stories were written by Cary Bates and Jim Shooter. The Bates/Grell/Shooter run on the title is very well-regarded today by Superboy/Legion fans, who consider it one of the high water marks in the character/team's history. Grell's work on SATLOSH is widely thought to be some of the best beefcake/cheesecake ever committed to comic book pages, and is affectionately referred to as the 'disco Legion' in retrospect by fans of the title.

[edit] The Warlord

The cover of The Warlord #67. Art by Mike Grell.
The cover of The Warlord #67. Art by Mike Grell.

Becoming a writer as well as artist, Grell cemented his status as a fan-favorite with his best-known creation, The Warlord, one of the first sword and sorcery comics and reportedly the best-selling title published by DC Comics in the late-1970s.

The character first appeared in 1st Issue Special #8 (Nov 1975) and was soon given his own, ongoing title (The Warlord #1, Jan/Feb 1976). In this book, Air Force pilot Travis Morgan crash lands in the prehistoric "hidden world" of Skartaris (highly influenced by Jules Verne's A Journey to the Center of the Earth and Edgar Rice Burroughs' Pellucidar). Thereafter for years he engages in adventures dressed only in a winged helmet, wristbands, boots and breechclout, armed with a sword and (years before Dirty Harry picked one up) a .44 Auto Mag.

At DC, Grell also worked on titles such as Aquaman, Batman, and the Phantom Stranger, and with writer Dennis O'Neil on the re-launch of the Green Lantern/Green Arrow series in 1976.

[edit] Tarzan

Grell wrote and drew the Tarzan comic strip from July 19, 1981 to February 27, 1983 (except for one strip, February 13, 1983, by Thomas Yeates). These strips were rerun in newspapers in 2004 - 2005.

[edit] First Comics: Jon Sable Freelance and Starslayer

Cover to Jon Sable Freelance #7. Art by Mike Grell.
Cover to Jon Sable Freelance #7. Art by Mike Grell.

Through the 1980s Grell developed creator-owned titles such Jon Sable Freelance and Starslayer. Jon Sable Freelance was published by the now defunct First Comics. Starslayer, a spaceborn science fiction series, started at Pacific Comics before shifting to First.

The titular character of Jon Sable Freelance was a former Olympic athlete and then African big game hunter who became a mercenary. First appearing with a cover date of June 1983, Jon Sable Freelance was a successful non-super-hero comic book in an era when successful non-super-hero comic books were almost unheard-of, and a graphically violent comic sold in mainstream comic book stores in an era when such was also almost unheard-of. Jon Sable was a precursor to what would eventually be called, by some, "the Dark Age of Comics" when even long-established super-heroes would become increasingly grim and violent.

The character was heavily influenced by Ian Fleming's James Bond novels as well as drawing on pulp fiction crime stories. Also, many of the stories of Sable's hunting exploits in Africa were influenced by Peter Hathaway Capstick's novels. At a convention in the late 1980s, Grell stated that his idea for Sable was "something like a cross between James Bond and Mickey Spillane's Mike Hammer."

Sable was adapted into a short-lived television series and the character's origin tale, "A Storm Over Eden" from the comic book was expanded and novelized by Grell under the title Sable which was published in 2000 by Tor Books.

[edit] Back at DC: Green Arrow

Green Arrow: The Longbow Hunters #1. Mike Grell's gritty redefinition of Green Arrow. Painted cover by Grell.
Green Arrow: The Longbow Hunters #1. Mike Grell's gritty redefinition of Green Arrow. Painted cover by Grell.

In 1987, Mike Grell wrote and drew the 3-issue prestige format limited series Green Arrow: The Longbow Hunters. He redesigned the character's costume, away from the costume Neal Adams had designed in 1969, and recast Green Arrow as an "urban hunter" going up against non-super-powered, real world villains such as serial killers, terrorists, street gangs, American mobsters and Japanese Yakuza. He did away with Green Arrow's arsenal of "trick arrows" and instead rearmed him with penetrating broadheads with which he actually killed his opponents. Longbow Hunters showed the first instance in which Green Arrow ever deliberately killed someone; in the follow-on series this occurred frequently.

The popularity of Longbow Hunters led to an assignment writing – and occasionally drawing – a relaunched Green Arrow series for 80 issues from 1988 to 1998. During this run, Grell avoided references to the fantastical elements of the DC Universe (e.g. in a guest appearance by Green Lantern the character is out of costume and does not use his powers). Notably, believing "Green Arrow" was "a stupid name," in no Mike Grell Green Arrow story is the character ever referred to as Green Arrow anywhere other than on the cover.[1]

In 2008, Grell provided a variant incentive cover for Action Comics #861, part four of the Superman and the Legion of Super-Heroes story. DC sought variant drawings for this story from artists who had worked on the Legion in the past, such as Steve Lightle, Keith Giffen, and Grell.

[edit] James Bond

In 1988, Grell authored and illustrated the graphic novel adaptation of the Timothy Dalton James Bond film Licence to Kill, and in 1989 wrote and drew an original Bond story, the three-issue mini-series Permission to Die, both published by Eclipse Comics.

[edit] Shaman's Tears and Bar Sinister

Shaman's Tears was a more ecologically themed outing for Grell. Main character Joshua Brand, the son of a half-Sioux father and an Irish mother, as an adult returns to the reservation he ran away from as a child. Discovering he mystically possesses the powers of all animals and the Earth itself, he becomes the protector of the planet. Jon Sable guest starred in issues #5-9 of this 12 issue series (May 1993 - Aug 1995). There was also a 0 issue published in Nov 1995.

Grell wrote and drew the covers, but did none of the interior artwork, for issues 1-4 of the Shaman's Tears spinoff series Bar Sinister (Jun - Sep 1995) from Windjammer, the creator-owned imprint of Valiant Comics. This series followed the adventures of a group of escaped government experimental subjects, animals genetically engineered to human intelligence and, basically, human form, as potential bio-weapons.

[edit] Marvel Comics: Iron Man

Most recently Grell has written and drawn Iron Man for Marvel Comics. It was during Grell's run that Iron Man chose to reveal his secret identity as Tony Stark to the world, a plot twist met with mixed fan reaction.

[edit] Artwork

Mike Grell's artwork is distinctive and highly detailed, with a scratchboard-like feel. Conversely, his writing is tight and minimalistic, often letting his art speak for itself during action sequences. He is renowned for his ability to draw very beautiful women - see for instance the scantily-clad Saturn Girl during his run on Superboy and the Legion of Superheroes in the Seventies. The men he drew almost invariably had the physical development of Olympic decathletes or middle-distance runners, unlike those drawn by the majority of comic-book artists of the day, whose physiques resembled those of chemically enhanced professional bodybuilders.

Like many artists entering comic books in the 1970s, Grell's early artwork in particular showed a strong Neal Adams influence, but underwent a significant change in a single stroke when he discovered the works of Joseph Clement Coll and Paul Calle ("The Pencil"). The change can be seen dramatically in the difference between the covers for Jon Sable Freelance #1 and #2.

[edit] Personal Life

Grell is an avid big-game hunter, which serves as an influence on his artwork and story lines, particularly in the Jon Sable Freelance series.

Grell currently lives in Washington state with his wife, Lauri, noted horsewoman and creator of the EQUUEST (tm) system of equine communication.

Grell was interviewed by John Siuntres for the "Word Balloon" podcast in March 2008, where he covered the entirety of his career and upcoming projects.

[edit] External links

Preceded by
Frank Tieri
Iron Man writer
2002–2003
(with Robin Laws in 2003)
Succeeded by
Robin Laws

[edit] References

  1. ^ http://goodcomics.comicbookresources.com/2008/04/10/comic-book-urban-legends-revealed-150/
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