Werner Roth (comics) | |
---|---|
Born | January 27, 1921 |
Died | June 1973 (aged 52) |
Area(s) | Penciller |
Pseudonym(s) | Jay Gavin |
Notable works | X-Men Lorna, the Jungle Girl |
Werner Roth (1921–1973)[1][2] was an American comic book artist, perhaps best known for immediately succeeding Jack Kirby on Marvel Comics' X-Men.
Roth's work began appearing in Marvel Comics, then known as Atlas Comics, in 1953. Stan Lee, the editor at Atlas, was impressed with Roth's portfolio, particularly his drawings of women. According to Lee, "when you have a good artist like Werner Roth, you want to use him. So I took his samples to show [then-publisher] Martin Goodman. I suggested we should use Werner, even create a comic for him. Which we did, and that was how Lorna, the Jungle Girl was born."[3] Roth drew the first dozen issues of Lorna. He drew a number of other features for Atlas, including most of the stories of the Apache Kid. He later drew romance comics at DC.
Roth returned to Marvel to work on the X-Men in 1966, initially using the pseudonym Jay Gavin, taken from the names of his two sons, to conceal his Marvel work from his editors at DC.[4][5]
Roth later drew more Western comics for Marvel, and pencilled issues of Superman's Girl Friend, Lois Lane for DC Comics.
Preceded by Jack Kirby |
Uncanny X-Men artist 1965–1969 |
Succeeded by Neal Adams |