Hank Chapman

Hank Chapman
Born Henry P. Chapman
Nationality American
Area(s) Writer
Notable works
war comics

Henry P. Chapman[1] (living status unknown), who is credited in comics under both his formal name and as Hank Chapman,[2][3] is an American comic book writer for Marvel Comics' two predecessors, Timely Comics and Atlas Comics, and later for DC Comics, where he specialized in war fiction. Though much of his Timely/Atlas work went unsigned, comics historians estimate that Chapman, a staff writer, penned several hundred or more stories.[4]

Among Chapman's works is an early self-reflexive comic-book story, in 1951, in which he and editor Stan Lee appear; and the creation, with artist Jack Abel, of the DC Comics character Sgt. Mule, a pack animal that helped its Allied keepers fight the Nazis in a variety of World War II stories.

Career

Chapman's earliest known credit is as one of the many Golden Age of comic books professionals who contributed to the epic crossover battle between the Sub-Mariner and the original Human Torch in Marvel Mystery Comics #8-10 (June-Aug. 1940), plus an additional story in The Human Torch #5 (Fall 1941; due to a numbering quirk, there was a previous #5, cover-dated Summer 1941).[2] His precise contributions are as lost to history as those of other writers and artists who legendarily collaborated on this hastily created confrontation. As described by historian Jess Nevins, Sub-Mariner creator Bill Everett and Human Torch creator Carl Burgos...

...brainstormed the story and then gave them to two writers, John Compton and Hank Chapman, to finish. Whether Everett & Burgos were the only ones to create this story remains, as do so many other questions about this time in comics' history, in dispute. [Timely Comics publisher] Martin Goodman seems to have had input into the crossover; he seems not to have been behind the idea, but seems to have influenced the content of the stories".[5]
Stan Lee and Hank Chapman appear as versions of themselves in Chapman's four-page story "The Nightmare" (Astonishing #4, June 1951). Art by either Wayne Boring or Al Plastino (sources differ).

By the following decade, Chapman was one of at least five staff writers (officially titled editors) under editor-in-chief Stan Lee at Marvel forerunner Atlas, along with Ernie Hart, Paul S. Newman, Don Rico, Carl Wessler, and, on teen-humor comics, future Mad Magazine cartoonist Al Jaffee. Among the titles for which Chapman wrote, beginning in early 1951, are the horror/fantasy series Adventures into Terror, Adventures into Weird Worlds, Astonishing, Marvel Tales, Mystery Tales, Spellbound, Strange Tales, Suspense, and Uncanny Tales; the war titles Battle, Battle Action, Battlefield, Battlefront, Battle Brady, Combat Casey, Combat, War Action, War Adventures, War Combat and War Comics; the Westerns Red Warrior and The Texas Kid; the adventure-drama series Girl Comics, Man Comics, Men's Adventures, and Young Men; the crime fiction series Crime Exposed and Justice; the romance titles True Secrets Love Romances; and such miscellanea as Sports Action, and Speed Carter, Spaceman.[2]

Chapman's last known Atlas works were in comics cover-dated May 1954. His next known credit is a story in the DC anthology title All-American Men of War #18 (Feb. 1955), followed by four years without recorded credits until his name surfaced in two June 1959 DC titles, G.I. Combat #73 and Our Fighting Forces #46. These would be the first of at least 105 war stories he would write in those comics along with Our Army at War, Sea Devils, Capt. Storm, and Star Spangled War Stories.[2]

His and artist Jack Abel's character Sgt. Mule — whose name, "Millie", meant she was actually not a mule (male) but a hinny (female) — appeared with various keepers including Private Mulvaney (Our Army at War #149 & 160, Star Spangled War Stories #136); Private Skinner (G.I. Combat #104); and Private Smith (Our Army At War #117).[2]

Chapman's last recorded credit is the story "Paper Bullets", with artist Abel, in Our Army At War #181 (June 1967).[2]

Chapman was married to wife Bonnie, a production staffer at Atlas.[6] He left comics to become a magazine writer for Boys' Life, in 1964, and for travel magazines.[6][1]

Known reprints

Chronological by date of original publication

"The Drop of Water" (art: Gene Colan), from Marvel Tales #105 (Feb. 1952)
"Locked up!" (art: Carmine Infantino), from Adventures Into Weird Worlds #9 (Aug. 1952)
"Blind Bomber" (art: Mort Drucker), from Star Spangled War Stories #84 (Aug. 1959)
"Frogman Fury" (art: Ross Andru & Mike Esposito), from Our Army at War #102 (Jan. 1961)
"The Secret Battle Eye" (art: Joe Kubert), from Our Fighting Forces #66 (Feb. 1962)
"No Place for a PT Boat" (art: Joe Kubert), from Our Fighting Forces #76 (May 1963)
"Straw Pilot" (art: Joe Kubert), from Our Army at War #147 (Oct. 1964)

References

  1. 1 2 Bails, Jerry; Ware, Hames. "Chapman, Hank". Who's Who of American Comic Books 1928-1999. Archived from the original on March 18, 2012. Retrieved February 27, 2015.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Hank Chapman and Henry P. Chapman at the Grand Comics Database.
  3. Page 1 credit at "The Nightmare". Astonishing #4 (June 1951). Archived from the original on October 5, 2001.
  4. Isabella, Tony (August 9, 2005). "Tony's Online Tips". (column) WorldFamousComics.com. Archived from the original on August 12, 2007. Chapman wrote hundreds of fine stories for Timely/Atlas and DC Comics from the 1940s through the early 1960s
  5. Nevins, Jess. "The Timely Comics Story". Archived from the original on May 29, 2010. Retrieved 16 August 2011.
  6. 1 2 Interview with Atlas/Marvel artist Stan Goldberg, Alter Ego #18 (Oct. 2002), p. 12

External links

Further reading

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Tuesday, July 21, 2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.