Steve MacManus

Steve MacManus

Steve MacManus drawn by Mike McMahon
Born United Kingdom
Nationality British
Area(s) Writer, editor
Pseudonym(s) Ian Rogan
Notable works
2000 AD
Crisis
Judge Dredd Megazine
Batman/Judge Dredd: Judgment on Gotham
Sonic the Comic

Steve MacManus (sometimes credited as Ian Rogan) is a British comic writer and editor, particularly known for his work at 2000 AD.

Born in London and educated in Devon, MacManus joined IPC in 1973, aged 20,[1] as a sub-editor on the boys' weekly comic Valiant, until 1975 when he moved to Battle Picture Weekly under editor David Hunt. While working on Battle he also freelanced on Action,[2] appearing as the title's mascot "Action Man",[3] who performed and wrote up stunts and activities such as exploring London's sewers[4] or flying a hot air balloon,[5] as well as writing "The Running Man",[6] "Sport's Not For Losers",[7] and episodes of "Dredger".[2]

In 1978 he was taken off Battle to sub for Kelvin Gosnell on a new science fiction title, Starlord. When it was cancelled later the same year, he became Gosnell's sub on 2000 AD, replacing Nick Landau who was moved to Battle. He wrote scripts for "M.A.C.H. 1", and was the main writer for its spin-off "M.A.C.H. Zero", as well as contributing episodes of "The V.C.s", and also wrote "The Lawless Touch" for another of Gosnell's titles, Tornado.[2][8][9]

In 1978 he was promoted to editor of 2000 AD, a job he held until 1987. This period is widely regarded as the title's "golden age", during which John Wagner, Alan Grant, Pat Mills and Alan Moore produced some of their best work, and new talents like Peter Milligan and Grant Morrison joined the line-up. MacManus had a hand in the creation of one of the comic's most enduring characters, "Rogue Trooper", alongside writer Gerry Finley-Day and artist Dave Gibbons, and he co-wrote the character with Simon Geller in 1986.[2][8][10]

The one-off story "Shok!", created with Kevin O'Neill for the 1981 Judge Dredd Annual, was the basis of Richard Stanley's 1990 film Hardware. Only after a court case, which Stanley lost, were the two given writing credits on the film. Hardware is now considered the first 2000 AD story to be adapted into film.[11]

MacManus gave up editing 2000 AD in 1987 to become Managing Editor of the 2000 AD Group, during which time he launched Crisis, a politically aware comic which introduced Garth Ennis, John Smith, Sean Phillips and Duncan Fegredo, among others. After IPC's comics division became Fleetway, he quit Crisis after 50 issues following problems with censorship under new owner Robert Maxwell.[2]

In the early 1990s he edited the first twelve issues of the Judge Dredd Megazine, and co-edited the Batman/Judge Dredd crossover Judgement on Gotham with DC Comics' Denny O'Neil. Other titles he oversaw in the 2000 AD Group included Revolver and Dice Man. In 1995 he became Managing Editor of the Pre-School Group of Fleetway's new owners Egmont, editing Sonic the Comic and overseeing titles such as Toxic and Ben 10.[2]

In 1997 he returned to 2000 AD to write their 3000 AD twentieth anniversary special with David Bishop. After Egmont sold 2000 AD to Rebellion Developments in 2000, MacManus moved out of comics and into Egmont's magazine editorial. He announced he was stepping down in 2011.[2][8]

On 26 January 2016 2000 AD announced to have added The Mighty One: My Life Inside the Nerve Centre, a memoir by Steve MacManus to its fall slate with a limited edition hardcover and a standard paperback edition hitting the shelves on 8 September.

Bibliography

Notes

  1. David McDonald, Steve MacManus Interview, Hibernia Comics, 7 April 2011
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 "Action Man Stands Down", The Sevenpenny Nightmare, 23 June 2011
  3. Action Man at The Sevenpenny Nightmare, 19 February 2010
  4. Action No. 9, 10 April 1976
  5. Action No. 12, 1 May 1976
  6. The Running Man at The Sevenpenny Nightmare, 16 February 2010
  7. Sport's Not For Losers at The Sevenpenny Nightmare, 15 February 2010
  8. 1 2 3 Steve MacManus' droid profile at 2000ad.org
  9. Steve MacManus on IMDB
  10. David Bishop, Respect Due: former 2000AD editor Steve MacManus, Vicious Imagery, 2 February 2011
  11. 2000AD Online – Films (via Internet Archive]

References

External links

Preceded by
Kelvin Gosnell
2000 AD editor
1978–1987
Succeeded by
Richard Burton
Preceded by
Judge Dredd Megazine editor
1990–1991
Succeeded by
David Bishop
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