Thursday, June 15, 2023

RIP John Romita Sr.

 

John Romita Sr., Legendary Marvel Comics Artist & Wolverine Co-Creator, Dead at 93

Comicbook

By Jenna Anderson

June 13, 2023

 

Legendary comic artist John Romita Sr. has passed away at the age of 93. The news was broken on Tuesday night by Romita's son, fellow comic artist John Romita Jr., who confirmed that he passed away peacefully in his sleep on Monday, June 12th. Romita had an illustrious career in the sphere of superhero comics, co-creating beloved characters such as Mary Jane Watson, Wolverine, and The Punisher.

"I say this with a heavy heart, My father, John Romita Sr passed away peacefully in his sleep this Monday morning," the post reads. "He is a legend in the art world and it would be my honor to follow in his footsteps. Please keep your thoughts and condolences here out of respect for my family. He was the greatest man I ever met."

Born on January 24, 1930, in Brooklyn New York, Romita graduated from Manhattan's School of Industrial Art in 1947 and received his first paid gig (for the Manhattan General Hospital) at the age of only 17. After working as an inker at a lithograph company, he stumbled into a job as a ghost artist at Timely Comics, the precursor to Marvel Comics. He continued to work at Timely and its other pre-Marvel successor, Atlas Comics, even while he was enlisted in the U.S. Army. His early work at the time included a 1953-1954 revival of Captain America, which led to the creation of M-11 the Human Robot.

During the 1950s, Romita also did uncredited work for DC, before switching over to the company exclusively in 1958, and working on romance titles such as Young Love and Girl's Love Stories. He then returned to Marvel in 1966, soon succeeding Spider-Man co-creator Steve Ditko on The Amazing Spider-Man #39 following Ditko's falling out with Stan Lee. Across Romita's tenure on the book, it became the company's best-selling title, and introduced now-legendary characters like Mary Jane Watson, The Rhino, The Kingpin, The Shocker, and George Stacy. He went on to contribute to 56 straight issues of the main title, countless iconic covers, as well as various magazine-format and newspaper spinoffs.

"I was bringing a little more glamour to it," Romita later said of Amazing Spider-Man to Alter Ego. "To listen to the fans at the time, what I was losing was the mystery and the shadowy stuff. They thought it was much too much broad daylight, and too much cuteness. That's a funny twist, because Stan was worried when I was doing it. He didn't threaten to take me off it, but he constantly was telling me I was making Peter Parker too handsome, and everybody too good looking. Even the villains were starting to look good, and I was taking age away from Aunt May. [laughter] I think there was another element behind the rise in sales. For about a year, Ditko and Stan were absolutely disagreeing on plotting. Ditko was plotting, and they weren't even talking. It already had probably gotten a little bit confusing to readers for about a year. So between the fact that I brought in a new audience, and didn't lose too much of the old audience I guess, I got the benefit of the rebound.

By 1973, Romita began officially operating as Marvel's art director, and had an influential role on the designs of Wolverine, Luke Cage, The Punisher, Bullseye, and Tigra. His later work for the publisher included Monica Rambeau's debut as Captain Marvel in 1982's The Amazing Spider-Man Annual #16, as well as a number of commemorative issues across Marvel.

Our thoughts are with Romita's family, friends, and fans at this time.

ROMITA, Sr., John

Born: 1/24/1930, Brooklyn, New York, U.S.A.

Died: 6/12/2023, Floral Park, New York, U.S.A.

John Romita Jr’s westerns – comic book artist:

Two Gun Western – 1951

Western Outlaws and Sheriffs – 1951

Wild Western - 1952

Western Kid 1954-1957

Outlaw Kid – 1955

Rawhide Kid - 1955

Cowboy Action – 1956

Gunsmoke Western - 1956

Frontier Western – 1957

Kid Outlaw – 1957

Six-Gun Western – 1957

Western Gunfighters - 1970

3 comments:

  1. Thanks for the correction on my posting Jr.'s photo in error. I try and not post Fake News or incorrect photos so I'm always open to corrections. Since the server for this blog won't let me delete posted photos, I have to delete the entire post and then repost it with any photo corrections. Once again thanks for catching my error. If you find out where he died please let me know so I can complete the obit.

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  2. The German version of Wikipedia states † June 12, 2023 in Floral Park, New York

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  3. Thanks! I'll add it to the post. Always amazes me when we can't get a place of death from the media in the country they live but it pops up in the foreign press.

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