Frank Springer

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Frank Springer
Frankspringer75.jpg
Frank Springer c. 1975
Born (1929-12-06)December 6, 1929
Jamaica, Queens, New York City, New York
Died Script error: The function "death_date_and_age" does not exist.
Damariscotta, Maine
Nationality American
Area(s) Penciller, Inker
Pseudonym(s) Francis Hollidge
Bob Monhegan
Notable works
"The Adventures of Phoebe Zeit-Geist"
Dazzler
Nick Fury, Agent of S.H.I.E.L.D.
Awards National Cartoonists Society Reuben Award, 1973, 1977, 1981
Inkpot Award, 2004

Frank Springer (December 6, 1929[1] – April 2, 2009[2]) was an American comic book and comic strip artist best known for Marvel Comics' Dazzler and Nick Fury, Agent of S.H.I.E.L.D.. As well, in collaboration with writer Michael O'Donoghue, Springer created one of the first adult-oriented comics features on American newsstands: "The Adventures of Phoebe Zeit-Geist" in the magazine Evergreen Review. A multiple winner of the National Cartoonists Society's Reuben Award, Springer was a president of the Society and a founding member of the Berndt Toast Gang, its Long Island chapter.

Biography

Early life and career

Frank Springer was born in the Jamaica neighborhood of the New York City borough of Queens, and moved with his family to nearby Nassau County, Long Island when he was nearly 10 years old.[3] He graduated from Malverne High School in Malverne, New York, in 1948.[2] He had one sibling, a sister, who predeceased him.[2] Springer, whose art influences included adventure comic strips and magazine-cover illustrations by Norman Rockwell, Dean Cornwell, and J. C. Leyendecker,[3] went on to earn an art degree from Syracuse University in 1952, and after being drafted that year, served with the U.S. Army through 1954. Stationed at Fort Dix, he spent his service, he said, "drawing pictures, drawing charts and that kind of thing. ... I got a lot of training in the army in doing sports cartoons with a deadline and so on."[3][4] Following his discharge, he began freelancing in New York City, soon he becoming assistant to cartoonist George Wunder on the comic strip Terry and the Pirates, on which Wunder had succeeded famed creator Milt Caniff. Springer recalled in 2008,

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I was essentially a line artist and it was through one of the freelance jobs that I learnt that George Wunder, who wrote and drew Terry And The Pirates, was looking for an assistant and I was given his number. I called him up, was hired and I stayed there for five years doing some backgrounds and foregrounds, answering his mail, coloring the Sunday strips. That was good training, watching a professional churning this stuff out, day after day, writing the synopsis, then writing the strips and so on. I loved the strips when I was growing up. I grew up on Terry And The Pirates, Flash Gordon and Prince Valiant; those were the main adventure ones. There were a lot of adventure strips at that time, Buck Rogers, Smilin’ Jack and all of that, so I leaned toward all of that rather than the gag cartoons.[3]

Leaving in 1960 to freelance again, Springer broke into comic books two years later with Dell Comics' Brain Boy, starring a telepathic government agent created by Herb Castle and Gil Kane in Four Color Comics #1330 (June 1962). Springer drew the spin-off series' five-issue run of #2-6 (Sept. 1962 - Nov. 1963).[5]

Silver Age comics

During the remainder of the 1960s and the early 1970s period that fans and historians call the Silver Age of comic books, Springer became a prolific penciler-inker across much of Dell's line, drawing issues of Ghost Stories, Movie Classic, Tales from the Tomb, Toka: Jungle King, and the movie/TV tie-in series The Big Valley, Charlie Chan, Iron Horse and The New People, among other comics.[6]

File:SecretSix1.jpg
Secret Six #1 (May 1968), art by Springer. Unusually, the story begins on the cover.

He debuted at DC Comics with two comics the same month: penciling Batman #197, and both penciling and inking the lead feature, "Dial H for Hero", in House of Mystery #171 (both Dec. 1967). Springer went on to draw an issue each of Detective Comics and Our Army at War; an anthological story in another House of Mystery; and the first two issues of Secret Six[7] — the initial one a rare example of a comic-book beginning its story on the cover rather than on the inside page one.[6]

After that, he found more regular work at rival Marvel Comics, where he debuted on Nick Fury, Agent of S.H.I.E.L.D. #4 (Sept. 1968), a fill-in issue of writer-artist Jim Steranko's signature series. Springer penciled and inked an origin-story retelling (scripted by Roy Thomas) sandwiched between Steranko's final two issues. Springer then succeeded the departed Steranko, drawing issues #6-11 (Nov 1968 - April 1969), with Steranko providing the covers of #6-7.[6]

Springer additionally drew Captain Marvel #13-14 (May–June 1969) and a Hercules back-up story in Ka-Zar #1 (Aug. 1970) before concentrating on his ongoing Dell work until 1973, when that company ceased publication.[6]

Later comic books

Springer returned to draw a handful of stories for Marvel's black-and-white horror-comics magazines in 1974 and 1975, and then sprang from title to title, penciling sporadic issues of The Avengers, Captain America, The Spectacular Spider-Man, and Spider-Woman, among others, and also inked many Marvel and DC Comics.[6]

He then became regular inker of Marvel's The Savage She-Hulk over Mike Vosburg during issues #10-22 (Nov. 1980 - Nov. 1981). He penciled a longer run of the superheroine series Dazzler from #4-31 and 35 (June 1981 - March 1984 and Jan. 1985), plus the Dazzler stories in What If...? #34 (Aug. 1982) and Marvel Graphic Novel #12 (1984). Springer, additionally, wrote Dazzler #27-28 and co-wrote with Jim Shooter #29 (July–Nov. 1983).[6]

Springer's other 1980s comics include issues of Marvel's Conan the Barbarian and its toy-license titles based on the properties G.I. Joe and Transformers; and, for DC, a return to the Secret Six in Action Comics Weekly, and issues of Manhunter and Green Arrow, issue #68 (Nov. 1992). After a brief hiatus from comics, he returned to co-ink, with Michael Weaver, Claypool Comics' Phantom of Fear City #11-12 (Feb. & May 1995), his last confirmed work in comics except for a single-page profile of the DC character Perry White in Superman Secret Files #1 (Jan. 1998).[6]

Miscellanea includes the Atlas/Seaboard series Cougar in the 1970s, and Continuity Comics' Armor in the 1990s.[6]

Adult satire

With the dark-humor writer-provocateur Michael O'Donoghue, Springer from 1965 to 1966 drew "The Adventures of Phoebe Zeit-Geist" in the magazine Evergreen Review. The feature was one of the first mature-audience comics in the U.S., following the French feature "Barbarella" in Evergreen Review in 1965. Others in the vein included Playboy's "Little Annie Fanny" and Magazine Enterprises' "The Adventures of Pussycat". Unlike its innocently bawdy contemporaries, "Phoebe Zeit-Geist" had a darker, sometimes brutal edge, with scenes of bondage depicted as actual torture rather than Bettie Page-like playfulness.[8] Evergreen Review publisher Grove Press collected the series as a 1968 book.[9]

Doonesbury comic-strip creator Garry Trudeau cited the strip as an early inspiration, saying, "[A] very heavy influence was a serial in the Sixties called 'Phoebe Zeitgeist'. ... It was an absolutely brilliant, deadpan send-up of adventure comics, but with a very edgy, modernist kind of approach. To this day, I hold virtually every panel in my brain. It's very hard not to steal from it."[10]

Springer also drew the series "Frank Fleet" for Evergreen Review from 1969 to 1970, and from 1971 to 1988 was a regular contributor to the satiric magazine National Lampoon, occasionally using the pseudonyms Francis Hollidge[11] and Bob Monhegan.[11] He came to National Lampoon, he recalled, through O’Donoghue, who had joined the magazine "and called me up almost right away to do a piece called “Tarzan Of The Cows”. I don’t know what issue it was in, but it was one of the earlier ones. I did several other pieces for the magazine and I worked with several of the other writers, Henry Beard, Doug Kenney, Brian McConnachie; all fabulous writers. These guys were really funny and I think I did some of my best work because the writing was so good."[3]

Comic strips and cartoons

After having assisted Wunder on Terry and the Pirates from 1955 to 1960 and then moving to comic books, Springer returned to comic strips as penciler of the syndicated newspaper strip Rex Morgan, M.D. from 1979 to 1981.[12][13] He also drew The Incredible Hulk newspaper strip, starring the Marvel Comics' antihero; the romance strip The Virtue of Vera Valiant, with writer Stan Lee; and The Adventures of Hedley Kase in the 1990s. Springer's cartoon art has appeared in Games Magazine, Muppets Magazine, the New York Daily News,[4] Playboy, Sports Illustrated for Kids,[3] and elsewhere.

In the mid-1960s, he did freelance work on the animated TV series Space Ghost, collaborating with a partner to produce "key drawings" of action for which "in-betweener" animators did connecting art. "It was part time stuff, but that was enjoyable. It was a different phase of cartooning," Springer recalled.[14]

Springer also did a small amount of uncredited penciling on the comic strip The Phantom, assisting Sy Barry, and "for a really brief period" worked with writer-artist Stan Drake on The Heart of Juliet Jones.[3] Without mentioning the strip's name, Springer said in the mid-2000s that, "I worked with Leonard Starr for some years doing part of that strip," presumably meaning Starrs' On Stage, later titled Mary Perkins, On Stage. "Leonard always handled the figures but I’d come in once a week and do the backgrounds, pick up a check and leave."[3] He additionally did uncredited work on the comic strip Friday Foster, drawn in Spain by Jorge Longarón. "I knew the [strip's] writer [Jim Lawrence], who lived here in New Jersey, ... [and] I got a call a couple of times from Lawrence who said they hadn’t gotten the material through from Spain" and Springer was asked to fill in. "I guess over the years I did two Sunday pages, maybe three."[3]

Later years and death

In 1980, just shy of his 51st birthday, Springer ran the New York City Marathon.[15] In 1995, after spending the majority of his life on Long Island (mostly in the towns of Lynbrook, Massapequa Park, and Greenlawn),[2] Springer and wife Barbara, whom he married in c. 1956-1957, moved to Maine,[2] where the artist turned to the medium of oil painting. He said in 2004, "There were some raggedy times, but I always had work, raised five kids, bought some houses, bought some cars. ... I've been lucky".[16]

Springer at one point was president of the National Cartoonists Society, and was a founding member of the Berndt Toast Gang, its Long Island chapter.[2]

Springer died on April 2, 2009, at his home in Damariscotta, Maine, of prostate cancer.[2] He was survived by his wife and five grown children: Barbara Edwards, Bill Springer, Jennifer Dills, Jon Springer, and Christopher Springer.[2] Characterizing Springer, Archie comics artist Stan Goldberg said, "Very few people could surpass him as an artist, as a gentleman, and as a true gentleman in my field. ... When you see a Frank Springer job, you know it's going to be the best job in the world".[2]

Awards

References

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  5. Brain Boy at Don Markstein's Toonopedia. Archived October 25, 2011.
  6. 6.0 6.1 6.2 6.3 6.4 6.5 6.6 6.7 Frank Springer at the Grand Comics Database
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  9. Adventures of Phoebe Zeit-Geist at the Grand Comics Database
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  13. Horn, Maurice, ed. The World Encyclopedia of Comics (Philadelphia, Chelsea House, 1999), entry pp. 722–723
  14. Springer, Frank, in Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
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External links

Preceded by Nick Fury, Agent of S.H.I.E.L.D. artist
1968-1969
Succeeded by
Barry Windsor-Smith
Preceded by The Invaders inker
1976–1978
Succeeded by
Chic Stone
Preceded by
Chic Stone
The Savage She-Hulk inker
1980–1981
Succeeded by
Al Milgrom
Preceded by Dazzler artist
1981–1985
Succeeded by
Mark D. Bright
Preceded by Dazzler writer
1983
Succeeded by
Jim Shooter