Tony Isabella

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Tony Isabella
File:Tony Isabella Portrait.jpg
Tony Isabella by Michael Netzer
Born (1951-12-22) December 22, 1951 (age 72)
Cleveland, Ohio, U.S.A.
Nationality American
Area(s) Writer, Editor
Notable works
Black Goliath
Black Lightning
Justice Machine
"Tony's Tips"
http://tonyisabella.blogspot.com

Tony Isabella (born December 22, 1951[1] in Cleveland, Ohio)[2] is an American comic book writer, editor, artist and critic, known as the creator and writer of Marvel Comics' Black Goliath; DC Comics' first major African-American superhero, Black Lightning; and as a columnist and critic for the Comics Buyer's Guide.

Biography

Early life and influences

Isabella discovered comics at the age of four, when his mother began bringing him I. W. Publications titles she bought at Woolworth.[2] Early influences from the comic book world included Stan Lee, Jack Kirby, Roy Thomas, Robert Kanigher, and Len Wein; Isabella was also influenced by writers like William Shakespeare, Harlan Ellison, Ed McBain, Neil Simon, Mel Brooks, Lester Dent, Dave Barry, Max Allan Collins, Don Pendleton, and Studs Terkel.[2]

As a teenager, Isabella had many letters published in comic book letter columns,[3] primarily in the pages of Marvel titles. He was active in comics fandom as well, a member of CAPA-alpha, and a regular contributor to comics fanzines.[2]

Marvel Comics

Isabella's work in comics fandom attracted the attention of Marvel editor Roy Thomas[2] (whose professional career began in similar fashion), and in 1972 Thomas hired Isabella as an editorial assistant at Marvel. With Marvel's establishment of Marvel UK that year, Isabella was assigned the task of overseeing the reprints used in Marvel UK's nascent comics line.[4] He also served for a time as an editor for Marvel's black-and-white magazine line.[5]

As a writer, Isabella scripted Ghost Rider; "It, the Living Colossus" in Astonishing Tales; Luke Cage in Hero for Hire and Power Man; Tigra in Marvel Chillers; Daredevil,[6] and Captain America. While writing the "Iron Fist" feature in Marvel Premiere, he co-created the supporting character Misty Knight with artist Arvell Jones.[7] Isabella developed the concept of The Champions series[8] and wrote the first several issues.[9]

Controversy

During his mid-1970s run on Ghost Rider, Isabella wrote a two-year story arc in which Johnny Blaze occasionally encountered an unnamed character referred to as "the Friend" who helped Blaze stay protected from Satan, who had granted Blaze supernatural power and created the Ghost Rider. Isabella said in 2007,

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Getting prior approval from editor Roy Thomas, as I would from later editors Len Wein and Marv Wolfman, I introduced "The Friend" into the series. He looked sort of like a hippie Jesus Christ and that's exactly who He was, though I never actually called Him that.... It allowed me to address a disparity that had long bothered me about the Marvel Universe. Though we had no end of Hell(s) and Satan surrogates in our comics, we had nothing of Heaven.... [After two years] I'd written a story wherein, couched in mildly subtle terms, Blaze accepted Jesus as his savior and freed himself from Satan's power forever. Had I remained on Ghost Rider, which was my intent at the time, the title's religious elements would have faded into the background. Blaze would be a Christian, but he'd express this in the way he led his life. ... Unfortunately, an assistant editor took offense at my story. The issue was ready to go to the printer when he pulled it back and ripped it to pieces. He had some of the art redrawn and a lot of the copy rewritten to change the ending of a story two years in the making. "The Friend" was revealed to be, not Jesus, but a demon in disguise. To this day, I consider what he did to my story one of the three most arrogant and wrongheaded actions I've ever seen from an editor.[10]

Isabella later said the assistant editor referenced was Jim Shooter.[11][12]

DC Comics

For DC Comics, Isabella worked as a writer and story editor but is mainly known for his creation of Black Lightning,[13] writing both the character's short-lived 1970s and 1990s series.[14]

Isabella and artist Richard Howell produced the Shadow War of Hawkman mini-series in 1985, involving the characters of Hawkman and Hawkwoman.[15] An ongoing series was launched the following year.

Justice Machine

In 1987, Isabella began writing the Justice Machine series for Comico, co-plotting with series creator and penciller Mike Gustovich. The new series picked up from the end of the Bill Willingham/Gustovich written limited series Justice Machine featuring the Elementals, which re-booted the series' continuity from the older Noble Comics/Texas Comics-published original series. The ongoing book became one of Comico's best-selling series, selling upwards of 70,000 copies of each issue at its peak. Isabella wrote the first 11 issues of the Comico series before moving on to other projects.

In 1990, Isabella returned to the characters to write the series for Innovation Comics, with Gustovich pencilling once more.

"Tony's Tips"

Isabella wrote the Comics Buyer's Guide column "Tony's Tips" for over a decade. The last column was June 22, 2010.[16]

Other work

During the 1980s, Isabella operated Cosmic Comics, a comic book shop in the Colonial Arcade in downtown Cleveland, Ohio,[17]

Isabella is the co-author with his fellow Comics Buyer's Guide columnist Bob Ingersoll of the short story "If Wishes Were Horses..." which was published in The Ultimate Super-Villains: New Stories Featuring Marvel's Deadliest Villains,[18] and the novels Captain America: Liberty's Torch[19] and Star Trek: The Case Of The Colonist's Corpse.[20]

He has also worked on translating foreign-language Disney comics and revising the wording for the U.S. market.

Personal life

Isabella's wife is named Barbara; they have two children, son Eddie (born c. 1989) and daughter Kelly (born c. 1992).[2]

Awards

References

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  5. Tony Isabella at the Grand Comics Database
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  14. Manning, Matthew K. "1990s" in Dolan, p. 269: "Writer Tony Isabella returned to his prized character, Black Lightning, in an ongoing series with artist Eddy Newell."
  15. Manning "1980s" in Dolan, p. 215: "May [1985] saw the return of the Winged Wonder in a four-issue miniseries entitled The Shadow War of Hawkman by writer Tony Isabella and penciller Richard Howell."
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  21. The Comic Reader #90 (October 1972).

External links

Preceded by Ghost Rider writer
1974–1976
Succeeded by
Gerry Conway
Preceded by Captain America writer
1975
Succeeded by
Jack Kirby
Preceded by Daredevil writer
1975
(with Bob Brown in late 1975)
Succeeded by
Marv Wolfman
Preceded by
n/a
Black Lightning writer
1977-1978
Succeeded by
Dennis O'Neil
Preceded by
n/a
Hawkman writer
1986-1987
Succeeded by
Dan Mishkin
Preceded by Justice Machine writer
1987
Succeeded by
Doug Murray
Preceded by
n/a
Black Lightning writer
1995
Succeeded by
Dave DeVries