After beginning his writing career on DC horror titles, David
Michelinie moved to Marvel. He and co-writer/inker Bob Layton
established Iron Man's battle with alcoholism, use of specialized
armor variants and vendetta against Doctor Doom, as well as other
aspects of the character that endure to this day. Michelinie's
unique blend of action, suspense and humor distinguished not only
Iron Man, but also Amazing Spider-Man. With artist Todd McFarlane,
he introduced the vicious vigilante Venom; he also wrote the first
Venom limited series, Lethal Protector. Michelinie's run as Amazing
writer was second in length only to that of Stan Lee himself, while
he also authored tie-in titles Spectacular Spider-Man, Web of
Spider-Man and Spider-Man. He moved from Marvel's flagship
character to DC's with a stint on Superman's Action Comics, later
returning to the world of Tony Stark for writing collaborations
with Bob Layton on Iron Man- Legacy of Doom and Iron Man- The
End.
Bob Layton began as a prolific and popular inker for Charlton,
Marvel and DC Comics, where he first teamed with longtime
collaborator David Michelinie on Claw the Unconquered and Star
Hunters. The Michelinie-Layton duo's writing work on Iron Man
(1978-1982 and 1987-1989) is one of the most popular and
influential interpretations of that character. Leaving Marvel in
1990, he became a key writer/artist/editor at Valiant Comics, where
he co-created characters such as X-O Manowar and rose to the post
of editor in chief before departing. He still does occasional
freelance work for DC and Marvel, notably Michelinie-Layton reunion
projects Iron Man- Bad Blood (2000), Iron Man- Legacy of Doom
(2008) and Iron Man- The End (2009).
A former animator for cult cartoonist Ralph Bakshi, Paul Smith
penciled Uncanny X-Men during a brief but pivotal run that included
Rogue joining the team, Storm's controversial makeover, Wolverine's
near-marriage and Cyclops' wedding to future villain Madelyne
Pryor. He then moved to Doctor Strange, Marvel Fanfare and others,
later drawing the acclaimed X-Men/Alpha Flight miniseries. With
James Robinson, he created DC's groundbreaking Golden Age
miniseries, highlighting the publisher's wartime heroes like few
before or since. His work for other companies includes First's
Grimjack and Image's Leave It to Chance; he returned to Marvel to
pencil the miniseries Kitty Pryde- Shadow and Flame, revisiting
some themes from his Uncanny work.
Beginning as Stan Lee's production assistant, Herb Trimpe
(1939-2015) went on to pencil a seven-year run on Marvel mainstay
Incredible Hulk - during which he debuted the future X-Man,
Wolverine - as well as 1970s classics Marvel Team-Up, Shogun
Warriors and Godzilla. He was equally prolific during the 1980s on
Nick Fury, The 'Nam and G.I. Joe; the 1990s saw him illustrate
Marvel's First Family on Fantastic Four Unlimited. Trimpe's
war-story credits also include the introduction of the Phantom
Eagle, the WWI aviator hero whose adventures were later chronicled
by Garth Ennis.
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