This Year's Bill Finger Awards

The fine folks who run Comic-Con International today announced…

Six Posthumous Recipients to Receive 2020 Bill Finger Award

Six writers who contributed mightily to the history of comics have been selected to receive the 2020 Bill Finger Award for Excellence in Comic Book Writing. The selection, made by a blue-ribbon committee chaired by writer-historian Mark Evanier, was unanimous.

"In a year where Comic-Con cannot take place, it seemed wrong to honor, as we usually do, one posthumous writer and one who is still with us," Evanier explained. "The one who is still with us would be denied the full honors of being brought to the convention and presented with the award onstage. Therefore, after much discussion, we decided to instead present no ‘alive' award this year, and, assuming there is a convention in 2021, we will present two of those awards then. For 2020, we have selected six writers from the dozens who have been nominated to receive the posthumous award. Each of these six during their time in the industry produced a body of work that the judges deem worthy of more recognition and/or reward than it has received."

The Bill Finger Award was created in 2005 at the suggestion of the late Jerry Robinson, who worked with Finger, knew him, and was disturbed that Bill had received so little credit and compensation for his work in comics, especially with regard to Batman and that character's supporting cast and world. As Evanier explains, "Though Bill Finger now receives a lot more recognition than he received in his lifetime, there are still many who do not, and that's why we keep giving out these awards." This year's recipients are, in alphabetical order:

Virginia Hubbell Bloch (1914-2006)

The writing of Virginia Hubbell Bloch — almost wholly uncredited, some signed by others — could be found for years in the pages of Lev Gleason Publications, MLJ Comics, and Dell Comics in the forties and fifties. A poet and copywriter before she met her first husband, comic book artist Cari Hubbell, she began writing scripts, some drawn by her husband and some not, in 1941 for MLJ, which would later be known as the Archie company. That was where she met editor-writer Charles Biro, who encouraged her to write comics and who went on to become the most famous comic book writer of his day, often credited on covers. Artists who worked for him at Lev Gleason later told historians that many of the scripts credited to Biro were clearly ghostwritten by Virginia Hubbell, especially for the popular Boy Comics and the Lev Gleason version of Daredevil. On her own, she also wrote for Marvel, St. John, and Western Publishing, where she mainly wrote Little Lulu. She also wrote plays and children's books, credited (when she was credited) as Virginia Bloch after she divorced Carl and remarried.

Nicola Cuti (1944-2020)

Nick Cuti began his writing (and drawing) career in 1968 with the self-published underground comic book Moonchild, much of which was done while he was serving in the Air Force. After his service, the popularity of Moonchild led to a series of jobs, including working for animator Ralph Bakshi, assisting artist Wally Wood, and serving as an assistant editor and writer at Charlton. Charlton led to Warren Publishing, and Warren led to DC. Along the way, he co-created E-Man and a spinoff comic, Michael Mauser, with artist Joe Staton. Cuti's writing for those comics won great critical acclaim, especially in bringing a fresh approach and a healthy sense of humor to a superhero title like E-Man. He later worked extensively as an artist in animation, as a writer-producer of short independent films, and an author of both text and graphic novels, some of which revived his beloved Moonchild. Nick left us earlier this year, and we look forward to a representative of his family joining us at the 2021 ceremony for a more formal recognition of his work.

Leo Dorfman (1914-1974)

Leo Dorfman began his comic book writing career in 1950, following years of writing mystery and romance novels under a wide array of pseudonyms. Utterly uncredited for most of his first two decades in comics, he first worked for Fawcett Comics until they cut back in production and sent all their freelancers scurrying for other markets. It wasn't until 1957 that he connected with Western Publishing, writing westerns based on TV shows such as Cheyenne and Gunsmoke at first, later segueing to The Twilight Zone, Boris Karloff's Tales of Mystery, Ripley's Believe it or Not, and other comics filled with ghost stories. In 1960, he began writing for Mort Weisinger at DC, contributing to the world of Superman with tales not only about the Man of Steel but also Jimmy Olsen, Lois Lane, Superboy, and Supergirl. Among his many contributions to the mythos was that in Superboy, he introduced the character of Pete Ross. He also penned "The Amazing Story of Superman-Red and Superman-Blue!", which ran in a 1963 issue and was considered one of the most memorable stories to ever grace the Superman comic book. At the same time, he wrote hundreds of stories for Western under the Dell and Gold Key imprints and hundreds more for DC. In 1971, he launched the comic Ghosts for DC, filling it with allegedly true tales of the unexplainable and quickly becoming the top seller of all the DC titles that offered such stories in anthology format.

Gaylord DuBois (1899-1993)

Gaylord DuBois spent over 30 years writing comic books and children's books for Western Publishing, the comics appearing under the Dell and Gold Key imprints. His work for them included thousands of scripts for well-known properties including The Lone Ranger, Red Ryder, Bat Masterson, National Velvet, Sergeant Preston of the Yukon, and Roy Rogers, as well as stories featuring his own co-creations, The Jungle Twins, Brothers of the Spear, and Turok, Son of Stone. Between 1947 and 1971, he wrote an estimated 95 percent of all the comics Western produced of Edgar Rice Burroughs' Tarzan of the Apes. During his run on it, the Tarzan comic book was consistently one of the top-selling comics in America; in the sixties, so was a comic DuBois wrote every issue of except the first: Space Family Robinson. During this time, he also wrote novels, Big Little Books, and other text-based publications for Western, many of them featuring the same characters. In his last years, DuBois — a devout Christian who occasionally taught Sunday school or filled in for a pastor on vacation — authored several Christian-focused comic books and books of inspirational poetry.

Joe Gill (1919-2006)

Suggested by some as the most prolific comic book writer of all time, Joe Gill began his career in the mid-1940s, working for his brother Ray Gill at Funnies, Inc., a company that created content for many comic book publishers. Soon, Joe was working directly for most of those publishers, including a staff job at Timely (now Marvel), where he wrote The Human Torch, Captain America, and, from all reports, every kind of comic they published. Around 1948 when Timely laid off a number of staffers, Gill connected with Charlton Comics, where he wrote a minimum of one comic a week until the firm ceased publishing in 1986. Some who worked with him claimed it was more like one comic per day, which was what it took to make a decent living working for a company that paid such low rates. Few Charlton titles during those years did not feature some Joe Gill scripts, but the best remembered books would include Konga, Gorgo, Billy the Kid, Cheyenne Kid, Ghostly Tales, The Many Ghosts of Dr. Graves, The Phantom, Flash Gordon, Popeye, Tales of the Mysterious Traveler, and all the other western, war, romance, and ghostly titles. He was the co-creator of Captain Atom, Peacemaker, The Fightin' Five, and Sarge Steel, among others. He also worked briefly for DC, Dell, and a few other publishers, but just his astounding output for Charlton earns him a Finger Award.

France Edward Herron (1917-1966)

France "Eddie" Herron was referred to as "the first comic book writer" by some of his contemporaries. The honor is arguable, but he was writing and editing as early as 1937, mainly for the Harry "A" Chesler studio, which produced comic book material for several publishers. He worked for Centaur Comics, then for Victor Fox's outfit, which is where he met and began a long association with Joe Simon and Jack Kirby. Among the other companies he worked for, often simultaneously, were Timely (where he worked with Joe and Jack on Captain America and co-created The Red Skull), Quality Comics, and Fawcett (where he wrote many early stories of the original Captain Marvel and co-created Captain Marvel Jr.). In 1945, he began a long association with DC Comics, where he often wrote Superman and Batman stories, and he was the main writer for long stints on Boy Commandos, Green Arrow, Challengers of the Unknown, and Tomahawk. His scripts appeared in all their war, western, romance, crime, and mystery titles, and he co-created the character, Cave Carson. Among the many newspaper strips he authored were Bat Masterson, Davy Crockett, Rip Tide, and Captain Midnight.

The Bill Finger Award honors the memory of William Finger (1914-1974), who was the first and, some say, most important writer of Batman. Many have called him the "unsung hero" of the character and have hailed his work not only on that iconic figure but on dozens of others, primarily for DC Comics.

In addition to Evanier, the Finger Award selection committee consists of Charles Kochman (executive editor at Harry N. Abrams, book publisher), comic book writer Kurt Busiek, artist/historian Jim Amash, cartoonist Scott Shaw!, and writer/editor Marv Wolfman.

The Finger Award falls under the auspices of Comic-Con International: San Diego and is administered by Jackie Estrada.

Political Fodder

Several folks wrote to ask if I was joining the boycott of Goya Foods products to protest some sort of pro-Trump stand the company has taken. The answer is that I can't boycott that which I have never purchased. I'm not sure I'd even heard of Goya Foods before this…and before you ask how such a thing is possible, I did just learn that they make products that are sold in the "Latino" section of the supermarket. There's almost nothing in that section that my food allergies would allow me to eat. I don't shop that aisle.

Would I boycott them if I did buy their products? I suppose. Maybe.

My view on boycotts has changed and somewhere in the ancient recesses of this blog, there are probably posts which reflect my old view, which was that boycotts of big companies rarely bring about change. Usually, the outrage is too small and the big companies are too big to miss the income. My view was that if it made you feel bad to give your money to that firm…or if it made you feel good to be "doing something," however microscopic, you should do whatever made you feel comfy. Just don't expect Ruth's Chris Steak House to replace the 40 oz. USDA Prime Porterhouse for Two with a plate of kale because a few hundred people believe beef = murder.

But in the last few years, I've seen boycotts yield some results. It seems to have something to do with increased Internet usage but I'm not sure if the 'net is helping boycotters organize and spread the word…or if it's that the big companies have become more afraid of the possibility of trending crusades to snowball into something huge. "Cancel Culture" is scaring the hell out of a lot of people.

So I guess my answer to those who asked is just that I can't very well boycott a company that's never gotten a dime of my money. That's inarguable and it also spares me from having to research whatever Goya did or said that prompted the outcry against them. In this world, there are times when you need to take a stand but it's not all the time.

Today's Video Link

Back in 2013, this blog brought you a video link to the Lincoln Center version of Carousel starring Kelli O'Hara and Nathan Gunn. I enjoyed it a lot…but then, I'd watch endless hours of Kelli O'Hara knitting an alpaca sweater.

But that video link was only good for a few weeks before they took it offline. It's back. I don't know for how long but it's back…

Recommended Reading

It looks like the new line from the Trumpers is that all the mistakes in handling the pandemic rest on the shoulders of Dr. Fauci. If someone sends you a link that asserts that, send them this link to an editorial in the National Review. That's the staunchly-Conservative National Review.

Dispatches From the Fortress – Day 125

Getting ready for tonight's webcast Conversation with Jeff Altman. We will speak of many things but I want to talk about a long-ago Golden Era at places like The Comedy Store when you could go in and see a lineup where you'd see a half-dozen new comedians on their way up…then see them in the months that followed on with Carson, in their new sitcoms, in movies, etc. Jeff was, for me, in the Top Five.

I'm not watching much news but I did just catch a brief clip of Dr. Anthony Fauci saying that in matters of health and science, people ought to listen to experienced experts on health and science. I never thought I'd see the day when a lot of people, including some in high positions of power, would argue with a statement like that.

Meanwhile, it's ten days since the Fourth of July. When are those people who live a block or two away from going to run out of fireworks? And what's so great about setting them off after Midnight?

Lastly for now: Seth Meyers is back with the sharpest/funniest political commentary on television. He will retain that distinction until John Oliver returns this Sunday night.

Today!!!

Today's Video Link

I just spent a little under an hour enjoying the hell out of this video. Every year, Shoshana Bean headlines or organizes or is somehow involved with a fund-raising concert for the Performing Arts Program at Beaverton High School in Beaverton, Oregon. This year's was supposed to have taken place in an actual auditorium there with live human beings sitting in theater seats but…well, you know. They wound up moving it, as so much in our lives has been moved, online. And that video is below.

If you are excited about seeing new performers and new voices raised in song, you too may enjoy the hell out of it. There are plenty of star names in there but the kids steal the show. And if you're a fan of Wicked, at least watch the opening where a tag team of ladies who've played Elphaba not only defy gravity but the realities of today's pandemic-crushing world. (And should you feel motivated to donate, they'll welcome your money here.) Enjoy…

Mystery Boxes

Being a Costco kind of guy, I buy a lot of Kirkland products…and why not? Kirkland stuff is usually good stuff and it's priced right and I can buy in bulk and stock up on necessities. I'm still living off the toilet paper I bought there before the pandemic.

There is, of course, no real Kirkland company that manufactures anything. Kirkland sells gas but has no oil fields. It sells canned tuna but has neither fishing boats nor canneries. They have other companies make up what they need and slap the Kirkland label on it. Sometimes, you also get the name of actual supplier but sometimes, the folks who make the Kirkland shoehorns don't want you to know of their involvement. They sell their shoehorns under their own brand for $6.00 each and would like it to be a secret that they also make identical shoehorns with the Kirkland label that Costco sells for three bucks.

Some of the fun of shopping at Costco is figuring out what's under the disguise. Here's an article that unmasks some of what you buy there.

Dispatches From the Fortress – Day 124

I'm within about a half-inch of All Better. The Food Poisoning has gone away and apart from a bit of fatigue, I'm back to being me, which is really the only thing at which I'm even vaguely competent.

I haven't been thinking about Donald Trump today. I've mostly been thinking about Groo the Wanderer. Those of you who are familiar with Groo can make up your own jokes and they'll be just as good as anything I can come up with.

We're closing in on our 28,000th post on this blog…and before this year is over, we will celebrate twenty years of doing this. I'm not sure why I'm mentioning that but it feels like something I oughta mention here.

To the steadily-growing list of Things I'll Never Understand, add why some people are so eager to "reopen" their cities even though so many cities that have "reopened" have seen an obvious cause-and-effect spike in their citizens getting a painful, potentially-fatal disease. I have heard the arguments about the "freedom" to not wear a mask but it always comes from someone who isn't concerned about, say, my freedom to go to the market without having a disease-carrying person spray infected respiratory droplets in my direction.

One time on this blog, I wrote about my belief that we are not harsh enough on people who get high or drunk and then drive a car. One gent wrote me — and if he was making a joke, it was a damned subtle one — on how the government has no right to tell you you can't do that. If that person wasn't writing a spoof or is still alive, both of which seem unlikely, I know which side of this issue he's on.

Today's Video Link

When I see people talk about the best stand-up comedians working today, I rarely see anyone mention Ricky Gervais. I guess he got typed as an actor who plays characters in comedies and that's how most folks think of him. But I think he's really good at stand-up. Here's eight and a half minutes that might make you agree with me…

School Bell

One of the fine actor-people I had on yesterday's webcast was my pal Michael Bell, who has been a performer — on-camera and off — for more years than you'd think to look at him. He's also a very powerful activist for animals. Those of you who've followed the tales of feral cats in my backyard have seen me apply lots of sound advice I got from Michael.

As you may know, I'm on the warpath against Voice Teachers and Coaches who, I think, charge unsuspecting people a lot of money for lessons that are of little use. There are some very fine voice teachers out there but there are also some terrible ones and I keep coming across stories that go something like this…

Little Jimmy (or Susie) loved cartoons and thought maybe he/she could have a career doing voices for them. It sounded like the coolest, neatest, funnest job in the world…and already, they had it wrong. No one really does cartoon voices for a living. Not exclusively. Many of these dreamers may not be aware that the job they crave is Voiceover Actor — a person who does commercials, audio books, dubbing, looping, narration, walla, dozens of other jobs where one is heard but not seen…and, in some cases, cartoon voices.

The most famous voice actor of all time, Mel Blanc, once told me he didn't think he ever had a year when cartoons — the kind Little Jimmy (or Susie) wants to do — accounted for more than about 35% of his income. These days, there may be folks who exceed that but if you get a voiceover agent, that agent is going to try to sell you in all those areas and you're not going to say no.

So somehow, Little Jimmy (or Susie) connects with a Voice Coach. It might be because of a panel at a convention or some website that offers a free seminar or evaluation. No matter how promising or unpromising Little Jimmy (or Susie) is then, the Voice Coach says they're wonderful, that they have so much potential if they'll just get the right lessons and training which, of course, the Voice Coach offers.

And the next thing you know, someone — often, the parents of Little Jimmy (or Susie) — is shelling out thousands of dollars for lessons that, to put it bluntly, aren't worth the price tag. Because the Voice Coach, while they all boast oodles of credits for their own voice work — really only makes a living getting the Little Jimmies (of Susies) of the world to pay for costly lessons.

Again: There are great coaches out there…folks who really can help you on your way to a career if you have the talent. They can't get you a career if you don't and therein lies one of the important differences between the Good Vocal Coaches and the Bad Vocal Coaches. The Good Vocal Coaches will tell you that you don't have the talent and if so, they won't take your money. Or at least they won't take a lot of it. After an introductory course or two, they'll be honest with you.

Which brings us back to Michael Bell. I don't think he's teaching now but when he did, he was great. And he made this video and put it up on YouTube to share with the world because that's the kind of guy he is. It's almost an hour and a half and as I watched it, I thought, "There are Voice Coaches who'd charge a thousand dollars for advice that isn't half as good as this." A lot of what he imparts would also be valuable for an actor of any kind…one who wasn't only interested in voice work.

It's smart, sage teaching from someone who has more experience in the field than you will ever have and it's absolutely free. All it'll cost you is one hour, twenty-five minutes and six seconds of your undivided attention…

Dispatches From the Fortress – Day 123

I know you're all coming here to see how my health is so here's the answer: I think I'm well again but I thought that yesterday and was wrong. I magically got well enough to host the Cartoon Voices Panel and then had about a three-hour relapse. I'd like to think the Food Poisoning just came back for a brief encore and now the show's over. Whew.

For a time there, I was about as sick as sick can be. No, I didn't think I had The Virus but I had some moments of empathy with those who do. I kept thinking, "This will be over in a day or two. Imagine if I knew that wouldn't be the case." Many's the time you're in misery over something but you have luxury of knowing it will end. As I get older, I'm more inclined to get philosophical over those temporary miseries…to think, "There's no point in whining about it or acting like you're the victim of some gross unfairness. You're going to feel like shit for X days, there's not much you can do to end it before it ends itself…just wait it out."

That's me giving myself very good advice but I'm not always able to listen to me about stuff like that. I often feel that way about the Trump Administration.