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Young Love #40 (December 1952) “Fallen Idol”, art by Jack Kirby
According to the Jack Kirby Checklist, “forget Me, Fraulein” was penciled by Jack Kirby and inked by Mort Meskin. The biggest problem with that is there on the right edge just above the story panel is Meskin’s signature.
6 bloggers weighed in on a similar topic
3 Months Ago,
Harry from Jack Kirby Museum & Research Center says
(in Art of Romance, Chapter 19, More Artists)
Young Romance #45 (May 1952) “The Things I Didn’t Know about Him”, art by Jack Kirby
“A Man for My Birthday” is listed in the Jack Kirby Checklist as drawn by Kirby and inked by Draut. Without doubt this is in error and Bill Draut did both pencils and inks.
8 Months Ago,
Harry from Jack Kirby Museum & Research Center says
(in The Art of Romance, Chapter 13, Romance Bottoms Out)
“My Tormented Heart” does not use the same letterer but then again not all Harvey comics that I have seen do. Both stories use the same splash page layout that is found in almost all Harvey romance comics. The title logo and the small circular caption are not typical for Simon and Kirby but can b...
9 Months Ago,
Harry from Jack Kirby Museum & Research Center says
(in The Little Shop of Horrors, Chapter 1, Expanding Their Fields)
Young Romance #23 (July 1950) house ad, art by Jack Kirby
Black Magic #2 (December 1950) “The Scorn of the Faceless People”, art by Jack Kirby
Black Magic #2 (December 1950) “The Scorn of the Faceless People” page 3, art by Jack Kirby
And
Harry from Jack Kirby Museum & Research Center says
(in The Art of Romance, Chapter 12, A Smaller Studio)
Bruno Premiani(?) has been a persistent presence in Simon and Kirby productions since August 1949. During this period Bruno provided 3 stories and 26 pages. While he did not appear as much as Kirby, Draut or Meskin what art he did was all first rate work. The romantic interest between an artis...
11 Months Ago,
Harry from Jack Kirby Museum & Research Center says
(in Black Magic at DC)
Black Magic #29 (March 1954) “The Greatest Horror of Them All” page 2, art by Jack Kirby
DC Black Magic #1 (November 1973) “The Greatest Horror of Them All” page 2, art by Jack Kirby and Joe Simon
“The Girl Who Walked on Water” page 6, art by Jack Kirby
22 Months Ago,
Mike Fahey from Kotaku says
(in The Virtual Console Update Sucks - Kirby 64!)
Kirby 64™: The Crystal Shards: (Nintendo 64®, 1-4 players, Rated E for Everyone, 1,000 Wii Points): Kirby's first 3-D adventure is also his Nintendo 64 debut, and it finds the always-versatile hero battling a new enemy called Dark Matter. Dark Matter is after a distant land's powerful cr...
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CA Here Nintendo has a Mario/Kirby-inspired platformer developed by a talented team (TOSE), and one that the company has partial rights of. The franchise has seen five iterations, including a cancelled Game Boy Color debut game back in 2000. ...
Tue, Jun 9 | from IGN