Mike Ploog | |
---|---|
Born | Michael G. Ploog July 13, 1940 or 1942 Mankato,Minnesota |
Area(s) | Penciller,Inker |
Notable works | Man-Thing The Monster of Frankenstein Ghost Rider Werewolf by Night |
Awards | Inkpot Award (2007)[1] |
Michael G. Ploog (/pluːɡ/; born July 13,[2] 1940[2][3] or 1942)[4][5] is an Americanstoryboard andcomic bookartist, and a visual designer forfilms.
In comics, Ploog is best known for his work on Marvel Comics' 1970sMan-Thing andThe Monster of Frankenstein series, and as the initial artist on the featuresGhost Rider andWerewolf by Night. His style at the time was heavily influenced by the art ofWill Eisner,[6] under whom he apprenticed.
Born inMankato,Minnesota, Mike Ploog was one of a family of three brothers and a sister[7] raised, initially, on a Minnesota farm.[7] He began drawing while a young child, his imagination fired by suchold-time radio dramas asSergeant Preston of the Yukon andGunsmoke, and such thriller anthologies asInner Sanctum Mysteries andTales of Horror.[7] After his parents divorced and sold the farm when Ploog was about 10 or 11 years old,[8] his mother took the children to live with her inBurbank, California.[9] Ploog entered theU.S. Marine Corps, leaving in 1968 after ten years.[10] Toward the end of his hitch, he began working on the Corps'Leatherneck Magazine,[5] doing bits ofwriting,photography and art.
Around 1969 he began working on Batman and Superman animated TV series at the Los Angeles studioFilmation, doing what he called "cleanup work for other artists."[11] The following season he was promoted to layout work on those characters' series. "Layout," Ploog recalled in a 1998 interview, "is what happens betweenstoryboarding and actual animation; you're literally composing the scenes. You're more or less designing the background, putting the characters into it so they'll look like they're actually walking on the surface".[11] Moving to theHanna-Barbera studio the following season, he worked on layouts for the animated seriesMotormouse and Autocat andWacky Races, as well as "the firstScooby-Doo pilot; nothing spectacular, though. It was okay; it was a salary, y'know? ... I had very few aspirations, because I didn't know where anything I was doing was going to take me".[11]
A Hanna-Barbera colleague passed along a flyer he had gotten from writer-artistWill Eisner seeking an assistant on the military instructional publicationPS, The Preventive Maintenance Monthly. Ploog was familiar with it from his Marine Corps days, and knew well the art, though not the artist's name. "I'd been copying his work for years," Ploog said, "because I was doing visual aids and training aids for the military for a long time".[12]
Eisner in 1978 recalled: "Mike came in working for me in 1967 [sic; Ploog was still in the Marines that year]. I was looking for someone who could work on thePS magazine ... and Mike sent me his material, or somebody sent it to me, I don't remember which, and I found myself in California, talking Mike into coming to work for us.... We had a very happy relationship for maybe two or three years, four years."[13]
Ploog moved toNew York City and remained with Eisner for just over two years. As Ploog recalled:
Will had workedPS Magazine since about 1952, and [the owners] decided, 'We've got to put it out to somebody else.' You know, it's like he's got this dynasty going. So they said, 'Well, Will, you've got to do something. You've got to either back out of it altogether or find some way of doing this.' So Will came up with the idea: I picked up the contract, and Will became the shadow partner, and I moved across the street from Will's office into another office that he had. I don't know whether he had been leasing it, but we subleased it from Will, and we took over the book. Then it just got to be too much, because it's not that profitable without a partner, but if you've got a partner, then it becomes totally non-profitable.[12]
Eventually, at the suggestion of Eisner lettererBen Oda, Ploog broke into comics atWarren Publishing, doing stories for the company's black-and-whitehorror-comics magazines.[14] AWestern sample he showed Marvel got him a callback to drawWerewolf by Night, which premiered inMarvel Spotlight #2 (Feb. 1972). As Ploog recalled,
Somebody told me I should go to Marvel, so I got up a Western strip, oddly enough, calledTin Star. ... I went over there and they said the work was too cartoony and it wasn't Marvel-style. So I kind of gave up on it, and went back home, and less than a week later they gave me a call. Wanted me to come back in again. That's when I went in and talked to them about doing "Werewolf by Night."[14]
After three stories inMarvel Spotlight, the feature spun off onto its own book. Ploog then helped launched the initialJohnny Blaze version of the supernatural motorcyclistGhost Rider, inMarvel Spotlight #5 (Aug. 1972), and drew the next three adventures.[15]
The specifics of the character's creation are disputed.Roy Thomas, a Marvel writer and the editor-in-chief at the time, recalls,
I had made up a character as a villain inDaredevil — a very lackluster character — calledStunt-Master ... a motorcyclist. Anyway, whenGary Friedrich started writingDaredevil, he said, 'Instead of Stunt-Master, I'd like to make the villain a really weird motorcycle-riding character called Ghost Rider'. He didn't describe him. I said, 'Yeah, Gary, there's only one thing wrong with it', and he kind of looked at me weird, because we were old friends from Missouri, and I said, 'That's too good an idea to be just a villain inDaredevil. He should start out right away in his own book'. When Gary wasn't there the day we were going to design it, Mike Ploog, who was going to be the artist, and I designed the character. I had this idea for the skull-head, something likeElvis'1968 Special jumpsuit, and so forth, and Ploog put the fire on the head, just because he thought it looked nice. Gary liked it, so they went off and did it.[16]
Friedrich has responded that,
Well, there's some disagreement between Roy, Mike and I over that. I threatened on more than one occasion that if Marvel gets in a position where they are gonna make a movie or make a lot of money off of it, I'm gonna sue them, and I probably will. ... It was my idea. It was always my idea from the first time we talked about it, it turned out to be a guy with a flaming skull and rode a motorcycle. Ploog seems to think the flaming skull was his idea. But, to tell you the truth, it wasmy idea.[17]
Ploog recalled, in a 2008 interview:
Now, there's been all kinds of dialog about who was the creator of Ghost Rider. Gary Friedrich was the writer on it. ... The flaming skull: That was the big area of dispute. Who thought of the flaming skull? To be honest with you I can't remember. What else were you going to do with him? You couldn't put a helmet on him, so it had to be a flaming skull. As far as his costume went, it was part of theold [Western] Ghost Rider's costume, with the Western panel front. The stripes down the arms and the legs were there merely so I could make the character['s costume] as black as I possibly could and still keep track of his body. It was the easiest way to design him.[18]
Ploog and writerGary Friedrich collaborated on the first six issues of Marvel'sThe Monster of Frankenstein (Jan.-Oct. 1973), the initial four of which contained a more faithful adaptation ofMary Shelley's novel than has mostly appeared elsewhere; comics historianDon Markstein said, "It was faithful to the story even to the point of leaving the monster trapped in the ice at the end — so of course, the fifth issue began with him being rescued."[19] In a 1989 interview, Ploog said, "I really enjoyed doingFrankenstein because I related to that naive monster wandering around a world he had no knowledge of — an outsider seeing everything through the eyes of a child."[11] The following year, Ploog teamed with writerSteve Gerber onMan-Thing #5-11 (May-Nov. 1974),[15]penciling a critically acclaimed series of stories involving a dead clown, psychic paralysis in the face of modern society, and other topics far removed from the usual fare of comics of the time, with Ploog's cute-but-creepy art style setting off Gerber's trademark intellectual surrealism.
Ploog's other regular titles at Marvel werePlanet of the Apes,Kull the Destroyer and the seriesWerewolf by Night. Ploog also drew theDon McGregor story "The Reality Manipulators" in the black-and-white comics magazineMarvel Preview #8 (Fall 1976), and theDoug Moench feature "Weirdworld" in the color comicMarvel Premiere #38 (Oct. 1977), among other items.[15]
He left Marvel following what he describes as "a disagreement withJim Shooter. I had moved to a farm inMinnesota, and agreed to do a hand-colored 'Weirdworld' story. Marvel backed out of the deal after I had started. I can't remember the details, but it doesn't matter. I think I was ready to move on."[20] "Marvel and I were both changing. I finished off a black-and-white Kull book that was my last comic for many years."[11] Richard Marschall, editor of what was to be a 60-page "Weirdworld" by Ploog and writer Moench for one of theMarvel Super Special series ofone-shots, said at the time that Ploog had been given four months to complete the art, and when it became evident the deadline would not be met, arranged to publish the story in two 30-page installments, giving Ploog two more months. Ploog sent Marvelphotocopies of the first 31 pages, and was paid for them. During this time, Marvel had givenwork-for-hire contracts to its freelancers, many of whom, including Ploog,Frank Brunner,Jack Kirby,Don McGregor,Roger Slifer, andRoger Stern, refused to sign, resulting in cessation of work for Marvel. Ploog "took himself off the project," said Marschall, and retained his original artwork.[20] Moench's script was eventually published as a 106-page story illustrated by pencilerJohn Buscema, inkerRudy Nebres, andairbrush coloristPeter Ledger as the three-part "Warriors of the Shadow Realm" inMarvel Super Special #11-13 (Spring - Fall 1979).[21]
Marginalia includes some work forHeavy Metal magazine in 1981, and three "Luke Malone, Manhunter" backup features in theAtlas/Seaboard titlePolice Action #1-3 (Feb., April, June 1975), the first of which he also scripted.[15]
Ploog returned to themovie industry. By his account, he has worked in post-production on the movieGhostbusters ("All that stuff you saw on cereal boxes are my paintings")[11] and with film directorRalph Bakshi on the animated featuresWizards,[22]The Lord of the Rings,[22] andHey Good Lookin'. He was production designer onMichael Jackson: Moonwalker (1988),[23] and has storyboarded or done other design work on films including John Carpenter'sThe Thing,[24]Superman II,[25]Little Shop of Horrors[26] andThe Unbearable Lightness of Being, and, he says, severalJim Henson Company projects, such as the filmsThe Dark Crystal[26] andLabyrinth and the TV seriesThe Storyteller.[27]
Between movies, Ploog illustratedL. Frank Baum's the Life and Adventures ofSanta Claus (1992;ISBN 0-7567-6682-6), agraphic novel adaptingThe Wonderful Wizard of Oz creator's 1902 novella.
With old colleague Steve Gerber, Ploog drew theMalibu ComicsUltraverse one-shotSludge: Red X-Mas (Dec. 1994), but otherwise remained away from comics for another decade before teaming with veteran writerJ.M. DeMatteis on theCrossGenfantasyAbadazad (May 2004).[15]
Ploog has illustrated cards for theMagic: The Gathering collectible card game.[28]
{{cite web}}
:|first2=
has generic name (help)CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)