| John Romita Sr. | |
|---|---|
Romita in 2006 | |
| Born | John Victor Romita (1930-01-24)January 24, 1930 New York City, U.S. |
| Died | June 12, 2023(2023-06-12) (aged 93) Floral Park, New York, U.S. |
| Area | Penciller,Inker |
Notable works | |
| Awards | |
| Spouse | |
| Children | 2, includingJohn Jr. |
John Victor Romita (/rəˈmiːtə/; January 24, 1930 – June 12, 2023) was an American comic book artist best known for his work onMarvel Comics'The Amazing Spider-Man and for co-creating characters includingMary Jane Watson, thePunisher,Kingpin,Wolverine, andLuke Cage. Romita was the father ofJohn Romita Jr., also a comic book artist, and the husband of Virginia Romita, who was for many years Marvel's traffic manager.
His first comics work was in 1949 as aghost artist forTimely Comics, the precursor to Marvel, through which Romita met editor-in-chiefStan Lee. In 1951, Romita began drawing horror, war, and romance comics forAtlas Comics (previously Timely), and also drew his first superhero work, a 1950s revival ofCaptain America. He worked exclusively forDC Comics from 1958 to 1965 and was the artist for many of their romance comics. During these years, Romita further developed his ability to draw beautiful women, which he later became well-known for.
Romita joined Marvel in 1965, initially drawingDaredevil comics. In 1966, whenSpider-Man artist and co-creatorSteve Ditko left Marvel, Romita was chosen by writer Lee as the new artist forAmazing Spider-Man. Within a year of Romita becoming the Spider-Man artist,The Amazing Spider-Man rose from Marvel's second-best-selling title to the company's top-seller. Romita brought a new romance style to Spider-Man comics that soon became the new design for the character. In June 1973, Romita was promoted to Marvel's art director and heavily influenced the look of Marvel comics throughout the 1970s and 1980s. Romita was inducted into theWill Eisner Comic Book Hall of Fame in 2002.
John Victor Romita[1] was born on January 24, 1930, inBrooklyn, New York City, where he was also raised.[2] The son of Marie and Victor Romita, a baker,[3][4] he also had three sisters and a brother.[3] Romita was ofItalian descent, fromSicily. He began drawing at 5 years old.[5] Romita graduated fromManhattan'sSchool of Industrial Art in 1947, having attended for three years after spending ninth grade at a Brooklynjunior high school.[6] Among his instructors wereHoward Simon, a book illustrator, and Ben Clements, a magazine illustrator.[7] Romita was deeply influenced by a variety of artists and illustrators. As a young reader of comics, he admiredNoel Sickles,Roy Crane, andMilton Caniff.[3] Caniff'sTerry and the Pirates in particular was an early inspiration for Romita.[8] Later in his career, he also drew inspiration fromSy Barry,Alex Toth, andCarmine Infantino.[9] Beyond comics, he looked up to commercial illustrators such asJon Whitcomb,Coby Whitmore, andAl Parker.[10][11]
On Romita's 17th birthday, he received his first artist work from theManhattan General Hospital. Ananesthesiologist paid Romita $60 a week to create a medical exhibit onpneumatology medicine, which Romita completed in six months.[12] Romita entered the comics industry in 1949 on the seriesFamous Funnies. "Steven Douglas up there was a benefactor to all young artists", Romita recalled. "The first story he gave me was a love story. It was terrible. All the women looked like emaciated men and he bought it, never criticized, and told me to keep working. He paid me two hundred dollars for it and never published it—and rightfully so".[13][14]
Romita was working at the New York City company Forbes Lithograph in 1949, earning $30 a week, when comic bookinker Lester Zakarin,[15] a friend from high school whom he ran into on a subway train, offered him either $17[16] or $20[13] a page topencil a 10-page story, possibly a crime comic about 1920s mobsters,[10] for him as an uncreditedghost artist. Now making more money on two pages than his usual weekly salary, Romita accepted the story and continued to ghost for Zakarin on other work.[13] The work was for Marvel's 1940s forerunner,Timely Comics, which helped give Romita an opportunity to meet editor-in-chief and art directorStan Lee. Romita ghost-penciled for Zakarin on Trojan Comics'Crime-Smashers and other titles, eventually signing some "Zakarin and Romita".[10]

The collaboration ended in early 1951, when Romita wasdrafted into theU.S. Army.[3] Taking the initiative prior to induction, he showed art samples to the base art director onGovernors Island inNew York Bay, who arranged for him to be stationed there to do layouts for recruitment posters[10] once Romita had completed basic training atFort Dix,New Jersey.[3] Romita was promoted to corporal after seven or eight months; now allowed to live off the post, he rented an apartment in Brooklyn.[17]
When not on duty, Romita could leave the base and go into Manhattan. In mid- to late 1951, he recalled in 2002, "I went uptown one day for lunch. I stopped over at Stan Lee's [office in theEmpire State Building, where Timely Comics had by now evolved intoAtlas Comics], and his secretary came out ... and I said, 'Stan doesn't know my name but I've worked for him for over a year'. I was in uniform! She must've told him this GI ... wants to do some comics. She said, 'Stan said here's a four-page science fiction story'. I penciled it and struggled with my first inking. That was the first story I did on my own. I didWesterns andwar stories then".[10] The collectionMarvel Visionaries: John Romita Sr.[18] and former Marvel editor-in-chiefRoy Thomas, inAlter Ego 9, each identify that four-page science fiction story as "It!", about a murderous alien in the guise of a baby.[3] That story saw print inStrange Tales #4 (December 1951), although the Grand Comics Database lists Romita's first identified published comic-book work as penciler andinker of the six-page story "The Bradshaw Boys" in Atlas'Western Outlaws #1 (February 1951)—published nearly a year earlier.[19] This may refer to a ghosted Zakarin story. The Atlas Tales database lists both "It!" and the six-page "Out of My Mind", inAstonishing #7 (also December 1951), as Romita's first full penciling and inking—although "It!" carries a later job number (9118) than the other tale (8964).[20]
Romita went on to draw a wide variety ofhorror comics, war comics,romance comics and other genres for Atlas. His most prominent work for the company was the short-lived 1950s revival of Timely's hit characterCaptain America, inYoung Men #24–28 (December 1953 – July 1954) andCaptain America #76–78 (May–September 1954).[21] Romita had been offered the Captain America work by Lee after Mort Lawrence's art was deemed unsatisfactory.[22] The character was billed now as "Captain America, Commie Smasher" in the wake of theCold War and faced enemies associated with theSoviet Union.[23] The series was a commercial failure, and was cancelled after just three issues.[24] Romita attributed the series' failure to the changing political climate, particularly the public opposition to theKorean War; the character subsequently fell out of active publication for nearly a decade.[25]
Additionally, Romita would render one of his first original characters,M-11 the Human Robot, in a five-page standalone science-fiction story inMenace #11 (May 1954). While not envisioned as an ongoing character, M-11 was resurrected decades later as a member of the super-hero teamAgents of Atlas.[26] Romita was the primary artist for one of the first series with a black star, "Waku, Prince of the Bantu"—created by writerDon Rico and artistOgden Whitney in the omnibus titleJungle Tales #1 (September 1954). The ongoing short feature starred anAfrican chieftain in Africa, with no regularly featuredCaucasian characters. Romita succeeded Whitney with issue #2 (November 1954).[21]
In the mid-1950s, while continuing to freelance forAtlas, Romita did uncredited work forDC Comics.[27] Romita had been recommended to DC's editors by his artist friendCarmine Infantino while serving in the Korean War.[28] After declining comics sales in the late 1950s forced Atlas to let most of their artists go, Romita transitioned to work for DC exclusively in 1958.[29] His first known work for the company is the tentatively identified penciling credit for the cover ofromance comicSecret Hearts #58 (October 1959), and, confirmably, pencils for the seven-page story "I Know My Love", inked by Bernard Sachs inHeart Throbs #63 (January 1960). Other titles to which he contributed includeFalling in Love,Girls' Love Stories,Girls' Romances, andYoung Love.[30]
Romita's artwork for these stories followed the house style for DC comics, and the first pages of his issues were often done by another artist. The cover art forromance comics was soon done primarily by Romita.[11] He would "swipe"—an artists' term for using existing work as models, a common practice among novices—frommovie stills and from theMilton Caniffcomic stripTerry and the Pirates.[11] Bernard Sachs andSy Barry inked some of Romita's romance work, but Romita began inking his own pencils in the late 1950s or early 1960s.[11] Romita had hoped a DC editor would eventually offer him a superhero comic, such as aBatman filler issue, but Romita remained on the romance titles.[31]
Shortly afterward, however, romance comics began declining in popularity, and by 1965, DC had ceased buying art for new romance comics. The company then only used romance comics from their large inventory of previously unpublished comics or published reprints. Romita was not offered work by the other genre departments, although admitted he did not try to present himself to them either.[32] Romita's last known DC story work was the six-page "My Heart Tricked Me", inked by Sachs, inGirls' Romances #121 (December 1966), though his spot illustrations, some or all of it reprints of earlier work, continued to appear on one-page "beauty tip" and other filler pages, as well as on letters pages, through early 1970, as did the occasional reprinted story.[21]
Even before his final original DC story was published, Romita had already returned to freelance for what had now becomeMarvel Comics. His first work for Marvel was inkingJack Kirby's cover andDon Heck's interior pencils on thesuperhero-team comicThe Avengers #23 (December 1965).[21]
Romita directed most of his efforts, however, toward findingadvertisingstoryboard work. He obtained a position at the large ad agencyBBDO through his friend Al Normandia, one of the firm'sart directors. "They were going to pay me $250 a week. I'd made just over $200 a week with the romance [comics] but only by killing myself" with long hours of work. Struggling to find new ideas for comics, Romita decided he would only doinking for comic work again.[33]
Marvel editorStan Lee, however, had heard of Romita leaving DC, and asked to see him. At a three-hour meeting over lunch, Romita recalled that Lee promised to match the agency salary if Romita would come work for Marvel. Lee also assured him the freedom to choose his work location, allowing him to work either from home or the office on any given day, based on Romita's own preference.[34] Romita had also received an offer to work in advertising, but chose Marvel instead because Lee had promised consistent assignments.[35] Though Romita felt he no longer wanted topencil, in favor of being solely an inker, Lee soon enticed him otherwise:
I had inked anAvengers job for Stan, and I told him I just wanted to ink. I felt like I was burned out as a penciler after eight years of romance work. I didn't want to pencil any more; in fact, I couldn't work at home any more—I couldn't discipline myself to do it. He said, "Okay," but the first chance he had he shows me thisDaredevil story somebody had started and he didn't like it, and he wanted somebody else to do it.[36] [He] showed meDick Ayers' splash page for aDaredevil [and] asked me, 'What would you do with this page?' I showed him on a tracing paper what I would do, and then he asked me to do a drawing of Daredevil the way I would do it. I did a big drawing of Daredevil ... just a big, tracing-paper drawing of Daredevil swinging. And Stan loved it.[3]
Romita began a brief stint onDaredevil beginning with issue #12 (January 1966), initially penciling over Jack Kirby's dynamic layouts as a means of learning Marvel's storytelling house style. Sales perked; while the title had a smaller print run than Marvel flagshipsThe Amazing Spider-Man andFantastic Four, it briefly had the company's highest percentage of sales compared to print-run.[3] It also proved to be a stepping-stone for Romita's signature, years-long penciling run onThe Amazing Spider-Man.[37] During this time, a DC editor offered Romita to work on theirMetamorpho character, but he declined.[38] Lee wrote a two-partDaredevil story for issues #16–17 (May–June 1966) with Spider-Man guest starring, to see the character depicted by Romita.[13]
The reason for the tryout was the growing estrangement betweenSpider-Man co-creatorsStan Lee andSteve Ditko. When Ditko abruptly left Marvel after completingThe Amazing Spider-Man #38 (July 1966), Lee gave Romita the assignment. This followed Romita's eight-issueDaredevil run, the cover of the subsequent issue #20 (September 1966), and an incidentalHulk and twoCaptain America stories (inTales to Astonish #77, March 1966, andTales of Suspense #76–77, April–May 1966, respectively). While Romita's depiction of Spider-Man would eventually become the company mascot and the definitive look to the general public, the artist had trepidations:
I was hoping against it, believe it or not. People laugh when I say this, but I did not want to do Spider-Man. I wanted to stay on Daredevil. The only reason I did Spider-Man was because Stan asked me and I felt that I should help out, like a good soldier. I never really felt comfortable on Spider-Man for years. ... I felt obliged to [mimic] Ditko because ... I was convinced, in my own mind, that he was going to come back in two or three issues. ... I couldn't believe that a guy would walk away from a successful book that was the second-highest seller at Marvel. ... After six months, when I realized it wasn't temporary, I finally stopped trying to [mimic] Ditko. ... I was doing these nine-panel pages and the thin line, and I was doing Peter Parker without any bone structure—just like Ditko was doing, I thought.[3]
Lee later commented that this transition in Romita's style actually worked out for the benefit of the series, as it gradually weaned readers off the Ditko look while ultimately allowing Romita to work in the style he most excelled at.[39] Romita took overThe Amazing Spider-Man with issue #39 (August 1966).[40] His first inker on what would become Marvel's flagship series wasMike Esposito, who initially used the pseudonym "Mickey Demeo" to conceal from his regular employer, rivalDC Comics, that he was moonlighting at Marvel.[41][42] After three issues, Romita inked himself for issues #43–48 (November 1966 – May 1967), before Esposito returned—uncredited for issue #49 (June 1967),[43] then as Mickey Demeo until finally taking credit under his own name with issue #56 (January 1968). Except for one issue (#65) inked by his successor,Jim Mooney, the Romita-Esposito team continued through issue #66 (November 1968),[21] establishing the new look of Spider-Man.The Amazing Spider-Man had been Marvel's second-best-selling title at the time Romita began drawing it. Within a year, it overtookFantastic Four to become the company's top seller.[44]
Romita designed the look ofMary Jane Watson, a supporting character in theSpider-Man series who would later become the lead character's romantic interest.[45] Romita has stated that in designing Mary Jane, he "usedAnn-Margret from the movieBye Bye Birdie as a guide, using her coloring, the shape of her face, her red hair and her form-fitting short skirts."[46] Mary Jane Watson made her first full appearance inThe Amazing Spider-Man #42 (November 1966),[47] although she first appeared in #25 (June 1965) with her face obscured and had been mentioned since #15 (August 1964).Peter David wrote in 2010 that Romita "made the definitive statement of his arrival by pulling Mary Jane out from behind the oversized potted plant [that blocked the readers' view of her face in issue #25] and placing her on panel in what would instantly become an iconic moment."[48] Other characters that debuted in the Lee-Romita era include theRhino in #41 (October 1966),[49] theShocker in #46 (March 1967),[50] theKingpin in #50 (June 1967),[51] andGeorge Stacy in #56 (January 1968). Romita had based George Stacy on actorCharles Bickford.[52] Lee and Romita's stories focused as much on the social and college lives of the characters as they did on Spider-Man's adventures.[53] The stories became more topical, addressing issues such as theVietnam War,[54] political elections,[55] andstudent activism.[56]
Romita, increasingly called upon to do art corrections and touch-ups, and to interface with artists for ever-busy editor Lee, became Marvel'sde facto art director.[57] Cutting back on his Spider-Man workload, Romita began doing only layouts, with finished pencils byDon Heck or Jim Mooney for nearly every issue for a year-and-a-half (#57–75, February 1968 – August 1969). Romita then stepped back for six issues, drawing only covers whileJohn Buscema laid out issues #76–81 (September 1969 – February 1970) for others to finish.[58]
These steps at reducing Romita's Spider-Man workload had mixed results, Romita recalled in 2001, saying, "Stan was always trying to speed me up. He had Don Heck pencil over my breakdowns for a while. ... Then, when Don had finished the pencils, [Lee would] call me in to fix up anything ... that he didn't like. Even after it was inked, he'd have me changing what the inker had done. I told him, 'This was supposed to save me time, but it isn't!' ".[3] Romita's initial run on the title, abetted by the three other artists,[Note 1] lasted through issue #95 (April 1971).Gil Kane succeeded him as Spider-Man's regular penciler through issue #105 (February 1972). Romita then began a second stint, doing full pencils for issues #105–115 and #119 (February–December 1972, April 1974), and providing occasional inking and most of the cover art through issue #168 (May 1977). Romita suggested to writerGerry Conway that supporting characterGwen Stacy should die at the hands of theGreen Goblin in "The Night Gwen Stacy Died" in issue #121 (June 1973).[59][60][61] Her demise and the Goblin's apparent death one issue later formed a story arc widely considered as the most defining in the history of Spider-Man.[62] In a June 2017 interview withSyFy Wire, Romita namedThe Amazing Spider-Man #108 and 109 as the two stories he was proudest of, explaining that by the time he did those issues, he was no longer invoking Steve Ditko, and was asserting his own style as an artist. Romita pointed to theMilton Caniff-inspired brushwork with which he rendered those pages, and lamented no longer owning the originals.[63]
Comics-art historian Daniel Herman assessed of Romita's Spider-Man work:
Romita's transformation of the character redefined the character's look and took the strip in a different direction. It also made him a star artist in the comic book world. The trouble was, Romita took Spidey away from his roots and firmly planted him in the mainstream ...[64] Marvel staffers would joke that Romita "took Spider-Man uptown". Romita reinvented the character and made it possible for [Spider-Man] to appeal to a wider audience, even if he removed the qualities that had made the strip a surreal standout.[65]
Romita was the artist forthe Spider-Man newspaper comic strip from its launch on January 3, 1977[66] through late 1980.[13] He continued in his role as Marvel's art director during this time, anticipating that the strip would not last.[67] Romita had promised Lee that he would continue the comic strip as long as sales continued to grow.[68] The Spider-Man comic strip reached an audience of 500 newspapers, making it one of the most popular adventure comic strips at the time.[69] At the start of the fourth year, the strip's number had begun to stagnate and then decline.[68]
After editor-in-chief and art directorStan Lee assumed the positions of publisher and president in 1972, he promoted Romita to the position ofart director in July 1973[57] after Romita had been in that position unofficially but on staff since 1972.[13] In that capacity through at least the late 1980s,[13] Romita played a major role in defining the look of Marvel Comics and in designing new characters. Among the characters he designed or helped design are thePunisher,[14]Wolverine,[70]Luke Cage,[71]Bullseye,[72]Tigra,[73] andBrother Voodoo.[74][75] Romita's catlike design for Wolverine was based on an encyclopedia description he found on wolverines, as vicious short animals with claws.[76] For the Punisher, a rough sketch was provided by writerGerry Conway, with a skull and crossbones on the chest. Feeling this was too simple, Romita made the skull larger to encompass the Punisher's torso, with his belt buckle resembling teeth. Romita also designedNatasha Romanova's Black Widow outfit, inspired byMiss Fury.[77]
Romita collaborated withThe Electric Company and to produceSpidey Super Stories comics, which were aimed at a younger audience and created with help from child psychologists. The series had 57 comics produced between 1974 and 1982. Romita created another program called "Romita's Raiders", which allowed young artists to gain hands-on experience and learn from the art staff at Marvel.[78]
In 1976, Romita did uncredited art corrections on the large-format, first DC/Marvelintercompany crossover,Superman vs. the Amazing Spider-Man, over the pencils ofRoss Andru.[79][80] Later that same year, Romita inked Jack Kirby's pencil work onCaptain America's Bicentennial Battles, aone-shot story published in an oversizedtreasury format.[81] Around 1980, Romita's art directing duties expanded from comic books to special projects. His duties included supervising and hiring other artists, providing corrections and cover sketches when needed, and drawing art for various merchandise.[68]

Romita inked the debut of newCaptain Marvel Monica Rambeau inThe Amazing Spider-Man Annual #16 (1982)[82] and the first appearance of theHobgoblin inThe Amazing Spider-Man #238 (March 1983).[83] He was one of six pencilers onPeter Parker, the Spectacular Spider-Man #121 (December 1986), and he penciled the nine-page story "I Remember Gwen" inThe Amazing Spider-Man #365 (August 1992, the 30th-anniversary issue)[84] and an eight-page backup story starring the hero and supporting character theProwler inPeter Parker, the Spectacular Spider-Man Annual #13 (1993).[21] In 1996, Romita announced his semi-retirement, but continued to work on multiple comics projects.[85]
Romita both penciled and inked the 10-page backup story "The Kiss"—aflashback in whichPeter Parker (Spider-Man) and his girlfriendGwen Stacy share their first kiss—inWebspinners: Tales of Spider-Man #1 (January 1999). He drew analternate-universe version of the Spider-Man characters in theone-shotSpidey: A Universe X Special (2001), and penciled the final four pages of the 38-page story in the milestoneThe Amazing Spider-Man #500 (December 2003) together with his sonJohn Jr. penciling the other pages. Romita drew one of four covers to the April 27 – May 3, 2002, issue ofTV Guide to promote the release of the2002Spider-Man film.[86]
In the early 2000s, Romita contributed to multi-artist jams in commemorative issues. He did a panel inCaptain America vol. 3, #50 (February 2002), starring the first Marvel superhero he had drawn; a portion ofIron Man vol. 3, #40 (May 2001), although the hero was not one of the artist's signature characters; a panel forDaredevil vol. 2, #50 (October 2003); and a few pages featuring Karen Page inDaredevil vol. 2, #100 (October 2007), done in the style of theromance comics he had drawn decades earlier. Romita both penciled and inked the cover ofDaredevil vol. 2, #94 (February 2007) in that same romance comics style. The following year he drew avariant cover of his signature series, forThe Amazing Spider-Man #568 (October 2008), doing so again with #642 (November 2010).[21]
A Romita image of Spider-Man and a Hulk image penciled byRich Buckler and inked by Romita were among the "Marvel Super Heroes" set ofcommemorative stamps issued by theU.S. Postal Service on July 27, 2007.[87]
As of 2013, he served on the Disbursement Committee of the comic-book industry charityThe Hero Initiative.[88]
Romita received anInkpot Award in 1979,[89] and was inducted into theWill Eisner Award Hall of Fame in 2002.[90] Romita was inducted into theInkwell Awards Joe Sinnott Hall of Fame in 2020.[91]

John Romita Sr. married childhood sweetheart Virginia Bruno in November 1952, who also worked on staff at Marvel as traffic manager from 1975 to 1996.[92][93] They lived inBrooklyn'sBensonhurst neighborhood until 1954, when they bought a house in theQueens neighborhood ofQueens Village.[9] Some years later, the family moved toBellerose, New York, onLong Island.[70]
Romita and his wife had two sons, Victor andJohn Jr. (born August 17, 1956),[2] who followed in his footsteps to become a noted comic-book artist himself.[3] At the time of his death, Romita had three grandchildren and one great-granddaughter.[94]
Romita died in his sleep at his home inFloral Park, New York on June 12, 2023, at the age of 93.[95][1] The news was broken by his son, John Jr., the following day.[85]
Romita has been credited with creating a new Spider-Man art style with romance and adventure influences that appealed to an even wider audience.[96] He drew a more handsome Peter Parker and beautiful women, and depicted "beautiful suffering" that combined soap opera and fantasy themes.[97] The Romita have been described as "The artist's line work became more rounded, and his depiction of women in particular became a real strength that would sustain him in years to come. His women were described as "fair of face but realistic rather than stylized" and displayed distinctive personalities through body language.[98] Comic artistAlex Ross has stated, "For me, John's Spidey is a design of such perfection and beauty so as to be simply the greatest-looking character in comics, by his hand."[99]
While working on DC's romance comics, Romita, finding the stories dull and repetitive, began looking for ways to add more personality into the artwork. For example, Romita would add flowing hair on women or objects moving in the wind for panels that had little happening and depicting characters from unique angles.[100] After moving to Marvel, Romita was known for drawing stylistic deep shadows and defined bone structure.[101]
Source:[21]
{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)Artist John Romita, the penciler that would define the looks of Spider-Man and Peter Parker for an entire generation, had his first crack at drawing the web-slinger in a two-part story of the Stan Lee penned seriesDaredevil.
After teasing the readers for more than two years, Stan Lee finally allowed Peter Parker to meet Mary Jane Watson.
In July 1973, Stan Lee announced that John Romita had been officially appointed Marvel's art director ... Unofficially, Romita had been moving into the position for some time.
{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)'[John] Romita and I designed the character,' Wein says.
Credited on the splash page [ofStrange Tales #169] for 'creative contributions' were [Roy] Thomas and art director John Romita, who no doubt came up with the character (Romita supplied the cover which might've doubled as a concept sketch before the book was produced.)
Many talents from both DC and Marvel contributed to this landmark publication – in addition to inker Dick Giordano, Neal Adams provided several redrawings of Superman while John Romita, Sr. worked on numerous Peter Parker/Spider-Man likenesses.
| Preceded by | Daredevil artist 1966 | Succeeded by |
| Preceded by | Tales of Suspense ("Captain America" feature) artist 1966 | Succeeded by Jack Kirby |
| Preceded by | The Amazing Spider-Man artist 1966–1970 | Succeeded by |
| Preceded by Jack Kirby | Fantastic Four artist 1970–1971 | Succeeded by |
| Preceded by Gene Colan | Captain America artist 1971–1971 | Succeeded by |
| Preceded by Gil Kane | The Amazing Spider-Man artist 1972–1973 | Succeeded by |