Showing posts with label GEORGE TUSKA. Show all posts
Showing posts with label GEORGE TUSKA. Show all posts

Friday, October 24, 2025

MENACE, ANYONE?


While artists like Lee Elias, Warren Kremer and Don Heck were designing horrific covers that would become legendary in pre-Code horror comics, over at Atlas, Stan Lee was cranking out reams of stories. While they eventually became formulaic, no one can deny that they were nearly always well-written.

Publisher Martin Goodman was a harsh taskmaster and kept his staff at Atlas busy. As a result, the imprint sold more titles (18) and released almost 400 single issues (see FIFC reference page HERE) than any other publisher during the pre-Code years. One of them was called MENACE and ran for 11 issues from 1953-1954 before it was cancelled, another casualty of the Comics Code Authority.

MENACE
Vol. 1 No. 1
March 1953
Hercules Publishing Corp. (Atlas Comics)
Editor: Stan Lee
Cover: Bill Everett
Pages: 36
Cover price: 10 cents

CONTENTS
"One Head Too Many!"
Script: Stan Lee
Art: Bill Everett

"The Man Who Couldn't Move"
Script: Stan Lee
Art: George Tuska

"Poor Mr. Watkins"
Script: Stan Lee
Art: Werner Roth

"The Wait In Their... Dungeon!"
Script: Stan Lee
Art: Russ Heath


























Saturday, June 7, 2025

THE MYSTERY OF WILLIAM EKGREN


Archer St. John's horror comics weren't a high target on Dr. Fredric Wertham's hit list, but they nevertheless produced some very good stories, albeit without the excessive violence and gore of other, more notorious publishers.

One such title, STRANGE TERRORS was significant for another reason: the very bizarre and many times referred to as psychedelic cover of issue #4 (November 1952). Clearly signed on the bottom right is the name of the artist, "William Ekgren".

For years the man remained a mystery. Was the name a pseudonym? Was he dead? Was he an artist visiting from another planet?

This and the following photo is believed to be of Ekgren.

The answer was a long time coming, but comics historian Ken Quattro manged to contact Ekgren. According to Ekgren he met publisher Arthur St. John and Marion McDermott, editor of St. John's romance comics line at an art market in Greenwich Village. Ekgren sold the rights to his paintings to St. John for $100 apiece, which were of course, used on the covers because they were so unique and would stand out on the newsstands. St. John returned the art to Ekgren after they had been published and it is presumed he sold them again to someone else.


Quattro goes into more detail and shares a letter he received from Ekgren:

“One day in the Spring of 1952--at the Greenwich Village Outdoor Art Show--three men and a woman were murmuring between themselves looking at one of my paintings…after less than 5 minutes they had bought the publication right to it--for 100 dollars. After a week they gave me the painting back so that I could sell it again…the same procedure came about at the next Outdoor Show (and then the next after that)…the same persons coming back, acting in an almost impolite way and paying 100 dollars for each picture.”

"Family of Three" (1950) sold at Heritage Auctions in 2020.

"Girl at Piano" (1950) sold at Heritage Auctions in 2007.

He also responded to Quattro hearing about that he was possibly schizophrenic:

 “About that and that: yes, of course, I’m schizophrenic, thus being more nutty than a fine fruitcake. But thus far I’ve been able to handle this “mental thing” rather nicely, by using ingredients, as well as wholeness, as basic measures giving informative vividness and strength to all my creative activities.”


STRANGE TERRORS
Vol. 1 No. 4
November 1952
St. John Publishing Company
Editor: ?
Cover: William Ekgren
Pages: 36
Cover price: 10 cents

CONTENTS
"The Curse of Khar"
Script: ?
Art: Joe Kubert

"The Spectres in Shaft 13"
Script: ?
Art: Bill Molno

"Terror in the Tombs"
Script: ?
Art: George Tuska

"Murder by Myth"
Script: ?
Art: Charles Sultan