Atlas Comics (1950s)
Atlas Comics is the 1950s comic-book publishing label that evolved into Marvel Comics. Magazine and paperback novel publisher Martin Goodman, whose business strategy involved having a multitude of corporate entities, used Atlas as the umbrella name for his comic-book division during this time. Atlas evolved out of Goodman's 1940s comic-book division, Timely Comics, and was located on the 14th floor of the Empire State Building.
This company is distinct from the 1970s comic-book company, also founded by Goodman, that is known as Atlas/Seaboard Comics.
History
After the Golden Age
Atlas Comics was the successor of Timely Comics, the company that magazine and paperback novel publisher Martin Goodman founded in 1939, and which had reached the peak of its popularity during the war years with its star characters the Human Torch, the Sub-Mariner and Captain America. The early to mid-1950s found comic books falling out of fashion due to competition from television and other media.Timely largely stopped producing superhero comics with the cancellation of Captain America Comics at issue #75, by which time the series had already been titled Captain America's Weird Tales for two issues, with the finale featuring only anthological suspense stories and no superheroes. The company's flagship title, Marvel Mystery Comics, starring the Human Torch, had already ended its run with #92 in June 1949, as had Sub-Mariner Comics with #32 the same month, and The Human Torch with #35 in March 1949. Timely made one more attempt at superheroes with the publication of Marvel Boy #1-2, which was retitled Astonishing with issue #3 and continued the Marvel Boy feature through #6.
In the absence of superheroes, Goodman's comic-book line expanded into a wide variety of genres, producing horror, Westerns, humor, funny animal, drama, crime, war, jungle, romance, espionage, medieval adventure, Bible stories and sports comics. As did other publishers, Atlas also offered comics about models and career women.
Goodman began using the logo of the Atlas News Company, the newsstand-distribution company he owned, on comics cover-dated November 1951, even though another company, Kable News, continued to distribute his comics through the August 1952 issues, with its "K" logo and the logo of the independent distributors' union appearing alongside the Atlas globe. The Atlas logo united a line put out by the same publisher, staff and freelancers through 59 shell companies, from Animirth Comics to Zenith Publications.
Atlas attempted to revive superheroes in Young Men #24-28 with the Human Torch, the Sub-Mariner and Captain America. The short-lived revival also included restarts of Sub-Mariner Comics and Captain America. All three superheroes also appeared in the final two issues of Men's Adventures.
Trend-following
Goodman's publishing strategy for Atlas involved what he saw as the proven route of following popular trends in TV and movies — Westerns and war dramas prevailing for a time, drive-in movie monsters another time — and even other comic books, particularly the EC horror line. As Marvel/Atlas editor-in-chief Stan Lee told comic-book historian Les Daniels, Goodman "would notice what was selling, and we'd put out a lot of books of that type." Commented Daniels, "The short-term results were lucrative; but while other publishers took the long view and kept their stables of heroes solid, Goodman let his slide." While Atlas had some horror titles, such as Marvel Tales, as far back as 1949, the company increased its output dramatically in the wake of EC's success. Lee recalled, "t was usually based on how the competition was doing. When we found that EC's horror books were doing well, for instance, we published a lot of horror books." Until the early 1960s, when Lee would help revolutionize comic books with the advent of the Fantastic Four and Spider-Man, Atlas was content to flood newsstands with profitable, cheaply produced product — often, despite itself, beautifully rendered by talented if low-paid artists.The Atlas "bullpen" had at least five staff writers besides Lee: Hank Chapman, Paul S. Newman, Don Rico, Carl Wessler, and, in the teen humor division, future Mad magazine cartoonist Al Jaffee. Daniel Keyes, future author of Flowers for Algernon, was an editor beginning 1952. Other writers, generally freelance, included Robert Bernstein.
The artists — some freelance, some on staff — included such veterans as Human Torch creator Carl Burgos and Sub-Mariner creator Bill Everett. The next generation included the prolific and much-admired Joe Maneely, who before his death just prior to Marvel's 1960s breakthrough was the company's leading artist, providing many covers and doing work in all genres, most notably on Westerns and on the medieval adventure Black Knight. Others included Russ Heath, Gene Colan, and the fledgling, highly individualistic Steve Ditko.
Some of Atlas' prominent Western titles, many reprinted in the 1970s, were Ringo Kid, with art by Maneely, Fred Kida and John Severin; artist Doug Wildey's The Outlaw Kid; artist Jack Keller's Kid Colt, Outlaw; the anthology Gunsmoke Western, starring Kid Colt; and Black Rider, drawn by Maneely, Syd Shores and others.
Humor and miscellanea
Atlas also published various children's and teen humor titles, including Dan DeCarlo's Homer, the Happy Ghost, Homer Hooper and the Joe Maneely-drawn Melvin the Monster. Sergeant Barney Barker, drawn by John Severin, was Atlas' answer to Sgt. Bilko.One of the most long-running titles was Millie the Model, which began as a Timely Comics humor book in 1945 and ran into the 1970s, lasting for 207 issues and launching spinoffs along the way. Created by writer-artist Ruth Atkinson, it later became the training ground for cartoonist DeCarlo — the future creator of Josie and the Pussycats, Sabrina, the Teenage Witch and other Archie Comics characters, and the artist who established Archie's modern look. DeCarlo wrote and drew Millie for 10 years.
The high-school series Patsy Walker, co-created by Atkinson and writer Otto Binder in 1944, featured art by Al Hartley, Al Jaffee, Morris Weiss and others, ran until 1967 and spun off three titles. Patsy herself would be integrated into Marvel Universe continuity years later as the supernatural superheroine Hellcat.
Atlas' funny animal books featured cartoonist Ed Winiarski's trouble-prone Buck Duck, Maneely's mentally suspect Dippy Duck, and Howie Post's The Monkey and the Bear. Buck and the other funny animal characters briefly returned in the early 1970s when Marvel published the five-issue reprint title Li'l Pals.
Miscellaneous titles included the espionage series Yellow Claw, with Maneely, Severin, and Jack Kirby art; the Native American hero Red Warrior, with art by Tom Gill; the space opera Space Squadron, written and drawn by future Marvel production executive Sol Brodsky; and Sports Action, initially featuring true-life stories about the likes of George Gipp and Jackie Robinson, and later fictional features of, as one cover headline put it, "Rugged Tales of Danger and Red-Hot Action!".
Staff artist Stan Goldberg recalled in 2005, "I was in the Bullpen with a lot of well-known artists who worked up there at that time.... The guys... who actually worked nine-to-five and put in a regular day, and not the freelance guys who'd come in a drop off their work... were almost a hall of fame group of people. There was John Severin. Bill Everett. Carl Burgos. There was the all-time great Joe Maneely.... We all worked together, all the colorists and correction guys, the letterers and artists.... We had a great time".
Layoffs
From 1952 to late 1956, Goodman distributed Atlas' comics to newsstands through his self-owned distributor, the Atlas News Company. He shut down Atlas News Company in 1956 and began newsstand distribution through American News Company, the nation's largest distributor and a virtual monopoly, which shortly afterward lost a Justice Department lawsuit and discontinued its business. As comic-book historian Gerard Jones explains, the company in 1956The Atlas globe remained on the covers, however, until American News went out of business in June 1957. With no other options, Goodman turned to the distributor Independent News, owned by rival National Periodical Publications, the future DC Comics, which agreed to distribute him on constrained terms that allowed only eight titles per month. The last comic to bear the Atlas globe on the cover was the funny-animal comic Dippy Duck #1, and the first to bear the new "Ind." distributors' mark was Patsy Walker #73, both cover-dated October 1957.
Stan Lee, in a 1988 interview, recalled that Goodman:
During this retrenchment, according to a fabled industry story, Goodman discovered a closet-full of unused, but paid-for, art, leading him to have virtually the entire staff fired while he used up the inventory. In the interview noted above, Lee, one of the few able to give a firsthand account, told a seemingly self-contradictory version of the downsizing:
In a 2003 interview, Joe Sinnott, one of the company's top artists for more than 50 years, recalled Lee citing the inventory issue as a primary cause. "Stan called me and said, 'Joe, Martin Goodman told me to suspend operations because I have all this artwork in house and have to use it up before I can hire you again.' It turned out to be six months, in my case. He may have called back some of the other artists later, but that's what happened with me.
Pre-superhero Marvel
Goodman's men's magazines and paperback books were still successful — the comics, except in the early Golden Age, were a relatively small part of the business — and Goodman considered shutting the division down. The details of his decision not to do so are murky. Artist Jack Kirby — who after his amicable split with creative partner Joe Simon a few years earlier and after losing a lawsuit to a DC Comics editor was having difficulty finding sufficient work — recalled that in late 1958,The interviewer, The Comics Journal publisher Gary Groth, later wrote of this interview in general, "Some of Kirby's more extreme statements... should be taken with a grain of salt...." Lee, specifically asked about the office-closing anecdote, said,
Kirby had previously returned, in late 1956, to freelance on five issues cover-dated December 1956 and February 1957, but did not stay. Now, beginning with the cover and the seven-page story "I Discovered the Secret of the Flying Saucers" for Strange Worlds #1, Kirby returned for a 12-year run that would soon help revolutionize comics. While career necessity led Kirby back to publisher Goodman, whom he had left acrimoniously in 1941, Kirby nonetheless helped elevate simple science fiction and giant-monster stories with what comics historian Charles Hatfield called "a vital jab in the ribs by outlandish artistry. Soon his dynamic work began gracing countless covers and lead stories in the extant Strange Tales and the newly launched Amazing Adventures, Strange Worlds, Tales of Suspense, Tales to Astonish and World of Fantasy. "Offsetting the formulaic nature of the stories was a dash of invigorating absurdity," wrote Hatfield. "The tales had Kirby's energy and, courtesy of Lee, confessional, first-person titles typical of sensation-mongering tabloids and comics, such as, 'I Created Sporr, the Thing That Could Not Die!'"
A Kirby science fiction/monster story, usually inked by Christopher Rule initially, then by Dick Ayers following Rule's retirement, would generally open each book. This was followed by one or two twist-ending thrillers or sci-fi tales drawn by Don Heck, Paul Reinman, or Joe Sinnott, all capped by an often-surreal, sometimes self-reflexive Lee-Ditko short. Lee in 2009 described these "short, five-page filler strips that Steve and I did together", originally "placed in any of our comics that had a few extra pages to fill", as "odd fantasy tales that I'd dream up with O. Henry-type endings." Giving an early example of what would later be known as the "Marvel Method" of writer-artist collaboration, Lee said, "All I had to do was give Steve a one-line description of the plot and he'd be off and running. He'd take those skeleton outlines I had given him and turn them into classic little works of art that ended up being far cooler than I had any right to expect."
Don Heck, who worked as an Atlas staff artist from 1954 until the company's retrenchment in 1957 before returning the following year, recalled that the 1958 page rate "was around $20 per page to pencil and ink, I think DC's average was $38. It didn't pick up until 1964-65, and even then it didn't go up all that much — a couple of bucks a page."
Although for several months in 1949 and 1950 Timely's titles bore a circular logo labeled "Marvel Comic", the first modern comic books so labeled were the science fiction anthology Journey into Mystery #69 and the teen humor title Patsy Walker #95, which each showed an "MC" box on its cover. However, collectors routinely refer to the company's comics from the April 1959 cover-dates onward, as pre-superhero Marvel. Goodman would reuse the name Atlas for the next comics company he founded, in the 1970s.
Atlas titles by type
Sources: Some titles may be arguably Timely at the earlier end, or Marvel at the later end. Note: In titles numbered from or into the various All Winners Comics, additional clarifying information is supplied.Crime
- All-True Crime #37–52 early issues Timely; continued from Timely Comics' All True Crime Cases
- Amazing Detective Cases #3–14 continued from n.a.
- Caught #1–5
- Crime Can't Win #41–43, 4–12 continued from romance title Cindy Smith
- Crime Cases Comics #24–27, 5–12 continued from successive Timely Comics series Li'l Willie Comics and Willie Comics
- Crime Exposed vol. 2, #1–14
- Crime Fighters #11–13 continued from Timely Comics' Crimefighters
- Crime Must Lose #4–12 continued from either Sports Action or Blaze the Wonder Collie
- Justice #7–9, then 4–52 early issues Timely Comics; continued from Timely title Wacky Duck; continued as
- *Tales of Justice #53–67
- Kent Blake of the Secret Service #1–14
- Police Action #1–7
- Police Badge #479 #5 continued from Spy Thrillers
- Private Eye #1–8
Drama
- Man Comics #1–10 continued as War title Man Comics
- Rugged Action #1–4 continued as Horror/fantasy/science fiction title Strange Stories of Suspense
- True Adventures #3 continued from Western title True Western; continued as
- *Men's Adventures #4–8 continued as war title Men's Adventures
Espionage
- Spy Cases #26–28 4–19 continued from Timely Comics' humor title The Kellys
- Spy Fighters #1–15
- Spy Thrillers #1–4 continued as
- *Police Badge #479
- Yellow Claw #1–4
Funny-animal and other children's comics
- Adventures of Homer Ghost #1–2
- Buck Duck #1–4
- Cartoon Kids #1
- Dippy Duck #1
- Homer, the Happy Ghost #1–22
- Little Lizzie vol. 2, #1–3
- Marvin Mouse #1
- Melvin the Monster #1–6 continued as
- *Dexter the Demon #7
- The Monkey and the Bear #1–3
- Wonder Duck #1–3 continued as
- *It's a Duck's Life #4–11
Horror/fantasy/science fiction
- Adventure into Mystery #1–8
- Adventures into Terror #43–44, then #3–31 original numbering continued from Timely Comics' Joker
- Adventures into Weird Worlds #1–30
- Amazing Adventures #1–6 continued as
- *Amazing Adult Fantasy #7–14 continued as Marvel Comics' Amazing Fantasy
- Amazing Mysteries #32–35 continued from Sub-Mariner;
- Astonishing #3–63 continued from Superhero title Marvel Boy
- Journey into Mystery #1–82 continued as a Marvel Comics superhero title
- Journey into Unknown Worlds #36–59 continued from Timely Comics' teen humor series Teen Comics
- Marvel Tales #93–159
- Menace #1–11
- Men's Adventures #21–26 continued as Superhero title Men's Adventures
- Mystery Tales #1–54
- Mystic #1–61
- Space Squadron #1–5 continued as
- *Space Worlds #6
- Spaceman #1–6
- Spellbound #1–34
- Strange Stories of Suspense #5–16
- Strange Tales #1–100 ; post-1961 issues Marvel Comics; series continued as a Marvel Comics superhero title
- Strange Tales of the Unusual #1–11
- Strange Worlds #1–5
- Suspense #1–29
- Tales of Suspense #1–38 ; post-1961 issues Marvel Comics; series continued as a Marvel Comics superhero title
- Tales to Astonish #1–34 ; post-1961 issues Marvel Comics; series continued as a Marvel Comics superhero title
- Uncanny Tales #1–56
- Venus #1–19 early issues Timely Comics
- World of Fantasy #1–19
- World of Mystery #1–7
- World of Suspense #1–8
Humor/satire
- Crazy #1–7
- Riot #1–6
- Snafu #1–3
- Wild #1–5
Humor/sitcom
- A Date with Millie #1–7
- A Date with Millie vol. 2, #1–7 continued as
- *Life With Millie #8–20
- A Date with Patsy #1
- The Adventures of Pinky Lee #1–5
- Della Vision #1–3 continued as romance title Patty Powers
- Girls' Life #1–6
- Hedy of Hollywood Comics #36–50 continued from Timely Comics' Young Allies #1–20, All Winners Comics #21, and Hedy De Vine Comics #22–35
- Hedy Wolfe #1
- Homer Hooper #1–4
- Kathy #1–27
- Millie the Model #1–207
- My Friend Irma #3–48 continued from Timely Comics' My Diary
- My Girl Pearl #1–11
- Nellie the Nurse #1–36
- Nellie the Nurse vol. 2, #1
- Patsy Walker #1–99 ; post-1961 issues Marvel Comics
- Patsy and Hedy #1–73
- Patsy and Her Pals #1–29
- Sergeant Barney Barker #1–2 continued as War title G.I. Tales
- Sherry the Showgirl #1–3 continued as
- *Showgirls #4 continued as
- *Sherry the Showgirl #5–7
- Showgirls vol. 2, #1–2
- Wendy Parker #1–8
- Willie the Wiseguy #1
Jungle
- Jungle Action #1–6
- Jungle Tales #1–7 continued as
- *Jann of the Jungle #8–17
- Lorna, the Jungle Queen #1–5 continued as
- *Lorna, the Jungle Girl #6–26
Medieval adventure
- Black Knight #1–5
Romance
- Cindy Smith #39–40 continued from Timely Comics' Cindy Comics; continued as Crime title Crime Can't Win
- Girl Confessions #13–34 continued from Misc. title Girl Comics
- Love Adventures #1–12 continued as
- *Actual Confessions #13–14
- Love Romances #6–106 early issues Timely Comics; continued from Timely's Ideal
- Love Tales #36–75 early issues Timely Comics; continued from Timely's The Human Torch #1–35; see note at Hero, above
- Lovers #23–86 early issues Timely; continued from Timely's Blonde Phantom
- Meet Miss Bliss #1–4 continued as
- *Stories of Romance #5–13
- Molly Manton's Romances #1
- *Romances of Molly Manton #2
- My Love Story #1a9
- My Own Romance #4–76 continued from Timely Comics' My Romance; continued as
- *Teen-age Romance #77–86
- Patty Powers #4–7 continued from Humor title Della Vision
- Secret Story Romances #1–21 continued as
- *True Tales of Love #22–31
- The Romances of Nurse Helen Grant #1
- *True Tales of Love #22–31
- True Secrets #3–40 continued from Timely Comics' Our Love
Sports
- Sports Action #2–14 continued from Timely Comics' Sport Stars
Superheroes
- Captain America #76–78 continued from Timely Comics' Captain America Comics and Captain America's Weird Tales
- The Human Torch #36–38 continued from its Timely Comics run, despite its numbering having been taken over by the Romance title Love Tales
- Marvel Boy #1–2 continued as Horror title Astonishing, in which Marvel Boy stars from #3–6.
- Men's Adventures #27–28 continued from Horror title Men's Adventures
- Sub-Mariner #33–42 continued from Timely Comics' Sub-Mariner Comics
- Young Men #24–28 continued from Misc. title Young Men
War
- 3-D Action #1
- Battle #1–70
- Battle Action #1–30
- Battle Ground #1–20
- Battlefield #1–11
- Battlefront #1–48
- Combat #1–11
- Combat Kelly #1–44
- Commando Adventures #1–2
- Devil-Dog Dugan #1–3 continued as
- *Tales of the Marines #4 continued as
- *Marines at War #5–7
- G.I. Tales #4–6
- Man Comics #11–28
- Marines in Action #1–14
- Marines in Battle #1–25
- Men in Action #1–9 continued as
- *Battle Brady #10–14
- Men's Adventures #9–20 continued from Drama title Men's Adventures; continued as Horror title Men's Adventures
- Navy Action #1–11 continued as
- *Sailor Sweeney #12–14 continued as once again
- *Navy Action #15–18
- Navy Combat #1–20
- Navy Tales #1–4
- War Action #1–4
- War Adventures #1–13
- War Combat #1–5 continued as
- *Combat Casey #6–34
- War Comics #1–49
Western
- 3-D Tales of the West #1
- All Western Winners #2–4 continued from Timely Comics' All Winners Comics vol. 2, #1; continued as
- * Western Winners #5–7 continued as
- * Black Rider #8–27 continued as
- * Western Tales of Black Rider #28–31 continued as
- * Gunsmoke Western #32–77
- Annie Oakley #1–11
- Arizona Kid #1–6
- Arrowhead #1–4
- Billy Buckskin Western #1–3 continued as
- *2-Gun Western #4 continued as
- *Two-Gun Western #5–12 See also Two Gun Western
- The Black Rider Rides Again! #1 See also Black Rider, above
- Frontier Western #1–10
- The Gunhawk #12–18 continued from successive Timely Comics titles Blaze Carson, Rex Hart, and Whip Wilson
- Kid Colt, Hero of the West #1–2 continued as
- *Kid Colt, Outlaw #3–229
- The Kid from Dodge City #1–2
- The Kid from Texas #1–2
- Matt Slade, Gunfighter #1–4 continued as
- *Kid Slade, Gunfighter #5–8
- Outlaw Fighters #1–5
- The Outlaw Kid #1–19
- Rawhide Kid #1–16, 17–25 ; post-1961 issues Marvel Comics
- Red Warrior #1–6
- Reno Browne, Hollywood's Greatest Cowgirl #50–52 continued as
- *Apache Kid #2–19 continued as
- *Western Gunfighters #20–27
- Ringo Kid Western #1–4 continued as
- *Ringo Kid #5–21
- Six-Gun Western #1–4
- Texas Kid #1–10
- True Western #1–2 continued as Drama title True Adventures
- Two-Gun Kid #1–59 early issues Timely Comics
- Two Gun Western #5–14 continued from Timely Comics' Crime title Casey – Crime Photographer
- Western Kid #1–17
- Western Outlaws #1–21
- Western Outlaws & Sheriffs #60–73 continued from Timely Comics' Best Western
- Western Thrillers #1–4 continued as
- *Cowboy Action #5–11 continued as
- *Quick-Trigger Western #12–19
- Western Trails #1–2
- Wild Western #3–57 continued from Timely Comics' 'Wild West; early issues Timely
- Wyatt Earp #1–29 continued as''' 1970s Marvel Comics reprint title
Miscellaneous
- Bible Tales for Young Folk #1–5
- Girl Comics #1–12 continued as Romance title Girl Confessions.
- Miss America #1–93 ; note: Variously, and at times overlapping, a superhero, romance and humor title.
- World's Greatest Songs #1
- Young Men #4–23 continued as Superhero title Young Men.