Brian K. Vaughan


Brian K. Vaughan is an American comic book and television writer, best known for the comic book series , Ex Machina, Runaways, Pride of Baghdad, Saga, and, most recently, Paper Girls.
Vaughan was a writer, story editor and producer of the television series Lost during seasons three through five. He was nominated for a Writers Guild of America Award for Best Dramatic Series at the February 2009 ceremony for his work on the fourth season. The writing staff was nominated for the award again at the February 2010 ceremony for their work on the fifth season. He was formerly the showrunner and executive producer of the TV series Under the Dome.
Wired describes Vaughan's comics work as "quirky, acclaimed stories that don't pander and still pound pulses". His creator-owned comics work is also characterized by "finite, meticulous, years-long story arcs", on which Vaughan comments, "That's storytelling, with a beginning, a middle, and an end. Something like Spider-Man, a book that never has a third act, that seems crazy." In 2007, Erik Malinowski, also of Wired, called Vaughan "the greatest comic book visionary of the last five years", comparing him to Frank Miller, Alan Moore, Paul Pope, and Steve Niles, and praised his addition to the TV series Lost as redeeming that series' third season.
For his writing, Vaughan has won 14 Eisner Awards, 14 Harvey Awards, as well as a Hugo Award.

Early life

Brian K. Vaughan was born July 17, 1976 in Cleveland, Ohio, to Geoffrey and Catherine Vaughan. He grew up in Rocky River and Westlake. Vaughan and his older brother are both fans of writer Peter David, and according to Vaughan, their adolescent comics reading was largely defined by a shared love of David's 12-year run on The Incredible Hulk. Vaughan also cites Joss Whedon as the reason he wanted to become a writer, a decision he made while attending St. Ignatius High School, from which he graduated in 1994.
Vaughan attended the New York University Tisch School of the Arts to study film. While a student there, Vaughan took part in Marvel Comics's Stan-hattan Project, a class for fledgling comic book writers.

Career

Vaughan's first credit was for Marvel Comics' Tales From the Age of Apocalypse #2. He would eventually write for some of the highest-profile characters at Marvel, including X-Men, Spider-Man, and Captain America. He would also write Batman and Green Lantern for DC Comics, and Buffy the Vampire Slayer Season Eight for Dark Horse Comics.
From 2002 to 2008, Vaughan, who came to prefer writing his own characters, wrote the creator-owned monthly series ', a post-apocalyptic science fiction series about the only man to survive the apparent simultaneous death of every male mammal on Earth. The series was published in sixty issues by Vertigo and collected in a series of ten paperback volumes. The series received Eisner Awards in 2005 and 2008, and numerous other nominations. The film rights to the series were acquired by New Line Cinema. Vaughan wrote his own screenplay for the project, though it was reported in March 2012 that Matthew Federman and Stephen Scaia were in final negotiations to write their own version.
In 2006, Vaughan published the graphic novel Pride of Baghdad, which centers on a group of lions who escape from an Iraqi zoo after the start of the Iraq War. The book was praised by IGN, who named it the Best Original Graphic Novel of 2006, calling it a "modern classic", lauding it for combining a tale of survival and family with a powerful analogy of war, and praising Vaughan for representing various viewpoints through the different lion characters.
From 2004 to 2010 Vaughan wrote another creator-owned series, Ex Machina, a political thriller that depicts the life of Mitchell Hundred, a former superhero known as the Great Machine who, in the wake of his heroism during the September 11, 2001 attacks, is elected Mayor of New York City. The story is set during Hundred's term in office, and interwoven with flashbacks to his past as the Great Machine. Through this, the series explores both the political situations Hundred finds himself in, and the mysteries surrounding his superpowers. New Line Cinema purchased the film rights to the series in July 2005, and commissioned Vaughan to write one of the two commissioned scripts, which he was reported to be working on in 2007. Following the conclusion of Ex Machina in 2010, Vaughan reiterated his previous statement that he would concentrate on creator-owned work, saying, "I realized when I turned in this final Ex Machina script that it would be the first time I wasn't under some kind of deadline at Marvel or DC since 1996. That's a huge chunk of my life to spend with those characters. I love them, and I still read Marvel and DC's superhero books. I just think I'm better when I'm working on my own creations. When there are so many talented creators out there who are better at that stuff than me, I should leave those characters to them. I should do what I'm fortunate enough to be in the position to do, which is to create more new stuff."
Vaughan was a writer, executive story editor and producer for seasons 3 to 5 on the ABC TV series Lost, a job he earned on the basis of his work on Y: The Last Man, of which Lost co-creator and executive producer Damon Lindelof was an ardent fan. Lindelof showed that book to series showrunner and executive producer Carlton Cuse. Lindelof relates, "And I told him, 'We need a guy like this on the show, but I don't think he'd ever do it. I don't think he even works in L.A.' And the next thing we knew, he was on the show." He began his stint on the series as executive story editor with the episode "The Man from Tallahassee", which premiered in March 2007. Vaughan continued as story editor on several episodes until he began writing episodes, beginning with the episode "Catch-22", which Vaughan co-wrote with Jeff Pinker, and premiered in April that year. That episode was praised by Wired writer Erik Malinowski, who stated that the themes that Vaughan's carried over to Lost from his comics work, including intricately weaved storylines typified by pathos and hope, as well as pop culture references, redeemed that series' third season.
Vaughan would write a total of 7 episodes, the last of which was the April 2009 episode "Dead Is Dead". He was first credited as a producer with the fourth-season premiere "The Beginning of the End", eventually acting as producer on a total of 29 episodes. He was also a co-producer on
', a spinoff Internet short film series produced during the hiatus between the show's third and fourth seasons.
In November 2011 Steven Spielberg selected Vaughan to adapt the Stephen King novel Under the Dome into a television series for Showtime, which is Vaughan's first television work since Lost. Vaughan was the showrunner and executive producer of the series. He exited the show before the second season premiered in 2014.
On March 14, 2012, Image Comics published the first issue of Vaughan and Fiona Staples' epic space opera/fantasy series, Saga, which he conceived to be a concept strictly relegated to comics, and not adapted to other media. Although Vaughan was a child when he first conceived of the ideas for the book - which owes its inspiration to Star Wars - it was not until his wife became pregnant with his second child that he began to write the series, which harbors parenthood as an underlying theme. The series depicts two aliens from warring races trying to survive with their newborn daughter. The book is Vaughan's first publication for Image Comics, and represents the first time he has employed first-person narration in his comics writing. The first issue sold out of its first printing ahead of its March 14 release date, with a second printing ordered for April 11, the same release date for issue #2. The series has received positive reviews from MTV, Ain't it Cool News, Comic Book Resources, IGN, Publishers Weekly and Time magazine. It has also appeared on the New York Times Graphic Books Best Seller List, won three 2013 Eisner Awards, won a Hugo Award and was nominated for seven Harvey Awards.
In March 2013, Vaughan published the first issue of The Private Eye with artist Marcos Martín on Panel Syndicate, a pay-what-you-want host for their creative efforts. Panel Syndicate offers DRM-Free comics available for purchase/download for whatever price readers wish to pay. Through Panel Syndicate, Vaughan and Martin published 10 issues of The Private Eye and released the first issue of Barrier in late 2015.
At the Image Expo in January 2015, it was announced that Vaughan would release two new books through Image Comics in 2015: Paper Girls with Cliff Chiang and Matthew Wilson, and We Stand On Guard with Steve Skroce.

Personal life

Vaughan and his wife, a native of Ottawa, Ontario, Canada and playwright, live in Los Angeles and have two children. They also have a pet Dachshund named Hamburger that has been repeatedly referenced as Vaughan's aide in selecting letters for the Saga letter column, including appearing in an illustration of Vaughan and Staples that was included in a 2013 Time magazine story on Saga.

Awards and nominations

YearAwardCategoryWorkResultRef.
2005Eisner AwardsBest New SeriesEx Machina Won
2005Eisner AwardsBest Writer, Runaways, Ex MachinaWon
2005Eisner AwardsBest Single Issue or One-ShotEx Machina #1: "The Pilot" Nominated
2005Eisner AwardsBest Serialized StoryEx Machina #2-5: "State of Emergency" Nominated
2005Eisner AwardsBest Serialized Story' #18-20: "Safeword" Nominated
2005Eisner AwardsBest Continuing Series' Nominated
2006Eisner AwardsBest Single Issue or One-ShotEx Machina #11: "Fortune Favors" Nominated
2006Eisner AwardsBest Serialized StoryEx Machina #12–14: "Fact v. Fiction" Nominated
2006Eisner AwardsBest Serialized Story' #37–39: "Paper Dolls" Nominated
2006Eisner AwardsBest Continuing SeriesEx Machina Nominated
2006Eisner AwardsBest WriterEx Machina, ' and RunawaysNominated
2006Harvey AwardsBest Continuing Series or Limited SeriesRunawaysWon
2006Joe Shuster AwardsOutstanding International CreatorWon
2007Harvey AwardsBest Single Issue or StoryPride of Baghdad Won
2007Harvey AwardsBest Writer'Nominated
2007Harvey AwardsBest Graphic Album of Original WorkPride of Baghdad Nominated
2007Joe Shuster AwardsOutstanding International Creator AwardWon
2007Wired Rave AwardsPrint: The StorytellerWon
2008Eisner AwardsBest Continuing Series' Won
2008Eisner AwardsBest New SeriesBuffy the Vampire Slayer Season Eight Won
2008Eisner AwardsBest WriterBuffy the Vampire Slayer Season Eight, Ex Machina, and 'Nominated
2008Harvey AwardsBest Writer'Won
2009Hugo AwardsBest Graphic Story, Volume 10: Whys and WhereforesNominated
2009Harvey AwardsBest Single Issue or Story #60 Won
2013Hugo AwardBest Graphic StorySaga Won
2013Eisner AwardsBest WriterSaga Won
2013Eisner AwardsBest New SeriesSaga Won
2013Eisner AwardsBest Continuing SeriesSaga Won
2013Harvey AwardsBest WriterSaga Won
2013Harvey AwardsBest New SeriesSaga Won
2013Harvey AwardsBest Continuing Series or Limited SeriesSaga Won
2013British Fantasy AwardBest Comic/Graphic NovelSaga Won
2014Hugo AwardsBest Graphic StorySaga Nominated
2014Eisner AwardsBest WriterSaga Won
2014Eisner AwardsBest Continuing SeriesSaga Won
2014Harvey AwardsBest WriterSaga Won
2014Harvey AwardsBest Continuing or Limited SeriesSaga Won
2015Hugo AwardsBest Graphic StorySaga, Volume Two Nominated
2015Eisner AwardsBest WriterSaga Nominated
2015Eisner AwardsBest Continuing SeriesSaga Won
2015Eisner AwardsBest Limited SeriesThe Private Eye Nominated
2015Eisner AwardsBest Digital Comic/WebcomicThe Private Eye Won
2015Harvey AwardsBest WriterSaga Nominated
2015Harvey AwardsBest Continuing or Limited SeriesSaga Won
2015Harvey AwardsBest Online Comics WorkThe Private Eye Won
2016Eisner AwardsBest New SeriesPaper Girls Won
2016Harvey AwardsBest New SeriesPaper Girls Won
2016Harvey AwardsBest WriterSaga Won
2016Harvey AwardsBest Continuing or Limited SeriesSaga Won
2017Hugo AwardsBest Graphic StorySaga, Volume Six Nominated
2017Hugo AwardsBest Graphic StoryPaper Girls, Volume 1 Nominated
2017Eisner AwardsBest WriterPaper Girls, Saga, We Stand On GuardWon
2017Eisner AwardsBest Continuing SeriesSaga Won
2018Hugo AwardsBest Graphic StorySaga, Volume 7 Nominated
2018Hugo AwardsBest Graphic StoryPaper Girls, Volume 3 Nominated
2018Eisner AwardsBest Digital ComicBarrier Nominated

Marvel Comics

Television