Bill Everett


Real Name and aliases:

Website:

Country:

U.S.A

Character:

Daredevil(creator)

Award:

  • The Will Eisner Award Hall of Fame, 2000

Added by: Shiwømihz. Last edit by: krympling.

Biography

William Blake Everett (May 18, 1917 – February 27, 1973) was an American comic book writer-artist best known for creating Namor the Sub-Mariner as well as co-creating Zombie and Daredevil with writer Stan Lee for Marvel Comics. He was allegedly a descendant of the childless poet William Blake and of Richard Everett, founder of Dedham, Massachusetts. Everett soon became a professional artist on the advertising staff of the Boston newspaper The Herald-Traveler for $12 a week. Soon afterward, he left to become a draftsman for the civil engineering firm The Brooks System, in Newton, Massachusetts. From there he pursued work in Phoenix, Arizona, and Los Angeles, California, without success. He then returned east to New York City, where he again did newspaper advertising art, for the New York Herald-Tribune. He next became art editor for Teck Publications' Radio News magazine, then assistant art director under Herm Bollin in Chicago, Illinois. Fired for being, as Everett described, "too cocky", he returned to New York where he sought employment as an art director. With no luck at this and desperate for work, he ran into an old Teck colleague, Walter Holze, who was now working in the new field of comic books. As Everett recalled in the late 1960s, "He asked me if I could do comics. I said, 'Sure!!' At that point I was starving. I wasn't interested in the comics business; I was talked into it" Freelancing for Centaur Publications, Everett "sold my first page for $2 – writing, penciling, inking and all. 'Skyrocket Steele' was my first strip." Soon he was getting $10 and then $14 a page, a respectable sum during this late-1930s period near the beginning of what historians and fans call the Golden Age of comic books. Everett co-created the superhero Amazing-Man at Centaur, working with company art director Lloyd Jacquet, and drew the first five issues. Everett and other creators followed Jacquet to his new company Funnies, Inc., one of the first comic-book "packagers" that would create comics on demand for publishers. Everett recalled I left Centaur with Lloyd Jacquet and another chap whose name was Max; I cannot remember his last name. Lloyd... had an idea that he wanted to start his own art service – to start a small organization to supply artwork and editorial material to publishers. ... He asked me to join him. He also asked Carl Burgos. So we were the nucleus.... I don't know how to explain it, but I was still on a freelance basis. That was the agreement we had. The artists, including myself, at Funnies, worked on a freelance basis." At Funnies, Inc., Everett created the Sub-Mariner for an aborted project, Motion Picture Funnies Weekly #1, a planned promotional comic to be given away in movie theaters. When plans changed, Everett used his character instead for Funnies, Inc.'s first client, pulp magazine publisher Martin Goodman. The original eight-page story was expanded by four pages for Marvel Comics #1 (Oct. 1939), the first publication of what Goodman would eventually call Timely Comics, the 1940s precursor of Marvel Comics. Everett's anti-hero proved a sudden success, quickly becoming one of Timely's top three characters, along with Carl Burgos' android superhero the Human Torch and Jack Kirby and Joe Simon's Captain America. Everett soon introduced such supporting characters as New York City policewoman Betty Dean, a steady companion and occasional love-interest, and Namor's cousin Namora. Everett drew his star character in Sub-Mariner Comics, published first quarterly, then thrice-yearly and finally bimonthly, for issues #1–32 (Fall 1941 – June 1949). Everett entered the U.S. Army for World War II military service in February 1942. He attended Officer Candidate School at Fort Belvoir, during which time he met Gwenn Randall, who was working for the Ordnance Department at the Pentagon. The couple married in 1944, when Everett returned from the European theater of operations, and their first child, a daughter, was born shortly before he was shipped out to the Philippines to fight in the Pacific theater; he returned home in February 1946. With money inherited from a great-uncle, Everett took some time off and traveled before settling in Fairbury, Nebraska, his wife's hometown. "This was when I renewed my association with Martin Goodman, working by mail on a freelance basis, picking up the Sub-Mariner where I'd left off four years ago". His first recorded post-war credit is writing and full art for the 12-page story "Sub-Mariner vs. Green-Out" in Sub-Mariner Comics #21 (Fall 1946) – the third of three Sub-Mariner stories that issue, for which Syd Shores drew the cover. Everett was soon providing Sub-Mariner stories regularly for the solo title as well as for The Human Torch, Marvel Mystery Comics and even Blonde Phantom Comics. Additionally, he drew the title feature in the three-issue spin-off series Namora (Aug.–Dec. 1948). Early pseudonyms included Willie Bee and Bill Roman. By now, Timely Comics had evolved into Marvel's 1950s iteration, Atlas Comics. Like most superhero characters in the postwar era, the Sub-Mariner had faded in popularity, and his solo title had been canceled in 1949. But after a nearly five-year hiatus, he briefly returned with Captain America and the Golden Age Human Torch in Young Men #24 (Dec. 1953), during Atlas' mid-1950s attempt at reviving superheroes. Everett drew the Sub-Mariner feature through Young Men #28 (June 1954) and in Sub-Mariner Comics #33–42 (April 1954 – Oct. 1955), which outlasted the other two characters' features. During this time, Namora had her own spin-off series. Everett also drew the features "Venus" and "Marvel Boy", as well as a large number of stories for Atlas' anthological horror-fantasy series. One such tale, "Zombie!," written by editor-in-chief Stan Lee and published in Menace #5, introduced the character Simon Garth, the Zombie, who in the 1970s would be plucked from this one-shot story to star in Marvel's black-and-white horror-comics magazine Tales of the Zombie. With writer-editor Lee, Everett co-created the Marvel superhero Daredevil, who debuted in Daredevil #1 (April 1964). Comics historian and former Jack Kirby assistant Mark Evanier, investigating claims of Kirby's involvement in the creation of both Iron Man and Daredevil, interviewed Kirby and Everett and found that, ...in both cases, Jack had already drawn the covers of those issues and done some amount of design work. He ... seems to have participated in the design of Daredevil's first costume. ... Everett did tell me that Jack had come up with the idea of Daredevil's billy club. . . . Jack, in effect, drew the first page of that first Daredevil story. In the rush to get that seriously late book to press, there wasn't time to complete Page One, so Stan had [production manager] Sol Brodsky slap together a paste-up that employed Kirby's cover drawing. . . . Everett volunteered to me that Jack had 'helped him' though he wouldn't – or more likely, couldn't – elaborate on that. He just plain didn't remember it well, and in later years apparently gave others who asked a wide range of answers. Conversely, 2000s Marvel editor-in-chief Joe Quesada said the cover had been created afterward. When Everett, he said, turned in his first-issue pencils extremely late, Brodsky and Spider-Man artist Steve Ditko inked "a lot of backgrounds and secondary figures on the fly [and] cobbled the cover and the splash page together from Kirby's original concept drawing." In an interview conducted by Marvel writer-editor and Everett's one-time roommate Roy Thomas, in what the latter recalled as either "late 1969 or in 1970," Everett said of Daredevil's creation five years earlier: I must have called Stan, had some contact with him, I don't know why. I know we tried to do it on the phone. I know he had this idea for Daredevil; he thought he had an idea. . . . With a long-distance phone call, it just wasn't coming out right, so I said, 'All right, I'll come down this weekend or something. I'll take a day off [from his job as art director of Eton Paper Corporation in Massachusetts] and come down to New York'. . . . I did the one issue, but I found that I couldn't do it and handle my job, because it was a managerial job; I didn't get paid overtime but I was on an annual salary, so my time was not my own. I was putting in 14 or 15 hours a day at the plant and then to come home and try to do comics at night was just too much. And I didn't make deadlines – I just couldn't make them – so I just did the one issue and didn't do any more. Everett, from photo gallery in Fantastic Four Annual #7 (Nov. 1969) Within two years, however, Everett began penciling for Marvel once again, first on the character the Hulk, in Tales to Astonish, initially over Kirby layouts, and on Doctor Strange in Strange Tales. Readers during this 1960s Silver Age of comic books also became acquainted with his Golden Age and 1950s stories, which were reprinted first in the book The Great Comic Book Heroes by Jules Feiffer (Dial Press, 1965), and then in the comic books Fantasy Masterpieces, Marvel Super-Heroes, and Marvel Tales. Everett even returned to his enduring character, first inking Namor's adventures in Tales to Astonish #85–86, then taking over full artistic duties for issues #87–91 and #94, and penciling issues #95–96. He then did complete stories – writing, penciling and inking – on Sub-Mariner #50–55 and 57 (June 1972 – Nov. 1972; Jan. 1973), with script assists by Mike Friedrich on two issues; and #58 (Feb. 1973), co-written with Steve Gerber and co-penciled with Sam Kweskin as his health began to deteriorate for the final time. He co-wrote and inked Sub-Mariner #59 (March 1973), plotted #60 (April 1973), and co-wrote, co-penciled (with fellow Golden Ager Win Mortimer), and co-inked #61 (May 1973). He had also been announced to draw an issue of Marvel Team-Up starring Spider-Man and the Sub-Mariner, but, according to one contemporaneous report, "was not able to finish this one before his death." Editor Roy Thomas explained on the letters page of Sub-Mariner #61, As you've no doubt noticed from the first three pages of this issue, Everett was back…and better than ever! And then, with only those three pages completed, [he] took ill. And, sad to say, it's the kind of illness that's going to keep him off Sub-Mariner (or any mag) for a month or two to come." Despite Thomas's optimistic tone, that would be Everett's last work on the series. His final efforts on the character he created were five pages of pencils, inked by fellow Golden Ager Fred Kida, that appeared posthumously in Super-Villain Team-Up #1 (Aug. 1975). Artist Gene Colan said that Everett had been Lee's first choice to draw the horror series Tomb of Dracula, which premiered in 1972 and for which Colan then lobbied successfully.

Artistic production

Comic Title Role Publisher Year Language
Marvel masterworks presents Atlas era heroes. Volume 1. Collecting Marvel Boy nos. 1-2,, Astonishing,, nos. 3-6 & Young men nos. 24-28 Author Marvel Pub 2007 English
Golden age Marvel comics. Volume 2 Author Marvel 2014 English
The Sub-Mariner. Vol. 8 Author Marvel Worldwide 2018 English
The man without fear 4 Author Marvel Worldwide 2016 English
Daredevil. Volume 1 Author Diamond 2010 English
Strange tales. Volume 5 Author Marvel 2014 English
Golden age sub-mariner. Volume 1 Author Marvel 2012 English
Golden age all-winners. Volume 2 Author Marvel 2014 English
The Sub-Mariner. Volume 7 Author Marvel Worldwide 2016 English
WWII super heroes Author Marvel 2013 English
The Incredible Hulk. This monster unleashed Author Hachette 2014 English
Heroic tales Author Fantagraphics 2012 English
Essential golden age Sub-Mariner Author Diamond 2007 English
Marvel masterworks presents Golden Age Daring mystery comics. Volume 2. Collecting Daring mystery comics nos. 5-8 Author Marvel Pub 2010 English
Marvel masterworks presents Golden age Human Torch. Vol. 2. Collecting Human Torch comics nos. 5B-8 Author Marvel Publishing 2007 English
Daredevil. Volume 1 2 Author Marvel 2015 English
Marvel zombies 4 Author Marvel Publishing 2009 English
Human Torch. Volume 1 Author Marvel 2013 English
I Classici del Fumetto di Repubblica #8 - Devil Illustrator Inker Gruppo Editoriale L'Espresso 2003 Italian
This Monster Unleashed #105 Writer Olympia Publications, Inc. 1968 English
"Part IX Godhood's End!" #97 Cover Artist Marvel Comics 1972 English
"The World Is Not for Burning!" #85 Cover Artist Marvel Comics 1971 English
The Widow Accused! #83 Inker Marvel 1972 English
"And Death Is a Woman Called Widow" #81 Illustrator Inker Marvel Comics 1971 English
Spider-Man : L' Intégrale 1969 Inker Panini Comics 2004 French
Spider-Man : L' Intégrale 1970 Inker Panini Comics 2005 French
This Man is Doom! #20 Writer Illustrator Marvel 1969 English
"Let the Silence Shatter!" #15 Writer Illustrator Inker Letterer Marvel 1968 English
The Reprehensible Riddle Of ...The Sorcerer! #14 Inker Marvel 1968 English
Armageddon--At Fifty Fathoms Full! #51 Illustrator Inker Marvel Comics 1972 English
...Can He Long Withstand The Attack of the Atomic Samurai! #52 Writer Illustrator Inker Marvel Comics 1972 English
The Abominable Snow-King! #55 Writer Cover Artist Illustrator Inker Marvel Comics 1972 English
"In The Lap of the Gods! #57 Writer Cover Artist Illustrator Inker Marvel Comics 1973 English
Hands Across the Water, Hands Across the Skies... #58 Writer Cover Artist Illustrator Inker Marvel Comics 1973 English
Thunder Over the Seas! #59 Cover Artist Writer Marvel Comics 1973 English
The Invasion of New York #60 Writer Marvel Comics 1973 English
The Prince and the Pirate! #61 Cover Artist Writer Illustrator Inker Marvel Comics 1973 English
Namor Agonistes! #38 Author Marvel Comics 1971 English
"...And Fire Stalks The Skies!" #45 Writer Illustrator Inker Letterer Marvel Comics 1972 English
...And the Rising Sun Shall Fall! #53 Writer Illustrator Inker Letterer Marvel Comics 1972 English
Comes Now...The Decision! #54 Writer Inker Illustrator Letterer Marvel Comics 1972 English
...And The Seas Shall Explode! #63 Author Marvel Comics 1973 English
Doomsmasque! #47 Cover Artist Marvel Comics 1972 English
Twilight of the Hunted! #48 Cover Artist Marvel Comics 1972 English
Who Am I? #50 Writer Illustrator Inker Marvel Comics 1972 English
The Death Of Danny! #2 Cover Artist Magazine Management Co., Inc. 1973 English
Don't Bury Me Deep! #6 Illustrator Marvel Comics Group 1973 English
Nightmare #164 Inker Vista Publications Inc. 1968 English
Daredevil / Batman Author Marvel Deutschland 0 German
The Coming of the Invaders #1 Writer Illustrator Inker Letterer Marvel Comics 1975 English
"The New Defender!" #16 Inker Marvel 0 English
Journey Into Unknown Worlds #17 Illustrator Western Fiction 0 English
The Titan And The Torment #79 Inker Vista Publications Inc. 1966 English
The Stage Is Set #81 Inker Vista Publications Inc. 1966 English
Less Than Monster, More Than Man #83 Inker Vista Publications Inc. 1966 English
The Wrath Of Warlord Krang #86 Inker Vista Publications Inc. 1966 English
A Stranger Strikes From Space #88 Illustrator Vista Publications Inc. 1967 English
Somewhere Stands ... Skull Island! #96 Illustrator Marvel 1967 English
Helpless, At The Hands Of Dragorr #94 Illustrator Vista Publications Inc. 1967 English
To Be Beaten By Byrrah #90 Illustrator Inker Marvel Comics 1967 English
Sub-Mariner #50 Illustrator Marvel Comics 0 English
Sub-Mariner #57 Illustrator Marvel Comics 0 English
The Day Of The Defenders #1 Inker Magazine Management Co., Inc. 1971 English
"A Titan Walks Among Us" #3 Inker Marvel Comics 1972 English
Amazing Adventures #7 Inker Marvel Comics 0 English
Amazing Adventures #8 Inker Marvel Comics 0 English
"...And the Madness of Magneto!" Inker Marvel Comics 1971 English
"The Uncanny Inhumans - ...and the Madness of Magneto" #9 Inker Magazine Management Co., Inc. 1971 English
Slayers from the Sea! Chapter One An Alliance Asunder?" #1 Illustrator Marvel Comics 1975 English
"...And Be A Villain!" #5 Author Marvel Comics 1976 English
The World Below #136 Inker Marvel Comics 1971 English
The Thunder God And The Thermal Man! #170 Inker Marvel 1969 English
... And, Soon Shall Come: The Enchanters! #143 Inker Marvel 1967 English
The Wrath Of The Wrecker! #171 Inker Marvel 1969 English
The Carnage of the Crypto-Man #174 Inker Marvel Comics Group 1970 Unspecified
Thor #171 Inker Marvel Comics 0 English
Thor #172 Inker Marvel Comics 0 English
Thor #173 Inker Marvel Comics 0 English
Thor #174 Inker Marvel Comics 0 English
"When Fails the Quest!" #2 Cover Artist Marvel Comics 1972 English
The Battle of Berlin! #20 Writer Illustrator Inker Letterer Marvel Comics 1977 English
The Battle of Berlin! Part Two! #21 Writer Illustrator Inker Letterer Marvel Comics 1977 English
"The Human Torch and the Sub-Mariner Fighting Side by Side!" #24 Writer Illustrator Marvel Comics 1978 English
Astonishing #12 Illustrator Atlas Magazines, Inc. 0 English
Astonishing #13 Illustrator Atlas Magazines, Inc. 0 English
Marvel Tales #149 Cover Artist Atlas Magazines, Inc. 0 English
"The Coming of the Scorpion!" #15 Writer Illustrator Inker Marvel 1968 English
Spellbound #19 Illustrator Atlas Magazines, Inc. 0 English
Rawhide Kid: The Kid From Missouri #148 Inker Marvel Comics Group 1978 English
Suspense #28 Illustrator Atlas Magazines, Inc. 0 English
Double Cross #18 Author Marvel Comics 1991 English
The Mighty Thor: And, Soon Shall Come: The Enchanters #14 Inker Marvel Comics Group 1975 English
Grottu, King of the Insects #3 Cover Artist Inker Marvel Comics Group 1970 Unspecified
H...as in Hulk...Hell...and Holocaust! #2 Author Marvel Comics Group 1974 English
Lo, This Monster! #1 Illustrator Marvel 1968 English
The Altar Of The Damned! #1 Illustrator Marvel Comics Group 1973 English
Tales Of The Zombie Annual #1 Illustrator Marvel Comics Group 1975 English
Frankenstein 1973 #2 Illustrator Marvel Comics Group 1973 English
Kill Me A Monster #9 Illustrator Inker Atlas Comics 1954 English
One Head Too Many! #1 Cover Artist Cover Artist Illustrator Inker Atlas Comics 1953 English
Men In Black #3 Cover Artist Cover Artist Illustrator Inker Letterer Atlas Comics 1953 English
A Vampire Is Born #4 Cover Artist Cover Artist Illustrator Inker Letterer Atlas Comics 1953 English
Zombie! #5 Cover Artist Cover Artist Illustrator Inker Letterer Atlas Comics 1953 English
The Graymoor Ghost #6 Cover Artist Cover Artist Illustrator Inker Atlas Comics 1953 English
Captain America: Bucky Reborn (Epic Collection) Inker Marvel Epic Collection 0 English
"The Human Torch Battles the Sub-Mariner (Part I)" #1 Writer Illustrator Inker Marvel Comics 1999 English
The Bill Everett. Vol. 1 Author Fantagraphics 2012 English
The Bill Everett Archives: Heroic Tales Illustrator Fantagraphics 2012 English