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Dennis O'Neil - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Dennis O'Neil

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Dennis O'Neil

Born May 3, 1939
St. Louis, Missouri
Nationality American
Area(s) Writer, Editor
Pseudonym(s) Denny O'Neil
Notable works Batman, Green Lantern/Green Arrow
Awards Shazam Award
  • Best Individual Story (1970, with Neal Adams)
  • Best Writer (Dramatic Division) (1970)
  • Best Individual Story (1971, with Neal Adams)

Dennis O'Neil (often credited as Denny O'Neil) is a comic book writer and editor, principally for Marvel Comics and DC Comics in the 1970s, 1980s, and 1990s, and Group Editor for the Batman family of books until his retirement.

Contents

[edit] Biography

[edit] Early Years

Dennis O'Neil was born into a Catholic household on May 3, 1939 in St. Louis, Missouri. He still recalls from his youth the Sunday afternoon ritual where he would accompany his father or his grandfather to the store for some light groceries and an occasional comic book.[1]

O'Neil graduated from St. Louis University around the turn of the sixties and from there joined the navy just in time to participate in the blockade of Cuba during the Cuban Missile Crisis. His degree centered on English literature, creative writing, and philosophy.[2]

After leaving the navy, O'Neil moved on to a job with a newspaper in Cape Girardeau, Missouri. O'Neil wrote occasional columns on the subject for the newspaper, which attracted the attention of Roy Thomas, who would eventually himself become one of the great names of the Silver Age.[3]

[edit] Marvel Comics

Roy Thomas soon took work with DC in its Superman stable, but left before long to work for Stan Lee at Marvel. He suggested that O'Neil take the Marvel Writer's Test, which involved adding dialogue to a wordless four-page excerpt of a Fantastic Four comic; and his entry impressed Lee enough to offer O'Neil a job.[4]

When Marvel's expansion made it impossible for Stan Lee to write the entire line of books, Lee passed as much on to Roy Thomas as he could, but still needed writers, so O'Neil took the reins for a short-term run of Dr. Strange stories, penning six issues, as well as scripting an issue of Daredevil over a plot by Lee when Lee went on holiday.O´Neil also edited Daredevil during Frank Miller´s run, on the late 70´s. That was one of the most memorables takes on the character.[5]

According to Bob Budiansky, Dennis O'Neil is the person who named Optimus Prime, leader of the Autobots and the most important character in The Transformers multiverse.[6]

[edit] Charlton Comics

The available jobs writing for Marvel petered out fairly quickly, and O'Neil took a job with Charlton Comics under the pseudonym of Sergius O’Shaugnessy. There he received regular work for a year and a half from Charlton's editor Dick Giordano.[7]

[edit] DC Comics

In 1968 Dick Giordano was offered an editorial position at DC and took a number of Charlton freelancers with him, including O'Neil. Charlton talent arrived at DC from a different culture of comics. At DC, the office seemed like a snapshot from 1950, with a crowd of short-haired men in white shirts and ties. The jeans-wearing, hippy trended Charlton crowd visibly represented a different generation.

Speedy's habit revealed, artist Neal Adams
Speedy's habit revealed, artist Neal Adams

O'Neil's first assignments involved two strategies for bolstering DC's sales. One approach centered on the creation of new characters, and O'Neil scripted several issues of Beware the Creeper, a series starring a new hero, The Creeper, created by artist Steve Ditko. From there, DC moved O'Neil to Wonder Woman and Justice League of America. With artist Mike Sekowsky, he took away Wonder Woman's powers, exiled her from the Amazon community, and set her off, uncostumed, into international intrigues with her blind mentor, the dubiously-named I Ching. These changes did not sit well with Wonder Woman's older fans, such as Gloria Steinem, and O'Neil later considered that removing DC's single super-powered female might have alienated readers. In Justice League, he had more success, introducing into that title the first socially and politically themed stories, setting the stage for later work on Green Lantern/Green Arrow.[8]

Following the lead set by Bob Haney and Neal Adams in a Brave and the Bold story that visually redefined Green Arrow into the version that appeared in comics between 1969 and 1986, O'Neil stripped him of his wealth and Playboy status making him an urban hero. This redefinition would culminate in the character that appeared in Green Lantern/Green Arrow, a socially conscious, left-wing creation that effectively took over Green Lantern's book to use him as a foil and straw man in sounding out the political concepts that would define that work.[9]

[edit] Other Work

He's written several novels, comics, short stories, reviews and teleplays, including the novelization of the movie Batman Begins.[10] He scripted a series of novels about a kung fu character named Richard Dragon, and later adapted those novels to comic book form.

Dennis spent several years in the late nineties teaching Writing for the Comics at Manhattan's School of Visual Arts, sometimes sharing duties with fellow comic book writer John Ostrander.

He currently writes a weekly column for ComicMix.[11]

[edit] Highlights

DC Comics Guide to Writing for Comics, artist Neal Adams
DC Comics Guide to Writing for Comics, artist Neal Adams

His best-known works include Green Lantern/Green Arrow and Batman with Neal Adams, The Shadow with Mike Kaluta and The Question with Denys Cowan, all of which were hailed for sophisticated (for the period, in the case of his 1970s work) stories that expanded the artistic potential of the mainstream portion of the medium. As an editor, he is principally known for editing the various Batman titles. Today, he sits on the board of directors of the charity The Hero Initiative.

His 1970s run on Batman is perhaps his best-known endeavour, getting back to the character's darker roots after a period dominated by the campiness of the 1960s TV show, and emphasizing his detective skills. This grimmer and more sophisticated Dark Knight, as well as new villains such as O'Neil creation Ra's Al Ghul, brought Batman back from the verge of pop culture oblivion. His work would influence later incarnations of Batman, from the seminal comic Batman: The Dark Knight Returns by Frank Miller, to the movie Batman Begins in 2005.

Speaking about his role in the death of character Jason Todd, O'Neil remarked:

It changed my mind about what I do for a living. Superman and Batman have been in continuous publication for over half a century, and it's never been true of any fictional construct before. These characters have a lot more weight than the hero of a popular sitcom that lasts maybe four years. They have become postindustrial folklore, and part of this job is to be the custodian of folk figures. Everybody on Earth knows Batman and Robin.[12]

[edit] Awards

His work has won him a great deal of recognition in the comics industry, including the Shazam Awards for Best Continuing Feature Green Lantern/Green Arrow, Best Individual Story for "No Evil Shall Escape My Sight" in Green Lantern #76 (with Neal Adams), for Best Writer (Dramatic Division) in 1970 for Green Lantern, Batman, Superman, and other titles, and Best Individual Story for "Snowbirds Don't Fly" in Green Lantern #85 (with Neal Adams) in 1971.

[edit] As a character

In The Batman Adventures -- the first DC Comics spinoff of Batman: The Animated Series -- O'Neil appears as The Perfesser, one of a screwball trio of incompetent super-villains that also includes The Mastermind (a caricature of Mike Carlin) and Mr. Nice (a caricature of Archie Goodwin). The Perfesser is depicted as a tall, pipe-smoking genius who often gets lost in his own thoughts, and who regularly forgets to give his criminal friends crucial information in planning their heists. (For example, after carefully planning a hotel robbery, the trio arrives at the hotel's location to find a vacant lot. The Perfesser then remembers that the hotel was torn down several years ago.)

[edit] Bibliography

[edit] Charlton Comics

[edit] DC Comics

[edit] Marvel Comics

[edit] Graphic Novels

  • Justice, Inc - 1975
  • The Shadow "1941" - with Michael W.Kaluta, Russ Heath 1988
  • Shadow the Private Files - with Mark Waid 1989
  • Batman: Bride of the Demon - 1990
  • Batman: Birth of the Demon - 1992
  • Green Lantern/Green Arrow: Hard-Traveling Heroes - 1992
  • Green Lantern/Green Arrow: More Hard-Traveling Heroes - 1993
  • Batman: Sword of Azrael - 1993
  • Batman: Bloodstorm - 1995
  • Batman: Death of Innocents : the Horror of Landmines - 1996
  • Batman: I Joker - 1998
  • Batman: Shaman - 1998
  • Batman in the Seventies - 2000
  • The Deadman Collection - 2001
  • Batman: The Ring, the Arrow, and the Bat - 2003
  • Green Lantern/Green Arrow Collection - Volume 1 - 2004
  • Green Lantern/Green Arrow Collection - Volume 2 - 2005
  • Green Lantern : Hero's Quest - 2005

[edit] Novellas

  • The Iconoclasts - Fantastic Stories, ed. Ted White, Ultimate Publishing, 1971
  • "Report on a Broken Bridge" - Ellery Queen's Mystery Magazine, December 1971
  • After They've Seen Paree - Generation, ed. David Gerrold, Dell, 1972
  • "The Elseones" – Fantasy & Science Fiction, February 1972
  • "Mister Cherubim" – Fantastic Stories June, 1972
  • "Noonday Devil" - Saving Worlds, eds. Roger Elwood & Virginia Kidd, Doubleday, 1973
  • "Devil Night" – Haunt of Horror August, 1973
  • "Annie Mae: A Love Story" - The Far Side of Time, ed. Roger Elwood, Dodd Mead, 1974
  • "There Are No Yesterdays!" - Unknown Worlds of Science Fiction March 1975
  • "Sister Mary Talks to the Girls Sodality" – Harpoon Magazine, January, 1975
  • "The Killing of Mother Corn" – Fantasy & Science Fiction, February 1975
  • "Father Flotsky" – Apple Pie Magazine May, 1975
  • "Alias the Last Resort" – Best Detective Stories of the Year, Ed. Hubin, 1975
  • "Adam and No Eve" (with Alfred Bester) - Unknown Worlds of Science Fiction March 1975
  • "Wave By" – Fantasy & Science Fiction, September, 1980
  • "Bicycle Superhero"- Superheroes, ed. John Varley Ace Fantasy, 1995

[edit] Novels

  • The Bite of Monsters – Belmont, 1971
  • Dragon’s FistsRichard Dragon, Kung Fu Master with Jim Berry, 1974
  • Secret Origins of the Super DC Heroes - Crown Publishing Group, April 1976
  • The Super Comics - Scholastic Book Services 1981
  • Batman Knightfall1994
  • The DC Comics Guide to Writing Comics - 2001
  • Green Lantern Hero’s Quest2005
  • Batman Begins novelization – 2005
  • DC Universe: Helltown - 2006
  • The Dark Knight - 2008

[edit] Essays, Reviews & Interviews

[edit] Audio Interviews

[edit] References

[edit] External links


Preceded by
Gardner Fox
Justice League writer
1968–1970
Succeeded by
Robert Kanigher
Preceded by
Len Wein
Justice League writer
1975
Succeeded by
Cary Bates
Preceded by
Marv Wolfman
Amazing Spider-Man writer
1980–1981
Succeeded by
Roger Stern
Preceded by
David Michelinie
Iron Man writer
1982–1986
Succeeded by
Danny Fingeroth
Preceded by
Frank Miller
Daredevil writer
1983–1984
Succeeded by
Arthur Byron Cover & Harlan Ellison
Preceded by
Arthur Byron Cover & Harlan Ellison
Daredevil writer
1984–1985
Succeeded by
Frank Miller
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