Neal
Adams, a leading comic book artist who brought a visceral realism to
his depictions of superheroes, notably helping to revitalize Batman by
giving him a darker image and new adversaries, while also championing
the rights of comic book creators, died on Thursday in Manhattan. He was
80.
His daughter Kristine Stone Adams attributed his death, in a hospital, to complications of sepsis.
Characters
drawn by Mr. Adams were more grounded in reality than his
predecessors’. The anguish of Deadman, the ghost of a trapeze artist
trying to solve his own murder, was evident in his facial expressions.
Mr. Adams’s Superman could burst the chains binding him simply by
expanding his chest. And Batman, as drawn by Mr. Adams, was lithe and
menacing, a return to the hero’s shadowy roots after a boom and bust in
his popularity following the campy 1960s “Batman” television show.
“He
was a master at every facet of art — his range of expressions, the
dramatic use of lighting and shadowing, the seemingly facile command of
anatomy and, of course, the trademark finger-pointed-in-your-face
foreshortening was all just unbelievably next level,” Jim Lee, the chief
creative officer and publisher of DC Comics, wrote in an Instagram post remembering Mr. Adams.
Some of Mr. Adams’s most well-regarded work resulted from his partnership with the writer Denny O’Neil.
In 1969, the two began to restore Batman to a brooding vigilante, as he
was originally conceived, and in 1971 they created a new foe for him,
the eco-terrorist Ra’s Al Ghul, whose goal of saving the planet usually
involved eliminating much of its population. Ra’s Al Ghul became the
central protagonist in the 2005 film “Batman Begins.” Mr. Adams would draw Batman stories through 1973.
The
two also collaborated from 1970 to 1972 on the Green Lantern/Green
Arrow series, in which the title heroes, who were friends out of
costume, traveled across the country in stories about drug abuse,
racism, corporate greed and poverty.
During this period Mr. Adams and Mr. O’Neil introduced John Stewart, the first Black Green Lantern.
Mr.
Adams made his way back to Batman in 2011 when he wrote and drew
“Batman: Odyssey,” a lavish seven-part series that was met with mixed reviews (some critics found it hard to follow), though his daughter Ms. Adams said it was the project he was most proud of.
His
pairing of Superman and Muhammad Ali in 1978 in a tabloid-size comic
book, which he wrote and drew from a plot by Mr. O’Neil, initially drew a
similarly tepid response. The boxing match at the center of the story
takes place over six pages and ends with the Man of Steel, who had
temporarily deactivated his powers, on a stretcher. But the two fighters
shake hands at the end, Ali declares, “Superman, WE are the greatest.”
“He
was always 10 to 20 years ahead of everybody,” Ms. Adams said in a
phone interview. “When ‘Superman vs. Muhammad Ali’ came out, everyone
hated it. Twenty years later, everyone was, like, ‘“Superman vs.
Muhammad Ali” was the best thing he ever did.’” The story was reprinted
in a hardcover edition in 2010.
One
of Mr. Adams’s achievements was to help make it standard practice for
publishers to return original artwork to the artists, which created new
revenue opportunities for them; they could then sell the pages to fans
and collectors.
Mr. Adams also joined the decades-long cause of Jerry Siegel and Joe Shuster, the writer and artist who created Superman, in their quest for recognition and remuneration.
Mr.
Siegel and Mr. Shuster sold their rights to Superman for $130 in 1938
and later fell into poverty. When they tried to claim a share of the
enormous revenue Superman generated, DC stripped them of credit and
denied them further work. Mr. Adams was a vocal supporter, joining a
successful publicity campaign in the 1970s that brought them recognition
for their work, as well as health benefits and, for each, a substantial
annuity.
“Neal was the loud voice of justice,” Mr. Levitz, the former DC president, said.
Neal Adams was born on June 15, 1941, on Governors Island
in New York City. His mother, Lillian, ran a boardinghouse. His father,
Frank, who was largely absent, was a writer for the military.
Mr.
Adams graduated from the School of Industrial Art in Manhattan in 1959.
He did some work for Archie Comic Publications but found more continual
employment in the advertising industry. In 1962, he landed an
assignment drawing “Ben Casey,” a newspaper strip based on the
television medical drama of the same name.
He
began working for DC Comics as a freelancer in 1967, when he drew a
short story for the long-running comic books series Our Army at War. He
ended the ’60s and started the next decade with some memorable freelance
work drawing the X-Men and the Avengers for Marvel.
In 1971, he and Dick Giordano
founded Continuity Studios, a graphics arts concern that worked in
advertising and film. It also had a publishing arm, Continuity Comics,
an early attempt to allow creators to reap more profits from their
characters. One of the company’s successes was Bucky O’Hare, a comic
book about a green rabbit who has adventures in space; the character
inspired toys, cartoons and video games.
Mr. Adams enjoyed nurturing talent.
“He
was the teacher who encouraged more than a handful of people who became
the leading lights of the next generation of the field, including Frank
Miller, Bill Sienkiewicz and Denys Cowan,” Mr. Levitz said. But it was a
tough-love encouragement.
“Kids would
bring them his portfolio, and he would rip it to shreds,” Mr. Levitz
said. However, after two or three times, if they improved, Mr. Adams
would call DC or Marvel on their behalf.
One of his protégés was Denys Cowan, who had a high school internship at Mr. Adams’s studio in 1977.
“I
was a 16-year-old Black kid from Queens,” Mr. Cowan said in an
interview. “He was letting me come to the studio every day and paying
me.” Mr. Cowan became a founder of Milestone Comics, a groundbreaking
imprint that flourished in the 1990s with stories centered on Black,
Asian, Hispanic and gay superheroes.
In
addition to his daughter Kristine, Mr. Adams is survived by his wife,
Marilyn Adams; another daughter, Zeea Adams; his sons, Joel, Jason and
Josh; five grandchildren; and one great-grandson. He lived in Manhattan.
Mr. Adams’s fight for what was right continued for decades. In 2008 he teamed with the comic book veterans Stan Lee and Joe Kubert, and with Rafael Medoff, director of the David S. Wyman Institute for Holocaust Studies in Washington, to bring attention to the plight of the artist Dina Gottliebova Babbitt. They told her story in comic book form:
Mrs.
Babbitt survived imprisonment at the Auschwitz concentration camp
during World War II by painting watercolor portraits for Josef Mengele,
the infamous Nazi physician known as the Angel of Death. She later
wanted her artwork back, but the Auschwitz-Birkenau Memorial and Museum
in Poland has continued to refuse to return them, citing the historical
and educational value of the work. (Ms. Babbitt died in 2009.)
Mr.
Adams and Mr. Medoff also produced animated shorts, released in 2013,
about Americans who spoke out against the Holocaust. In 2018, with Craig
Yoe, Mr. Adams published the book “We Spoke Out: Comic Books and the
Holocaust,” a look at how comics depicted the Nazi genocide.
“He
told me many times that he felt that the Dina Babbitt campaign and our
book, ‘We Spoke Out’, were the most meaningful projects of his career,”
Mr. Medoff said, “which was saying a lot.”
NEW YORK TIMES
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