1971 in comics

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Notable events of 1971 in comics.

January

February

First appearances of Highfather, Kalibak, Lightray, and Orion

Spring

March

  • March 2: The first episode of Bill Tidy's The Fosdyke Saga appears in print. The series will continue until 1985. [6]
  • March 4: The first episode of the Astérix story The Mansions of the Gods, by Goscinny and Uderzo, is prepublished in Pilote.
  • March 11: The final episode of Andries Brandt's Horre, Harm en Hella is published.[7]
  • March 14: In the story La resa dei conti (The showdown), by Claudio Nizzi and Carlo Boscarato, Larry Yuma gets his definitive name (in the two previous episodes, the character was called Dave).[8]
  • March 20: Andries Brandt and Jan Van Haasteren's Aafje Anders makes its debut. After a few stories Robert Hamilton and Richard Klokkers take over the artwork. The series will run until 17 April 1973.[7]
  • The Avengers #85 (Marvel Comics)
First appearance of the Squadron Supreme, as well as members Blue Eagle, Doctor Spectrum, Golden Archer, Hyperion, Lady Lark, Nighthawk, Tom Thumb, and Whizzer.

April

First appearance of Mister Miracle

May

First appearance of Talia al Ghul[13]
First appearance of DeSaad
First appearance of Granny Goodness
  • With the publication of Savage Tales #1, Marvel creates its black-and-white magazine line, which published material that doesn't carry the seal of the Comics Code Authority.
First appearance of Man-Thing

June

First appearance of Ra's al Ghul[16]

July

First appearance of Swamp Thing[20]
The woman appearing on the cover of this issue was modeled after future comics writer Louise Simonson.[21]
First appearance of Doc Samson

August

September

October

First appearance of Big Barda
First appearance of Morbius, the Living Vampire

November

  • Marvel Comics, following rival DC's lead, raises the price of its typical comic book from 15 cents to 25 cents, and the page-count from 36 to 52.
  • The Avengers #93: Neal Adams begins his celebrated stint as Avengers artist, continuing the "Kree-Skrull War" story arc begun in issue #89 of the title.
  • DC Special (1968 series), with issue #15 (November /December cover date), is cancelled by DC.

December

First appearance of The Defenders
First appearance of John Stewart

Specific date unknown

Octobriana

Births

August

  • August 12: Michel Koeniguer, French comics artist (The Bridge, Bomb Road, Misty Mission, Berlin sera notre tombeau), (d. 2021).[42]

Deaths

January

  • January 17: Oscar Knudsen, Danish illustrator and comics artist, dies at age 72. [43]
  • January 27: E. Simms Campbell, American comics artist (Harlem Girls, Cuties), dies at age 65.[44]

February

  • February 18: Walter Booth, British comics artist (Professor Potash), dies at age 81.[45]
  • February 24: Jan Bouman, Dutch comics artist and illustrator (Lijntrekker), dies at age 56.[46]
  • February 21: Ercüment Kalmik, Turkish painter and comics artist (Çetin Kaptan, a.k.a. Çetinin), dies at age 61 or 62. [47]

March

April

May

  • May 10: Ted Mathijsen, aka Roberic, Dutch comics artist (Ted Start), dies at age 44.[51]

June

  • June 5: Otto Waffenschmied, German comics artist (Muck und Puck, Max und Miki), dies at age 69. [52]
  • June 9: Russell R. Winterbotham, American novelist and comics writer (scripted Red Ryder[53] and Kevin the Bold [54]), dies at age 66.[55]
  • June 27: Catrinus Tas, Dutch cartoonist, dies at age 42. [56]
  • June: Henri Dimpre, French illustrator and comics artist, dies at age 64. [57]
  • June: Carl Rose, aka Earl Cros, American cartoonist (I say it's spinach), illustrator and comics artist (Our New Age), dies at age 68.[58]

July

August

  • Specific date unknown: Julius Svendsen, Norwegian-American comics artist and animator (Disney comics), dies at age 51 or 52.[63]

October

November

  • November: Hy Gage, American comics artist (Miss Information), dies at age 93.[66]
  • November 28: Vasil Zahariev, Bulgarian painter and comics artist, dies at age 76. [67]

December

Specific date unknown

  • Georges Bourdin, French illustrator and comics artist (L'Histoire de Cochise), dies at age 83 or 84. [72]
  • Reg Bunn, British comics artist (The Spider), dies at age 65 or 66.[73]
  • Lev Gleason, American comics publisher (Lev Gleason Publications), dies at age 62 or 63.[74]
  • James Jewell, Scottish comics artist (Wee Peem), dies at age 73.
  • Noé Solano Vargas, Costa Rican comics artist (Candelario), dies at age 71 or 72.[75]

Exhibitions

Conventions

I came back into the field because of [convention organizer Phil Seuling]. I remember [him] calling me in New London, [Connecticut], where I was sitting there as chairman of the board of Croft Publishing Co. My secretary said, 'There's a Mr. Seuling on the phone and he's talking about a comics convention. What is that?' She said, 'I didn't know you were a cartoonist, Mr. Eisner.' 'Oh, yes,' I said, 'secretly; I'm a closet cartoonist.' I came down and was stunned at the existence of the whole world. ... That was a world that I had left, and I found it very exciting, very stimulating".[83]

Awards

Goethe Awards

Presented July 3, 1972, (for comics published in 1971) at the Comic Art Convention, New York City in a ceremony emceed by Tony Isabella and Carl Gafford.[94] The Goethe Award ballot was initially published in The Buyer's Guide to Comics Fandom,[95] The Monster Times,[96] and Graphic Story World.[97] Nominations were sent in from 335 readers. Ultimately, there were 7 categories with 4-7 nominees in each category. 700 fans voted for the final nominees.[94] The award results were also published in Comic Art News & Reviews.[98]

Shazam Awards

Presented in 1972 for comics published in 1971:

First issues by title

Initial appearance by character name

References

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