Aztec Ace
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
| Aztec Ace | |
|---|---|
The cover to Aztec Ace #1 (March 1984), art by Michael Bair. | |
| Publication information | |
| Publisher | Eclipse Comics |
| Schedule | Irregular |
| Format | Ongoing series |
| Publication date | March 1984 - September 1985 |
| No. of issues | 15 |
| Main character(s) | Ace (Caza) Bridget Head |
| Creative team | |
| Created by | Doug Moench |
| Written by | Doug Moench |
| Penciller(s) | Michael Bair (#1-2, #9) Dan Day (#3-8, #10-13, #15) Mike Harris (#14) |
| Inker(s) | Nelson Redondo (#1-8) Ron Harris (#9-11) Mike Gustovich (#9-13, #15) Art Nichols (#14) Tom Yeates (#14) |
| Letterer(s) | Adam Kubert (#1) Esphid Mahilum (#2-6) Pete Sullit (#3-6) Peter Iro (#7-9) Carrie Spiegle (#10-15) |
| Colorist(s) | Philip DeWalt (#1-12) Dennis McFarling (#1-5) Steve Oliff (#12-15) Sam Parsons (#14-15) |
| Editor(s) | Cat Yronwode |
Aztec Ace is an American creator-owned science fiction comic book formerly published by Eclipse Comics. Created by writer Doug Moench, it was published for 15 issues from 1984 to 1985.[1] Amazing Heroes would describe the series as "a strange cross between Dr. Who and the Illuminati trilogy".[2]
The series kept an irregular schedule due to main artist Dan Day's meticulous approach; by 1985 the book was aiming for a six-weekly schedule, with Eclipse editor-in-chief Cat Yronwode hoping for nine or ten issues a year.[3] Other contributors to Aztec Ace included Mike Harris and Mike Gustovich.[4] The Aztec Ace logo was created by Denis McFarling.[5]
Aztec Ace featured appearances from numerous historical figures, including Amelia Earhart, Glenn Miller and Ambrose Bierce.[3] The series ended abruptly, leaving several storylines unresolved. This was announced as being due to the difficulty in finding adequate fill-in artists.[6] In 1988, a copy of Aztec Ace #13 - featuring Bridget dressed as Cleopatra - was part of an Egyptology exhibit at the Brooklyn Museum.[7]
For Eclipse's 10th anniversary in 1988, they commissioned the crossover mini-series Total Eclipse, and the creators of Aztec Ace gave permission for Marv Wolfman to use the characters in the series.[8] The characters had sizeable roles in the series, with Nine-Crocodile the overarching villain, in league with Misery, the spectral archenemy of the aviator and hero Airboy, while Moench contributed a short "Interlude" story centred on Aztec Ace for the second issue, with art by Tim Sale. [9] This led to the announcement of plans to collect the earlier material as a trade paperback[10] and to continue the story as a three-issue mini-series - tentatively titled Aztec Ace - Time Tripper - in 1992 with artist Doug Heinlein;[11] however, these plans would not come to fruition.