There is so
much I could write about Dick Ayers and his wonderful wife, Lindy. Here is an
article I wrote for Roy Thomas’ Alter Ego #90.
It’s one case where I cannot write, “’Nuff said.”
Dick, we will
miss you.
Read more about Dick Ayers on Nick Caputo's blog:
http://nick-caputo.blogspot.com/2014/05/farewell-to-dick-ayers.html
Read more about Dick Ayers on Nick Caputo's blog:
http://nick-caputo.blogspot.com/2014/05/farewell-to-dick-ayers.html
Photo by Michael J. Vassallo
The Man Who Succeeded:
The Yancy Street Gang visits Dick Ayers
By Barry Pearl,
F.F.F.
One Saturday in January, 2008, The
Yancy Street Gang, Nick Caputo, Barry Pearl and Mike Vassallo, visited the home of Dick and Lindy Ayers. It is in Westchester ,
just down the road from Professor Xavier’s School for Gifted Children. Dick and
Lindy have been living there for 50 years!
Dick Ayers had been an essential contributor
to the beginning of the Marvel Age, inking many of the first stories of The
Fantastic Four, Avengers and Thor just to name a few. While Dick also penciled many of Marvel’s early super-heroes such as The Human
Torch and Giant-Man Dick will be most
remembered for his work on the war and western strips, Sgt. Fury, Captain Savage and the
Rawhide Kid.
The first thing we did was crowd into
the bedroom to watch a DVD on the Ayers’ TV. Nick had discovered a DVD of the
1949 CBS TV show called Suspense. Suspense was one of the many crime suspense shows that
were popular at the time it was also a very popular radio series that was
playing simultaneously on TV. That genre is remembered mostly because of shows
like Alfred
Hitchcock Presents. There was
one episode on Suspense called "The
Comic Strip Murders" which had the same basic storyline of the Jack
Lemmon, movie “How to Murder Your Wife,” which was released in 1965. The plot
revolved around a comic strip artist, here played by Don Briggs, who writes a
daily comic strip. A murder plot is
developed in the strip and the viewers are lead to believe that the actual
artist may be planning to murder his real wife! In the show, several comic
strips were shown and the artist hands were often shown drawing. The artist who created the strips and whose
hands were shown doing the actual drawing was Dick Ayers! On the TV show the
artist’s assistant happens to be played by Eva Marie Saint. Nick did make Dick
laugh when, he said, "Dick, how does this guy get Eva Marie Saint for an
assistant and you get Ernie Bache!" We then had a discussion on how few women
there were in the comic book industry at that time. This was a live 30 minute
broadcast, captured on film by using a kinescope, a motion picture camera that
filmed the actual broadcast from a TV set. We also discussed the limitations
and flaws caused by doing live TV, this was brought on by observing the actual
cameras moving in the background. Dick and Lindy were so excited to get this
DVD. Dick had never seen the show. In 1949 virtually all TV was live and there
were no VCRs.
Leaving the bedroom we headed towards
Dick’s studio and entered the walkway that is filled with Dick’s original artwork.
Each page has a story. For example,
there is the splash page from Sgt. Fury #23, a particular favorite of
Dick’s. Dick told us how Stan called him
one day and said, “I can’t think of a story for Sgt. Fury #23. We won’t have an issue unless you think of
something!” A worried Dick could not sleep that night and kept Lindy awake too.. They talked about story after story until, in
the middle of the night, Lindy came up with the idea of the Howlers saving a
nun and her young charges. Dick said,
“Stan will never go for that, he wants nothing about religion… But I’ll ask
him.” When Dick did, Stan said, “What a great idea, I’ll use it.” So they put
together a terrific story. When Dick’s finished pages were shown to him, he saw
the credits where he was only listed as artist.
He went to Stan’s office and asked if he could also be listed as
co-plotter. Stan yelled, “Since when did
you developed an ego? Get out of here!”
The wall also displayed splash
pages of the Human Torch and the Hulk, as well as a drawing Dick drew as a
child! In pencil, we also got to see several breakdowns of Sgt. Fury.
You could not help but notice the
beauty of a framed, five page story entitled, “And Not a Word was Spoken,” a
western story with no narration or dialogue. It was originally published in Two
Gun Kid #61, January 1963. Dick explained that he not only drew it but
plotted it.. When he submitted his
payment requisition, he felt he should be paid a little extra for writing, or
plotting the story. So he asked to be
paid for five pages of lettering! They
argued, but they paid him! We began to discuss that in the first Sgt. Fury Masterworks,
Stan had said Percy might be gay. I mentioned that this was unlikely. While Percy was drawn to look like David
Niven, his personality was more like Hugh Hefner. In fact, in Sgt.
Fury Annual #4, which took place in “current day 1968” Percy owned a
ran a “Bunny” club. Dick said he asked
Stan about this and Stan said, “You’ve got to give the fans what they want.” So
Percy was ret-conned! Will war crimes
never end? Dick then mentioned that he was asked to do the introduction to the
second Marvel Masterworks of Sgt. Fury.
On the subject of annuals, Dick had
expressed his disappointment in setting them in the future. By showing the
Howlers during D-Day, Korea
and Viet Nam ,
it meant that they all made it through the war, removing some of the suspense
and eliminating some storylines where a Howler could be in real danger. It also meant that any new Howler was in
trouble! I mentioned that only other time Marvel had done this was with Conan,
where in his first comic you learned that he was destined to be king when he
got older, insuring that he will live at least that long..
There were no covers on the walls
and Dick said that they were very hard to get and he had none, but he did have
several local newspapers framed. The
papers all had stories about Dick and all had pictures of covers or characters
he was involved in. In our entire stay,
I never heard him express a preference for a character, it was like they were
all his children.
In the late 1950s there was some
competition for jobs and assignments. Dick was disappointed when Jack Kirby got
the penciling assignment on the Rawhide Kid a job Dick thought he
had gotten. He was assigned the inking. Around that time, Dick mentioned he was
also inking “Sky Masters.” He was paid about the same as inking for Marvel, a
surprise for me because I thought work in comic strips paid more.
Dick told a story about a publisher
that influenced him throughout his career. Once while doing a strip, the
publisher came over and said to Dick, “They have already bought today’s paper,
you need to draw something to make them want to buy tomorrow’s paper.” You can
see he feels the same way about his comics, he is drawing to make you want to
buy the next issue!
We took a few pictures of Mike
standing next to Dick in the hallway. You can see the pictures on each side. The
corridor ends at his studio and office, which is also filled with artwork. Dick discussed how he went to art school on
the G.I. Bill after the war and showed us some very beautiful pictures he drew,
looking nothing like comics.
“A small group of men at the top of
their game” is how Dick described Jack Kirby, Stan Lee, Steve Ditko, Don Heck
and himself at the beginning of the Marvel Era. We sat down with Dick as he
nostalgically drew upon the past. We asked Dick if any one artist was harder
than another to ink. He said no, but some took longer to get used to than
others. This was not a diplomatic
response, he is just a decent guy who appreciated the efforts of others. He mentioned that Steve Ditko was one of the
artists who took longer to get used to.
Dick noted that Ditko’s pencils were not very tight and that, like
himself, he probably did most of the finished work in the inking stage. As an
artist it showed how Dick understood what Ditko did and how he worked. Nick noted that Dick Ayers was an important
contributor to the Marvel Age of Comics. He brought a solidity of form and
sharp brush work to the pencils of Jack Kirby. Those early stories of the Fantastic Four, the Hulk, Thor, Ant-Man,
the Avengers and the Human Torch all showcased the
distinctive inking of Dick Ayers. Dick’s work gave those early Marvel Comics a
unique charm that would not have been the same under any other inker. Dick’s
inking was absolutely perfect for the rough and tumble style of Jack Kirby. The
team was a startling contrast to the plain and placid DC comics, giving the
early Marvel Comics a visual identity of its own. Not only was Dick a thorough
professional who got the assignment in on time, he also added personality to
every job.
I felt
that Dick Ayers was
always a master of “minimalistic detail,” a term that sounds contradictory.
There is great, fine detail in his work, but before he is a penciller,
before he is an inker, he is first and foremost a storyteller. Therefore, every
aspect of his work, every object in a scene, works to tell a story, give
atmosphere or set the mood. Nothing is irrelevant or distracting. It’s all there to tell a
story. Of current work Dick noted there were many fine artists, but the storytelling
was often missing. I also asked if he had ever inked John Severin. Emphatically, Dick replied: “I never inked
Severin!” Nick asked Dick if he, in the early 1960s ever tried to get work at
DC. Again, a strong answer was no, Dick did not like the editorial policies
there and he did not want to work for Bob Kanigher.
Dick, talking as if he were a
movie director, explained that he worked diligently to make his artwork seem
cinematic, using movie perspective and lighting, all designed to move the story
along. He had pointed out on the original artwork the various angles and
lighting effects he worked to achieve. Gosh, you can really see that in his
original artwork, which is so much better than the printed comic. The spectacular detail, the sense of
perspective you used this word twice in this paragraph and movement compel you
through the story, and, as that publisher mentioned, makes you want to buy the
next issue!
If comics were movies, the writer would submit the screenplay. The penciller becomes the director, placing
the character and laying out the setting. The inker would be both the lighting
and set designer. Dick Ayers, as inker,
added the details, shadings and atmosphere to the original pencils he worked
with. He helped tell the story by
emphasizing the necessary items in the
panel. Some inkers of that age
left out, not just the details, but significant portions of the penciled art but not Dick Ayers. Other artists, dominated the original
pencils, taking away from the look of the original artist. Not Dick Ayers.
Ayers let you appreciate the work of the original pencils and brought out the
strengths of the penciller. At the same time, his own style allowed you to feel
the emotions of a scene and to see all the details. Dick mentioned that on one
of his first jobs for Stan, he more or less just traced the pencils. Stan said
that this was not what he expected, he wanted Dick to put his perspective and
personality into the project. In order to embellish the work Unfortunately, inkers are often not given the recognition they
deserve. Some people seem to feel that
by complimenting the inker they are diminishing the work of the penciller. The best inkers tend to be pencillers. They
add greatly to the finished product and bring out the best of the pencillers
work.
To sit down
causally with Dick Ayers and talk about the good old days, is just a thrill.
When we talked about writers, Dick was like Goldilocks; some writers wrote too
much of an outline and some wrote too little. Some, like Tony Isabella, were
just right. This gave us an opening to
discuss War is Hell, the fourth war comic Dick drew during the Marvel
era. Unique to the Marvel Age, this war comic does not feature a military group
or even an enlisted soldier. It stars a ghost? It is a combination of Deadman
meets Quantum Leap, 20 years before Quantum Leap.
Tony Isabella, the fourth member of
the Yancy Street Gang, said of War is
Hell: To be honest, I wasn’t a good enough writer to do War Is Hell (to do it) justice after I
conceived the series. That’s why I handed it off to Chris Claremont. When Roy
(Thomas) asked me to come up with a new feature for War Is Hell, I decided to take the “hell” part literally. Okay,
maybe it was more like WAR IS PURGATORY, but the idea was that John was being
punished in his afterlife.” I had asked Tony,
“When you come up with an idea do you think about who the artist will
be? Did you “lobby” for a certain one
for a certain strip?” “In the case of War Is Hell, I knew Dick Ayers would
be the artist. He needed a book to make up for the loss of IT! So I tried to come up with something that
would play to his strengths.” Boy did it.
One, in a series of memorable
moments occurred when the Yancy Street Gang gave Dick another present: it was
for him, Lindy, his children and grandchildren.
The gang had put together a four part illustrated book called “Dick Ayers of the Marvel Age” an
appreciation of his work.
John Caputo, a founding member of the Yancy Street Gang, and Dick Ayers |
First, we collected and listed Dick’s credits from
the Atlas and Marvel Age. Markus Mueller,
the keeper of the on-line site of the “Unofficial Handbook of Marvel Creator”
helped compile his current reprint credits. Next was a section entitled, “Mr. Ayers Goes to War.” This came from my soon to be never
published book, “The Essential Marvel Age Reference 1961-1977” It listed ALL
the Marvel Age war stories Dick drew, with a summery, credits and comments for
every story. The third section, “Mr.
Ayers of the Marvel Age” featured a similar layout for all of his Marvel
Age Super-Hero stories. The final section, Mr. Ayers and the westerns discusses
the very important and long lasting work Dick did in that genre, and how it
“leaked over” to the super-heroes. The westerns gave the Marvel Super-Heroes so
many creators, characters, stories and titles. Dick is famously know for Ghost Rider, but gave Marvel a Panther
in Two Gun #77 ten months before Lee
and Kirby gave one to the Fantastic Four. There are just so many of these and
so many were done by Dick Ayers. One story may hold particular interest to many
fans:
An orphan is raised by his Uncle Ben, a loving man, who is
seen in just a few panels. He
treats his nephew as a son.
Uncle Ben gives the teenager great wisdom and insists that his young
charge studies and learn. Later, the boy
discovers that his Uncle Ben, was killed, shot by a criminal. As his nephew learns his great new skills, he
tracks down the murderer. Instead of killing him, he turns him over to the law.
He pledges to spend the rest of his
life fighting crime. Not trusted by the law, he must fight the good guys too.
To avoid arrest he keeps his real identity a secret. It’s August, 1960.
And such is the life of Johnny Bart, the Rawhide Kid as told by Stan Lee
and Jack Kirby, with Dick Ayers as inker. Peter Parker would come a year later.
There were commentaries and quotes
throughout Dick’s book.. There were also
many color pictures. Doc supplied
wonderful scans of Dick’s Atlas work, a few of which Dick had forgotten. Doc also supplied a wonderful picture of Dick
Ayers in his army uniform taken just last year! And Dick was reading a comic!
Also, Doc had previously taken a wonderful picture of Dick and Lindy together,
holding a copy of his autobiography.
Barry had taken scans of two self
portraits Dick had drawn from Sgt. Fury #22 and #100. Dick and Lindy were very
touched. In fact, we received this email two days later:
“Lindy
and I thank you for visiting us and bringing the terrific book honoring my Sgt
Fury and Marvel years which is a most valuable keepsake for me and the family.
I read it twice
yesterday and marvel at the way you illustrated it.”
We were sitting around the dining
room table talking about what made the characters good in the 1960s and what
they lack today. For example, before the Viet Nam war escalated, Dick and
Lindy came up with that plot about nuns defending children, “The
Man who Failed.” Here the nun and children run to the Howlers for
protection and aide. As the Viet Nam
war worsened America
took a different view of itself. I pointed out to Dick that in 1973, in a
similar story in Combat Kelly #7, in a story written by Gary Friedrich, the nun
runs away from the Americans soldiers, fearing that they are as evil and violent as the Nazis. The age of American heroism in comics is
winding to an end.
Dick asked, “Did you see the PBS
documentary on "The War." 60 years later people still cannot talk about
what they went through and what they saw. " He discussed how the country
pulled together and no one complained about the lack of sugar, gas, coffee and
such. Well, Dick did not want to talk
about the war, he didn’t have to, he drew it and told stories about it. That was his way of expressing what it was
like and we never realized it until he mentioned it. Lindy took out Dick’s war medals, there were
three of them and two ribbons: For Victory in Europe ;
Victory for War; Good Behavior and the blue medal, to be worn over the right
pocket was a Presidential Citation for his unit, the 586th of the
U.S. Army Air Corps. He also served in the 394th Bomb Group. Lindy also took out what Burne Hogarth called Dick’s
“Boy Scout Picture” young Dick Ayers in
his military uniform, from November 1942.
We discussed that Marvel never
romanticized war, but the Comics Code would not allow them to show the violence
so Sgt. Fury often showed the loss and tragedy of war. As the Viet Nam war raged, the new editors
at Marvel decided not to put out new war comics anymore, even though they had sold
well. I said that I was sad that there
was no “Sgt. Fury #121” featuring an end to WW2. Where were the Howlers on VE day, where were
they on VJ day? Dick said that many
years after the Fury run had ended in 1974,
a special issue was thought out and was going to be produced. But then Marvel got even newer editors and
they were just not interested in any war story, so the idea was not used. The Howlers
had reached “The End of the Road”
We started speaking of the comics
produced today and why the four us simply did not enjoy them as we did the ones
produced in the good old days. We discussed with Dick the fact that many comics
today do not have the sense of character and morality that he Stan, Jack,
Steve, Don and so many others brought to the comics. We discussed the humanity
and the decency that Dick , Stan and Jack always and Marvel presented. This is something that we miss in comics today. Where did it go? Well, I pulled out the Ayers
project and read out loud, what Ken
Quattro had written on this subject for and about Dick:
"I suspect the
writers do not have any of these qualities either and that is why the story
lines are so repulsive. Honor is now suspect; decency is treated with a smirk
and a roll of the eyes. I believe that today's writers feel obligated to strip
away any semblance of heroism to somehow add "realism". What they
cannot understand is that heroism is real. Previous generations understood that
implicitly because we witnessed it. Our parents survived The Depression, The
War and still managed to come through it all to raise cohesive families. And
they did it all while maintaining an unshakable sense of Right and Wrong.
That's real heroism. That's what is lacking today."
The silence was deafening.
Dick added a story that changed the
mood. In Europe ,
Dick mentioned that he would paint logos onto the military aircraft, and often
take a bottle of liquor as payment. One
day he refused the bottle and asked to get a ride inside the belly of the plane.
He wanted to buzz the Autobahn and to get so close that the cars would had to
get out of the way. The pilot agreed and
they buzzed the Autobahn!
Lindy then brought out a picture of
their greatest creations, a wonderful family picture, with children and
grandchildren. I asked Dick if he got
reprint rights for grandchildren. Here, at least, Stan does NOT get a
co-creator credit!
Dick also told a story where his
then young daughter was in class and the teacher asked the students what their
fathers did fir a living. The daughter replied “My daddy draws Monsters!” The
teacher thought the child was fibbing and talked to the father about this.
Dick’s daughter, of course, was telling the truth. Originally, especially in the 1950s, comic
book artists were looked down on. We
mentioned that when the Congressional hearings took place, even Charles
Schultz, creator of Peanuts, got some flack. Dick told a story about a neighbor
who ignored him because he worked in comics. Dick was home during the day,
working, but they treated him like he was unemployed. Recently, the neighbor,
now a grandfather, had his grandson over. His grandson turned out to be a big
comic book fan and, when discovering that his grandfather lived next to Dick
Ayers insisted on meeting him. The guy
knocks at the Ayer’s door and has to eat a bit of humble pie.
Today, Dick is happy to be
remembered so fondly. He is delighted that the fans care so much about him. At
one point, he thought no one would. He pointed
out that he had a choice in 1949 to go to Hollywood
or stay with comics. More than ever when
he meets his devoted fans, he knows he made the right choice.
When we left, Dick and Lindy
generously pulled out sketches and let us pick one for each of us. Ghost Rider,
The Thing, The Hulk, Fury, Ant-Man, Giant-Man the Wasp were all laid out on the
table. He treated them equally as if they were all his children. It was a
touching sight. The biggest thing for me
was when we were leaving they asked for OUR autographs on the book for them!
Imagine Dick Ayers asking US for our autographs! Dick was later to email us saying that he is
going to conventions and showing that 1949 tale of Suspense. He wrote us: “You 3 F.F.F. (Fearless Face Fronters for those who don’t know) guys
have launched me on a new gig.”