Steve Englehart was born on this date in 1947. Englehart dropped onto the comics landscape at Marvel and left a huge impression with his stories that developed elaborate back histories for some of Marvel's forgotten characters. he co-created Mantis in the Avengers and Coyote for the Epic line. Englehart was not a writer to suffer too much editorial fussing about and if a story he "wrote" appeared that had been too altered for his tastes he used the pseudonym "John Harkness". Englehart's generosity when it came creation is revealed in tale of The Foozle.
I'll let Steve tell the story himself.
"I had no plan - what was I going to do with DC-specific stories if I didn't sell them to DC? - but that very afternoon, Jan and Dean Mullaney bought them to start their new magazine line (for the price DC had promised).
So, Marshall Rogers, who was going to draw the Superman-Creeper story, sat down and riffed on it. He turned Superman into a little girl and the Creeper into the Foozle, and I rewrote dialogue as needed. Marshall later spun the Foozle into his own series, which he wrote himself, and since it was pretty much his creation, I renounced my rights to him...er, it..."
Later Konsbon the Foozle showed up in the debut issue of Eclipse Comics running for a few issues.
For those of us who remember the Foozle, and his eventual companion Captain Quick, it was fun stuff, emerging from an exceedingly fertile time for comics. The Foozle didn't have all that many adventures at Eclipse, but he did make a big impression on my memory at least. I'm tickled to discover that he was inspired by Steve Ditko's wacky giggling superhero.
Thanks DC for always being there for us fans. We owe their corporate incompetence and short-sightedness more than we can imagine I'd suspect.
Interesting story on the Foozles origins, I wasnt aware of any of that. I have / had a couple of Foozle strips but I never really got around to reading them in any detail and my memory of the character is now pretty limited, but I nay have missed something fun.
ReplyDeleteI am an Englehart fanboy, so this stuff is in my wheelhouse. Marshall Rogers was a fantastic artist.
DeleteAnd I guess you already know that Madame Xanadu was similarly transformed to Scorpio Rose, also by Englehart and Rogers, also published by Eclipse.
ReplyDeleteMadame Xanadu is scheduled to show up later this year. Englehart was a master of taking a character and having versions show up in different universes.
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