Lee Semmens
Last Son of Krypton
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Posts: 201
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« Reply #1 on: September 28, 2005, 12:40:28 PM » |
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Here is the little bit of information I have dug up on him, courtesy the Aquaman Archives Volume 1, and one other source:
Bernstein (b. 1919) began his writing career in the pulps of the 1940s before moving into comics. In addition to his work for DC on SUPERBOY, SUPERMAN'S GIRL FRIEND, LOIS LANE, GREEN ARROW, and AQUAMAN, among others, he also provided numerous scripts for Archie Comics, Dell, E. C., Hillman, and Marvel Comics.
Deaths in the Cartooning Community. "Bernstein Dead at 69" p. 23 (Comics Journal #127 February 1989)
Plus this, by Bob Hughes:
Robert Bernstein is one of the great unsung heroes of the Silver Age of Comics. While fans were busy tracking down every story by Otto Binder, Jerry Siegel, and Ed Hamilton, Bernstein was ignored, overlooked, or worse yet, had his stories inadvertently credited to one of the others. After a long career writing for Lev Gleason and Stan Lee, Bernstein came to DC just in time to help launch Lois Lane's own title and to participate in creating major portions of the Superman legend; including Mon-El, Sun-Boy, Pete Ross, the Superboy Revenge Squad and the Phantom Zone. On top of that he created Aqualad and Congorilla. For Marvel, he wrote the second Iron Man story and a bunch of early Thors, then went over to Archie Comics where he created the Jaguar and wrote most of the Adventures of the Fly!
In John Corben, Bernstein created one of the most memorable rats in comics. Corben had no redeeming values whatsoever. He didn't even want to conquer the world! He was just a creep who thought nothing of killing, stealing, kicking dogs or anything else that struck his fancy at the moment. In the end, his own meanness killed him. The character must have struck a chord though, because the fans wanted him back. Unfortunately, he was dead and Bernstein was too good a writer to waste his time writing the same story twice.
In 1964 though, he split writing duties with Leo Dorfman, a writer with whom he is often confused (Dorfman uses different sound effects), on an _Action Comics_ two-parter: "Superman King of Earth" (#311, April) and "King Superman vs Clark Kent- Metallo" (#312, May) both with art by Curt Swan and George Klein. Leo started writing Superman in 1963 when he wrote "The Last Days of Ma and Pa Kent" and a long-forgotten tale called "The Amazing Story of Superman Red and Superman Blue". (His version was much better, and much, much, *much* shorter!)
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