Bill Everett
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William Blake Everett (; May 18, 1917 – February 27, 1973) was an American comic book writer-artist best known for creating
Namor the Sub-Mariner Namor (), also known as the Sub-Mariner, is a fictional character appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. Debuting in early 1939, the character was created by writer-artist Bill Everett for comic book packager Funnies Inc ...
as well as co-creating
Zombie A zombie ( Haitian French: , ht, zonbi) is a mythological undead corporeal revenant created through the reanimation of a corpse. Zombies are most commonly found in horror and fantasy genre works. The term comes from Haitian folklore, in w ...
and Daredevil with writer Stan Lee for
Marvel Comics Marvel Comics is an American comic book publishing, publisher and the flagship property of Marvel Entertainment, a divsion of The Walt Disney Company since September 1, 2009. Evolving from Timely Comics in 1939, ''Magazine Management/Atlas Co ...
. He was allegedly a descendant of the childless poet
William Blake William Blake (28 November 1757 – 12 August 1827) was an English poet, painter, and printmaker. Largely unrecognised during his life, Blake is now considered a seminal figure in the history of the poetry and visual art of the Romantic Age. ...
and of
Richard Everett Richard Everett (December 11, 1597 – July 3, 1682) emigrated from the English county of Essex. On July 15, 1636 he and a party of settlers bought land from Native American on the Connecticut River at Agawan – now Springfield, Massachusetts. E ...
, founder of Dedham, Massachusetts.


Early life

William Everett was born May 18, 1917 in
Cambridge, Massachusetts Cambridge ( ) is a city in Middlesex County, Massachusetts, United States. As part of the Boston metropolitan area, the cities population of the 2020 U.S. census was 118,403, making it the fourth most populous city in the state, behind Boston ...
."Marvel Bullpen Bulletins". Marvel Comics cover-dated September 1973. Sedlmeier, Cory (Editor). ''Marvel Masterworks: The Incredible Hulk'' Volume 2. Marvel Comics. Page 244. Everett, a fabulist who spun fanciful stories of his youth, claimed at various points to have graduated from high school in
Arizona Arizona ( ; nv, Hoozdo Hahoodzo ; ood, Alĭ ṣonak ) is a state in the Southwestern United States. It is the 6th largest and the 14th most populous of the 50 states. Its capital and largest city is Phoenix. Arizona is part of the Fou ...
, Steranko, Jim. ''The Steranko History of Comics – Volume One'' (Supergraphics, 1970), p. 59. The book's Everett interview closely coincides with a letter from Everett to Jerry DeFuccio, written May 19, 1961, originally published in ''The Comics'', vol. 10, #1 or instead to have joined the U.S. Merchant Marine at ages ranging from 15 to 17, among other tales. In actuality, he was born at the Cambridge Hospital (renamed
Mount Auburn Hospital Mount Auburn Hospital in Cambridge, Massachusetts, is a teaching hospital of Harvard Medical School. It was founded by Civil War nurse and administrator Emily Elizabeth Parsons as the first hospital in Cambridge in 1866. It was reopened in 1886 a ...
in 1947) and raised in nearby
Watertown, Massachusetts Watertown is a city in Middlesex County, Massachusetts, and is part of Greater Boston. The population was 35,329 in the 2020 census. Its neighborhoods include Bemis, Coolidge Square, East Watertown, Watertown Square, and the West End. Waterto ...
, with his parents Robert Maxwell Everett and Elaine Grace Brown Everett, and his sister Elizabeth, born in 1915.Bell, p. 11 His 300-year-old
New England New England is a region comprising six states in the Northeastern United States: Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Rhode Island, and Vermont. It is bordered by the state of New York (state), New York to the west and by the Can ...
family included
Everett, Massachusetts Everett is a city in Middlesex County, Massachusetts, United States, directly north of Boston, bordering the neighborhood of Charlestown. The population was 49,075 at the time of the 2020 United States Census. Everett was the last city in the Un ...
' namesake,
Edward Everett Edward Everett (April 11, 1794 – January 15, 1865) was an American politician, Unitarian pastor, educator, diplomat, and orator from Massachusetts. Everett, as a Whig, served as U.S. representative, U.S. senator, the 15th governor of Mass ...
, who after serving as president of
Harvard University Harvard University is a private Ivy League research university in Cambridge, Massachusetts. Founded in 1636 as Harvard College and named for its first benefactor, the Puritan clergyman John Harvard, it is the oldest institution of high ...
became
governor of Massachusetts The governor of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts is the chief executive officer of the government of Massachusetts. The governor is the head of the state cabinet and the commander-in-chief of the commonwealth's military forces. Massachuset ...
and, in 1852, the
U.S. Secretary of State The United States secretary of state is a member of the executive branch of the federal government of the United States and the head of the U.S. Department of State. The office holder is one of the highest ranking members of the president's Ca ...
. It also includes Edward's son, Massachusetts Congressman
William Everett William Everett (October 10, 1839 – February 16, 1910) was born in Watertown, Massachusetts, United States. He was the son of Charlotte Gray Brooks and orator, Massachusetts governor and U.S. Secretary of State Edward Everett, who spoke ...
; and the poet
William Blake William Blake (28 November 1757 – 12 August 1827) was an English poet, painter, and printmaker. Largely unrecognised during his life, Blake is now considered a seminal figure in the history of the poetry and visual art of the Romantic Age. ...
. Everett's father ran a successful trucking business, and when Everett was young the family bought a large summer home in
Kennebunkport Kennebunkport is a resort town in York County, Maine, United States. The population was 3,629 people at the 2020 census. It is part of the Portland– South Portland–Biddeford metropolitan statistical area. The town center, the are ...
, Maine.Bell, p. 12 Both parents supported the artistic talents of their son, whose reading tastes ran to the classics rather than
pulp novels Pulp magazines (also referred to as "the pulps") were inexpensive fiction magazines that were published from 1896 to the late 1950s. The term "pulp" derives from the cheap wood pulp paper on which the magazines were printed. In contrast, magazine ...
or comic strips, and included work by Samuel Taylor Coleridge and Jack London. He would later find artistic influence in such commercial magazine artists as Mead Schaeffer, Dean Cornwell, and especially Floyd MacMillan Davis. At 12, in 1929, Everett contracted tuberculosis, and was pulled from sixth grade to go with his mother and his sister to Arizona, to recuperate for four months. They then returned to Massachusetts, but a recurrence of the disease sent the trio back West, first to Prescott, Arizona and then to Wickenburg, Arizona, Wickenburg, 60 miles away. There, taking his first drink, Everett began the path to teenage alcoholism. Nonetheless, he became well enough by 16 to return home with his mother and sister to the Boston area, where his father, unscathed by the Great Depression, had a large house in West Newton, Massachusetts, West Newton. His alcoholism and natural rebelliousness caused his parents to remove him from high school at age 16, in his second year, and enroll him in 1934 at Boston's Vesper George School of Art. His inability to focus, however, led him to drop out in 1935, after a year-and-a-half of the program.This paragraph: Bell, p. 15 That same year, his father died of acute appendicitis, and the family, though remaining well-off, moved to an apartment back in Cambridge.Bell, p. 16 Everett knew his father "always wanted me to be a cartoonist, and he died, unfortunately, before he saw that come true. But that was probably in back of the whole thing."


Career


Early work

Everett soon became a professional artist on the advertising staff of the Boston newspaper ''Boston Herald#The Herald-Traveler, The Herald-Traveler'' for $12 a week. Soon afterward, he left to become a draftsman for the civil engineering firm The Brooks System, in Newton, Massachusetts. From there he pursued work in Phoenix, Arizona and Los Angeles, California without success. He then returned east to New York City, where he again did newspaper advertising art, for the ''New York Herald-Tribune''. He next became art editor for Teck Publications' ''Radio News'' magazine, then assistant art director under Herm Bollin in Chicago, Illinois. Fired for being, as Everett described, "too cocky", he returned to New York where he sought employment as an art director. With no luck at this and desperate for work, he ran into an old Teck colleague, Walter Holze, who was now working in the new field of comic books. As Everett recalled in the late 1960s, "He asked me if I could do comics. I said, 'Sure!!' At that point I was starving. I wasn't interested in the comics business; I was talked into it". Freelancing for Centaur Publications, Everett "sold my first page for $2 – writing, penciling, inking and all. 'Skyrocket Steele' was my first strip." Soon he was getting $10 and then $14 a page, a respectable sum during this late-1930s period near the beginning of what historians and fans call the Golden Age of comic books. Everett co-created the superhero Amazing-Man (Centaur Publications), Amazing-Man at Centaur, working with company art director Lloyd Jacquet, and drew the first five issues. Everett and other creators followed Jacquet to his new company Funnies, Inc., one of the first comic-book "packagers" that would create comics on demand for publishers. Everett recalled


Sub-Mariner

At Funnies, Inc., Everett created the Sub-Mariner for an aborted project, ''Motion Picture Funnies Weekly'' #1, a planned promotional comic to be given away in movie theaters. When plans changed, Everett used his character instead for Funnies, Inc.'s first client, pulp magazine publisher Martin Goodman (publisher), Martin Goodman. The original eight-page story was expanded by four pages for ''Marvel Mystery Comics, Marvel Comics'' #1 (Oct. 1939), the first publication of what Goodman would eventually call Timely Comics, the 1940s precursor of Marvel Comics. Everett's anti-hero proved a sudden success, quickly becoming one of Timely's top three characters, along with Carl Burgos' Android (robot), android superhero the Human Torch (Golden Age), Human Torch and Jack Kirby and Joe Simon's Captain America. Everett soon introduced such supporting characters as New York City policewoman Betty Dean, a steady companion and occasional love-interest, and Namor's cousin Namora. Everett drew his star character in ''Sub-Mariner Comics'', published first quarterly, then thrice-yearly and finally bimonthly, for issues #1–32 (Fall 1941 – June 1949).Bill Everett
at Grand Comics Database
Everett entered the U.S. Army for World War II military service in February 1942.Steranko, ''History of Comics'', p. 60 He attended Officer Candidate School at Fort Belvoir, during which time he met Gwenn Randall, who was working for the Ordnance Department at the The Pentagon, Pentagon. The couple married in 1944, when Everett returned from the European theater of World War II, European theater of operations, and their first child, a daughter, was born shortly before he was shipped out to the Philippines to fight in the Pacific Ocean theater of World War II, Pacific theater; he returned home in February 1946. With money inherited from a great-uncle, Everett took some time off and traveled before settling in Fairbury, Nebraska, Fairbury, Nebraska, his wife's hometown. "This was when I renewed my association with Martin Goodman, working by mail on a freelance basis, picking up the Sub-Mariner where I'd left off four years ago".Steranko, ''History of Comics'', p. 61 His first recorded post-war credit is writing and full art for the 12-page story "Sub-Mariner vs. Green-Out" in ''Sub-Mariner Comics'' #21 (Fall 1946) – the third of three Sub-Mariner stories that issue, for which Syd Shores drew the cover. Everett was soon providing Sub-Mariner stories regularly for the solo title as well as for ''Human Torch (android), The Human Torch'', ''Marvel Mystery Comics'' and even ''Blonde Phantom, Blonde Phantom Comics''. Additionally, he drew the title feature in the three-issue spin-off series ''Namora'' (Aug.–Dec. 1948). Early pseudonyms included Willie Bee and Bill Roman.


Atlas Comics

By now, Timely Comics had evolved into Marvel's 1950s iteration, Atlas Comics (1950s), Atlas Comics. Like most superhero characters in the postwar era, the Sub-Mariner had faded in popularity, and his solo title had been canceled in 1949. But after a nearly five-year hiatus, he briefly returned with Captain America and the Golden Age Human Torch (android), Human Torch in ''Young Men #24'' (Dec. 1953), during Atlas' mid-1950s attempt at reviving superheroes. Everett drew the Sub-Mariner feature through ''Young Men'' #28 (June 1954) and in ''Sub-Mariner Comics'' #33–42 (April 1954 – Oct. 1955), which outlasted the other two characters' features. During this time, Namora had her own spin-off series. Everett also drew the features "Venus (comic book), Venus" and "Marvel Boy", as well as a large number of stories for Atlas' anthological horror fiction, horror-fantasy series. One such tale, "Zombie!," written by editor-in-chief Stan Lee and published in ''Menace (Atlas Comics), Menace'' #5, introduced the character Simon Garth, the Zombie (Marvel Comics), Zombie, who in the 1970s would be plucked from this one-shot story to star in Marvel's black-and-white horror-comics magazine ''Tales of the Zombie''.


Marvel Comics

With writer-editor Lee, Everett co-created the Marvel superhero Daredevil, who debuted in ''Daredevil (Marvel Comics series), Daredevil'' #1 (April 1964). Comics historian and former Jack Kirby assistant Mark Evanier, investigating claims of Kirby's involvement in the creation of both Iron Man and Daredevil, interviewed Kirby and Everett and found that, Conversely, 2000s Marvel editor-in-chief Joe Quesada said the cover had been created afterward. When Everett, he said, turned in his first-issue pencils extremely late, Brodsky and Spider-Man artist Steve Ditko inked "a lot of backgrounds and secondary figures on the fly [and] cobbled the cover and the splash page together from Kirby's original concept drawing." In an interview conducted by Marvel writer-editor and Everett's one-time roommate Roy Thomas, in what the latter recalled as either "late 1969 or in 1970," Everett said of Daredevil's creation five years earlier: Within two years, however, Everett began penciling for Marvel once again, first on the character the Hulk, in ''Tales to Astonish'', initially over Kirby layouts, and on Doctor Strange in ''Strange Tales''. Readers during this 1960s Silver Age of comic books also became acquainted with his Golden Age and 1950s stories, which were reprinted first in the book ''The Great Comic Book Heroes'' by Jules Feiffer (Dial Press, 1965), and then in the comic books ''Fantasy Masterpieces'', ''Marvel Super-Heroes (comics), Marvel Super-Heroes'', and ''Marvel Tales (comics), Marvel Tales''. Everett even returned to his enduring character, first inking Namor's adventures in ''Tales to Astonish'' #85–86, then taking over full artistic duties for issues #87–91 and #94, and penciling issues #95–96. He then did complete stories – writing, penciling and inking – on ''Sub-Mariner'' #50–55 and 57 (June 1972 – Nov. 1972; Jan. 1973), with script assists by Mike Friedrich on two issues; and #58 (Feb. 1973), co-written with Steve Gerber and co-penciled with Sam Kweskin as his health began to deteriorate for the final time. He co-wrote and inked ''Sub-Mariner'' #59 (March 1973), plotted #60 (April 1973), and co-wrote, co-penciled (with fellow Golden Ager Win Mortimer), and co-inked #61 (May 1973). He had also been announced to draw an issue of ''Marvel Team-Up'' starring Spider-Man and the Sub-Mariner, but, according to one contemporaneous report, "was not able to finish this one before his death." Editor Roy Thomas explained on the letters page of ''Sub-Mariner'' #61, Despite Thomas's optimistic tone, that would be Everett's last work on the series. His final efforts on the character he created were five pages of pencils, inked by fellow Golden Ager Fred Kida, that appeared posthumously in ''Super-Villain Team-Up'' #1 (Aug. 1975). Artist Gene Colan said that Everett had been Lee's first choice to draw the horror series ''Tomb of Dracula'', which premiered in 1972 and for which Colan then lobbied successfully.Robert Greenberger, Greenberger, Robert. "Inside the Tome of Dracula", ''Marvel Spotlight: Marvel Zombies Return'' (2009), p. 27 (unnumbered)


Death

Everett died February 27, 1973 at the age of 55.


References


External links

* Additional . * * {{DEFAULTSORT:Everett, Bill 1917 births 1973 deaths American comics artists American comics writers Artists from Cambridge, Massachusetts Daredevil (Marvel Comics) Golden Age comics creators Silver Age comics creators Marvel Comics people Will Eisner Award Hall of Fame inductees