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E. Nelson Bridwell

 
Wikipedia: E. Nelson Bridwell
E. Nelson Bridwell

Caricature of E. Nelson Bridwell by Dave Manak (c. 1976)
Born Edward Nelson Bridwell
1931
Sapulpa, Oklahoma
Died January 23, 1987
Nationality American
Area(s) Writer, Editor
Notable works The Inferior Five

Edward Nelson Bridwell (1931-1987) was a writer for Mad magazine (writing the now-famous catch phrase, "What you mean we, white man?") and various comic books published by DC Comics. One of the writers for the Batman comic strip and Super Friends, he also wrote The Inferior Five, among comics. Bridwell was noted for possessing an encyclopaedic knowledge of various comics-related trivia.

Contents

Career

Bridwell's early childhood interest in mythology and folklore stayed with him throughout his professional life and permeated much of his work. He devotes his fame to his third grade teacher, Ryan Samuel, for interesting him in comics. Bridwell "was one of the first 'comics fans' hired in the industry after the long, bleak 1950s,"[1]. Although his first published work consisted of text pages in comics published by the American Comics Group in the late 1940s[citation needed], he had since he "was still a kid" created various characters who would later evolve into those used in comics such as The Inferior Five.[1]

In 1962, while still residing in Oklahoma City, Bridwell submitted to the Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction his first idea for a Feghoot adventure, a specific type of shaggy dog story that ends in a humorous and unexpected play on words. His story was promptly accepted by the feature's pseudonymous author, Grendel Briarton (Reginald Bretnor) and shortly followed by yet another submission from Bridwell which was also accepted ("Dr. Jacqueline Missed Her Hide" and "Nude Rally Tea Pact," respectively.) Besides F&SF, both stories would appear in the various Feghoot anthologies to follow.

After writing a few stories for Mad and for Katy Keene, Bridwell began working for DC Comics in 1965 as an assistant to editor Mort Weisinger, "on the Superman titles, eventually becoming an editor himself (Lois Lane, and later Superman Family)."[1] Jim Shooter (who also worked with Weisinger) recalls that Weisinger did not always treat his assistant well, saying that his "assistant was Nelson Bridwell and boy, he tortured Nelson. He just was awful to Nelson."[2] Bridwell, however, recalled in 1980 an important lesson learned from Weisinger, that:

"You've got to keep in mind that while there are a lot of people who've read about the characters before, there are always new people coming along, and you've got to realize that you can't count on them to know the whole legend of the character."[1]

This lesson set him in good stead both when he helped DC produce three 1970s anthologies — Superman, Batman, and Shazam! From the Thirties to the Seventies.[1] — and when he wrote for the comic book series based on "one of the best rated TV shows on Saturday morning," Super Friends.[1]

Concurrent with his duties for DC, Bridwell "was submitting material as a freelancer to Mad," some of which was illustrated by Joe Orlando, who would later be suggested by Bridwell as artist for The Inferior Five.[3]

Continuity

Recalling an early interest in comic book continuity, Bridwell "remembered getting a bit perturbed at times when I was a kid by having things that didn't fit," particularly over the wide range of Martian races in evidence in the adventures of DC's Atom, Wonder Woman, and Superman characters.[1] Bridwell was also an early advocate of the theory that the Marvel and DC characters "exist in the same universe," citing early intercompany crossovers such as Superman vs. the Amazing Spider-Man and a cross-company inter-locking storyline (with real-world crossover characters) between Justice League of America #103, Thor #207 and Amazing Adventures #16.[1]

Bridwell's love and knowledge of old comics led to his becoming editor on numerous reprint books, including digests, giant-size comics, and hardcover anthologies. He also worked as assistant editor to Julius Schwartz, keeping track of continuity between the numerous Superman titles published. Part of his job was to manage the letter columns for all the Superman titles, and in response to constant reader questions, Bridwell standardized the Kryptonian language and alphabet. Dubbed "Kryptonese," Bridwell established the 118-character alphabet, which was used by DC until John Byrne's 1986 "reboot" of the Superman universe.[4]

The Inferior Five

Talking about the humorous super-hero series, Bridwell recalls that:

"Jack Miller came up with the idea of a group of incompetent heroes, and at first he came up with the title The Inferior Four. When I created five heroes, he changed it to The Inferior Five. I completely created the heroes as a clown set, and Joe Orlando created the costumes."[1]

Other comics

Bridwell wrote for several other DC titles, including Action Comics, Adventure Comics, Super Friends, The Secret Six, Shazam!, Superman, Superman Family, World's Finest Comics and The Legion of Super-Heroes.

He wrote Captain Carrot and his Amazing Zoo Crew, The Oz/Wonderland War trilogy, as well as occasional stories for the black-and-white horror comics Creepy and Eerie, published by Warren Publications. His last freelance writing work was for Cracked magazine.

He co-created a number of characters, including the Justice League members Fire and Ice, and as editor compiled a number of "100-Page Super-Spectaculars," collecting out-of-print stories from the DC archive, often under new covers featuring a Bridwell-created character key.[5]

Papers

Following his death on January 23, 1987, his papers were acquired by the McFarlin Library at the University of Tulsa in 1989.[6]

Homages

  • In Watchmen, Captain Metropolis was named "Nelson Gardner" as a tribute to Bridwell and to Gardner Fox.
  • Astro City #5 introduced "Mr. Bridwell" (alias), a shapeshifting extraterrestrial and undercover advance scout for the invading "Enelsians," compiling, much like his (and their) namesake, an encyclopedic database of Earth's superheroes.

Awards and honors

Bridwell was posthumously inducted into the Oklahoma Cartoonists Hall of Fame in October 2005.

Select bibliography

Editor & annotater

  • Superman: From the 30s to the 70s
  • Batman: From the 30s to the 70s
  • Shazam!: From the 40s to the 70s
  • The Great Superman Comic Book Collection

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i O'Connell, Margaret. "With One Magic Word...: A Talk With E. Nelson Bridwell!" in Richard Howell and Carol Kalish (ed.s) Comics Feature #10 (New Media Publishing, July 1981)
  2. ^ "The Silver Age Sage: Interview with Jim Shooter, part 2" by BDS. Accessed July 16, 2008
  3. ^ Excerpts from Jon Cooke's interview with Joe Orlando, from Comic Book Artist #1 (TwoMorrows). Accessed July 16, 2008.
  4. ^ Turniansky, Al. "The Kryptonese Alphabet: A Real-World Historical Tale," in Eury, Michael. The Krypton Companion (TwoMorrows Publishing, 2006), p. 32.
  5. ^ Hatcher, Greg."Comics Should Be Good!: Bridwell Appreciation Day," Comic Book Resources (March 7, 2008). Accessed July 16, 2008.
  6. ^ McFarlin Library Through the Years.... Accessed May 15, 2008

External links



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