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Joe Quesada

 
Wikipedia: Joe Quesada
Joe Quesada

Quesada at the Big Apple Convention in Manhattan, October 17, 2009.
Born Joseph Quesada
January 12, 1962 (1962-01-12) (age 47)[1]
Nationality American
Area(s) Penciller, Writer, Editor

Joseph "Joe" Quesada (born January 12, 1962[1]) is an American comic book editor, writer and artist. He is currently the editor-in-chief of Marvel Comics.

Contents

Writer and artist

The Mucha-inspired cover to Ninjak #3 (Apr 1994).

Quesada was born in New York City to Cuban-born parents and grew up in the Jackson Heights neighborhood of Queens.[2] He studied at the School of Visual Arts, where he received a BFA in illustration in 1984. He started out as an artist in the early 1990s. His first widely distributed works were for Valiant Comics where he penciled interiors and covers for Ninjak, Solar, Man of the Atom and others. His art was heavily influenced by Japanese manga, evidenced by large, watery eyes, long, flowing hair, and unnatural body proportions. Several of his page compositions reflect the art nouveau style of Alphonse Mucha.[3] Later, he and his inking partner Jimmy Palmiotti formed a publishing company, Event Comics, and co-created Ash, a firefighter with superpowers.

In 1998, Event Comics was contracted to do several books for Marvel Comics, dubbed Marvel Knights. As editor of Marvel Knights, Quesada encouraged experimentation and used his contacts in the indie comics world to bring in new creators such as David W. Mack, Mike Oeming, Brian Michael Bendis, Garth Ennis, and Steve Dillon. Quesada also illustrated a Daredevil story written by film director Kevin Smith.

Editor-in-chief of Marvel Comics

Joe Quesada became editor-in-chief of Marvel Comics in 2000, following Bob Harras's departure from the company. Joe Quesada is the first artist to become Marvel's editor-in-chief.[4] As editor-in-chief of one of the two largest publishers in the comic book business, he holds a great deal of influence over the direction of the American comic book industry.

Quesada became editor-in-chief at the same time that Bill Jemas succeeded to the presidency of the company. The relationship culminated in the establishment of the Ultimate line of Marvel titles, which were aimed at teenagers, took place outside of the restrictive continuity of the Marvel Universe. Jemas separated from the company after some time.

House of M #1 variant cover art by Joe Quesada & Danny Miki.

In the mid-2000s, Quesada imposed a moratorium on the comic-book practice of creatively bringing back a character thought to be dead, known as "dead is dead". In a January 2008 interview in which he was questioned about numerous characters that had since been resurrected, Quesada clarified that the policy was for writers to exercise forethought and caution before killing off characters or resurrecting them, so that such plots were not produced too frequently or without gravitas, and not that it be entirely prohibited.[5]

Joe Quesada's predecessor as Marvel editor in chief, Bob Harras, canceled and restarted all of Marvel's titles that were not either X-Men-related or at fewer than 100 issues already. This was an effort to shore up sagging sales with a new #1 issue for each of Marvel's popular titles, issued at a time shortly after the bust of the comic book collecting industry, and when Marvel was in the throes of bankruptcy. Quesada reversed this policy first by showing the "old", combined issue numbers beside the "new" numbers on covers (the difference between the two issue numbers shown on the cover would always be the number of issues that the series had before Harras restarted it), and then definitively restoring the "old" numbers for Fantastic Four, Amazing Spider-Man and Avengers when they each passed the 500 mark.[6]

Joe Quesada has been involved in the creation of three successful imprints:

Critics of Quesada's policy of emphasizing trade paperbacks charge that they cannibalize monthly comic book sales, because readers may opt to forego monthly series in order to wait for the cheaper collections, not realizing that monthly sales are an indicator to publishers of interest in such collections.[7]

When confronted with a backlash by some fans due to his decision to dictate a controversial retcon of Peter Parker's marriage to Mary Jane Watson-Parker in the "One More Day" storyline, Quesada participated in a series of interviews on the subject to address the issue of the marriage, comparing it to real life marriages. He also promoted and praised the MC2 title Spider-Girl for continuing to provide fans with a stable marriage and an expanded family,[8] although that title has since been canceled and relaunched multiple times[9] before being relaunched as Spectacular Spider-Girl under Marvel's Digital Comics Unlimited online service.[10]

Media appearances

In Kevin Smith's 1995 film Mallrats Quesada is credited as an artist for the opening sequence featuring fictional comic books covers. He appears in Chasing Amy, alongside frequent collaborator and inker Jimmy Palmiotti, signing comic books in the end scene. He later appeared as a pizza delivery man in Smith's 2001 film Jay and Silent Bob Strike Back.

Bibliography

The two page cover for X-O Manowar #0 by Joe Quesada and Jimmy Palmiotti.

Joe Quesada's art has been featured in:

With writer Dennis O'Neil, he co-created Azrael

Quesada's writing has been featured in:

References

  1. ^ a b Comics Buyer's Guide #1650; February 2009; Page 107
  2. ^ Jennings, Dana. "New York Action Hero", The New York Times, November 23, 2003. Accessed may 28, 2009. "Mr. Quesada also falls squarely in comics' up-by-your-bootstraps, Ellis Island lineage. He grew up in Jackson Heights, Queens (Spider-Man's home borough), the comics-seduced child of Cuban immigrants."
  3. ^ Jonah Weiland. "Father and Child Reunion: Joe Quesada's 'Daredevil: Father'" Comic Book Resources. February 2, 2004
  4. ^ Peter David. "But I Digress..." Comics Buyer's Guide #1401; September 22, 2000; Page 58
  5. ^ Jonah Weiland. "The "One More Day" Interview with Joe Quesada - The Fans" Comic Book Resources; January 28, 2008
  6. ^ In the case of Avengers, this was short-lived; at writer Brian Michael Bendis's request, the book was later restarted as New Avengers
  7. ^ David, Peter; "WHAT'CHA WANNA KNOW?", October 21, 2003; Writer Peter David expressed this sentiment in a question-and-answer thread on his blog, in response to an October 21, 2003 5:45 a.m. post.
  8. ^ Interview 3 of 5 at CBR.
  9. ^ DeFalco Confirms Amazing Spider-Girl Cancelation, Comic Book Resources, October 13, 2008
  10. ^ Spider-Girl Returns In Marvel Digital Comics, Comic Book Resources, March 18, 2009

External links

Preceded by
Bob Harras
Marvel Comics Editor-in-Chief
2000–present
Succeeded by
incumbent
Preceded by
Kurt Busiek & Roger Stern
Iron Man writer
2000
(with Frank Tieri in late 2000)
Succeeded by
Frank Tieri

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