Scott Edelman
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Help me ID an unfamiliar face from this 1975 convention photo

Posted by: Scott    Tags:  comics, Cons, FOOM, Len Wein, Marv Wolfman    Posted date:  September 25, 2017  |  9 Comments


In 1975, when I was working in the Bullpen at Marvel Comics, I flew to Toronto to appear on a panel at CosmicCon along with Marv Wolfman, Len Wein, and … someone whose name I no longer remember.

Neither does Marv.

And since the reason I dug out this photo was as part of my mourning process for Len, we’ll never know if he might have remembered.

When I recently shared the image on Twitter and Facebook in the hopes someone could identify the face at the far right, suggestions included Bernie Wrightson and Howard Chaykin (I blame the sideburns), but … it wasn’t either of those two.

If you happen to know who that is, please let me know!

UPDATED 9/26/2017: Thanks to Ron Kasman, who wrote this article about the history of CosmicCon, I learned that’s Jim Craig, who worked for Atlas Comics at the time, and went on work for Marvel on such titles as Master of Kung Fu and The 3-D Man.

Here’s a photo of him which appeared a couple of years later in FOOM.

Thanks, Internet, for solving this mystery!

The day Jim Shooter and I fell from the sky

Posted by: Scott    Tags:  FOOM, Jim Shooter, Marvel Comics    Posted date:  October 6, 2012  |  2 Comments


I was tweeting last night about Sean Howe’s Marvel Comics: The Untold Story, which I’m currently about 75% of the way through (more on that later), and in response to my statement that I was glad I’d left Marvel before things got truly ugly there, I was asked whether I’d moved on before or during the Jim Shooter era.

Well, not only was I there during the beginnings of the Shooter era, but he and I actually once fell from the sky together!

In case you didn’t know that, check out this sidebar I wrote that appeared in the December 1976 issue of Marvel’s fan magazine FOOM.

And since the pics accompanying the article are quite fuzzy thanks to FOOM‘s far from state-of-the-art printing process, here are some of the original pics to show how insane (and young) we once were. (more…)

In 1975, I interviewed Archie Goodwin … or tried to

Posted by: Scott    Tags:  Archie Goodwin, comics, FOOM, Marv Wolfman, Marvel Comics, Video    Posted date:  March 22, 2011  |  No comment


Back in 1975, while on staff at Marvel Comics, I edited the company’s official fan magazine, FOOM. One of the things I did as editor was to change the format of the news section. Rather than just running unadorned information, I decided I’d print interviews with the various writers and editors about what was upcoming on their titles. That way the fans would not only get facts, but also an insight into Bullpen personalities.

Some of those interviews were more successful than others.

As you’ll hear in the clip below—if you can even make out what I’m asking through the thick Brooklyn accent I had back then—my inability to get anything useful out of Archie could just as easily have been the fault of my goofy questions as anything else.

Keep listening for a special guest star—because the brief clip includes an even briefer cameo by Marv Wolfman.

And if you happen to remember why I would have made a joke back then about out-of-work police officers, please let me know—because I remember nothing!

(Thanks to Alan Light for the use of the photo I married to my audio. It’s a 1982 pic with a 1975 voice, but I hope you won’t find it too jarring.)

“The Harmony Factor Syndrome Beneath Wakanda” by D*nald F. MxGr*mlin

Posted by: Scott    Tags:  comics, Don McGregor, FOOM, Marv Wolfman, Marvel Comics    Posted date:  February 26, 2010  |  No comment


This will be my last post based on old issues of FOOM, I promise. But I couldn’t resist, especially since in this case, I have more than just one piece of the puzzle.

I loved the writing of Don McGregor, first in Warren’s black-and-white comics, and then at Marvel with Black Panther and Killraven. He was then, and remains now, one of my favorite comic-book writers. But even those of us who were his fans had to admit that he could be a bit … well … wordy.

Which will explain the tweaking he received in FOOM #9 at the hands of Marv Wolfman and Marie Severin, who collaborated on “The Harmony Factor Syndrome Beneath Wakanda.”

McGregor1

And as for that other piece of the puzzle—here’s Marv’s original script for that feature. (more…)

John Byrne’s Shang-She, Mistress of Kung Fu

Posted by: Scott    Tags:  FOOM, John Byrne, Marvel Comics    Posted date:  February 25, 2010  |  No comment


When I dug out the March 1975 issue of FOOM last week, I found something fun on the back cover—a piece of John Byrne art I don’t think has seen print in 35 years.

I have no idea why we ran this image that issue, not when it was a “Special Cosmic Issue,” with all the other feature content relating to Marvel’s cosmic characters such as Captain Marvel, the Silver Surfer, and Adam Warlock. John probably just whipped up the spoof as a joke and we all thought it so silly we couldn’t resist sharing it.

Which is sort of the same reason I’m sharing it now.

So check out Shang-She, Mistress of Kung Fu, as she teams up with Iron Sis to take on the insidious Su Manchu.

The Secret Origins of Roger Stern and Ralph Macchio

Posted by: Scott    Tags:  comics, FOOM, Roger Slifer, Roger Stern    Posted date:  February 22, 2010  |  No comment


Roger Stern—longtime comics editor and writer, known for his scripting on Spider-Man, Doctor Strange, and The Avengers, as well as for helping create the “Death of Superman” storyline.

Ralph Macchio—comics writer turned editor who was in charge of Daredevil for more than a decade and who most recently oversaw the transformation of Stephen King’s Dark Tower novels into a comics.

But once … once they were fans.

I was remembering that thanks to the issues of FOOM, Marvel’s fan magazine, that I dug up last week.

Here’s the editorial I wrote for FOOM #9, the March 1975 issue, in which I mentioned them both. None of us had any idea of what was to come.

FOOM9Editorial

As you can see, back in those days, Sterno worked for WXLW Radio in Indianapolis and published the fanzine C.P.L., while Ralph was a letterhack who won a contest judged by Don McGregor. Their comics futures still lay ahead.

Hey, we all have to start somewhere, right?

In which I am an X-Man

Posted by: Scott    Tags:  comics, Duffy Vohland, FOOM, Len Wein, Marv Wolfman, Marvel Comics    Posted date:  December 7, 2008  |  No comment


Last week, while digging out a Marie Severin illustration with which to wish Chris Claremont a happy 58th birthday, I came across another drawing which brought back the old days, and a photo, too, all three from the pages of the June 1975 issue of Marvel Comics’ own fan magazine, FOOM.

I was the editor of FOOM back then, and issue #10 was an X-Men special, in honor of the relaunch which had occurred just a few months earlier in the pages of Giant-Sized X-Men #1. I filled that issue of FOOM with many articles and drawings about the mutant supergroup, including this Paty Cockrum illustration of Marvel Bullpenners as members of the original X-Men.

The piece, which appeared on one of the issue’s two editorial pages, shows Duffy Vohland as The Angel, me as the Beast (and yes, that’s an accurate depiction of my coiffure back then), Stan Lee as Professor X, Marv Wolfman as Iceman, Len Wein as Cyclops, and Paty as Marvel Girl.

You’re probably familiar with all of us in the artwork above save for Duffy Vohland, who isn’t much remembered by many outside of the industry these days, but without whom I’d never have gotten a job at Marvel in the first place. Though I’d been a convention-attending fan for years before I was hired by Marvel Comics, Duffy was the one who urged me to apply for an open position editing the company’s British line, when I’d previously avoided trying to make a living at something I loved, not wanting to mix business and pleasure. (I’ll leave further details of that ambivalence for some other time.) (more…)

Happy 58th birthday, Chris Claremont!

Posted by: Scott    Tags:  Chris Claremont, comics, Dave Cockrum, FOOM, Len Wein, Marie Severin, Marvel Comics    Posted date:  November 30, 2008  |  No comment


Chris Claremont, with whom I worked at Marvel Comics back in the ’70s, turns 58 today. Chris is perhaps best known for his 16-year run on Uncanny X-Men.

But Chris wasn’t always the trusted comics veteran that he is today. When I was editing the Marvel fan magazine FOOM, I asked Marie Severin to draw this image for the June 1975 issue just as Chris was at the beginning of that amazing run.

According to the caption, the image depicts “What the fans wanted to do to Chris Claremont, Len Wein, and Dave Cockrum for destroying the X-men before they saw the book. Once the finished product was in their hands, they quickly changed their minds.”

But as I look at the expression of agony on Chris’ face, I suspect that what this picture really shows is how he might be feeling inside today as the realization sinks in that another year has gone by.

Happy birthday, Chris!

Happy 57th Birthday, Bill Mantlo!

Posted by: Scott    Tags:  Bill Mantlo, FOOM, Marvel Comics    Posted date:  November 9, 2008  |  No comment


Bill Mantlo, a Marvel Comics colorist turned writer who became best known for scripting Micronauts, Rom, Cloak and Dagger, and Alpha Flight, turned 57 today. Well … that may be what the wider world thinks of first when they think of Bill, but what I remember most from the days we worked together back at Marvel was his sense of humor.

Here’s one example—

When I was putting together the December 1974 issue FOOM, Marvel’s fan magazine, I thought it would be fun to run baby pictures of the artists and writers in the news section next to stories about their upcoming projects. I wasn’t going to ask anyone to do anything I wouldn’t do myself, so this image of me appeared at the top of the section:

FOOMBabyScottEdelman

Many other writers and artists cooperated, and handed in photos such as these, which I will leave unidentified for the moment: (more…)

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