Gardner Fox
Artist
![[ Gardner Fox ]](../assets/bio/gardner_fox.gif)
Gardner Fox was an American writer born in Brooklyn, New York. He is best known for writing comics and co-creating
numerous comics characters, especially for DC
Comics.
Fox received a law degree from St
John's College and was admitted to the New York bar
in 1935. He practiced for about 2 years but
the great depression was hard on Fox and his legal
practice so he took work writing comics for DC
Comics editor Vincent Sullivan.
Fox's first
story was for Steve Mallone, District Attorney. He later contributed scripts for Zatara and Batman. Fox, along with writer Bill
Finger was instrumental in the evolution of Batman. He introduced the now famous
crimefighting tools such as the Batarang and the
Batplane.
Fox also co-created numerous
characters including The Sandman with Bert
Christman, Starman with Jack Burnley, and Doctor Fate with Howard Sherman. Though he
contributed a number of scripts for other companies
Fox remained a mainstay of DC and became the head
writer for the DC-related company All-American. There, Fox created such iconic superhero characters
as The Flash (with artist Harry Lampert) and Hawkman with Dennis Neville. With
editor Sheldon Mayer and artist Sheldon Moldoff Fox
created the first superhero team, the Justice
Society of America. These characters
gained their own titles and became very successful
making Fox one of the comic industry's stars.
During World War II, Fox took over a variety of
characters and books of several of his colleagues
that had been drafted. He worked for numerous
companies including what would one day become Marvel
Comics, and at EC he served a brief stint as head
writer.
With the waning popularity of
superheroes Fox contributed western, science
fiction, humor, romance, and funny animal stories. In the late 1950s Fox was called upon by editor
Julius Schwartz to revive The Flash. Fox reinvented the character adorning the title to a
new character, a police scientist by the name of
Barry Allen. The sales success of The Flash in
the anthology title Showcase is considered by
many to be the instigator of the Silver Age of comic
books.
Superheroes were once again in vogue
and Fox was called upon to revive characters and
concepts such as Hawkman and the Atom,
and created the Justice League of America. He also wrote scripts for Batman reintroducing villains such as The Riddler and The
Scarecrow, who would go on to become some of Batman's most famous foes.
Fox stopped
receiving work in 1968 when DC comics refused to
give health insurance and other benefits to their
older creators. Fox, who had written a number
of prose science fiction novels in the 1940s,
returned to producing novels under his own name and
several pseudonyms. He wrote over 100 novels
in genres such as sci-fi, sword and sorcery, spy,
crime, fantasy, romance, western, and historical
fiction. His pen names include Jefferson
Cooper, Bart Sommers, Paul Dean, Ray Gardner, and
Lynna Cooper. He is estimated to have written
over 4000 comic stories.
Fox's work on The Cloak is showcased in Adventures Into Digital Comics. |