And now, to let the other shoe drop.
A lot of fans (including the long-winded Don McGregor) thought Steranko's NICK FURY #1 was one of the coolest, best comics ever, ever written. I wasn't one of 'em. It LOOKED great. but it was almost completely DISJOINTED and incoherent. If someone argued it was a triumph of style over substance... okay. But if so, it should have been a one-time thing.
Instead, he did it again in #2. And then again in #3. Which, incidentally, was his first of 2 remake-tributes to stories in CAPTAIN AMERICA COMICS #10 from 1940. I'm not making this up. Right down to the 2-page spread title sequence. Yep. KIRBY did it first.
I read that one day, Frank Springer, fresh from DC's "Secret Six" (I believe it had just been cancelled without the story being fnished) visited Marvel, wherer "ye editor" asked him, "What series would you like to do?" Naturally, coming off a spy series, he said... "NICK FURY".
When Martin Goodman sold the company in late '67, the new owners, Perfect Film, switched them from their previous distributor (who also handled DC and kept them to a small number of books per month) to another, and plans were immediately hatched to expand the line, and flood more of the newsstand shelves. And so, for example, all 3 split books (STRANGE TALES, TALES OF SUSPENSE and TALES TO ASTONISH) were turned into 6 solo books.
Most of those "first" issues were either the middle or the end of ongoing stories. But most of those "first" issues also had RETOLD ORIGIN stories. Most of them sucked compared to the originals. The one Roy Thomas did with Dan Adkins DIDN'T. Damn, that was good. Steranko decided NOT TO DO ONE. Apparently, that bugged his boss.
And so, what happens? Roy "SECRET ORIGINS" Thomas teamed with Frank "MASQUE OF THE RED DEATH" Springer (see Dell Comics, heh) to do-- NOT a real "SHIELD ORIGIN ISSUE" (as proclaimed on the cover) but an INFERIOR retelling of ST #135. Kirby did it WAY, WAY better.
"Whatever Happened To Scorpio?" was announced for #4. Instead, we got that non-ORIGIN thing. Steranko told his boss, IF he interrupted his UNBROKEN run on the book, it would HURT SALES. And so, he threatened to WALK off the book if his boss did what he was planning. His boss figured he was bluffing. HE WASN'T BLUFFING.
For decades since, his boss spread the false narrative that Steranko was "slow" and had "BLOWN A DEADLINE". He hadn't. Leave it to you-know-who to screw things up, then publicly BLAME "the talent". In a further effort to take Steranko down a peg, after first replacing Joe Sinnott (their best inker) with Frank Giacoia (who wasn't bad) and then Dan Adkins (who was suddenly doing a lot less on DR. STRANGE), he decided to shove John Tartaglione on as the inker. He inked 3 of Steranko's books. The 2 X-MEN issues sucked. NICK FURY #5 didn't. This is because, suddenly having #4 pushed back a whole month to #5, and with no other assignments (oh yeah, this was definitely a boss saying "FUCK YOU!" to a free-lancer), Steranko TOOK BACK the pages... and RE-INKED them himself. UNPAID, UNCREDITED. Just like when Kirby, Ditko and so on and son on would WRITE.
It seems to me the writing on #5 was a step up than it was on #1, 2 & 3. It got WAY BETTER on CAPTAIN AMERICA #110, 111 & 113. (By the way, Steranko DIDN'T blow a deadline on #112, EITHER. He NEVER blew a deadline in his life.) What you had were 2 guys with massive egos clashing. I suppose it was inevitable that Steranko would walk, just as Ditko & Wood had done.
So, suddenly without the one guy holding it together, NICK FURY began to disintegrate right before readers' eyes. And unfortunately, STRANGE TALES always sold less than the other 2 split books. So splitting it into 2 books was a mistake, since it was reaching for 2 very different audiences, and now, each book probably had HALF the sales any give ST issue had. OY.
Once things shook out on DR. STRANGE, Thomas, Colan & Palmer (MY GOD, what an art team!) were fabulous... but it wasn't selling. NICK FURY, meanwhile, turned to TOTAL CHAOS.
#6 had Roy Thomas on story, Frank Springer on art, Archie Goodwin on dialogue.
#7 had Goodwin & Frank Springer.
#8 had Ernie Hart, Springer (with help from Herb Trimpe) & John Tartag. (WTF?)
NOT BRAND ECCH #11 had Arnold Drake, Frank Springer & Tom Sutton. It still cracks me up to think I read that many years before getting ahold of the story it was making fun of.
THEN, some stability arrived... but, not quite.
#9, 10 & 11 had Gary "burnout" Friedrich & Frank Springer, with #10 oddly inked by Johnny Craig. Of this 3-parter (each chapter done as a stand-alone story), part 1 was actually pretty damn good. Part 2 was average at best. Part 3... was INCOHERENT. I later found out Friedrich has a SERIOUS drinking problem. His output, on every series I've seen him work on, was VERY, very incosnsistent.
So then out of nowhere... #12 had the team of Steve Parkhouse as writer, BARRY SMITH as writer-artist, and Sid Greene as inker. MAN, did this think look weird. This was when Smith was heavy into his "JACK KIRBY!" mode, only with Steranko-inspired panel layouts. Some of it looked cool. Some of it looked terribly amateurish. But what has always stood out to me... this was the BEST DAMNED issue since Steranko. NO S*** !!! Whoever among those 2 Brits was responsible for the story & dialogue, they managed to capture the real essense of "Nick Fury" in ways Thomas, Goodwin, Hart & Friedrich had all failed miserably to do. And what a cliffhanger.
Disaster struck. Smith's green card ran out, and he was deported back to England until he could get it straightened out.
Part 2 of THIS 3-parter... was done by Gary Friedrich & HERB TRIMPE. It was completely incoherent, and seemed to have no connection with part 1. W-- T-- F!!!???
Part 3... MAN, what an improvement. It wasn't completely coherent, but it did-- mostly-- sort of-- tie up the loose ends. What they did here, really, was basically DITCH the Streranko influence, and try their damndest to recapture the KIRBY run of the series. You know... this could have worked.
But then #15 came along. Friedrich & Trimpe were about to start a whole new EPIC. I'm betting they got the entire issue finished, when suddenly... sales reports came in, somebody decided, "PULL THE PLUG!!!", and before it got to the printer, DICK AYERS was recruited to do several brand-new pages at the end of the book, to replace what Trimpe had done, CHANGE the ending, and bring the series to a crashing halt... where it looked like Nick had been ASSASSINATED. What nerve. They killed the book, and KILLED its hero.
I dunno. I think... just, MAYBE!! ...if Friedrich & Trimpe had taken over with #6, and stuck with it, the book might have lasted.
Instead, a few months later, Roy Thomas & Sal Buscema did a sequel in which Nick acted COMPLETELY out-of-character, put the lives of a whole team of heroes at risk, and in the process, I have no doubt, TOTALLY screwed over whatever Steranko had in mind concerning the mystery of Scorpio. OHHHHHHHH... Fury hasn't been right since.