Posted by: narfstar
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Giunta was part of the shop system. My understanding is that those considered top tier would be given jobs for the to tier companies and the others given work for the lower tier. Giunta was given some covers which means they recognized his talent. He really has some great covers. I will be scanning Top Spot today. I do not think he put as much effort in this Duke story as he did in Triple Threat. I am really disappointed that we know so few writers/creators. I personally am more a character/writer fan than artist fan. The Duke is just a really cool character regardless of the artist.
Narf.
There were MANY "shop systems" and I NEVER said that the Baily shop (where Giunta worked) had tiers of talent. My statement was in regard to the Jacquet Shop which had Carl Pfeufer, John Jordan, et al who provided material for Fawcett and Ed Ryan, Alonzo Vincent (Jack A Warren), Al Plastino, Claire Mo, etc. who provided material for Novelty. Then you get the 2nd tier of the studio who did work for the books we're looking at now: Chu Hing, Henry Kiefer, Fred Bell, Harold Delay (who sometimes worked at both tiers), Arnold Hicks, Gerald Altman, Ramona Patenaude, Harry Fisk, William Allison, etc. I find these artists more individual and interesting than some of the "top" tier talents, so calling them "second tier" is more in reference to their ASSIGNMENTS than their ABILITIES.
The divisions of talent were pretty dramatic and were probably based on pay scales: since Fawcett paid Jacquet better than Rewl did, Fawcett got the more expensive talent. [now THAT is speculation on my part, so please don't base a response around it as a fact - but if you have other theories that fit the facts, I'd love to hear them.]
NOW the Baily Shop on the other hand seems to have been fairly "level" AND it seems to have a rotating staff with the exception of Charles Voight and John Giunta and August Froehlich. Interesting enough, the Who's Who puts Mac Raboy as a co-owner of the Baily Shop. Wonder where than info came from? Anyway, here's the WW listing of the Baily Shop. I've marked it up in red the names I (personally, just me, my opinion, IMHO) think could be removed. Questionable entries I've marked in purple and additions are in green.
Studio personnel
ALBRIGHT, NINA (pen/ink/) 1945-46 > 45 46
AMES, LEE (pen/ink/) 1944-45 unconfirmed > 44 45 APPEL, GEORGE H. unconfirmed BAILY, BERNARD (own/) 1943-46- > 43 44 45 46 47 48
BAKER, BRUCE c1945 unconfirmed > 45 BALDWIN, W. F. c1946 unconfirmed > 46 BARRY, DAN (dir/pen/ink/) 1946 > 46
BRIEFER, DICK 1945 unconfirmed > 45 COHEN, MILTON (pen/ink/) c1945 > 45
COOPER, SAM (pen/ink/) c1945 > 45 DEL BOURGO, M. (pen/ink/) c1943 > 43
FERGUSON, HOWARD (let/) 1944 > 44
FRAZETTA, FRANK (pen&ink/) 1944 > 44
FROEHLICH, AUGUST (pen/ink/) c1944-46 > 44 45 46
FROHMAN, BURT (pen/ink/) 1946 > 46
GALE, JERRY (wr/) c1943-45 confirmed by Marvin Levy > 43 44 45
GATTUSO, PAUL (pen/ink/) mid-1940s > 44 45 46
GIUNTA, JOHN (pen/ink/) 1944 > 44
45 GOLDEN, ROBERT unconfirmed
HENNING, BILL (pen/ink/) c1944-45 > 44 45
HICKS, ARNOLD (pen/ink/)
HOLLINGSWORTH, ALVIN (pen/ink/) mid-1940s > 44 45 46
INFANTINO, CARMINE (pen/ink/) c1945 > 45 JOURDAIN (pen/ink/)
KANE, GIL (pen/ink/) 1946 > 46
KIEFER, HENRY C. (pen/ink/) 1945 > 45
LEAV, MORT unconfirmed
LEE, LESTER (wr/) 1945 possibly part of the team LEE/SCHERTZ > 45
LEVY, MARVIN (ink/bkgrd/) 1943-46 > 43 44 45 46
LITTLE, FRANK (wr/pen/ink/) 1944-45 > 44 45
MORGAN, FRED (pen/ink/)
PADDOCK, MUNSON (pen/ink/) 1945 > 45
POST, HOWARD (pen/ink/) 1945-46 > 45 46
PROSS, AL (pen/ink/) c1945 > 45
RABOY, MAC (co-own/) c1944-45 > 44 45
RICE, PIERCE (pen/) 1943 > 43
SCHERTZ (pen/ink/) 1945-46 part of team LEE/SCHERTZ > 45 46
SHERMAN, HAROLD (pen/ink/) 1945-46 > 45 46
STAHL, AL (pen/ink/) 1945 > 45
STALLMAN, MANNY (pen/ink/) 1945 > 45
STONER, E. C. (pen/ink/)
TIRMAN, IRVING (pen/ink/) c1943-45 > 43 44 45
TYLER, AL (pen/ink/)
VOIGHT, CHARLES (pen/ink/) c1945-c46 > 45 46
WARREN, ALONZO c1945 unconfirmed
John Giunta was, by any standard of measure, a "top tier" talent. I think (again note that I am prefacing this with an "opinion" label) that Giunta chose to work for Baily as a "big fish" in a "small pool" role. I also THINK that one of the appeals of the first Duke of Darkness strips is that Giunta was assisted on them by Frank Frazetta. Nothing to back that up beyond my eyes, however.
Here's MY take on some of the "connectivity" of these oddball titles: Baily seems to have been a "broker" of comic material to anyone with a paper quota during WWII. I believe that Baily (and in some cases, Baily's artists) OWNED their characters and when a Baily Shop customer showed up with a paper supply, the shop would fill a new comic title for them with the next installments of whatever they had sold to the previous customer - as if the were certain that the previous client wouldn't return? Since the copyrights were owned internally, there was never a conflict.
I heard directly from the mouth of Manny Stallman, sitting here in my own living room, that Giunta seemed to have problems completing jobs. Manny worked with him for several years, especially at Harvey horror, and would not elaborate on that statement. And I won't speculate. Suffice it to say that Giunta DID have a productive career (DC, Marvel, Avon, Fawcett, Prize, Holyoke, Hillman, etc.) but his output levels never seemed to live up to his contemporaries.
Again I agree with bchat that these characters were much more visceral than the sanitized and repetitive heroes of the big guys' comics. And they didn't survive long enough to be done to death. PLUS you can (almost) afford to buy the comics. Lots of pluses on their side - especially the fun part.
Peace, Jim (|:{>