Charles Dickens (7 February 1812 - 9 June 1870) is considered the
greatest novelist of the Victorian era and created many of the
worlds most notable fictional characters, including Fagin, Mr
Micawber and Miss Havisham. George Evans was an American comics
illustrator with a large number of credits to his name, including
work for such comics publishers as Fiction House, Fawcett, EC
Comics, DC Comics, Gold Key and several title adaptations for
Gilberton's Classics Illustrated series. JOE ORLANDO was born in
Bari, Italy, but his family emigrated to the USA and settled in New
York City in 1929. He attended the High School of Industrial Art
before being drafted into the Army, where he served in the Military
Police in France, Belgium and Germany. Back in civil life, he
studied at the Art Students League in New York. He published his
first comic, the feature 'Chuck White', in titles like Catholic
Comics and Treasure Chest. He then opened a small studio with
Wallace Wood, where they were joined by young artists like Sid
Check and Harry Harisson. Wood and Orlando worked as a tandem on
Fox features like 'Dorothy Lamour', 'Martin Kane', 'Frank Buck',
'Judy Canova' and 'Pedro'.
When Fox folded in 1950, the discouraged Orlando went to work at a
handbag manufacturer, but was soon brought back to comics by Wood,
who could use some help with his heavy workload. They shared art
duties on comics for Avon ('An Earth Man on Venus', 'Strange
Worlds', 'The Mask of Dr. Fu Manchu'), Youthful Magazines ('Captain
Science') and Master Comics ('Dark Mysteries'), as well as EC.
At EC, he became a solo artist, and was one of the staples of the
New Trend's science fiction titles (Weird Science, Weird Fantasy,
Weird Science/Fantasy), especially for the 'Adam Link' stories he
made with Otto Binder. Orlando also had stories published in the
horror and crime titles, as well as the humor title Panic.
When EC stopped publishing comic books in 1956, due to Fredric
Wertham's campaign against violent comics, Orlando transferred to
Stan Lee's Atlas, working on titles like Mystic and Astonishing.
Orlando also contributed art for three issues in Gilberton's
Classics Illustrated series, namely 'A Tale of Two Cities',
'Caesar's Conquests' and 'Ben Hur'.
In 1957, he went back to EC when he became a regular contributor to
Mad magazine, among others by taking over 'Scenes We'd Like to See'
from Phil Interlandi. In the mid 1990s, he also worked for Marvel's
Daredevil and the James Warren magazines Creepy and Eerie.
Orlando joined DC Comics in 1966, initially doing art on 'Swing
with Scooter' and 'The Inferior Five', before becoming an editor
under Carmen Infantino. Besides editing existing titles like 'House
of Mystery' (in which he introduced the hosts Cain and Abel) and
'Swing with Scooter', new titles were created under his helm, such
as 'Swamp Thing', 'Phantom Stranger', 'Jonah Hex' and 'The
Sandman'. He also co-launched and drew for DC's new humor title
PLOP! in 1973, and provided magazine art to National Lampoon and
Newsweek. At DC he eventually became Vice President and Editorial
Director, and even became head of MAD, after the death of Bill
Gaines in 1992. In addition, Orlando was a teacher at New York's
School of Visual Arts.
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