Warren Publishing was an
American
magazine company founded by James Warren, who published his
first magazines in 1957 and continued in the business for
decades. Magazines published by Warren include
After Hours,
Creepy,
Eerie,
Famous Monsters of
Filmland,
Help!,
and
Vampirella.
Initially
based in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
, the company relocated by 1965 to New York City
.
Publishing history
Founding
Begun by James Warren, Warren Publishing's initial publications
were the
horror-
fantasy--
science
fiction movie magazine
Famous Monsters
of Filmland and
Monster World, both edited by
Forrest J. Ackerman. Warren soon published
Spacemen magazine and
in 1960
Help! magazine with the
first employee of the magazine being
Gloria Steinem. After first introducing what
he called "Monster Comics" in
Monster World, Warren
expanded in 1964 with horror-
comics stories
in the sister magazines
Creepy and
Eerie —
black-and-white publications in a standard magazine format, rather
that comic-book size, and selling for 35 cents as opposed to the
standard comic-book price of 12 cents. Such a format, Warren
explained, averted the restrictions of the
Comics Code Authority, the comic-book
industry's self-censorship body:
By
publishing graphic stories in a magazine format to which the Code
did not apply, Warren paved the way for such later graphic-story
magazines as the American
version of
Heavy Metal;
Marvel Comics' Epic Illustrated; Psycho and
other "horror-mood" series from Skywald Publications; and Warren's own
line of magazines.
Russ Jones was the founding editor of
Creepy in 1964. A year later,
Archie Goodwin succeeded him, with
Joe Orlando acting as a
behind-the-scenes story editor. Goodwin, who would become one of
comics' foremost and most influential writers, helped to establish
the company as a major force in its field. From 1965 to 1966,
Warren also published the four-issue
Blazing Combat, a
war-comics magazine with anti-war themes, highly
controversial at the time.
Vampirella and international artists
After 17 issues of
Creepy and 11 of
Eerie,
Goodwin resigned as editor in 1967. The movement of Warren's
operations from Philadelphia to New York City, combined with a
change in distributors and a downturn in the market imposed a cash
flow problem on Warren, and Goodwin along with all of the artists
except for
Tom Sutton and
Rocke Mastroserio (who soon died) departed
the company.
During the next two-and-a-half years, Warren's publications
consisted primarily of reprints from the early issues. During this
period, a variety of editors ran the magazines including
Bill Parente,
Nicola
Cuti, and Warren himself. Things started picking up again for
Warren in 1969 with the premiere of its third horror magazine,
Vampirella. Many of Warren's
original artists returned during this period, as would Goodwin for
a period of time in 1970 and 1971. After Goodwin's second
departure, editors would
J.R. Cochran. The art director was
Billy Graham.
In 1971,
Warren began using artists from the Barcelona
studio of Spanish
agency
Selecciones
Illustrada. Over the next few years, Spanish artists
would dominate the magazines.
Additional Spanish artists from S.I.'s
Valencia
studio began
freelancing for Warren in 1974.
In 1973, new editor
Bill DuBay,
who had originally joined the company as an artist early in 1970,
transformed Warren's magazines to create a uniform style. The
following year, Warren Publishing was dissolved and replaced by
Warren Communications, a sister company James Warren had founded in
1972. Dubay was editor for all three of Warren's horror magazines
until 1976, except for a short period of time in 1974 where Goodwin
returned to edit four issues of
Creepy and two of
Vampirella. During this time the frequency of Warren's
magazines was upped to nine issues a year.
Line expansion in the 1970s
In 1974, DuBay oversaw a new black-and-white magazine,
The Spirit, which revived acclaimed
writer-artist
Will Eisner's masked
detective of 1940s and early-1950s
newspaper Sunday supplements, reprinting the
character's seven-page, semi-anthological stories for a new
generation. The magazine featured new covers by Eisner and an
occasional reprint in color. It would later move to
Kitchen Sink Press. The same year, Warren
debuted
Comix
International, a color magazine reprinting earlier Warren
stories.
After Dubay's departure,
Louise
Jones, his former assistant, headed the editorial staff from
1976 to 1980. Toward the end of Dubay's period of editorship many
American artists had returned to the magazines, including
John Severin,
Alex
Toth, and
Russ Heath and they
contributed many stories during Jones' time as editor. Former
DC Comics publisher
Carmine Infantino would also join the
company during this period and pencil over 50 stories.
Much like the wave of
Spanish artists that dominated throughout the mid-1970s, a number
of artists from the Philippines
would begin contributing during this period.
Dubay returned as editor after Jones' departure, using the alias
"Will Richardson".
Toward the end of the 1970s, Warren published two new magazines
edited by Dubay: the science-fiction anthology
1984, in 1978 (which would change its
name to
1994 two years later); and, in 1979,
The Rook, starring a
time-traveling adventurer whose
stories had appeared in
Eerie since 1977.
Decline and bankruptcy
James Warren's bad health, combined with changing tastes and
business problems, led to internal turmoil and editorial turnover.
The company suspended publishing in late 1981, editor Bill Dubay
left in 1982, and Warren declared bankruptcy in 1983. In August
1983,
Harris Publications
acquired company assets at auction, although legal murkiness and a
1998 lawsuit by James Warren resulted in his reacquisition of the
rights to
Creepy and
Eerie, though no new
material since has been published as of 2007.
Artists and writers

Creepy #22 (Aug.
1968), cover art by Tom Sutton.
Illustrators included such established artists as Orlando,
Neal Adams,
Gene Colan,
Frank Frazetta,
Angelo Torres,
Roy
G. Krenkel,
Gray Morrow, Al
Williamson, Johnny Craig, Reed Crandall, Alex
Toth, John Severin, Russ Heath and Wally
Wood, plus a newer group of talents, including Dan Adkins, Richard
Bassford, Roger Brand, Frank Brunner, Rich
Buckler, Dave Cockrum, Nicola Cuti, Richard
Corben, Al Hewetson, Ken Kelly, Pepe
Moreno, Mike
Royer
, Tom Sutton, and Berni Wrightson.
The Spanish artists from
Selecciones Ilustradas included
Esteban Maroto,
José Ortiz,
Luis Bermejo,
Rafael Aura Leon,
Luis Garcia,
Jose Gonzalez,
Isidro Mones, Martin Salvador,
Fernando Fernandez,
Leopold Sanchez,
Ramon Torrents,
Jose
Bea,
Vicente Alcazar, Jose Gual,
Felix Mas and Jaime Brocal.
Artists from the Philippines
included Alex Niño,
Rudy Nebres, Alfredo Alcala and Abel Laxamana. Other international
artists who worked for Warren include Gonzalo Mayo (Peru
), Pablo Marcos (Peru), Leo Duranona (Argentina
) and Paul Neary (U.K.
).
Cover artists for
Creepy,
Eerie and
Vampirella included Adkins, Frazetta, Kelly, Morrow,
Sutton,
Ken Barr,
Vaughn Bodé,
Pat
Boyette, Ron Cobb, Richard Conway,
Jack
Davis,
H.R. Giger,
Basil Gogos,
Bill Hughes,
Terrance Lindall,
Gutenberg Monteiro, Albert Nuetzell, Vic Prezo,
Manuel Sanjulian, Vincente Segrelles,
Kenneth Smith, Enrich Torres and
Boris
Vallejo.
Writers included Goodwin,Cuti, Dubay,
Bruce
Jones,
Doug Moench,
Budd Lewis,
Gerry
Boudreau,
Rich Margopoulos,
Don McGregor,
Steve Skeates,
Jim
Stenstrum, and
T. Casey Brennan.
Milestones
The first known
interracial kiss
in mainstream comics (as opposed to
underground comix) occurred in Warren's
Creepy #43 (Jan. 1972), in "The Men
Who Called Him Monster" by writer
Don
McGregor and artist
Luis
Garcia. McGregor said in 2001 that the kiss was actually due to
the artist misunderstanding the line "This is the clincher" in the
script. McGregor would later script color comic books' first known
interracial kiss, in the "
Killraven: Warrior
of the Worlds" feature in
Amazing Adventures #31 (July
1975).
Chronological list of magazines
Ongoing publications; one-shots not listed
Miscellany
The unrelated Warren Publishing of Cornelius, North Carolina
publishes literary fiction and nonfiction, medical books, poetry
and children's books. Also unrelated is the black-and-white horror
magazine publisher
Eerie
Publications.
Footnotes
- James Warren interview, Comic Book Artist
#4 (Spring 1999)
- Arndt, Richard J. "The Warren Magazines" Accessed 24 December
2007. Link updated 11 October 2009. WebCite
archive
- Roach, Cooke, p. 90
- "Two Warren Editors Quit Within Two Weeks," The Comics
Journal #67 (October 1981), p. 12.
- Senstrum, Jim. "New Editor at Warren," The Comics
Journal #66 (September 1981), p. 16.
- "Warren Magazines Suspends Publications," The Comics
Journal #79 (January 1982), p. 15.
- "Dubay Leaves Editorship," The Comics Journal #76
(October 1982), p. 28.
- "Publisher Buys Up Warren Inventory," The Comics
Journal #86 (November 1983), pp. 8-9.
- Spurgeon, Tom. "Warren Case Moves Forward: Publisher Claims
Numerous Violations in Case Against Harris Publications," The
Comics Journal #210 (February 1999), pp. 11-13.
- Roach, Cooke, p. 14
References
External links