- Fred Kida
Fred Kida (born
December 12 ,1920 ,New York City ,New York ) is an Americancomic book andcomic strip artist best known for the charactersAirboy and Valkyrie.Biography
Early life and career
Born and raised in
Manhattan , Kida attended New York City'sAmerican School of Design , whereBill Fraccio andBob Fujitani were classmates. Like many young artists in theGolden Age of comic books , he then broke into the field at the Jerry Iger Studio, formerlyEisner & Iger , one of the earliest "packagers" that produced outsourced comic book content forpublishers entering the new medium. Starting as aninker and background artist in 1941, Kida moved on to a staff position at Iger clientQuality Comics . There he both penciled and inked his first known credited work, the feature "Phantom Clipper" in "Military Comics" #9 (April 1942).Airboy and afterward
In 1942, he joined
Hillman Periodicals , where he drew such features as "Iron Ace" (from its premiere in "Air Fighters Comics" vol. 1, #2, Nov. 1942), "Boy King" and "Gunmaster", and the following year began work on his most prominent Golden Age character,Airboy . That aviation hero, created by writerCharles Biro with scripterDick Wood and artistAl Camy , appeared initially in "Air Fighters Comics", later renamed "Airboy Comics". Aside from Airboy himself, the feature was known for the sexy antagonist the Valkyrie, a cleavage-baring Axis aviatrix who soon defected and became his ally. Kida remained on the feature through 1948, afterward working with writer Biro on such Hillman crime comics as the seminal "Crime Does Not Pay". In 1953, he left to freelance for Atlas Comics, the 1950s forerunner ofMarvel Comics . There he worked on characters including the Western gunslingers theRingo Kid and theTwo-Gun Kid and the medieval hero the Black Knight, andanthological horror, war andBible stories .After leaving comics to concentrate on comic strips (see below), Kida returned to Marvel in the 1970s, primarily as an inker, working on such characters as
Iron Man ,Godzilla ,Ka-Zar ,Luke Cage ,Man-Wolf , and (forMarvel UK )Captain Britain . His final known full comic-book credit is the superhero-team title "The Defenders" #72 (June 1979) — featuring Marvel's own character called Valkyrie. His last known published comic-book work was in the 1980sEclipse Comics revamp of Airboy, to which he contributed a full-page pinup featuring both Airboy and Valkyrie.Comic strips
In addition to his comic-book work, Kida in 1941 was one of writer-artist
Will Eisner 's assistants on thenewspaper Sunday-supplement comic-book "The Spirit "; and from 1946-47 assisted artist Bob Fujitani (also known as "Bob Wells") on the comic strip "Judge Wright". He also briefly assistedMilt Caniff on the strip "Steve Canyon ".Most notably, however, Kida assisted
artist Dan Barry on the long-running strip "Flash Gordon " from 1958-61 and then again from 1968-71; and, under his own byline, drew the comic strip "The Amazing Spider-Man" from 1981-86.Reprints
* "Fred Kida's Valkyrie!" (Ken Pierce, Inc., 1982):Black-and-white reprints of selected stories from "Air Fighters Comics" vol. 2, #2 & 7; and "Airboy Comics" vol. 2, #12, and vol. 3, #6 & 12. Introduction by
Alex Toth .References
* [http://www.lambiek.net/artists/k/kida_fred.htm Lambiek Comiclopedia: Fred Kida]
* [http://hometown.aol.com/comicsproj/credits.html The Comic Strip Project]
* [http://www.comics.org The Grand Comics Database]
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