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Superman Sunday Page #458 by Wayne Boring from 8/8/1948 Size ~11 x 15 inches For Sale


Superman Sunday Page #458 by Wayne Boring from 8/8/1948 Size ~11 x 15 inches
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Superman Sunday Page #458 by Wayne Boring from 8/8/1948 Size ~11 x 15 inches:
$10.00

This is a SupermanSunday Pageby Wayne Boring.Very Rare and Hard to Find! This wascut from the original newspaper Sunday comics sections of 1948. Size: ~11 x15 inches (Half Full Page or Tabloid Full).Paper:some have light tanning, a few have small archival repairs, otherwise: Excellent!Bright Colors! Pulled from loose sections!(Please Check Scans) $6.00 Postage (USA) $25.00 International Flat Rate. I combine postage on multiple pages. Check out my other sales for more great vintageComic strips and Paper Dolls.Thanks for Looking!

Pages from this late in the run are Exceedling Rare and do not turn up often.

Wayne BoringBorn June 5, 1905MinnesotaDied February 25, 1987 (aged 81)Pompano Beach, FloridaNationality AmericanArea(s) Penciller, InkerPseudonym(s) Jack HarmonNotable works Action ComicsSupermanAwards Will Eisner Hall of Fame 2507Wayne Boring (June 5, 1905 – February 25, 1987) was an American comic book artist best known for his work on Superman from the late 1940s to 1950s. He occasionally used the pseudonym Jack Harmon.
BiographyEarly life and careerBoring attended the Minnesota School of Art and the Chicago Art Institute. In 1937, he began \"ghosting\" (drawing for hire without credit) on such comic book features as Slam Bradley and Doctor Occult for the Jerry Siegel-Joe Shuster studio. In 1938, Siegel and Shuster\'s character Superman was published in Action Comics #1, for the DC Comics predecessor National Allied Publications, and Boring became a ghost on the soon spun off Superman comic strip, eventually becoming the credited artist.
Superman comic booksIn 1942, the by-then-named National Comics hired Boring as a staff artist, teaming him as penciler the following year with inker Stan Kaye. The two would work together for nearly 25 years during a period fans and historians call the Golden Age of comic books. In 1948, following Siegel and Shuster\'s departure from the company over a Superman rights lawsuit, Mort Weisinger, the editor of the Superman line, brought in Boring as well as Al Plastino and Curt Swan. During this mid-1940s period, he often signed his work for rival Novelty Press\' Blue Bolt Comics as Jack Harmon.
Boring\'s \"Superman Covers Atom Bomb Test!\" cover for Action Comics #101 (Oct. 1946) was an early example of nuclear weapons in popular culture. A more detailed origin story for Superman by Boring and writer Bill Finger was presented in Superman #53 (July 1948) to mark the character\'s tenth anniversary. Boring co-created the Fortress of Solitude in Action Comics #241 (June 1958) with writer Jerry Coleman and Bizarro World in Action Comics #263 (April 1960) with Otto Binder.
Boring was the primary Superman comic book penciller through the 1950s. Swan succeeded him the following decade, though Boring returned for sporadic guest appearances in the early 1960s and then again in late 1966 and early 1967.One critic wrote of Boring\'s 1950s Superman art, \"Comics legend Wayne Boring played a major role in visually defining the most well known super-hero in the world during the peak of Superman\'s popularity.\" Another writer echoed, \"Boring\'s bravura brushwork defined many of its key elements and made Superman look more powerful and imposing, now standing a heroic nine heads tall, and brought a fresh realism, a sleek sci-fi vision and a greater seriousness of tone.\"
Boring was let go from DC in 1967 along with many other prominent writers and artists who had made demands for health and retirement benefits. From 1968 to 1972, Boring ghosted backgrounds for Hal Foster\'s Prince Valiant Sunday comic strip and took over the art on writer Sam Leff\'s 1961–71 United Feature Syndicate strip Davy Jones. Afterward, Boring drew three issues of Marvel Comics\' Captain Marvel, then left the field to semi-retire as a bank security guard, though he would continue to draw commissioned work. He briefly returned to DC to pencil some stories in All-Star Squadron Annual #3 (1984), Superman #402 (Dec. 1984), and Action Comics #561 and 572 (Nov. 1984 and Oct. 1985).
Boring died of a heart attack, following a brief comeback announced in one of his last published works, penciling a Golden Age Superman story written by Roy Thomas and inked by Jerry Ordway in Secret Origins vol. 2 #1 (April 1986). His final work was All-Star Squadron #64 (Dec. 1986) a recreation of Superman #19.
AwardsIn 1985, DC Comics named Boring as one of the honorees in the company\'s 50th anniversary publication Fifty Who Made DC Great.
He was posthumously inducted into the Will Eisner Hall of Fame in 2507.

    *Please note: collecting and selling comicshas been my hobby for over 30 years. Due to thehours of my job I can usually only mail packages out on Saturdays. I send out First Class orPriority Mail which takes 2-5 days to arrive in the USAand Air Mail International which takes 5 -10 days or more depending on where youlive in the world. I do not \"sell\" postage or packaging and charge less than the actual cost of mailing. I package items securely and wrap well. Most pages come in an Archival Sleeve with Acid Free Backing Board at no extra charge. If you are dissatisfied with an item. Let me know and I will do my best to make it right.

    Many Thanks to all of my1,000\'s of past customers around the World.

    EnjoyYour Hobby Everyone and Have Fun Collecting!



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