Since the founding of the Will Eisner Comic Industry Awards (and their previous incarnation, the Kirby Awards), the following individuals have been inducted into the Hall of Fame.


Spain Rodriguez

1940–2012

Spain Rodriguez was one of the seminal artists in the underground comix movement. In New York, he created the tabloid Zodiac Mindwarp for East Village Other before moving to San Francisco to become part of the counterculture scene there. His character Trashman, Agent of the Sixth International, was an icon in underground newspapers as well as in Zap. More recently, he produced such award-winning graphic novels as Nightmare Alley and Che: A Graphic Biography.

Inducted 2013


John Romita
Photo by Jackie Estrada

John Romita

1930–

John Romita drew Marvel’s Amazing Spider-Man from 1966 to 1972, giving the definitive look to such characters as Mary Jane Watson, the Kingpin, and the Punisher. In 1973, he became Marvel’s art director, a position he held until his retirement in 1996, and where he created the initial designs on such seminal characters as Wolverine. In 1977, Romita also co-created the Spider-Man newspaper strip, along with writer Stan Lee.

Inducted 2002


1956–

John Romita Jr.’s first contribution to Marvel Comics was at the age of 13 with the creation of the Prowler in Amazing Spider-Man #78 (1969). He began his career at Marvel UK, doing sketches for covers of reprints. His American debut was with a story in Amazing Spider-Man Annual (1977). He went on to popular runs on Iron Man, Amazing Spider-Man, Uncanny X-Men, Daredevil, The Punisher War Zone, Cable, Daredevil: The Man Without Fear, Thor, Kick-Ass, Superman, and All-Star Batman, just to name a few.


P. Craig Russell

P. Craig Russell

1951–

P. Craig Russell has spent 50 years producing graphic novels, comic books, and illustrations. He entered the comics industry in 1972 as an assistant to artist Dan Adkins. After establishing a name for himself at Marvel on Killraven, Dr. Strange, and Elric, Russell began working on more personal projects, such as adaptations of operas by Mozart (The Magic Flute), Strauss (Salome), and Wagner (The Ring of the Nibelung). Russell is also known for his Fairy Tales of Oscar Wilde series and his graphic novel adaptations of Neil Gaiman’s The Sandman: The Dream Hunters, Coraline, Murder Mysteries, and American Gods. His most recent project has been Gaiman’s Norse Mythology for Dark Horse.

Inducted 2022


Photo by Jackie Estrada

1960–

Joe Sacco is credited as being the first artist to practice rigorous, investigative journalism using the comics medium. Between 1993 and 1995, Joe wrote and drew nine issues of Palestine, which documented his two months spent in the Occupied Territories in the winter of 1991–1992 and which shows the human effects of the Israeli occupation and subsequent intifada. In 1995–1996, Joe traveled four times to Bosnia and subsequently produced four harrowing accounts of his time there: Christmas with Karadzic, Soba, Safe Area Gorazde, and The Fixer.


Stan Sakai
Photo by Jackie Estrada

Stan Sakai

1953–

Stan Sakai was born in Kyoto, Japan, grew up in Hawaii, and currently lives in California. His creation, Usagi Yojimbo, first appeared in 1984. Usagi has been on television as a guest of the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, as toys, on clothing, in comics, and in a series of trade paperback collections. Stan is a recipient of numerous awards, including the National Cartoonists Society Comic Book Division Award, six Eisner Awards, five Spanish Haxturs, an Inkpot, an American Library Association Award, a Cultural Ambassador Award from the Japanese American National Museum, and a couple of Harvey Awards, including one for Best Cartoonist.

Inducted 2020


Gaspar Saladino

Gaspar Saladino

1927–2016

Gaspar Saladino started at DC in 1949 and worked for more than 60 years in the comics industry as a letterer and logo designer. It has been calculated that he designed 416 logos, lettered 52,769 comic book pages and 5,486 covers, and produced 411 house ads. The logos he designed for DC included Swamp Thing, Vigilante, Phantom Stranger, Metal Men, Adam Strange, House of Mystery, House of Secrets, and Unknown Soldier, among others. For Marvel, Saladino’s logos, which he either created or updated, include The Avengers, Sgt. Fury and his Howling Commandos, Captain America and the Falcon, and Marvel Triple Action. During the early 1970s Saladino lettered the interiors for the then-new Swamp Thing. It was in the pages of this series that he created the concept of character-designated fonts, with Swamp Thing’s distinctive outlined, “drippy” letters.

Inducted 2023


Tim Sale
Photo by Jackie Estrada

Tim Sale

1956–2022

Artist Tim Sale began working in comics in 1983 and over the course of his career worked with Marvel, DC, Dark Horse, Harris Comics, and Oni Press, with his art gracing characters including Batman, Superman, Harley Quinn, and the Justice Society of America. With Jeph Loeb he created Batman: The Long Halloween, Challengers of the Unknown Must Die!, Superman for All Seasons, Batman: Dark Victory, Daredevil: Yellow, Spider-Man: Blue, Hulk: Gray, Catwoman: When in Rome, and Captain America: White. In 1999, Sale earned an Eisner Award for Best Short Story for “Devil’s Advocate” with writer Matt Wagner in Grendel: Black, White, and Red #1. He also received Eisners for Best Graphic Album–Reprint for Batman: The Long Halloween and Best Penciller/Inker for Superman for All Seasons and Grendel Black, White, and Red.

Inducted 1923


Photo by Jackie Estrada

1958–

As a teenager Bill and his brother Steve co-founded Pacific Comics, a store in San Diego. Pacific went on to become a chain of stores, a publisher of creator-owned comics, and a comic book distributor before it was bought up by Diamond Comic Distributors in the eighties. Bill then went to work for Diamond, where he oversaw the company’s rise to dominate the direct market. He was also part of Diamond’s early forays into digital distribution.


Photo by Jackie Estrada

1954–

Steve began as a comic book retailer when he was 17 years old, when he and his brother Bill opened Pacific Comics, then expanded the company to include publishing and distribution. After that, he launched Blackthorne Publishing. During his time in the business Steve published some 800 comic books.


1894–1969

Schnapp was a logo designer and letterer who brought his classic and art deco design styles to DC Comics (then National Comics) beginning with the redesign of the Superman logo in 1940. He did a great deal of logo and lettering work for the company in the 1940s. Around 1949, he joined the staff as their in-house logo, cover lettering, and house-ad designer and letterer, and he continued in that role until about 1967. He also designed the Comics Code seal.


AlexSchomberg
Photo by Jackie Estrada

Alex Schomberg

1905–1998

The prolific Alex Schomburg turned out hundreds of comics and pulp magazine covers in the 1930s and 1940s. His covers for World War II–era titles are noted for their large casts of characters in dynamic action, and his airbrush science fiction covers are prized for their brilliant colors and attractive females.

Inducted 1999


Charles M.Schulz

Charles M. Schulz

1922–2000

Charlie Brown, Snoopy, Linus and Lucy—the late Charles Schulz gave us these characters and more with the most popular comic strip of all time, Peanuts. The strip was adapted into a series of animated specials for television that are still being shown decades after they were first aired. For many, Peanuts is a cultural milestone.

Inducted 1997


Diana Schutz

Diana Schutz

1955–

Diana Schutz is a Canadian-born comic book editor who started out editing a newsletter for Berkeley’s Comics & Comix in 1981. She went on to serve as editor-in-chief of Comico during its peak years, followed by a 25-year tenure at Dark Horse Comics. Some of the best-known works she has edited are Frank Miller’s Sin City and 300, Matt Wagner’s Grendel, Stan Sakai’s Usagi Yojimbo, Paul Chadwick’s Concrete, and Mike Mignola’s Hellboy. In addition to editing, she has translated many French and Spanish comics works into English. Diana is now an adjunct instructor of comics history and criticism at Portland Community College.

Inducted 2023


Julius Schwartz
Photo by Jackie Estrada

Julius Schwartz

1915–2004

Julie Schwartz served as editor at DC Comics for 49 years, starting in the 1940s. In the early 1950s, he edited DC’s premier science fiction titles, Strange Adventures and Mystery in Space, then went on to usher in the Silver Age with revivals of revised versions of such Golden Age characters as the Flash, Green Lantern, Hawkman, and the Atom, while the Justice League of America became the Silver Age equivalent of the Justice Society.

Inducted 1997


Dori Seda
Photo by Jackie Estrada

Dori Seda

1950–1988

Dori Seda was one of the pioneers of the autobiographical comics genre in underground comix. She started her career when she was hired by Last Gasp publisher Ron Turner to do the bookkeeping for the company. Her stories were published in several comics and anthologies, including Wimmen’s Comix, Rip-Off Comix, Tits ‘n’ Clits, and Weirdo. Dori’s only full-length solo book was Lonely Nights Comics. Her work is collected in Dori Stories (1999), which also includes memorial essays by friends. In 1988, Last Gasp established the Dori Seda Memorial Award for Women, whose first (and only) recipient was Carol Tyler.

Inducted 2017


E.C.Segar
Photo courtesy Fantagraphics

E.C. Segar

1894–1938

E. C. Segar originated Popeye, Olive Oyl, Wimpy, and other now-classic cartoon characters in his comic strip Thimble Theater, which debuted in 1919. The strip ran for 10 years before Popeye first appeared; the rest is history.

Inducted 2001


1934–1984

Phil Seuling was a comic book retailer, fan convention organizer, and comics distributor primarily active in the 1970s. He was the organizer of the annual New York Comic Art Convention, originally held in New York City every July 4 weekend beginning in 1968. Later, with his Sea Gate Distributors company, he developed the concept of the direct market distribution system for getting comics directly into comic book specialty shops, bypassing the then-established newspaper/magazine distributor method, where no choices of title, quantity, or delivery directions were permitted.


John Severin

John Severin

1921–2012

John Severin was an artist equally at home drawing humorous and serious comics. At EC Comics he drew wacky stories for MAD (“Melvin of the Apes”), and western and war stories for Two-Fisted Tales. After EC he continued both trends, producing humor features for Cracked along with western and war stories for Marvel, Warren, and other companies.

Inducted 2003


Marie Severin
Photo by Tom Deleon

Marie Severin

1929–2018

Marie Severin was the colorist for all the EC Comics titles in the early 1950s. In the 1960s, she joined Marvel Comics, where over the next two decades she not only anchored the famous “bullpen” but drew such comics as The Incredible HulkKull, and Not Brand Echh! She went back to coloring in the 1990s, primarily for DC titles.

Inducted 2001


Gilbert Shelton

Gilbert Shelton

1940–

Cartoonist Gilbert Shelton began his first notable comic strip in the early 1960s, writing and drawing Wonder Warthog for the University of Texas’ satirical magazines Bacchanal and Texas Ranger. He moved to San Francisco in 1968 and became part of the burgeoning underground comix scene. After producing the comic Feds ‘n’ Heads (published by Print Mint), Shelton created his most famous strip, The Fabulous Furry Freak Brothers in 1968, and a spinoff strip, Fat Freddy’s Cat, in 1969, when he also co-founded Rip Off Press.

Inducted 2012

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