Timely Comics is
the 1940s comic-book publishing company that would evolve into Marvel
Comics. During this era, called the Golden Age of comic books, "Timely"
was the umbrella name for the comics division of pulp magazine publisher
Martin Goodman, whose business strategy involved having a multitude
of corporate entities (including Red Circle Comics) all producing
the same product. Timely was originally located in the McGraw-Hill
Building on West 42nd Street in New York City, and later moved to
the 14th floor of the Empire State Building.
CREATING THE COMPANY
In 1939, with the emerging medium of comic books proving hugely
popular, and the first superheroes (most notably the archetypal
Superman) setting the trend, Goodman contracted with newly formed
comic-book "packager" Funnies, Inc. to supply material.
His first effort, Marvel Comics #1 (Oct. 1939), featured the
first appearances of writer-artist Carl Burgos' android superhero,
the Human Torch, and Paul Gustavson's costumed detective The Angel.
As well, it contained the first generally available appearance
of Bill Everett's mutant anti-hero Namor the Sub-Mariner, created
for the unpublished movie-theater giveaway comic, Motion Picture
Funnies Weekly earlier that year, with the eight-page original
story now expanded by four pages.
Also included was Al Anders' Western hero the Masked Raider;
the jungle lord Ka-Zar the Great, with Ben Thompson adapting the
story "King of Fang and Claw" by Bob Byrd in Goodman's
eponymous pulp magazine Ka-Zar #1; Thom Dixon's non-continuing-character
story "Jungle Terror," featuring an adventurer named
Ken Masters; "Now I'll Tell One", five single-panel,
black-and-white gag cartoons by Fred Schwab, on the inside front
cover; and a two-page prose story by Ray Gill, "Burning Rubber",
about auto racing. A painted cover by veteran science-fiction
pulp artistFrank R. Paul featured the Human Torch, looking much
different than in the interior story.
The
Ka-Zar here is unrelated to the Marvel Comics jungle lord Ka-Zar
introduced in The X-Men (March 1965).
That initial comic, cover-dated October 1939, quickly sold out
80,000 copies, prompting Goodman to produce a second printing,
cover-dated November 1939 and identical except for a black bar
in the inside-front-cover indicia over the October date, and the
November date added at the end. That sold approximately 800,000
copies. With a hit on his hands, Goodman began assembling an in-house
staff, hiring Funnies, Inc. writer-artist Joe Simon as editor.
Simon brought along his collaborator, artist Jack Kirby, followed
by artist Syd Shores.
BOOM YEARS
Marvel Comics was rechristened Marvel Mystery Comics with issue
#2 the magazine would last through #92 (June 1949)
and Timely began publishing additional titles, beginning with Daring
Mystery Comics #1 (Jan. 1940), Mystic Comics #1 (March 1940), Red
Raven Comics #1 (Aug. 1940), The Human Torch #2 (premiering Fall
1940 with no cover date and having taken over the numbering from
the unsuccessful Red Raven), and Captain America Comics #1 (March
1941). Going on sale in December 1940, a year before the bombing
of Pearl Harbor, and already showing Cap socking Hitler in the jaw,
that first issue sold nearly one million copies.
Captain America Comics #1 (March 1941), art by Jack Kirby (penciler)
and Joe Simon (inker).With the hit characters Human Torch and
Sub-Mariner now joined by Simon & Kirby's seminal patriotic
hero Captain America, Timely had its "big three" stars.
Rival publishers National Comics / All-American Comics, the sister
companies that would evolve into today's DC Comics, likewise would
have their own "big three": Superman and Batman from
National, plus the soon-to-debut Wonder Woman from All-American,
where she would join the Flash and Green Lantern. Timely's other
major competitors were Fawcett Publications (Captain Marvel, introduced
Feb. 1940); Quality Comics (Plastic Man, Blackhawk, both Aug.
1941); and Lev Gleason Publications (Daredevil, Sept. 1940; unrelated
to the 1960s Marvel hero).
Other
notable Timely characters, many still seen both in modern-day
retcon appearances and in flashbacks include super-speedster
the Whizzer; Miss America; the Destroyer; the Black Marvel; the
original Vision, who inspired Marvel writer Roy Thomas in the
1960s to create a Silver Age Vision; and the Blazing Skull and
the Thin Man, two members of the present-day New Invaders.
Just as Captain America had his teenage sidekick Bucky and DC
Comics' Batman had Robin, the Human Torch acquired a young mutant
partner, Toro, in the first issue of the Torch's own magazine.
The Young Allies one of several "kid gangs" popular
in comics at the time debuted under the rubric the Sentinels
of Liberty in a text story in Captain America Comics #4 (June
1941) before making it to the comics pages themselves the following
issue, and then eventually into their own title.
Seeing a natural "fire and water" theme, Timely was
responsible for comic books' first major crossover, with a two-issue
battle between the Human Torch and the Sub-Mariner that spanned
Marvel Mystery Comics #8-9 telling the story, Rashomon-style
but years before Rashomon, from the two characters' different
perspectives.
After the Simon & Kirby team moved to DC late 1941, having
produced Captain America Comics through issue #10 (Jan. 1942),
Al Avison and Syd Shores became regular pencilers of the celebrated
title, with one generally inking over the other. Stan Lee (né
Stanley Lieber), a cousin of Goodman's by marriage who had been
serving as an assistant since 1939, at age 16 1/2, was promoted
to interim editor just shy of his 19th birthday. Showing a knack
for the business, Lee stayed on for decades, eventually becoming
Marvel Comics' publisher in 1972. Fellow Timely staffer Vincent
Fago would substitute during Lee's World War II military service.
The staff at that time, Fago recalled, was, "Mike Sekowsky.
Ed Winiarski. Gary Keller was a production assistant and letterer.
Ernest Hart and Kin Platt were writers, but they worked freelance;
Hart also drew. George Klein, Syd Shores, Vince Alascia, Dave
Gantz, and Chris Rule were there, too".
FUNNY ANIMALS AND PEOPLE

The
superheroes were the products of what Timely referred to as the
"adventure" bullpen. The company also developed an "animator"
bullpen creating such movie tie-in and original funny animal comics
as Terrytoons Comics, Mighty Mouse and Animated Funny Comic-Tunes.
Former Fleischer Studios animator Fago, who joined Timely in 1942,
headed this group, which consisted through the years of such writer/artists
as Hart, Gantz, Klein, Platt, Rule, Sekowsky, Frank Carin (né
Carino), Bob Deschamps, Chad Grothkopf, Pauline Loth, Jim Mooney,
Moss Worthman a.k.a. Moe Worth, and future MAD Magazine cartoonists
Dave Berg and Al Jaffee.
Features from this department include "Dinky" and "Frenchy
Rabbit" in Terrytoons Comics; "Floop and Skilly Boo"
in Comedy Comics; "Posty the Pelican Postman" in Krazy
Komics and other titles; "Krazy Krow" in that character's
epnoymous comic; and in various titles, "Tubby an' Tack"
and "Ziggy Pig & Silly Seal".
In slightly more grownup fare, Timely in 1944 and '45 initiated
a sitcomy selection of titles aimed at female readers: Millie
the Model, Tessie the Typist and Nellie the Nurse. Timely also
published one of humor cartoonist Basil Wolverton's best-known
features, Powerhouse Pepper. The first issue, cover-dated Jan.
1943, bore no number, and protagonist Pepper looked different
from his more familiar visualization (when the series returned
for four issues, May-Nov. 1948) as the bullet-headed bozo in the
striped turtleneck sweater.
TIMELY AFTER TIMELY

After
the wartime boom years when superheroes had been new and
inspirational, and comics provided cheap entertainment for millions
of children, soldiers and others the post-war era found superheroes
falling out of fashion. Television and mass market paperback books
now also competed for readers and leisure time. Goodman began turning
to a wider variety of genres than ever, emphasizing horror, Westerns,
teen humor, crime and war comics, and introducing female heroes
to try to attract girls and young women to read comics.
In 1946, for instance, the superhero title All Select Comics
was changed to Blonde Phantom Comics, and now starred a masked
secretary who fought crime in an evening gown. That same year,
Kid Komics eliminated its stars and became Kid Movie Comics. All
Winners Comics became All Teen Comics in January 1947. Timely
eliminated virtually all its staff positions in 1948.
The precise end-point of the Golden Age of comics is vague, but
for Timely, at least, it appears to have ended with the cancelation
of Captain America Comics at issue #75 (Feb. 1950) by which
time the series had already been Captain America's Weird Tales
for two issues, with the finale featuring merely anthological
horror/suspense tales and no superheroes. The company's flagship
title, Marvel Mystery Comics, starring the Human Torch, had already
ended its run (with #92, June 1949), as had Sub-Mariner Comics
(with #32, the same month). Goodman began using the globe logo
of Atlas, the newsstand-distribution company he owned, on comics
cover-dated Nov. 1951.