| Neal Adams | | | Born | June 6, 1941 (1941-06-06) (age 65) Governors Island, Manhattan, New York City | | Nationality | American | | Area(s) | Penciller, Inker, Writer, Editor, Publisher | | Notable works | Batman Green Lantern Green Arrow X-Men | | Awards | Alley Awards - Best Cover (1967)
- Best Full-Length Story (1968, with Bob Haney)
- Best Pencil Artist (1969)
Shazam Awards June 6 is the 157th day of the year (158th in leap years) in the Gregorian calendar. ...
For the movie, see 1941 (film). ...
This article is about Governors Island in New York State. ...
Manhattan is a borough of New York City, New York, USA, coterminous with New York County. ...
Nickname: Location in the state of New York Coordinates: Country United States State New York Boroughs The Bronx Brooklyn Manhattan Queens Staten Island Settled 1625 Government - Mayor Michael Bloomberg (R) Area - City 468. ...
Image File history File links No higher resolution available. ...
- Best Individual Story (1970 and 1971, with Dennis O'Neil)
- Best Pencil Artist (Dramatic Division) (1970)
| Neal Adams (born June 6, 1941, Governors Island, Manhattan, New York City) is an American comic book and commercial artist best known for his highly naturalistic style of illustration. He has helped create some of the definitive modern imagery of the DC Comics characters Batman, Green Arrow, and others. Adams has named artists Joe Kubert, Russ Heath, and Mort Drucker as his influences.[citation needed] Other influences include Jack Kirby, Stan Drake, and Jim Steranko.[citation needed] June 6 is the 157th day of the year (158th in leap years) in the Gregorian calendar. ...
For the movie, see 1941 (film). ...
This article is about Governors Island in New York State. ...
Manhattan is a borough of New York City, New York, USA, coterminous with New York County. ...
Nickname: Location in the state of New York Coordinates: Country United States State New York Boroughs The Bronx Brooklyn Manhattan Queens Staten Island Settled 1625 Government - Mayor Michael Bloomberg (R) Area - City 468. ...
A comic book is a magazine or book containing the art form of comics. ...
Commercial art refers to art created for commercial purposes, primarily advertising. ...
The definition of an artist is wide-ranging and covers a broad spectrum of activities to do with creating art, practising the arts and/or demonstrating an art. ...
Naturalism in art refers to the depiction of realistic objects in a natural setting. ...
Illustration by Jessie Willcox Smith. ...
DC Comics is one of the largest American companies in comic book and related media publishing. ...
Batman (originally referred to as the Bat-Man and still referred to at times as the Batman) is a DC Comics fictional superhero who first appeared in Detective Comics #27 in May 1939. ...
To meet Wikipedias quality standards, this comics-related article or section may require cleanup. ...
Joe Kubert (born September 18, 1926, Poland) is an American comic book artist who went on to found the Joe Kubert School of Cartoon and Graphic Art. ...
Russ Heath is an artist who has worked in the comics industry. ...
Mort Drucker is a cartoonist and caricaturist from Brooklyn, New York. ...
Jack Kirby (August 28, 1917 â February 6, 1994) was one of the most influential, recognizable, and prolific artists in American comic books. ...
Stanley Albert Drake (November 9, 1921-March 10, 1997) was a cartoonist, artist for the comic strips The Heart Of Juliet Jones and Blondie. ...
Captain America #111 (March 1969): Sterankos signature surrealism. ...
Biography
Early life and career
Strange Adventures #207 (Dec. 1967): One of Adams's earliest DC Comics covers, and his first for his signature character Deadman, already shows a mature style and a boundary-pushing innovation for the time. Adams attended the High School of Industrial Art in Manhattan, and shortly after graduation began working in the advertising industry. Interested in comic books, he unsuccessfully submitted art samples to DC Comics, but did find uncredited freelance work drawing Bat Masterson for Archie Comics.[citation needed] In 1962, Adams began his comics career in earnest at the NEA newspaper syndicated, working as an anonymous assistant on such comic strips as Peter Scratch, Rip Kirby, and The Heart of Juliet Jones before being given his own strip, Ben Casey, based on the medical drama TV series. This comic strip ran from 1962 through 1965. Image File history File links StrangeAdv207. ...
Image File history File links StrangeAdv207. ...
Deadman is a fictional character, a superhero appearing in DC Comics. ...
The High School of Art and Design is a Career and Technical Education high school located at 1075 Second Avenue, between 56th and 57th Streets in Manhattan, New York City, New York. ...
Commercialism redirects here. ...
DC Comics is one of the largest American companies in comic book and related media publishing. ...
Bat Masterson in 1879. ...
Archie Comics is an American comic book publisher known for its many series featuring the fictional teenage Archie Andrews, Betty Cooper, Veronica Lodge, Reggie Mantle and Forsythe Jughead Jones characters created by Bob Montana. ...
United Media is large editorial column and comic strip newspaper syndication service based in the United States, owned by The E.W. Scripps Company. ...
Print Syndication is a form of syndication in which news articles, columns, or comic strips are made available to newspapers and magazines. ...
This article is about the comic strip, the sequential art form as published in newspapers and on the Internet. ...
Rip Kirby, drawn by Alex Raymond. ...
...
Dr. Maggie Graham (Bettye Ackerman) and Vince Edwards as the title character Ben Casey was a medical drama series which ran on ABC from 1961 to 1966. ...
A medical drama is a television drama in which events center upon a hospital, an ambulance staff, or any other medical environment. ...
A television program is the content of television broadcasting. ...
1965 (MCMLXV) was a common year starting on Friday (the link is to a full 1965 calendar). ...
Silver Age splash After Archie Goodwin, editor of Warren Publishing's black-and-white horror-comics magazines began running his work, Adams reapproached DC. In 1968, nearing the end of what historians call the Silver Age of comic books, but an exciting time for the industry, Adams made an immediate splash with the feature "Deadman" in Strange Adventures, and quickly became the company's premiere cover artist. Archie Goodwin (September 8, 1937 â March 1, 1998) was an American comic book writer, editor, and artist. ...
Warren Publishing is a magazine firm founded by James Warren, who published his first magazines in 1957 and continued in the business for decades. ...
Horror fiction is, broadly, fiction in any medium intended to scare, unsettle, or horrify the reader. ...
This article is about the magazine as a published medium. ...
Showcase #4 (Oct. ...
Deadman is a fictional character, a superhero appearing in DC Comics. ...
Strange Adventures was an American comic book published by DC Comics. ...
This led to a stint at Marvel Comics, where Adams teamed with writer Roy Thomas on X-Men, then on the verge of cancellation. Though the duo failed to save the title (which ended its initial run with #66), their collaboration on issues #56-63 (May-Dec. 1969) — and on the "Kree-Skrull War" arc of The Avengers #93-97 (Nov. 1971 - May 1972) — produced what comics historians regard as some of Marvel's creative highlights of the era. He also collaborated with Stan Lee on two issues of The Mighty Thor. Marvel Comics is an American comic book line published by Marvel Publishing, Inc. ...
Roy Thomas (born November 22, 1940, Missouri, United States) is a comic book writer and editor, and Stan Lees first successor as editor-in-chief of Marvel Comics. ...
The X-Men are a group of comic book superheroes featured in Marvel Comics. ...
The Kree-Skrull War, in the fictional Marvel Universe, was a series of conflicts between the Kree Empire of the Greater Magellanic Cloud and the Skrulls of the Andromeda Galaxy that lasted for several million years. ...
The Avengers is a fictional comic book superhero team in the Marvel Comics universe. ...
Stan Lee (born Stanley Martin Lieber on December 28, 1921[1]) is an American writer, editor, Chairman Emeritus of Marvel Comics, and memoirist, who â with several artist co-creators, most notably Jack Kirby and Steve Ditko â introduced complex, naturalistic characters and a thoroughly shared universe into superhero comic books. ...
Thor (often called The Mighty Thor) is a fictional character, a superhero appearing in the Marvel Universe. ...
Continuity and creators' rights
Green Lantern vol. 2, #76 (April 1970). Cover art by Neal Adams. In the early 1970s, Adams and frequent writing collaborator Dennis O'Neil did a celebrated and, for the time, controversial revamping of the longstanding DC characters Green Lantern and Green Arrow, teaming them in a long story arc in the former's title in which the two undertook a social-commentary journey across America. Adams and O'Neil revitalized Batman with a series of noteworthy stories reestablishing the character's dark, brooding nature and taking the books away from the campy look and feel of the 1966-69 TV series. Adams' pencil drawings were frequently inked by artist Dick Giordano, with whom Adams formed Continuity Associates, a company that primarily supplied storyboards for motion pictures. In the early 1970s, Adams was the art director, costume designer, as well as the poster/Playbill illustrator for Warp, a science fiction stage play by Bury St. Edmund and Stuart Gordon that had had some cult success in Chicago, and which played on Broadway from Feb. 14-18, 1973, at the original Ambasasador Theatre. Cover of Green Lantern #76 This work is copyrighted. ...
Cover of Green Lantern #76 This work is copyrighted. ...
Dennis Denny ONeil is a comic book writer and editor, principally for Marvel Comics and DC Comics in the 1970s, 80s, and 90s, and Group Editor for the Batman family of books until his retirement. ...
To meet Wikipedias quality standards, this comics-related article or section may require cleanup. ...
Richard Joseph Dick Giordano (born July 20, 1932) is an American comic book artist and editor best known for introducing Charlton Comics Action Heroes stable of superheroes, and serving as editor of then industry-leader DC Comics. ...
. ...
For other uses see film (disambiguation) Film refers to the celluliod media on which movies are printed Film — also called movies, the cinema, the silver screen, moving pictures, photoplays, picture shows, flicks, or motion pictures, — is a field that encompasses motion pictures as an art form or as...
The cover of the Playbill issue about The Producers. ...
Science fiction is a form of speculative fiction principally dealing with the impact of imagined science and technology, or both, upon society and persons as individuals. ...
For other usages see Theatre (disambiguation) Theater (American English) or Theatre (British English and widespread usage among theatre professionals in the US) is that branch of the performing arts concerned with acting out stories in front of an audience using combinations of speech, gesture, music, dance, sound and spectacle —...
// Biography Stuart Gordon (born August 11, 1947) in Chicago, Illinois) is a director, writer and producer of films. ...
Broadway theatre[1] is the most prestigious form of professional theatre in the U.S., as well as the most well known to the general public and most lucrative for the performers, technicians and others involved in putting on the shows. ...
X-Men #63 (Dec. 1969), art by Neal Adams and Tom Palmer After the early 1970s, Adams seldom did interior art for comic books, but continued to be a much-in-demand cover artist. A stormy collaboration with Harlan Ellison produced Adams' last mainstream comic story-art, the Now Comics' one-shot The Twilight Zone (Oct. 1991), based on concepts from the classic TV series. Image File history File links Download high resolution version (400x603, 81 KB) Summary Cover, X-Men #63 (Dec. ...
Image File history File links Download high resolution version (400x603, 81 KB) Summary Cover, X-Men #63 (Dec. ...
Tom Palmer is a popular comics artist. ...
Harlan Jay Ellison (born May 27, 1934) is a prolific American writer of short stories, novellas, essays, and criticism. ...
NOW Comics was founded by Tony C. Caputo in 1985 as a sole-proprietorship before becoming part of Caputo Publishing, Inc. ...
The Twilight Zone title. ...
A television program is the content of television broadcasting. ...
During the 1970s, Adams was politically active in the industry, and attempted to unionize its creative community. His efforts, along with precedents set by Atlas/Seaboard Comics' creator-friendly policies and other factors, helped lead to modern industry's standard practice of returning original artwork to the artist, who can earn additional income from art sales to collectors. Adams notably and vocally helped lead the lobbying efforts that resulted in Superman creators Jerry Siegel and Joe Shuster receiving decades-overdue credit and some financial remuneration by DC. Atlas/Seaboard is the term that comic book historians and collectors use to refer to the short-lived line of comics published as Atlas Comics by Seaboard Periodicals, to differentiate it from Atlas Comics, the former name of Marvel Comics. ...
Superman is a fictional character and comic book superhero , originally created by American writer Jerry Siegel and Canadian artist Joe Shuster and published by DC Comics. ...
Jerome Jerry Siegel a. ...
Joseph Joe Shuster (July 10, 1914 - July 30, 1992) was a Canadian-born comic book artist best known for co-creating the DC Comics character Superman, with writer Jerry Siegel, first published in Action Comics #1 (March 1938). ...
Also during the 1970s, Adams illustrated paperback novels in the Tarzan series and did some film work. With the independent-comic publishing boom of the early 1980s, he began working for Pacific Comics and other publishers, and founded his own Continuity Comics as an off-shoot of Continuity Associates. His comic-book company's characters include Megalith, Bucky O'Hare, Skeleton Warriors, CyberRad, and Ms. Mystic. James H. Pierce and Joan Burroughs Pierce starred in the 1932-34 Tarzan radio series 1964 Edition of Tarzan of the Apes Tarzan, a fictional character created by Edgar Rice Burroughs, first appeared in the 1912 novel Tarzan of the Apes, and then in twenty-three sequels. ...
The term alternative comics is one of several labels applied to a range of comics that have appeared since about 1980, in the wake of the underground comix movement of the late 1960s and early 70s. ...
Pacific Comics was one of the independent comic book publishers that flourished in the early 1980s. ...
Continuity Comics was a short-lived independent comic book company formed by Neal Adams in the 1980s. ...
Bucky OHare and crew in the comic book (art by Michael Golden) Bucky OHare was created by comic writer Larry Hama in the late 1970s. ...
Ms. ...
Awards Adams won Alley Awards in 1967 for Best Cover (Strange Adventures #207); in 1968 for Best Full-Length Story ("Track of the Hook" in The Brave and the Bold #79, with writer Bob Haney); and in 1969 for Best Pencil Artist. He was inducted into the Alley Award Hall of Fame in 1969. The Alley Awards are comic book awards originally sponsored by Alter-Ego magazine, edited by Jerry Bails, Roy Thomas, Ronn Foss, and, in 1978, Mike Friedrich. ...
The Brave and the Bold is a DC Comics comic book that is currently in monthly publication in a second volume. ...
Robert Haney (1926 - November 25, 2004) was a comic book writer. ...
He also won Shazam Awards in 1970 for Best Individual Story ("No Evil Shall Escape My Sight" in Green Lantern #76, with writer Dennis O'Neil), and Best Pencil Artist (Dramatic Division); and in 1971 for Best Individual Story ("Snowbirds Don't Fly" in Green Lantern #85, with O'Neil). The Academy of Comic Book Arts is an American professional organization of the 1970s that was designed to be the comic book industry analog of such groups as the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences. ...
For the DJ, see DJ Green Lantern. ...
Dennis Denny ONeil is a comic book writer and editor, principally for Marvel Comics and DC Comics in the 1970s, 80s, and 90s, and Group Editor for the Batman family of books until his retirement. ...
For the DJ, see DJ Green Lantern. ...
Adams was a finalist for induction into the Harvey Awards' Jack Kirby Hall of Fame in 1990 and 1991, and was inducted in 1999. The Harvey Awards are given for achievement in comic books. ...
The Harvey Awards are given for achievement in comic books. ...
Quotes Harlan Ellison: "There are artists who come along who do wonderful work, innovative work, even stylistically seminal or germinal work, but they don't change the face of the craft or the social conscience of the industry. Neal did that".[1] Harlan Jay Ellison (born May 27, 1934) is a prolific American writer of short stories, novellas, essays, and criticism. ...
Bob McLeod on breaking into comics in 1973: "Pat [Broderick] told me I really ought to meet Neal Adams, whom he had met at DC. ... At that time, Neal held a position of respect in the industry that no one in comics since then has achieved. He was the single most respected artist in the business. ... Neal looked at one of my samples and asked me what kind of work I was looking for. I said 'Anything that pays.' (By that time, I was down to my last $10....) He just picked up the phone and called the production manager at Marvel and said, 'I've got a guy here who has some potential as, well, some potential as an artist, but I think he has a lot of potential as a letterer.' I was immediately hired at Marvel in the production department on Neal's recommendation, and they still didn't even want to see my portfolio. If I was good enough for Neal, I was good enough for them".[2] Bob McLeod is an American comic book artist best known for co-creating the New Mutants with writer Chris Claremont. ...
Pat Broderick is a comic book artist. ...
Trivia - In an early 1980s issue of Fantastic Four, Johnny Storm was captured by a villain who believed he needed to re-ignite the Earth's core; the villain's name, Alden Maas, is an anagram of Neal Adams.
- Adams appeared on the radio show Coast to Coast with George Noory on March 16, 2006, and Coast to Coast with Art Bell on August 12, 2006, to discuss hollow-Earth/expanding-planet theory.[3]
Samuel Warren Carey (1911 â 2002) was an Australian geologist who was an early advocate of the theory of continental drift. ...
A Hollow Earth theory posits that the planet Earth has a hollow interior and, possibly, a habitable inner surface. ...
Movements of the continents as the Earth expands. ...
Wired is a full-color monthly magazine and on-line periodical published in San Francisco, California since March 1993. ...
Neal Adams (born June 6, 1941, Governors Island, Manhattan, New York City) is an American comic book and commercial artist best known for his highly naturalistic style of illustration. ...
The Skeptics Guide to the Universe is a weekly one-hour podcast hosted by Steven Novella, MD and a panel of skeptical rogues. It is the official podcast of the New England Skeptical Society, and is produced in conjunction with the James Randi Educational Foundation. ...
The Fantastic Four is a fictional American team of comic-book superheroes in the Marvel Comics universe. ...
This article or section on a comics-related subject may need to be cleaned up and rewritten because it describes a work of fiction in a primarily in-universe style. ...
An anagram (Greek ana- = back or again, and graphein = to write) is a type of word play, the result of rearranging the letters of a word or phrase to produce other words, using all the original letters exactly once; e. ...
Radio broadcasts have been a popular entertainment since the 1910s, though popularity has declined a little in some countries since television became widespread. ...
Selected bibliography Comic books National Periodical / DC - Aquaman — #50-52 (Deadman backup stories)
- Batman — #219 (backup story), 232, 234, 237, 243, 244, 245, 251, 255
- The Brave and the Bold (Batman team-ups) — #79-86, 93, 102 (pages 14-22 only)
- Detective Comics (featuring Batman) — #369 (Elongated Man backup story), #395, 397, 400, 402, 404, 407, 408, 410
- Flash #217-219, 226 (Green Lantern / Green Arrow backup stories)
- Green Lantern/Green Arrow — #76-87, 89
- House of Mystery (certain stories) — #178, 179, 186
- Phantom Stranger — #4
- The Spectre — Vol. 1, #2-5
- Strange Adventures (featuring Deadman) — #206-216
- Superman VS. Muhammad Ali (All New Collector's Edition #C-56)
- Teen Titans — #20-22
- World's Finest Comics (Batman-Superman team-ups) — #175-176
Aquaman is a fictional character, a superhero in DC Comics. ...
Batman (originally referred to as the Bat-Man and still referred to at times as the Batman) is a DC Comics fictional superhero who first appeared in Detective Comics #27 in May 1939. ...
The Brave and the Bold is a DC Comics comic book that is currently in monthly publication in a second volume. ...
Cover of Detective Comics #27 (May 1939). ...
Batman (originally referred to as the Bat-Man and still referred to at times as the Batman) is a DC Comics fictional superhero who first appeared in Detective Comics #27 in May 1939. ...
The Elongated Man is a fictional comic book superhero in the DC universe. ...
The Flash is a name shared by several DC Comics superheroes. ...
For the DJ, see DJ Green Lantern. ...
To meet Wikipedias quality standards, this comics-related article or section may require cleanup. ...
House of Mystery was a horror anthology comic book series published by DC Comics from 1951 to 1983. ...
The Phantom Stranger is a fictional character of unspecified paranormal origins who battles mysterious and occult forces in various titles published by DC Comics, sometimes under their Vertigo imprint. ...
The Spectre is a fictional cosmic entity and superhero who has appeared in numerous comic books published by DC Comics. ...
Strange Adventures was an American comic book published by DC Comics. ...
Deadman is a fictional character, a superhero appearing in DC Comics. ...
Teen Titans redirects here. ...
Worlds Finest Comics was a comic book series published by DC Comics from 1941 to 1986. ...
Superman is a fictional character and comic book superhero , originally created by American writer Jerry Siegel and Canadian artist Joe Shuster and published by DC Comics. ...
Marvel
Adams' early comics covers included not only superheroes, but also Jerry Lewis, Tomahawk, Jimmy Olsen, and Superman's Girl Friend, Lois Lane #79 (Nov. 1967), his first of several for that series. Amazing Adventures is the name of several anthology-format comic book series, all but one published by Marvel Comics. ...
The Avengers is a fictional comic book superhero team in the Marvel Comics universe. ...
Hither came Conan, the Cimmerian, black-haired, sullen-eyed, sword in hand, a thief, a reaver, a slayer, with gigantic melancholies and gigantic mirth, to tread the jeweled thrones of the Earth under his sandalled feet. ...
Thors battle against the giants, by MÃ¥rten Eskil Winge, 1872 Thor (Old Norse: Ãórr) is the red-haired and bearded god of thunder in Norse Mythology and more generally Germanic mythology (Old English: Ãunor, Old Dutch and Old High German: Donar, from Proto-Germanic *Ãunraz). ...
The Uncanny X-Men, first published as simply The X-Men, is the flagship Marvel Comics comic book series within the X-Men franchise. ...
Image File history File links LoisLane79. ...
Image File history File links LoisLane79. ...
This article or section does not adequately cite its references or sources. ...
Tomahawk is a comic book character whose adventures were published by DC Comics during the 1950s and 1960s in his own comics series. ...
Covers only National Periodical / DC - All-Star Superman - #1 (variant cover)
- Action Comics (featuring Superman) — #356, 358-359, 361-362, 364, 366-367, 370, 373, 375-379
- Adventure Comics (featuring the Legion of Super-Heroes) — #365-369, 371-373
- Batman — #200, 203, 217-218, 220, 230, 240 (DC)
- The Brave and the Bold — #76
- Challengers of the Unknown — #67-68
- Detective Comics — #372, 385, 399, 403, 411-413 (DC)
- Green Lantern — #63
- House of Mystery — #175 - 192
- Justice League of America — #66-67, 70, 74
- The Phantom Stranger — #3
- Showcase — #80 (first Phantom Stranger)
- Superboy — #143, 145-146, 148-153, 155, 157-159
- Superman — #204-208, 210, 213-215
- Superman's Girl Friend, Lois Lane — #79, 81-82, 85-88, 90-91
- Superman's Pal, Jimmy Olsen — #109-112, 115, 118
- Tales of the Unexpected - Vol. 2, #1 (variant cover)
- World's Finest Comics #174, 178
All Star Superman, launched in November 2005, is an ongoing comic book series featuring Superman, written by Grant Morrison, drawn by Frank Quitely, and published by DC Comics. ...
Cover of Action Comics #1, which featured the debut of Superman. ...
Adventure Comics #296 Adventure Comics is a comic book series published by DC Comics from 1935 to 1983. ...
The Legion of Super-Heroes is a DC Comics superhero team. ...
Cover to Challengers of the Unknown #7, 1959. ...
House of Mystery was a horror anthology comic book series published by DC Comics from 1951 to 1983. ...
The Justice League is a DC Comics superhero team. ...
The Phantom Stranger is a fictional character of unspecified paranormal origins who battles mysterious and occult forces in various titles published by DC Comics, sometimes under their Vertigo imprint. ...
Showcase has been the title of several anthology series published by DC Comics. ...
Superboy is the name of several fictional characters in the DC Comics Universe, most of them youthful incarnations of Superman. ...
Lois Joanne Lane-Kent is a fictional character who appears in DC Comicsâ Superman stories. ...
Jimmy Olsen (full name James Bartholomew Olsen) is a fictional character who appears in DC Comicsâ Superman stories. ...
Hardcover collections - Green Lantern/Green Arrow Collection — 2000 ISBN 1-56389-639-7
- Deadman Collection - 342 pages 2001 ISBN 1-56389-849-7
- Batman Illustrated by Neal Adams Vol. 1 — 240 pages 2003 ISBN 1-4012-0041-9
- Batman Illustrated by Neal Adams Vol. 2 — 236 pages 2004 ISBN 1-4012-0269-1
- Batman Illustrated by Neal Adams Vol. 3 — 280 pages 2006 ISBN 1-4012-0407-4
Softcover collections - X-Men Visionaries: Neal Adams - 208 pages - 2000 ISBN 0-7851-0198-5
- The Avengers: the Kree-Skrull War - 208 pages - 2000 ISBN 0-7851-0745-2
- Green Lantern/Green Arrow Volume One - 176 pages - 2004 ISBN 1-4012-0224-1
- Green Lantern/Green Arrow Volume Two - 200 pages - 2004 ISBN 1-4012-0230-6
Footnotes - ^ NinthArt.com: "Thumbnail: Neal Adamas", by John Mazzeo
- ^ BobMcLeod.com
- ^ Coast to Coast with George Noory site: Guests — Neal Adams
References |