Table of Contents

Biography
Awards
Bibliography
DC Comics
Marvel Comics
Notes
References
External links

Bob Oksner

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Birth Date1916-10-14
Birth PlacePaterson, New Jersey, U.S.
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Bob Oksner (October 14, 1916 – February 18, 2007) was an American comics artist known for both adventure comic strips and for superhero and humor comic books, primarily at DC Comics.

Biography

Oksner's early work includes creating the second version of Marvel Boy in 1943 for Timely Comics, the predecessor of Marvel Comics. He later wrote with Jerry Albert and drew the syndicated newspaper comic strip Miss Cairo Jones (1945–1947), after which DC Comics editor Sheldon Mayer hired him as an artist on comics adapted from other media. Oksner drew a few Justice Society of America stories in All Star Comics during his early years at DC. He moved from adventure strips to teen-oriented strips such as Leave It to Binky which debuted in February 1948. Oksner described Leave It to Binky as "the one that I really feel got my feet on the ground at DC. I did that one from the very beginning until it ended 1958." Oksner's work in this field included The Adventures of Dean Martin and Jerry Lewis and its successor, The Adventures of Jerry Lewis; The Adventures of Bob Hope; The Many Loves of Dobie Gillis; Sgt. Bilko; Pat Boone; and Welcome Back, Kotter; and, for the King Features syndicate, the newspaper comic-strip spin-off of the 1950s TV sitcom I Love Lucy. Other work includes drawing the original humor comics Angel and the Ape and Stanley and His Monster.

When the demand for humor comics fell off by the 1970s, Oksner began drawing DC superhero series such as Superman, Supergirl, Shazam!, Superman's Girl Friend, Lois Lane, and Ambush Bug.

Oksner's other work in comic strips included succeeding Gus Edson as writer of artist-creator Irwin Hasen's Dondi for a time beginning in 1965; and drawing and co-creating Soozi (1967), with Don Weldon. He retired from comics in 1986.

Oksner was Jewish.

Awards

Oksner won the National Cartoonists Society Division Award for Comic Books in 1960 and 1961, and in 1970 the Shazam Award for Best Pencil Artist (Humor Division) for his work on Adventure Comics and other DC titles.

Oksner was a recipient of the Inkpot Award in 2002.

Bibliography

Interior pencil art (except where noted) includes:

DC Comics


Marvel Comics


Notes


References


External links


Category:1916 births
Category:2007 deaths
Category:20th-century American artists
Category:21st-century American artists
Category:American comic strip cartoonists
Category:Artists from Paterson, New Jersey
Category:Columbia University alumni
Category:Comics inkers
Category:DC Comics people
Category:Deaths from pneumonia in Florida
Category:Golden Age comics creators
Category:Inkpot Award winners
Category:Jewish American comics artists
Category:Place of death missing
Category:Silver Age comics creators