Ghost Rider #1

The Origin of the Ghost Rider

Featuring: Ghost Rider
Release: December 1, 1966
Cover: February 1967
12 cents
Edited by… Stan Lee
Written by… Gary Friedrich and Roy Thomas
Plotted and drawn by… Dick Ayers
Inked by… Vince Colletta
Lettered by… J. Verpooten
17 pages

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Tim Holt #11, Story BPRELUDE
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Ghost RiderGhost Rider #2

It is sheer folly to do battle with a ghost!

Magazine Enterprises is long since defunct. So nobody owns the character of Ghost Rider we met in Tim Holt #11. The co-creator Dick Ayers is now a Marvel regular, so Marvel takes the character and has Ayers revive him.

Of course this means Marvel, now owned by Disney, owns the character of Ghost Rider and will for all time.

Ayers would attempt to return to his character in the ’90s, adding some new covers to the old stories, but they had to call him the “Haunted Horseman”, as they had no rights to the name. Because of the world we live in (or at least the country I live in) and laws built to serve corporations and not artists.

Gary Friedrich is a mostly new name to us. This is his first Marvel work. He’s in his early ’20s. He started at Charlton and we saw his work with Steve Ditko on Blue Beetle over there. He’ll become a prolific writer over the decades.

Gary has no relation to Mike Friedrich, who will be starting work at DC soon.

The letterer John Verpooten is also new to us. He’s just started as a regular at Marvel, working on staff. He’s here for behind-the-scenes stuff, and we’ll start seeing him occasionally as a letterer, and soon enough as an inker. He’ll spend a decade with Marvel until his untimely death in 1977 at the age of 37.

Giving Ayers a plotting credit is part of a general trend we are seeing of recognizing artists for their plotting contributions.

Though Thomas would much later claim that credit was false, and the plotting was entirely done by Friedrich and himself.

While the name and likeness are lifted directly from Ayers’ 40s hero, this is a different character with a different origin. The original Ghost Rider was Rex Fury. This issue introduces Carter Slade.

Continue reading “Ghost Rider #1”

PRELUDE: Tim Holt #11, Story B

The Ghost Rider

Featuring: Ghost Rider
Release: October 14, 1949
10 cents
Dick Ayers
6 pages

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Sgt. Fury #38Reading orderGhost Rider #1

When the Calico Kid went to his doom in the swirling, surging waters of the Devil’s Sink, Badman Bart Lasher laughed an evil laugh… then out of the realm of death came– the Ghost Rider!

Last week I thought it would be a funny April Fool’s joke to read a Marvel comic from 1975 at random when we are still in 1967. Now I think we should read a non-Marvel comic from 1949 and call it part of our Marvel reading. But this time I’m serious.

Magazine Enterprises was a comic publisher from the 1940s and ’50s. This series features Tim Holt, “Cowboy star of the movies”. Tim Holt was a popular actor of the era, who starred in a number of cowboy films: Robbers of the Range, The Bandit Trail, Riding the Wind, etc. And had some roles in acclaimed films like Treasure of the Sierra Madre or My Darling Clementine.

Several movies costarred Richard Martin as Chito Rafferty, in the role of the sidekick to Holt’s character.

The comic features Tim Holt as himself, but not as himself the 1940s actor, but as Tim Holt the 19th century western hero. Chito is his sidekick.

As noted above, this comic was not published by Marvel and Tim Holt has nothing to do with Marvel. Yet here it is in our Marvel reading.

The second story in this particular issue will have some connection to Marvel. The artist is Dick Ayers, who has been drawing Sgt. Fury as well as several of Marvel’s western comics, so there’s already a connection.

And some readers may recognise the name Ghost Rider. We’ll talk more about the connections to Marvel soon. For the moment let’s read this story.

I don’t see a date on the cover. Dick Ayers has signed the issue. The GCD credits the script to Ray Krank based on an interview with Ayers from 2001.

Continue reading “PRELUDE: Tim Holt #11, Story B”