
- HOCUS FOCUS HENRY BOLTINOFF HOUSTON CHRONICLE PROFESSIONAL
- HOCUS FOCUS HENRY BOLTINOFF HOUSTON CHRONICLE SERIES
That same year, an editor told him it was impossible to put a cartoon on the business page, because business was too serious, and Boltinoff responded with Stoker the Broker - which ran until well into the 1990s. Other syndication successes include Woody Forrest, a minor but long-lasting strip distributed by a very small outfit called Conley Feature Syndicate, and King Features Syndicate's Nubbin, which he took over from George Crenshaw ( Belvedere) in 1960. His first success in that area was This & That, which was done by a variety of cartoonists during its 14-year run. Meanwhile, he continued freelancing, and made efforts to break into syndication as well. By the time his DC work ended, there was relatively little humor, teenage or otherwise, being published in comic books, and therefore not much room for Henry Boltinoff.
HOCUS FOCUS HENRY BOLTINOFF HOUSTON CHRONICLE SERIES
His last DC creation was Cap's Hobby Hints, which replaced all the other series in the late 1960s. He did similar work for Harvey Comics, Fawcett Publications, and other comic book publishers, but that was dwarfed by his DC output. But the fillers continued until the early 1970s, and appeared in most DC issues during all that time.

Dover & Clover was the only Boltinoff creation ever to appear on a DC cover - it took that spot away from Green Arrow in 1945.ĭover & Clover ended in 1947, and the rest of Boltinoff's longer work was gone soon after.


Also, for More Fun Comics, he created a feature called Dover & Clover, about a pair of identical twins who went into the detective business, and were so bad at it, they couldn't be fully relied on to detect which was which. Following the success of Archie, DC was publishing quite a bit of teenage humor, and Boltinoff did several stories for Buzzy, Leave It to Binky, A Date with Judy and other titles in that line. In the mid-1940s, Boltinoff started doing longer stories for DC. Henry later said having his brother as an editor never made it easier to sell a page - harder, if anything, with both striving to avoid any appearance of favoritism. Murray Boltinoff spent most of his career at DC, editing such titles as Challengers of the Unknown, Legion of Super Heroes and Doom Patrol. When Ellsworth complained (as editors often do) of overwork, Henry Boltinoff suggested his brother, Murray, as an assistant. The only certainty was that practically every DC comic book would contain something by Henry Boltinoff. They were mixed randomly, with "On the Planet Og" sometimes turning up in Tomahawk and sometimes in Tales of the Unexpected and "Hy Wire" sometimes in Strange Adventures and sometimes in Superman. They began seeing print in 1940, and continued for decades.Ĭasey the Cop, Super Turtle, Jerry the Jitterbug, Homer, Doctor Rocket, Moolah the Mystic, Cora the Carhop, Little Pete, Chief Hot Foot these are only a few of the characters Boltinoff created for DC. Ellsworth gave him a go-ahead to submit fillers, ranging from half-page gags to tiny stories in the 2-3 page range. Two years after that, he called on Whitney Ellsworth, DC's editor, whom he'd come to know while making the magazine rounds, and asked for steady work. Then he freelanced for magazines, selling hundreds of cartoons to Esquire, The Saturday Evening Post, Ladies' Home Journal etc. He worked there from 1933 until the paper folded, in 1937.
HOCUS FOCUS HENRY BOLTINOFF HOUSTON CHRONICLE PROFESSIONAL
He was a professional cartoonist before he was out of his teens, drawing pictures for the theatre section of The New York American, where his brother, Murray, was an assistant editor. And tho generations of comic book readers know him almost exclusively for his DC work, the vast majority of his millions of fans know absolutely nothing about anything he's done in comic books.īoltinoff was born in 1914 in New York City. Henry Boltinoff never worked on Batman, Wonder Woman, Aquaman or any of the other long-lasting and numerous superheroes thatįorm the bulk of DC Comics' output over the past two-thirds of a century - and yet, his work has probably appeared in more individual DC issues than that of any other creator. Please contribute to its necessary financial support. If this site is enjoyable or useful to you, Noted for: Hocus Focus, Stoker the Broker and more, including dozens of filler characters for DC Comics

Worked in: Comic books and newspaper comics HENRY BOLTINOFF Born: 1914 : : : Died: 2001
