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Vincenzo Colletta (October 15, 1923 – June 3, 1991) Vincent Colletta, Social Security Number 151-22-4770, at the Social Security Death Index via FamilySearch.org. Retrieved on February 25, 2013. Https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.1.1/JYMP-ZYM" target="_blank" rel="nofollow"> Archived from the original on April 7, 2014. was an American comic book artist and . He was one of 's frequent during the 1950s-1960s Silver Age of comic books. This included some significant early issues of ' , and a long, celebrated run on the character Thor in Journey into Mystery and The Mighty Thor.


Early life
Vincente Colletta was born in , , the son of Rosa and Francesco "Frank" Colletta, the latter "a pretty high-level ", according to family lore. Colletta Sr emigrated from Sicily to escape local law enforcement and served with the US armed forces in World War II, where he provided art on the sides of bombers. He settled in , New York City, where his wife and child joined him 10 years later. The family then moved to New Jersey and opened an Italian market, severing any ties to the Mafia.Franklin Colletta in

Colletta was educated at the Academy of Fine Arts.


Career
Colletta entered comics in 1952, freelancing first as a , his own work, for the publisher , on the titles Intimate Love and Out of the Shadows, and for publisher Youthful Magazines' imprint Pix-Parade, on the title Daring Love.

The following year he began his decades-long collaboration with Marvel, at the company's 1950s iteration, Atlas Comics. Primarily a artist, he drew dozens of stories and covers for the Atlas titles , Lovers, My Own Romance, Stories of Romance, and The Romances of Nurse Helen Grant, with his earliest confirmed Atlas romance art the six-page story "My Love for You" in Love Romances #37 (March 1954). Colletta's work also appeared in such genres as jungle adventure ( , Jann of the Jungle, Lorna, the Jungle Girl) and / ( Uncanny Tales, Journey into Mystery). Vince Colletta at AtlasTales.com

During an Atlas retrenchment in the late 1950s, Colletta freelanced as a penciler on the romance titles Falling in Love, Girls' Love Stories, and , and ' Love Diary and Teen Confessions. His last confirmed pencil work for decades was "I Can't Marry Now" in Love Diary #6 (Sept. 1959).

Colletta's first work as an inker of another artist's pencils is unknown, largely due to credits not being given routinely in 1950s comics. Two possibilities suggested by historians and researchers are the cover of Atlas' Western Tales #10 (April 1956), co-inking with over Brodsky's pencils, and the three-page story "I Met My Love Again", penciled by Matt Baker, in My Own Romance #65 (Sept. 1958). Additionally assigned to ink stories in Atlas' emerging / and giant-monster comics, Colletta entered what fans and historians call "pre-superhero Marvel" with three Baker-penciled stories: "The Green Fog" in Journey into Mystery #50 (Jan. 1959), "I Fell to the Center of the Earth" in Tales to Astonish #2 (March 1959), and "The Brain Picker" in World of Fantasy #17 (April 1959).

Historians pinpoint Colletta's first inking of Jack Kirby's pencils as either the cover of #100 (Sept. 1961) or (with Colletta's credit confirmed), the cover of Love Romances #98 (March 1962).

Members of artist 's studio were among those who assisted or ghosted on Colletta's mid-1960s Charlton stories. Wally Wood Studio at Bails, Ware. Archived from the original on April 8, 2014. Artists who assisted or ghosted through Colletta's own studio included Maurice Whitman in 1964, from 1960 to 1964, and at various times Matt Baker, , and , Colletta Studio at Bails, Ware. Archived from the original on April 8, 2014.Sinnott did not work at the physical studio, but from home, saying in as well as .Bryant, p. 106


Marvel Comics
As an for Marvel in the 1960s, Colletta worked on nearly every title, including some of the earliest issues of Daredevil. He inked Kirby's #40–44, as well as Fantastic Four Annual #3, featuring the wedding of and and guest-starring virtually all the major Marvel Comics characters of the time.

Colletta began his six-year run on Kirby's "The Mighty Thor" feature with the "Tales of Asgard" backup in Journey into Mystery #106 (July 1964). Colletta graduated to the lead feature with #116 (May 1965). He continued through the book's retitling to The Mighty Thor with #126 (March 1966), and — except for one issue (#143) — inked it through #167 (Aug. 1969), picking up again from #176 (May 1970) to Kirby's final issue, #179 (Aug. 1970), inking in #178. Colletta also inked Journey into Mystery Annual #1 (1965), which introduced Hercules to the , and The Mighty Thor King-Size Annual #2.

Historians and critics consider Colletta's Thor work to be his creative highlight. Historian Nick Simon said, "For me, the Kirby/Colletta version of Thor is the definitive one." Author and Silver Age of Comic Books historian Pierre Comtois wrote that,

Colletta would also pencil stories in many 1960s issues of ' Teen-Age Love and First Kiss (at least some of which has been credited in reprints as by "Vince Colletta Studio"). He occasionally inked romance stories penciled by , and other pencilers on such titles as Charlton's Gunmaster, and ' Guerrilla War, Jungle War Stories, and series Idaho.


DC Comics
In 1970, Colletta — who had been freelancing for since 1968 on the romance titles Falling In Love, Girls' Love Stories, and — stepped up his inking for the company following 's move there from . Colletta inked Kirby's two black-and-white one-shots, In the Days of the Mob and Spirit World (both Oct. 1971), and the initial issues of Kirby’s and "Fourth World" titles: The Forever People, and The New Gods. While Colletta's rates were good and he brought "an innocent Marvel Age look to Jack's new heroes", he was prone to "erasing background characters" and transforming "bustling crowd scenes into easier silhouettes".Ro, Ronin. Tales to Astonish: Jack Kirby, Stan Lee and the American Comic Book Revolution (Bloomsbury, 2004) Kirby confidante and inker eventually convinced a reluctant Kirby to ask DC Publisher Carmine Infantino to remove Colletta from inking Kirby's titles. He was replaced by inker Mike Royer, causing some fans to write to DC in complaint, denouncing Kirby for "abandoning the Marvel-style look". Colletta's frequent assistant Art Cappello did much of the background inking on these comics. Reprinted in
(2025). 9781893905023, TwoMorrows Publishing.

Colletta went on to ink a large array at DC, including a variety of , and titles; the TV tie-in series Isis and ; and nearly every issue of from #206 (July 1973) to #270 (Aug. 1980), over including , , , José Delbo and .

He was named DC's in May 1976, resigning the post in May 1979. DC Timeline 1976-1979 His time there included discovering future industry star Frank Miller. As one-time Marvel editor-in-chief described, Miller had broken in with "a small job from Western Publishing, I think. Thus emboldened, he went to DC, and after getting savaged by , got in to see art director Vinnie Colletta, who recognized talent and arranged for him to get a one-page war-comic job".

Before and after his tenure, Colletta continued to do a small amount of inking for Marvel, as well as for Skywald Publications' black-and-white horror magazine Psycho. Well into the 1980s, Colletta continued to ink a wide assortment of comics for both DC and Marvel. His last known credit is a Marvel one-shot, Fred Hembeck Destroys the Marvel Universe (July 1989).

In late 1987 after editor-in-chief was fired from Marvel, Colletta sent Marvel a scathing, profanity-laced letter highly critical of the company's action, which became widely circulated.


Analysis
Colletta was regarded as one of the American comics industry's fastest inkers and a reliable professional to call upon when a comic was in danger of missing a printing deadline. He nonetheless has been criticized by a range of fellow professionals and comic historians for erasing various details in a penciler's work, both in order to lessen the inking burden and to help meet time constraints during an industry era when printers charged then-prohibitive thousands of dollars for missed deadlines, which resulted in idle presses.The magazine The Jack Kirby Collector #14 (Feb. 1997), for example, ran the point-counterpoint article "The Pros & Cons of Vince Colletta", by Tony Seybert and John Morrow, reprinted in The Collected Jack Kirby Collector, Volume Three (TwoMorrows, 2004) As comics artist told author Marc Flores, who writes under the Ronin Ro, "When I penciled the romance stories, I used to tell myself, Vince wrecked what I did. ... He would eliminate people from the strip and use silhouettes, everything to cut corners and make the work easier for himself." Writer told an interviewer what he enjoyed most about working on was, "Getting to work with the wonderful , before Vinnie Colletta got his hands on the pencils and ruined them".

Colletta was reassigned from inking The Tomb of Dracula when publisher determined Colletta had taken unacceptable shortcuts on issue #9. , penciler on the series (and on several earlier projects inked by Colletta), remarked many years later that "when he wanted to he could do very good work, but he didn't take his time with my stuff."Field, p. 88

Jack Kirby partisans are particularly vocal. said, "In 1970 when Steve Sherman and I met , he asked us about the new Kirby books that were then about to debut at DC. When we told him Colletta was handling the inking, he winced and said that he would probably not look at the comics. Back when he was working for Marvel, Ditko said he'd pick up the latest issues in the office and always check the credits before taking the comics home. If he found Colletta's name — especially as Kirby's embellisher — he would make a point of putting the comic back, or even in a wastebasket. And he'd make sure Stan Lee saw what he was doing and knew the reason why.". The Jack Kirby Collector (date not given), reprinted in NeilAlien.com, September 8, 2005. WebCitation archive.

Conversely, Colletta's admirers point to the speed with which Colletta was often required to work, and the results he could produce when given time. Critic Tony Seybert wrote that "for tales set in the distant past of myth and legend, Colletta's soft delicate inks evoke the vapors of ancient times and just as effective on crags as on the sylvan glades of . The Kirby/Colletta Thor is a mighty blond deity with a hint of Norse faerie-dust. Hercules is a roughly hewn sculpture, almost incomplete, like one of the unfinished prisoners of ."Seybert, Tony, The Jack Kirby Collector #14

Colletta himself described his methods as a necessity of the industry. When asked to describe his philosophy of inking, he said, "Well, first of all, some inkers like to pick and choose... and they'll take their time, no matter what the deadline is, even if the editor is in a jam, or a colorist is waiting for pages to come in so they can earn a living, too. I can't be that way."Colletta interview with Marvel Comics editor-in-chief Jim Shooter, "Bullpen Bulletins", Marvel Comics May 1983, including The New Mutants #3 (May 1983).


Personal life
By the early 1950s, Colletta was married to his wife, Viola. The couple had a son, Franklin and two daughters, Roseannette and Cynthia. Circa 1962, the family began living at 3 Old Woods Road, in Saddle River, New Jersey.Bryant, p. 17

Some time after having recovered from a heart attack, Colletta was diagnosed with cancer; three weeks later, on June 3, 1991, aged 67, he died at Pascack Valley Hospital in Westwood, New Jersey.Bryant, p. 115 At least one obituary, in The Comics Journal, erroneously stated he died at age 65 and in "late June", and claimed the cause was heart disease.


Awards
Colletta was posthumously awarded the Special Recognition Award in 2016. His son, Frankie, extended his thanks on the awards' official site. Inkwell Awards 2016 Winners


External links

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