Richard Starkings: Difference between revisions
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'''Richard Starkings''' — who has often written under the name '''Richard Alan''' — is an [[Eisner Award|Eisner]]-nominated comic [[letterer]], with work stretching at least back to the [[12th January]] [[1985]] issue of the UK ''Transformers'' title. He was a staple of the Marvel UK family of artists during its heyday in the late 1980s. His first big break in the American comic industry came with 1988's ''[[wikipedia:Batman: The Killing Joke|Batman: The Killing Joke]]'', and he continues, as of [[2011]], to work regularly for American publishers. In the late [[20th century|20th]] and early [[21st century|21st centuries]], he has been one of the busiest letterers in the American comic book industry. | '''Richard Starkings''' — who has often written under the name '''Richard Alan''' — is an [[Eisner Award|Eisner]]-nominated comic [[letterer]], with work stretching at least back to the [[12th January]] [[1985]] issue of the UK ''Transformers'' title. He was a staple of the Marvel UK family of artists during its heyday in the late 1980s. His first big break in the American comic industry came with 1988's ''[[wikipedia:Batman: The Killing Joke|Batman: The Killing Joke]]'', and he continues, as of [[2011]], to work regularly for American publishers. In the late [[20th century|20th]] and early [[21st century|21st centuries]], he has been one of the busiest letterers in the American comic book industry. |
Revision as of 14:56, 17 July 2011
Richard Starkings — who has often written under the name Richard Alan — is an Eisner-nominated comic letterer, with work stretching at least back to the 12th January 1985 issue of the UK Transformers title. He was a staple of the Marvel UK family of artists during its heyday in the late 1980s. His first big break in the American comic industry came with 1988's Batman: The Killing Joke, and he continues, as of 2011, to work regularly for American publishers. In the late 20th and early 21st centuries, he has been one of the busiest letterers in the American comic book industry.
His work in the DWU has been mostly confined to two periods. He was variously a writer, editor and letterer during the Sixth and early Seventh Doctors eras in the pages of Doctor Who Magazine. During this period, he also served in the staff position of "picture consultant" for a number of issues. Two decades later, he returned to the newly-created American centre of DWU publishing at IDW Publishing, working on several issues involving the Tenth Doctor.
In the 20th century
Starkings edited DWM: Redemption, Culture Shock, Nemesis of the Daleks and Follow That TARDIS! Usually under his "Richard Alan" pseudonym, he wrote or co-wrote DWM: Time and Tide, the aforementioned Nemesis of the Daleks, and Up Above the Gods, the prelude to Emperor of the Daleks. He lettered or co-lettered DWM: Frobisher's Story, The Gift, The World Shapers, and Up Above the Gods.
In the 21st century
For the BBC Wales era of the DWU, Starkings co-wrote IDW: Cold-Blooded War under his own name. It was also a story he lettered, along with The Whispering Gallery and most issues of The Forgotten. He was also one of the letterers on TWM: Rift War!
External links
- Richard Starkings at comicbookdb.com, which also contains a link to his work as "Richard Alan"