

A man of many artistic talents, Wildey then took over the syndicated strip The Saint from Bob Lubbers in 1959 and drew it in Lubbers' style for many months before developing his own unique look to the feature. The Saint's new image, now with a hip goatee beard, over time developed into the prototype for another creation, the future Dr. Benton Quest. Later, one can start to see the foundations of Race and Jonny were also in development when Wildey pitched his own Sunday strip about an international race car driver named Stretch Bannon and his boy mechanic, but unfortunately the strip never caught on with any syndicate. In the early sixties, Doug then joined Hanna-Barbara Studios and created the first prime time animated television program, and his most famous creation, Jonny Quest. All his best ideas and inspirations of his prior years in comics surfaced in this exciting new adventure series. The show has played in syndication for decades, sparked a new television sequal, and inspired many artists in the comic field. Wildey did other work for the small screen, including art direction, layouts, and design work for Marvel characters such as The Fantastic Four , The Submariner and other Hanna-Barbara's properties, The Herculoids, Space Angel, and caveman hero, Mighty Mightor. While pursuing his TV assignments, Wildey also drew three years of Tarzan of the Apes for Gold Key and their companion jungle book, Korak, Son of Tarzan. Though his style was not as sophisticated as his later work, it still had a charming rough quality that made these Edgar Rice Burroughs stories work very well. Wildey in his spare time also perfected his western storytelling technique with an oversized series of characters and southwest scenes. In 1971 he produced a portfolio with twenty six illustrated drawings which was entitled, The Movie Cowboy, which was his best work to date in the genre but there was one great western character to come.

In 1972 Wildey went back to the strips creating a feature for the Chicago Tribune-New York News Syndicate. Ambler was the story of a young folk singer's and his adventures while traveling across America. Despite the fact that the strip had great graphics, a solid story line, and a loyal fan following, it only survived two short years. When Doug's last strip attempt folded, the artist returned to comics with the western book Kid Cody for Atlas/Seaboard Publications, horror stories in Madhouse for Red Circle, and some splendid detailed war yarns in G.I. Combat, Sgt.Rock, Blackhawk, and Star Spangled War Stories for DC. While contributing to National's House of Secrets, and Jonah Hex, Doug also created the sly detective feature Eddie Race for Kubert's oversized two issue slick magazine, Sojourn.

Wildey's ultra realistic style was always in demand for any horror, war, mystery, romance, or western stories. Never one to piecemeal his work out, all his pages were penciled and inked by Wildey himself. Many artists seem to produce their best quality work early on, later losing their inspiration and motivation for what they create. Doug Wildey though in my opinion was just the opposite, producing his greatest art work at the end of his career, and I would even dare to say that his last western stories were also superior because it was his favorite subject matter both in the comics and his own personal paintings. Rio, the ex-gunfighter was his most famous western creation produced for Comico, and was later featured in Eclipse, Dark Horse, and finally Marvel Comics.

I was lucky enough to spend a little time with Doug Wildey and his wife, Ellen, years ago in Dallas. He spoke of Jonny Quest and his dislike for that little dog Bandit that the producers forced him to include in the show. Doug talked of The Rocketeer and how at a recent comic show he must have autographed as many comics as Dave Stevens since the character of Peevy was inspired and loosely based on him. He spoke of his travels across the American southwest, western films, oil painting, and his overall love of the West. It was a real pleasure to meet one of my favorite artists and talk with him about his long career before his passing in Las Vegas, Nevada in 1994. He was once quiet gentleman that will be missed by us all.

5 comments:
Another great post Dave (except I kept trying to click those images to see them bigger!).
I agree with you about Wildey continuing to get better as he aged. We should all be so lucky!
Thanks for the kind words Steve, by the looks of you sensational work on Captain America, your art only gets better every issue as well!
Thanks for this, Dave. I, to, click away, trying to get larger images. I'd love to (if possible) see the art larger.
It would be lovely to have, at the very least, a giant Doug Wildey "phone book" sampler of his comic book work. At best, a large slip-cased hardbound edition of same.
I'd love to see a larger scan of that JONNY QUEST mummy illustration? Don't suppose you have a larger image, Dave?
Loston, sorry I don't have a bigger scan of that great piece.
Post a Comment