Joe Shuster

Joe Shuster (July 10, 1914 - July 30, 1992) was a Canadian-born artist best known for co-creating Superman with Jerome Siegel. Joseph Shuster was born in Toronto, Ontario, the son of Jewish immigrants. His father Julius was an immigrant from Rotterdam, and his mother, Ida, who had come from Kiev, were barely able to make ends meet. As a youngster, Joe Shuster worked as a newspaper boy for the Toronto Star and, as a hobby, he liked to sketch. The sights and sounds of a big city newspaper, the hustle bustle of its offices, and the fantasy world of the newspaper's color comics had a powerful impact on him. He was a cousin of one of Canada's most popular comedians, Frank Shuster. At the age of ten, Joe Shuster's family moved to Cleveland, Ohio, where, by the age of 18, he and his friend Jerome Siegel began publishing a short-lived "Science Fiction" magazine. Shuster made the drawings and Siegel did the writing, creating a super character that a few years later evolved into a comic strip. Employed by DC-National, the pair produced a variety of comic stories, including the lead feature in the company's issue of the first Action Comics in 1938. The feature character in that issue, Superman, was an enormous success that led to what is referred to as the "Golden Age of Comic Books." When Superman first appeared, its hero, Clark Kent, worked for the Daily Star newspaper, named by Shuster after his old employer in Toronto. When the comic strip received international distribution, the company permanently changed the name to the Daily Planet. Joe Shuster very quickly became famous as the co-creator of one of the most well-known and commercially successful fictional characters of the 20th century. At the time, in the midst of the Great Depression, he made a very good living from producing Superman stories. However, the copyright to his and Siegel's work belonged to their employer, and when the company refused to compensate them to the degree they believed appropriate, the pair sued. In 1948, the New York State Supreme Court limited their settlement to $60,000 each, at the time a large amount for someone, but very small compared to the multi-millions in profits their employer was generating annually. After the bitter legal wrangling, Joe Shuster left the comics business and his and Siegel's byline was dropped by DC comics. In 1978, Siegel & Shuster again filed a legal action against DC Comics for royalties from the Superman character. In the face of a great deal of negative publicity over their handling of the affair, DC reinstated the byline dropped more than 30 years earlier, and granted the pair a lifetime pension of $35,000 a year. Joe Shuster died in Los Angeles, California. Shuster, Joe Shuster, Joe Shuster, Joe

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
mill creek township, pennsylvania
millcreek township, pennsylvania
miller township, pennsylvania
monroe township, pennsylvania
montgomery township, pennsylvania
morris township, pennsylvania
morrisville, pennsylvania
mount joy township, pennsylvania
mount pleasant township, pennsylvania
newburg, pennsylvania
newtown, pennsylvania
helsinki vantaa airport
newtown township, pennsylvania
nicholson township, pennsylvania
north union township, pennsylvania
northampton township, pennsylvania
oakland, pennsylvania
oakland township, pennsylvania
oliver township, pennsylvania
paint township, pennsylvania
palmyra township, pennsylvania
paradise township, pennsylvania
penn township, pennsylvania
perry township, pennsylvania
peters township, pennsylvania
pike township, pennsylvania
princess christina of the netherlands
pine creek township, pennsylvania
pine grove township, pennsylvania
pine township, pennsylvania
pleasantville, pennsylvania
plymouth township, pennsylvania
polk township, pennsylvania
portage township, pennsylvania
porter township, pennsylvania
potter township, pennsylvania
pulaski township, pennsylvania
redbank township, pennsylvania
richland township, pennsylvania
richmond township, pennsylvania
agns sorel
rockland township, pennsylvania
layamon
inwood, manhattan