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Star Trek: Gold Key #1–61 1967–1979 The Original Series: Star Trek: Marvel #1–18 1980–1982 1979 film Star Trek (Volume 1) DC #1–57 1984–1988 The Original Series, 1984 and 1986 films, The Next Generation: Star Trek: The Next Generation (Volume 1) #1–6 1988 The Next Generation: Star Trek (Volume 2) #1–80 1989–1996
During the 1970s, the entire comics industry experienced a downswing and Gold Key was among the hardest hit. [1] Its editorial policies had not kept pace with the changing times, and suffered an erosion of its base of sales among children, who instead of buying comic books, could now watch cartoons and other entertainment on television for free.
Gold Key/Western Comics: Star Trek #1–61, Star Trek – Enterprise Logs Vol. #1–4, Star Trek – Dynabrite #11357 and #11358, Star Trek – Dan Curtis Give-Away #2 and 6 Peter Pan/Power Records: Star Trek comic/record sets – Passage to Moauv, The Crier in Emptiness, Dinosaur Planet, The Robot Masters, A Mirror for Futility, The Time Stealer
Gold Key Comics characters (1 C, 10 P) T. Gold Key Comics titles (5 C, 64 P) Pages in category "Gold Key Comics" The following 5 pages are in this category, out of 5 ...
The initial publisher of Star Trek comic adaptations and tie-in comics was Gold Key, part of Whitman Publishing. The series ran for 61 issues between July 1967 until March 1979, and is noted for the first nine issues of the series being published with photo covers, made up from promotional photographs supplied by Paramount, some of which were ...
Miller grew up a comics fan; a letter he wrote to Marvel Comics was published in The Cat #3 (April 1973). [8] His first published work was at Western Publishing's Gold Key Comics imprint, received at the recommendation of comics artist Neal Adams, to whom a fledgling Miller, after moving to New York City, had shown samples and received much critique and occasional informal lessons. [9]
Arnold Drake (March 1, 1924 – March 12, 2007) [1] [2] was an American comic book writer and screenwriter best known for co-creating the DC Comics characters Deadman and the Doom Patrol, and the Marvel Comics characters the Guardians of the Galaxy, among others. Drake was posthumously inducted into the Will Eisner Comic Book Hall of Fame in 2008.
Gold Key Comics March 1980 – September 1980 The first two issues were an adaptation of the film, which was first published in its complete form in Walt Disney Showcase #54 two months earlier in January 1980, the latter two issues are an completely original story continuing from where the film story ended; retitled Beyond the Black Hole from #3.
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