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Larroca was asked to draw fill-in issues of The Uncanny X-Men and X-Men. These issues led up to the "X-Men Reload" event, as the titles gained new writers, artists, and story direction. Larroca joined with writer Chuck Austen on X-Men. During his run of X-Men, Larroca took a side job drawing Spider-Man: House of M miniseries.
The Enforcers first appeared in The Amazing Spider-Man #10 (March 1964), and were created by writer-editor Stan Lee and artist and co-plotter Steve Ditko. [1] [2]The Enforcers appear often in the early issues of The Amazing Spider-Man, debuting in #10, [3] and returning in #14 and 19, in the latter issue teaming with the supervillain the Sandman.
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John Romita Jr. was born August 17, 1956, [2] the son of Virginia (Bruno) and comic book artist John Romita Sr., one of the signature Spider-Man artists since the 1960s. [3] [4] He studied advertising art and design at Farmingdale State College in East Farmingdale, New York, graduating in 1976.
Between 2001 and 2013 Campbell did numerous covers for The Amazing Spider-Man, including issues 30 - 35 in 2001, 50 - 52 and 500 in 2003, and seven issues done sporadically from issues 601 in 2009 and 700 in 2013. His cover to issue #30 was used as the cover of the 2003 trade paperback that collected issues 30 and 31.
Alex Saviuk grew up on Long Island, New York, graduating from Floral Park Memorial High School in 1970. [3] He attended the School of Visual Arts, where he studied with (among others) Will Eisner, [4] [5] graduating in 1974 with a degree in Illustration. [3]
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In 1976, Andru penciled the first large-scale comic book Intercompany crossover, Superman vs. the Amazing Spider-Man, in a story written by Conway and co-published by Marvel and DC. As one historian wrote, "The tale was written by Gerry Conway and drawn by Ross Andru, both among the few [at that time] to ever have worked on both Superman and ...