Here's a page from "Code of the Silver Sage" with Rocky Lane (Motion Picture Comics 102). The clues to lead to Leo Dorfman are "As" and "Just then" in the captions, but the clincher is the use of periods--all of these not exclusive to Dorfman, but used by him much more often than the other writers at Fawcett at the time. "Ivanhoe" and "The Red Badge of Courage" are, as I never tire of pointing out, the "classics in comics" mentioned in an early 70s Superboy text page and taken by fandom at the time as meaning Classics Illustrated.
Writers--
Fawcett movie one-shots
1949 | Dakota Lil | Joe Millard | |
1950 | Copper Canyon | Millard | |
Destination Moon | Otto Binder | ||
Montana | Millard | ||
Pioneer Marshal | Millard | ||
Powder River Rustlers | Millard | ||
Singing Guns | Millard |
Fawcett Movie Comic
1950 | 7 | Gunmen of Abilene | Binder |
Dec/ | 8 | King of the Bull Whip | Leo Dorfman |
Feb/51 |
9 | The Old Frontier | Dorfman |
Apr/
|
10 | The Missourians | Dorfman |
May/
|
11 | The Thundering Trail | Dorfman |
Aug/ | 12 | Rustlers on Horseback | Dorfman |
Oct/ | 13 | Warpath | Dorfman |
Dec/ | 14 | The Last Oupost | Dorfman |
Feb/52 | 15 | The Man from Planet X | Binder |
Apr/
|
16 | Ten Tall Men | Dorfman |
June/ | 17 | Rose of Cimarron | Dorfman |
Aug/
|
18 | The Brigand | Dorfman |
Oct/ | 19 | Carbine Williams | Dorfman |
Dec/ | 20 | Ivanhoe | Dorfman |
Motion Picture Comics
1950 | 101 | The Vanishing Westerner | Millard |
Jan/51 | 102 | Code of the Silver Sage | Dorfman |
Mar/
|
103 | Covered Wagon Raid |
Dorfman |
May/
|
104 | Vigilante Hideout | Dorfman |
July/
|
105 | The Red Badge of Courage |
Dorfman |
Sep/ | 106 | The Texas Rangers |
Dorfman |
Nov/ | 107 | Frisco Tornado |
Dorfman |
Jan/52 | 108 | Mask of the Avenger |
Dorfman |
Mar/ | 109 | Rough Riders of Durango |
Dorfman |
May/
|
110 | When Worlds Collide |
Dorfman |
July/ | 111 | The Vanishing Outpost |
Dorfman |
Sep/
|
112 | Brave Warrior |
Dorfman |
Nov/ | 113 | Walk East on Beacon | Dorfman |
Jan/53 | 114 | Cripple Creek | Dorfman |
I say this a lot, but I'm in awe of your detection skills.
ReplyDeleteAgain, thank you, Tony.
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