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Wednesday, January 12, 2005
Retrospectively Roy: A Look Back on the Career of Roy Thomas
By Rik
Offenberger
Roy Thomas is a busy man with a long history in comics, he
recently took some time out for 20 questions about his
career…
Rik Offenberger: You were there at the beginning of
comics fandom, how did fans meet and get together in the
beginning?
Roy Thomas: Julie Schwartz started publishing full
addresses in his comics LPs (letter pages). Gardner Fox sent
me Jerry Bails' address, after Julie sent me Gardner's.
Offenberger: What made you start Alter Ego?
Thomas: Actually, it was Jerry who decided to launch
AE… I just helped.
Offenberger: How did you get the job with Mort
Weisinger at DC?
Thomas: I'd sent him a letter or two about a
Schaffenberger-drawn LOIS LANE story that came to his
attention, but mostly I think it was sending him ALTER
EGO #7 and maybe #8.
Offenberger: Why did you leave DC for Marvel?
Thomas: Weisinger and I didn't get along. I found him
sadistic.
Offenberger: Was there concern about the future of
Marvel after both Ditko and Kirby left?
Thomas: Only about the quality of Spider-Man,
not Marvel per se-- all of which was alleviated since the
mag sold even better under Romita, as we soon learned.
Offenberger: Initially Stan was plotting and you were
scripting the finished art, how did you feel about your part
in the creative process?
Thomas: I only did that one first issues of a few
series I started, like SGT. FURY and X-MEN and
AVENGERS. I never scripted much of anything else Stan
had plotted, unless maybe my first DAREDEVIL. In all
these cases, actually, the artist would have done much of
the plotting.
Offenberger: Eventually you were sole writer on
X-Men and Avengers, how did this transpire?
Thomas: That was always the intent.
Offenberger: How did Conan become a Marvel
property?
Thomas: Stan and I felt we should get a
sword-and-sorcery property, and after a false start with Lin
Carter's Thongor, I went after Conan on my own
and got it by going directly to REH estate literary agent
Glenn Lord.
Offenberger: How did you become Editor in Chief at
Marvel and since you were the first one, what did the job
entail?
Thomas: I became ed-in-chief because Stan became
publisher and president… and it entailed about what you'd
think, although Stan was still more involved editorially in
those early days.
Offenberger: Marvel had retold Captain America’s
history to fit the new "Marvel Age", and done the same thing
with Namor. They total recreated the Human Torch from
scratch. You had done something similar with the Vision.
What was your feeling about updating, changing and
completely dismissing the Golden Age stories that created
these heroes?
Thomas: I never mentally dismissed the old stories. I
even had Steve Englehart reconcile the late 1940s and 1950s
Cap with Marvel continuity.
Offenberger: You took control of the Golden Age
Marvel Universe with the Invaders, was it a hard sell
to convince Marvel they wanted to tell Golden Age stories
again?
Thomas: No. Stan liked the idea the way I presented
it to him, with the name THE INVADERS--which he'd
originally thought of for a book co-starring Namor and Hulk.
Offenberger: You were with Marvel in the over 15
years, and then you left for DC, why?
Thomas: I didn't feel I could go along with a new
policy, so Stan and I decided I would become simply
writer/editor of my own material. Otherwise, I'd have gone
to DC six years earlier. I stayed around until I felt I
couldn't work with Jim Shooter because I felt he had been
untruthful with me… to put it politely.
Offenberger: Within 6 months of joining DC you
started All-Star Squadron, was this planned from the time
you joined DC?
Thomas: As soon as I met with DC people, I suggested
ALL-STAR SQUADRON and ARAK. They just took
months to come out.
Offenberger: You also wrote the Legion; was
there a conscious decision to stay away from the main stream
DC Universe?
Thomas: To some extent. I had no interest in doing
Batman or Superman, or the mainstream heroes, though I would
do them if asked. I liked the idea of doing WONDER WOMAN,
but was unhappy not to have a whole book, so soon left. I
never wanted to do LEGION, though I enjoyed the few
issues I did.
Offenberger: You launched Captain Carrot and the
Zoo Crew in the 80s, what was the thinking in launching
the 1st funny animal book at DC in 40 years?
Thomas: I wanted to do it… had been planning to do
one at Marvel with Herb Trimpe as artist.
Offenberger: In 1983 you started working on Elric
for Pacific, what made the Pacific offer attractive while
you were working for DC?
Thomas: It was extra money, and a chance to branch
out. Besides, I liked doing sword-and-sorcery comics and
Conan was lost to me.
Offenberger: In 1984 you launched Infinity Inc.,
how did this come about?
Thomas: I was going to pitch an idea I called TIME
TITANS, but Dann and I came up with INFINITY, INC.
(though not that name) while going on a day trip to the
Statue of Liberty and I never pitched TIME TITANS to
DC.
Offenberger: The DC using much of Infinity Inc.
in the JSA, 20 years later, does it seem the same or
different form Marvel's revamp of the 40s heroes in the 60s
or your uses of the DC and Quality heroes in All-Star
Squadron?
Thomas: I don't think of it in those terms, although,
even though I own a piece of the Infinity characters, I
resent their being used and my having no part in it.
Offenberger: In 1989 you went back to Marvel, what
brought you back?
Thomas: Tom DeFalco arranged it. I felt DC had become
a dead end, much as I liked their characters.
Offenberger: Currently you are back in the fanzine
business with Alter Ego again, how is that going?
Thomas: Pretty well, although since 9-11 the sales
have been flat enough that we need just a few hundred
dependable readers every month to make it really sail. I
enjoy dong it more than I've enjoyed writing many comics.
Offenberger: Thanks for your time, Roy!
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