Posted in: Comics, Heritage Sponsored, Vintage Paper | Tagged: Charles Biro, MLJ, Zip Comics
Charles Biro Horror, End of Scarlet Avenger, Zip Comics #17 at Auction
MLJ ended the pulp-style character Scarlet Avenger in Zip Comics to make way for the style of teen humor that would make the publisher famous.
Best known as the publisher who debuted Archie and the rest of the gang of Riverdale during the Golden Age, MLJ Magazines was better than most publishers at navigating the rapidly evolving industry of that era. The character the Scarlet Avenger was a good example of that. Zip Comics #17 featured the end of the Scarlet Avenger in the Golden Age, making way for teen humor character Wilbur Wilkin ahead of the debut of Archie. This issue also features a "superhero horror" style cover by Charles Biro of the kind that he and Irv Novick had made a trademark at MLJ. An early Golden Age MLJ comic book that rarely comics up for sale in anything above low grade, there's a GD+ copy of Zip Comics #17 (MLJ, 1941) as well as many other issues of the series up for auction at Heritage Auctions.
The Scarlet Avenger was created by Harry Shorten and Irv Novick and first appeared in Zip Comics #1. The character was a classic pulp-style hero in comics form. As his origin in the debut of Zip Comics describes, "The Scarlet Avenger in real life is Jim Kendall. He has devoted himself to wiping out gangland ever since the death of his wife and child. An airplane in which they were all flying was hijacked because it was carrying a cargo of gold bullion. It crashed, and all the occupants except Jim himself were killed. In the accident, his face muscles were paralyzed, and Jim is now the man who never smiles. Behind Kendall's stony face there is a giant scientific brain. He brings science to the aid of his crusade. He has fashioned for himself a scarlet robe, woven from steel into a super-fine, bullet-proof steel-mesh cloak. His identity unknown, even to his own aides, the flaming arrow is the emblem of the Scarlet Avenger."
In Zip Comics #17, MLJ ended a pulp-style character to make way for teen humor character Wilbur Wilkins in the title — an adept move that served the publisher well. This is a surprisingly tough issue of the title that his highly sought after by collectors due to that Biro cover, but there's a GD+ copy of Zip Comics #17 (MLJ, 1941) as well as many other issues of the series up for auction at Heritage Auctions.