Howard The Duck creator Steve Gerber dead at 60
Steve Gerber,
the comic book writer and creator whose
signature character was the alienated, cigar-chomping Howard the Duck,
has died.
He was 60, KATHLEEN HENNESSEY is reporting Feb. 16 for the AP.
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Or in Cleveland, where Howard was a lone talking duck
“trapped in a world he never made!”
according to the comic’s tagline.
Gerber split with Marvel in 1978 amid a dispute over the rights to the character.
He sued the company and settled out of court.
Skrenes said Gerber was not closely involved in George Lucas’ 1986
“Howard the Duck” film, which fared poorly at the box office.
Gerber also worked in television as a story editor on “G.I. Joe” and “Dungeon & Dragons.”
More recently, Gerber and Skrenes created “Hard Time” for DC Comics,
the story of a 15-year-old boy convicted in a Columbine-like school shooting
who discovers he has special powers.
Gerber was working on a revival of the DC Comics’ Dr. Fate series at the time of his death.
“He was the kind of guy people would give an old, moribund idea to
and he would come up with a fresh idea for it,” said Mark Evanier, a friend.
Gerber was born Sept. 20, 1947, in St. Louis and received a
bachelor’s degree from St. Louis University, before joining Marvel
as an assistant editor in 1972.
He is survived by his mother, Bernice; his daughter,
Samantha Voll; and three siblings.
Steve Gerber, no longer trapped in a world he never made.
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