Bill Benulis
Bill Benulis | |
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Born |
1928 Brooklyn, New York |
Nationality | American |
Area(s) | Penciller, Inker |
Bill Benulis (born 1928 in Brooklyn, New York) was an American comic book artist in the 1950s. His style is distinctive, and he signed his work, but he drew only a small number of stories, in a variety of genres. His work appears in war comics, horror comics, and science fiction comics, and was reprinted in the Marvel Comics reprint series, War Is Hell, as well as in several of the reprints of fifties comic books published under the IW imprint in the sixties.[1]
Biography
Benulis was born in 1928 in Brooklyn, New York. He married in 1959, and has three children and two grandchildren.
He decided not to pursue his art further past the early 50's in order to provide for his family by working in the post office. Despite living with the after-effects of childhood polio, he worked many years on foot as a letter carrier in the post office and retired from it around 1993. Sadly, he never drew any more after his short time in comics—a time in which he was able to work alongside others he admired like Will Eisner and Stan Lee. He illustrated a cover for an early science fiction book by Scientology founder L. Ron Hubbard.
Bibliography
- Adventures into Terror (Atlas Comics, 1951)
- Astonishing (Atlas, 1951)
- Strange Tales (Atlas, 1951)
- Journey into Mystery (Atlas, 1952)
Notes
- ↑ Bill Benulis, Lambiek's Comiclopedia
References
- Bill Benulis at the Grand Comics Database
- Bill Benulis at the Comic Book DB
External links
- Bill Benulis on Comicvine
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