All strips included in issues 1-15 (24th March 1984 - 30th June
1984) of the original Scream! run, including:
The Dracula File - Writers Gerry-Finley Day, Simon Furman, Artist
Eric Bradbury
Fiends and Neighbours - Artist Graham Allen
Tales From the Grave - Writers Tom Tully, Ian Rimmer, Scott
Goodall, Artist Jim Watson
Library of Death - Writers Barrie Tomlinson,James Nicholas, Angus
Allan Artists Cam Kennedy, Ron Smith, John Cooper, Brendan
McCarthy, Mike Dorey, Steve Dillon
Monster - Writers Alan Moore, John Wagner, Artists Henzil, Jesus
Redondo
The Nightcomers - Writer Tom Tully, Artist John Richardson
Terror of the Cats - Writer Simon Furman, Artists Gonzalez, John
Richardson
The Thirteenth Floor - Writers John Wagner, Alan Grant, Artist Jose
Ortiz
A Ghastly Tale - Artists Mike Western, Mike Dorey, Jose Casanovas
Sr
Best known for writing Transformers comics, Simon Furman was
instrumental in making Marvel UK a success. During the eighties and
nineties he worked on many titles for them, including the
aforementioned Transformers and also Action Force, Thundercats,
Doctor Who Magazine as well as two series he helped create –
Dragon’s Claws and Death’s Head. More recently he has written the
Annihilation: Rohan miniseries for Marvel US and the ten issue
maxi-series To The Death series, drawn by his Transformers
workmate, Geoff Senior.
John Wagner has been scripting for 2000 AD for more years than he
cares to remember. His creations include Judge Dredd, Strontium
Dog, Ace Trucking, Al’s Baby, Button Man and Mean Machine. Outside
of 2000 AD his credits include Star Wars, Lobo, The Punisher and
the critically acclaimed A History of Violence.
With over 300 2000 AD stories to his name – not to mention over 250
Daily Star Judge Dredd strips – Alan Grant’s prolific creative
record speaks for itself. Outside the Galaxy’s Greatest Comic,
Grant is well-known to Batman fans following a lengthy run on
various incarnations of the title. More recently he has adapted
Robert Louis Stevenson’s classic novels Kidnapped and Doctor Jekyll
and Mr Hyde in Graphic Novel format with artist Cam Kennedy.
Perhaps the most widely respected comic writer of the modern era,
Alan Moore’s contribution to the comics world is incalculable.
Creator of some of 2000 AD’s most popular series, including Abelard
Snazz, The Ballad of Halo Jones, D.R. & Quinch and Skizz, he has
also worked on A.B.C. Warriors, Ro-Busters, Rogue Trooper, Ro-Jaws’
Robo-Tales, Tharg the Mighty, Time Twisters and several one-off
strips. Outside of the Galaxy’s Greatest Comic, Moore is best known
for his work on the classic Watchmen, which redefined the superhero
genre in 1986, but this is simply touching the surface of a career
which has included 1963, A1’s Warpsmiths, Bojeffries Saga and
Maxwell the Magic Cat, AARGH!, Batman, Big Numbers, Brought to
Light, Captain Britain, Deathblow, Flesh and Bones, From Hell,
Glory, Green Lantern Corps, Lost Girls, Miracleman, A Small
Killing, Snakes and Ladders, Spawn, Supreme, Swamp Thing, Superman
, V For Vendetta, WildC.A.T.S. and Youngblood. Moore is now owner
and chief writer of the America’s Best Comics line, distributed by
WildStorm, and including Promethea, Tom Strong, Tomorrow Stories,
Top Ten and The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen, which has been
made into a major Hollywood movie.
Jesus Redondo worked on several strips for 2000 AD including
Tharg’s Future Shocks, Nemesis the Warlock, M.A.C.H. 1 and Return
to Armageddon. In the 1990’s he worked on Motormouth and Killpower
for Marvel UK and Kitty Pryde for Marvel US.
Cam Kennedy is another hugely popular 2000 AD artist, having
illustrated many Judge Dredd strips and co-created luckless wannabe
creator Kenny Who? and the Taxidermist. A key early Rogue Trooper
artist, he has also drawn Batman/Judge Dredd: Vendetta in Gotham,
Judge Dredd, Tharg the Mighty, Tharg’s Future Shocks, and The
V.C.’s. His extracurricular work includes Axel Pressbutton, Batman,
Lobo, Nick Fury: Agent of S.H.I.E.L.D., and Star Wars.
José Ortiz Moya’s sixty plus year career began after he won a
contest which ran in the Spanish magazine Chicos. In the 1950s he
worked on many digest strips for Editorial Maga, including Capitan
Don Nadie, Pantera Negra and Jungla. Agency work saw him produce
several strips for foreign publishers, particularly in Britain
where he illustrated Caroline Barker, Barrister at Law for the
Daily Express, Smokeman and UFO Agent for Eagle magazine and the
Phantom Viking in Lion. In the seventies and eighties Ortiz worked
on several British popular strips including The Tower King and
House of Daemon for the new Eagle, Rogue Trooper and Judge Dredd
for 2000 AD and The Thirteenth Floor for Scream!, which he
co-created with John Wagner and Alan Grant. Whilst doing all of
this work on UK kid’s comics, in the US Ortiz was also working on
and is arguably best known for illustrating several stories for
Warren’s horror titles, including Eerie and Vampirella.
Brendan McCarthy began working for 2000 AD in its early days and as
his style developed, he created and designed many memorable strips
for the comic, including the British, Japanese and OZ judges, the
Judda/Chopper storyline, Zenith and Sooner or Later. His later
comics work includes the celebrated Rogan Gosh, the controversial,
banned Skin, the influential Strange Days, the Dr
Strange/Spider-Man series Fever for Marvel and more recently. The
Zaucer of Zilk for 2000 AD (being re-published by IDW in the US).
During the eighties, he moved into designing pop videos and then
went on to create the visuals for the groundbreaking hit cgi
animated TV series Reboot. This led to work in Hollywood on such
projects as the first Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles movie, Lost In
Space and Highlander. He also co-wrote and designed the new
instalment of the Mad Max franchise called Fury Road, with director
George Miller. Brendan currently has a big new cgi animated feature
film and a bizarre new comic series (Nano Nano) in the works.
One of the most prolific writers in the comic’s history, Gerry
Finley-Day holds a special place in many 2000 AD fans’ hearts as
the creator of classics like Rogue Trooper, Fiends of the Eastern
Front and The V.C.s, as well as Harry 20 on the High Rock and Ant
Wars. A keen “ideas man”, Finley-Day’s concepts of the horrors
future warfare had in store were key to both Rogue and The V.C.s’
continuing popularity, ensuring that their recent return to the
Galaxy’s Greatest Comic was well-received. Finley-Day also scripted
episodes of Judge Dredd and Dan Dare, and co-scripted much of
Invasion! (and entirely scripted the prequel story, ‘Disaster
1990!’).
Eric Bradbury began his comic career at Knockout, working on such
humour strips as Blossom and Our Ernie. He moved onto the adventure
western, Lucky Logan, sharing art chores with Mike Western
(Bradbury would go on to ink Western’s pencils on The Leopard from
Lime Street). High profile work on Mytek the Mighty (Valiant &
Vulcan), the House of Dolmann (Valiant), Von Hoffman’s Invasion
(Jet!), Death Squad (Battle), Hook Jaw (Action) and Doomlord (The
Eagle) followed. Bradbury has been described as an ‘unsung hero’ of
2000 AD, having contributed to many popular strips in the
long-running sci-fi comic. His credits in the ‘Galaxy’s Greatest
comic’ include Rogue Trooper, Tharg the Mighty, Invasion and The
Mean Arena.
Widely regarded as one of the best artists to ever grace the
British comic industry, Mike Western began his career on Knockout,
having already spent time working for GB Animation. During the
1950s he shared art chores with Eric Bradbury on the popular
western strip Lucky Logan. In 1960 he moved onto TV Express where
he drew No Hiding Place and Biggles. Buster and Valiant followed
where Mike found himself drawing long-running strips such as Wild
Wonders. In the 1970s he was very prolific, illustrating Buster's
Leopard from Lime Street and several key strips for Battle,
including Darkie's Mob, The Sarge and HMS Nightshade. Mike made an
impact on the iconic Roy of the Rovers, illustrating the newspaper
strip which ran in the Daily Star during the 1990s.
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