One of the most original and widely respected writers in comics,
Glasgow-born Grant Morrison got his start with British indie comics
during the late 1970s and early 1980s before working on Marvel UK
features such as Zoids. After co-creating the popular strip Zenith
with artist Steve Yeowell in 2000 AD, Morrison made his mark in
America with DC Comics, where he revived an obscure hero to
critical acclaim in his Animal Man series. In 1989, he wrote the
best-selling Batman graphic novel Arkham Asylum and began a
memorably surreal run as writer of the freakish heroes of DC's Doom
Patrol. Subsequent DC projects included Kid Eternity, Sebastian O,
Flex Mentallo, Kill Your Boyfriend, Aztek, Invisibles, DC One
Million, Flash and a hugely popular revamping of DC's JLA. Morrison
then shifted focus to Marvel Comics, where he had already made a
brief pit-stop co-writing 1995's bizarre Skrull Kill Krew with Mark
Millar. In addition to his groundbreaking four-year New X-Men run,
Morrison's Marvel credits include Fantastic Four- 1234 and Marvel
Boy. He has since returned to DC, where his later credits include
Seaguy, WE3, Vimanarama, JLA- Classified and Seven Soldiers. While
serving as a special creative consultant to DC editorial, Morrison
has written All-Star Superman, and the flagship Batman title and
its spinoff Batman Inc.; co-written the event series 52; and served
as the mastermind behind Final Crisis.
Peter Milligan was at the forefront of the 1990s "British
Invasion," introducing a revolutionary new breed of comic books for
an adult audience. His Eisner Award-nominated DC/Vertigo series
Shade the Changing Man offered a satirical look at American culture
from the point of view of an alien visitor from another dimension.
Enigma cemented Milligan's reputation for unparalleled weirdness,
and Human Target's sharp deconstruction of the action-movie
paradigm demonstrated his versatility. But the critically acclaimed
Marvel series X-Force (later X-Statix), with its unique
interpretation of the mutant condition, stands as perhaps his most
popular work. His other Marvel credits include X-Men, Sub-Mariner-
The Depths and 5 Ronin.
British artist Garry Leach first made a name for himself penciling
short strips in 2000 AD before helping launch Warrior magazine and
its revival of the character Marvelman (later Miracleman). Leach
worked mainly in advertising for years before returning to comics
during the 1990s. He worked frequently as an inker and penciled the
first issue of Global Frequency, written by Warren Ellis. He also
illustrated Magic- The Gathering cards.
The career of British-born artist Alan Davis took off like a rocket
after his humble beginnings at Marvel UK. Continuing the
collaboration that saw Captain Britain become an enduring critical
and fan-favorite, the two co-created D.R. and Quinch. Davis broke
into U.S. comics with runs on Batman and the Outsiders and
Detective Comics. Hired by Marvel U.S. in 1986, Davis launched
Excalibur with Chris Claremont, and the book quickly became one of
Marvel mutantdom's most unique and humorous titles. When Davis took
over as writer, he continued many plot threads from his Captain
Britain run. Davis also created the super-hero family ClanDestine,
and wrote and drew the DC miniseries JLA- The Nail. After a lengthy
arc writing and drawing X-Men, Davis went on to work on the
miniseries Killraven, Fantastic Four- The End and a ClanDestine
revival. He has also illustrated writer Brian Michael Bendis'
Avengers Prime and contributed to the status-quo-changing X-Men-
Schism, later helping relaunch Wolverine with writer Paul Cornell.
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