Sal Buscema


Sal Buscema is an American comics artist, primarily for Marvel Comics, where he enjoyed a ten-year run as artist of The Incredible Hulk. He is the younger brother of comics artist John Buscema.

Biography

Early life and career

Born in Brooklyn, New York City, New York, from Sicilian parents, Sal Buscema was the youngest of four siblings. His elder brothers Alfred and John, a celebrated comic-book artist, and his sister Carol predeceased him. Their father, who was born in Italy and died in 1973, was a barber.
Buscema grew up a fan of Hal Foster's Prince Valiant comic strip, of George Tuska's comic-book art, and of commercial illustrators such has Robert Fawcett, Al Parker, and Norman Rockwell, and called his artist brother John "greatly responsible for me pursuing drawing.... John was definitely an inspiration".
Like his brother John, Sal Buscema attended the High School of Music & Art, graduating in 1955. He got his start as a comic-book inker in the early 1950s when his brother agreed to let him ink comics pages; this led to Sal helping John by doing occasional background art on Dell Comics series John was drawing.
After high school, Buscema found work at "a small, two-man advertising art studio in Manhattan" but was fired after three months of doing mostly production work. He went on to a larger commercial-art studio, where he was a gofer and a delivery person. He quit, then spent less than a year filling wedding-ring orders for the jewelry manufacturer J.R. Wood and Sons before being drafted into the peacetime U. S. Army in 1956. Classified as an "illustrator", he served with the Army Corps of Engineers stationed at Fort Belvoir in Virginia. He spent 21 months doing film strips and charts as training aids before being discharged after two years. He attained the rank of specialist 3rd class, which he called "equivalent to corporal."
After briefly returning to New York City to assist at a one-man art studio, an Army connection found him work at the large Creative Arts Studio in Washington, D.C. There he did illustrations for government agencies, including the Department of Agriculture and the Department of Defense. After living with his godparents for three months, Buscema and an Army buddy became roommates in Alexandria, Virginia.
In 1961, a call from his brother John brought Buscema to New York City to work with him at the advertising agency Alexander Chaite, Inc. After a year-and-a-half, John Buscema returned to the comic-book industry while Sal Buscema joined a friend and colleague from Creative Arts Studio, Mel Emde, who was opening his own company, Design Studio. There Buscema stayed until 1968, when he began working for Marvel Comics, for which his brother was already established as a freelance artist.

Marvel Comics

Buscema by this time had spent "every night for about a year" teaching himself "how to produce a dynamic page" in the Marvel Comics storytelling style, enduring harsh critiques from his Marvel-artist brother John. As Buscema recalled in the late 2000s:
The interview had come about after Buscema, at his brother's urging, had first written to Marvel production manager Sol Brodsky to introduce himself and his work. Brodsky had no assignments for him at the time, and Buscema "called him a couple of times just to bug him a little bit and let him know that I was still alive, and eventually the first job came through" in June 1968 — the 10-page Western feature "Gunhawk". "I think they just said, 'Sal, here's the plot, go to it,'" Buscema recalled in 2003. That story, "The Coming of Gunhawk", by writer Jerry Siegel and penciler Werner Roth, was eventually published in the omnibus title Western Gunfighters #1. Buscema's first published comics work had come before that: inking John Buscema's pencil art on four 39- to 40-page stories in the superhero comic The Silver Surfer #4–7 ; and inking Larry Lieber's pencils on the regular-sized, 20-page Western The Rawhide Kid #68.
John Buscema specifically asked for his brother as inker on The Silver Surfer, at the time a high-profile project dear to writer-editor Lee, who gave the character an unprecedented for the time double-sized, 64-page solo series priced at 25 cents, more than twice the price of the standard 32-page, 12-cent comic. Sal Buscema recalled,
Within a year, Buscema was penciling the superhero-team comic The Avengers, and for the next thirty years, he was one of the most prolific artists at the company. He recalled in the late 2000s, "At first I was very slow. If I knocked out six or eight pages a week I was happy. Then I started getting a little bit better, and I could probably do a couple of pages a day. But once I hit that five-year transitional period, I was like a machine. I could grind the stuff out.... Everything just fell into place, and all of a sudden I found it very easy to do."
Sal Buscema and writer Roy Thomas introduced the Squadron Sinister in The Avengers #69 as a homage to the Justice League. The Thomas/Buscema team produced the last new story in The Uncanny X-Men before that series became all-reprints for several years, and created the super-villain Llyra in Sub-Mariner #32. Buscema drew an Avengers story plotted by novelist Harlan Ellison which featured the debut of Psyklop. Writer Steve Englehart and Buscema launched The Defenders as an ongoing series in August 1972 and introduced Valkyrie to the team in issue #4. Buscema also worked with Englehart on Captain America; their 1972–1975 run on that title saw it become one of Marvel's top-sellers. The pair teamed on several issues of The Avengers as well and Engelhart has described Buscema as being one of his "all-time favorites" and "a perfect comic book storyteller." With Steve Gerber, a successor writer, Buscema co-created Starhawk, adding the character to the roster of the future-based super-team, The Guardians of the Galaxy. In 2010, Comics Bulletin ranked Buscema's collaboration with Gerber on The Defenders first on its list of the "Top 10 1970s Marvels".
With writer Bill Mantlo, Buscema created the supporting character Jean DeWolff in Marvel Team-Up #48. Mantlo, a frequent collaborator, later said that Buscema was a formative influence on his plotting. Buscema was the original artist on The Spectacular Spider-Man, which debuted in December 1976. He and Jim Shooter created Graviton in The Avengers #158. The Rom series was launched by Mantlo and Buscema in December 1979. The Mantlo/Buscema collaboration on The Incredible Hulk included the creation of the U-Foes and the Soviet Super-Soldiers. Buscema had a 10-year run on that Hulk series, which he described as "robably one of the most enjoyable experiences of my career. The fact that the Hulk is my all-time favorite character might be a contributing factor. I never tired of the character. Every story was a new challenge." He became the artist on New Mutants, beginning with issue #4. Beginning in the late 1970s, Buscema generally inked his own work. In 1986, he began drawing Thor, working with writer Walt Simonson. In the late 1980s, he returned to inking others' work, again including that of his brother John Buscema on an Englehart-scripted run on Fantastic Four.

Later career

From 1988 through 1996, he penciled and mostly inked a 100-issue run on The Spectacular Spider-Man. This included such story arcs as the "Lobo Brothers Gang War" with Gerry Conway and "The Child Within", written by J. M. DeMatteis, featuring the death of longtime Spider-Man supporting character Harry Osborn in #200. In a 2002 interview, DeMatteis said, "I really loved the two years on Spectacular Spider-Man that I wrote with Sal Buscema drawing. Talk about underrated! Sal is one of the best storytellers and a wonderful collaborator. I loved that run." From 1997 to 1999, Buscema worked for rival DC Comics, including penciling Batman, Superman, and Superboy stories, and inking the Creeper, Wonder Woman, and other characters' stories. He recalled, "he short time I worked for DC, they were giving me all these young guys that could hardly hold a pencil in their hands, and asking me to 'tweak it.' In cases like that I would definitely put a lot of myself into it and change whatever I felt needed to be changed."
Buscema then returned to Marvel, inking Pat Olliffe on Spider-Girl 1999, the summer annual of that series, and did work for both companies briefly before becoming the regular inker on The Incredible Hulk vol. 3, #11–20 and inking a smattering of other titles. In 2003 he described himself as "retired for three years... and I'm still inking jobs for Marvel!" That same year he returned to comics full-time, inking Oliffe on Spider-Girl #55 and then launching into a long stint inking or doing finished art over pencil layouts by Ron Frenz from issues #59–100. He continued to ink the series when it was relaunched as The Amazing Spider-Girl #1–30. He inked Spider-Girl stories over Frenz's pencils in the omnibus title Web of Spider-Man vol. 2, #1–7 and in the four-issue miniseries The Spectacular Spider-Girl vol. 2 and the one-shot Spider-Girl: The End! #1. In 2011, he was the inker, over Frenz, on the five-issue superhero miniseries Thunderstrike vol. 2. He returned to DC Comics in 2011 with DC Retroactive: The Flash – The '70s and a Superman one-shot, Superman Beyond In 2012, Buscema inked IDW Publishing's G.I. Joe Annual and the ongoing Dungeons and Dragons: Forgotten Realms series.

Personal life

In February 1959, Buscema started dating Joan, a secretary at Creative Arts Studio in Washington, D.C., where he worked, and the two married in May 1960. Their first son, Joe, was born in 1968, followed by Tony and Mike.
Buscema has acted in community theatre, and was recognized for his portrayal of Tevye in Fiddler on the Roof, in which he appeared at the Little Theatre of Alexandria, Virginia in 1998.

Awards

Buscema received the Inkpot Award in 2003 and the Hero Initiative Lifetime Achievement Award in September 2013 at the Baltimore Comic-Con. In 2013, Buscema received the Inkwell Awards' S.P.A.M.I. Award for his work on such titles as G.I. Joe Annual and Dungeons and Dragons: Forgotten Realms. In 2018, he was awarded the Inkwell Awards' S.P.A.M.I. Award again, for his work on Rom.

DC Comics