Murray Boltinoff | |
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Murray Boltinoff in the 1970s. Photo by Jack Adler.
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Born |
New York City, United States |
January 3, 1911
Died | May 6, 1994 Pompano Beach, Florida, United States |
(aged 83)
Nationality | American |
Area(s) | Writer, Editor |
Pseudonym(s) | Al Case, Anne Case, Bill Dennehy, Blair Bolton, Bob Donnely, Evan Douglas, Ray Bolton, Sam Meade, Wesley Marsh, and Woody Adams |
Murray Boltinoff (January 3, 1911 – May 6, 1994 in Pompano Beach, Florida) was a writer and editor of comic books, who worked for DC Comics from the 1940s to the 1980s, in which role he edited over 50 different comic book series.
A graduate of New York University, in 1933 Boltinoff was hired as an assistant editor at the New York American—the first newspaper to hire his younger brother Henry Boltinoff as a cartoonist. Although Craig Yoe has stated that "Murray had got Henry [the] job",Don Markstein reported that it was actually more difficult for Henry to sell artwork to Murray, as "both [strove] to avoid any appearance of favoritism". Henry Boltinoff subsequently began selling cartoons to Whitney Ellsworth at National Allied Publications, and suggested that Ellsworth hire Murray as an assistant, which Ellsworth did around the year 1940.
As an editor, he oversaw the creation of the Doom Patrol in My Greatest Adventure. When the Doom Patrol series was cancelled in 1968, Boltinoff and artist Bruno Premiani appeared in the story to urge readers to keep the series alive. Boltinoff revived Metamorpho as the backup feature in World's Finest Comics #218-220 and #229 after the character had a brief run as the backup in Action Comics #413-418. Gina Misiroglu has described Boltinoff as Metamorpho's "savior" from post-cancellation obscurity due to his "tendency to stick [Metamorpho] into whichever comic [Boltinoff] happened to be working on at the time." The character's creator Bob Haney later reported having read an interview in which Boltinoff claimed to have created Metamorpho, and attributed this to senility on Boltinoff's part. Haney was not the only one to comment on Boltinoff's memory: Superboy and the Legion of Super-Heroes writer Jim Shooter recounted that Boltinoff "seemed to have early stage Alzheimer’s. Seriously. Ask his former assistant, Jack Harris. Murray would give me instructions, forget what he’d said, then be upset that I hadn’t followed some orders he’d never given me. I ended up doing rewrites because Murray misremembered things."