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Crazy (magazine) : ウィキペディア英語版
Crazy Magazine

''Crazy Magazine'' was an illustrated satire and humor magazine, and was published by Marvel Comics from 1973 to 1983 for a total of 94 regular issues (and two "Super Specials", Summer 1975, 1980).〔(Crazy Magazine comics ) from (The Big Comic Book Database ) Retrieved August 2008.〕 It was preceded by two standard-format comic books titled ''Crazy''.
Many comic book artists and writers contributed to the effort in the early years. These included Stan Lee, Will Eisner, Vaughn Bodé, Frank Kelly Freas, Harvey Kurtzman, Mike Ploog, Basil Wolverton, Marie Severin, Mike Carlin, editor Marv Wolfman and executive editor Roy Thomas. Mainstream writers like Harlan Ellison and Art Buchwald also contributed. Lee Marrs supplied a few pictures. In addition to drawn art, ''Crazy'' experimented with fumetti.
==History==
Marvel (then known as Atlas) first published a ''Crazy'' comic book in 1953. It ran for seven issues, through mid-1954, and was focused on popular culture parodies and humor.〔(1953 ''Crazy'' listing at the GCD )〕 The second comic title, as ''Crazy!'', ran for three issues in 1973, and reprinted comics parodies from Marvel's late-1960s ''Not Brand Ecch''.〔(1973 ''Crazy'' listing at the GCD )〕 Later that year, Marvel repurposed the title for a black-and-white comics magazine. Marv Wolfman edited the first ten issues from 1973–1975 and the first "Super Special", and created the magazine's first mascot, Irving Nebbish, a short, bug-eyed man in a large black hat and draped in a black cape.
Steve Gerber, who served as ''Crazy'''s editor from issues #11-14, and wanted it to be distinctive from the archteypal ''Mad'', said that the goal was to present work that implied the creators were themselves insane.〔(Scott Edelman interviews Steve Gerber (1975) ), YouTube. Accessed Dec. 12, 2011.〕 Gerber's own contributions were often prose stories with a handful of illustrations, such as the "Just Plain Folks" series of bizarre biographies. The last issue of his run as editor included a darkly comic short story he wrote in college, "...And the Birds Hummed Dirges!", about high-school kids who make a suicide pact.
Paul Lamont edited issue #15 (Jan. 1976) and Paul Laikin edited #16-60 and #62 (May 1980).
In 1980, the Irving Nebbish mascot was replaced with the belligerent Obnoxio the Clown, who made his first appearance in issue #63 (June 1980), the first regular issue edited by Larry Hama, who had also edited issue #61 (April 1980).
In 1982 a Dutch version of ''Crazy'' was published by Juniorpress. The only editor, translator and contributor of the four issues was Ger Apeldoorn.
''Crazy Magazine'''s last issue was #94 (April 1983).

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Crazy Magazine」の詳細全文を読む



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