1Shot: | Y |
Superhero: | y |
Publisher: | DC Comics |
Date: | 1986 |
Main Char Team: | Superman and Batman |
Editors: | Robert Greenberger |
Creators: | Jim Starlin and Bernie Wrightson |
Sort: | Heroes Against Hunger |
Heroes Against Hunger is a 1986 all-star benefit comic book for African famine relief and recovery. Published by DC Comics in the form of a "comic jam" or exquisite corpse, the book starred Superman and Batman.[1] Spearheaded by Jim Starlin and Bernie Wrightson, all proceeds from the comic went to hunger relief in Africa.
Heroes Against Hunger came about in response to the devastating 1983–85 famine in Ethiopia. The concept was nearly identical to the earlier benefit comic, Heroes for Hope, published by Marvel Comics in 1985 (which was also spearheaded by Wrightson and Starlin),[2] and was in the spirit of contemporaneous musical fund-raisers like Band Aid's "Do They Know It's Christmas?", USA for Africa's "We Are the World", and the Live Aid concerts.
In a story called "A Song of Pain and Sorrow!", Superman, Batman, and Lex Luthor try to curtail the Ethiopian famine. While there, they interact with Peace Corps member Lee Ann Layton. Their antagonist is a green-skinned, four-armed giant with a keyboard embedded on his chest called the Master. The Master feeds on entropy, so he is strengthened by the Ethiopian famine.
The story was plotted by Jim Starlin with a plot assist from Bernie Wrightson. The editor was Robert Greenberger. Front cover penciled by Neal Adams, with inks by Dick Giordano; back cover by Bill Sienkiewicz. Logo design by Gaspar Saladino.
There were 100 contributors to the project. In addition to Starlin and Wrightson, a number of Heroes for Hope contributors also donated their creative labors to Heroes Against Hunger, including John Byrne, Howard Chaykin, John Costanza, Steve Englehart, Klaus Janson, Jeffrey Catherine Jones, Michael Kaluta, Steve Leialoha, Al Milgrom, Gray Morrow, Josef Rubinstein, Bill Sienkiewicz, Walt Simonson, and Alan Weiss.[3]
Pages | Writer | Penciler | Inker | Letterer | Colorist |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1, 48 | Kim DeMulder | Helen Vesik | Daina Grazanus | ||
2-3 | Carrie Spiegle | Michele Wolfman | |||
4–5 | Carrie Spiegle | Michele Wolfman | |||
6-7 | Helen Vesik | Gene D'Angelo | |||
8–9 | Duncan Andrews | Carl Gafford | |||
10-11 | Carl Gafford | ||||
12-13 | Agustin Mas | Anthony Tollin | |||
14–15 | Milt Snapinn | Tom Ziuko | |||
16-17 | George Roberts | ||||
18–19 | Bob Lappan | Anthony Tollin | |||
20–21 | Joe Brozowski | Bob Pinaha | Gene D'Angelo | ||
22–23 | Albert DeGuzman | Liz Berube | |||
24-25 | Nansi Hoolahan | ||||
26–27 | Todd Klein | Tatjana Wood | |||
28–29 | Agustin Mas | Nansi Hoolahan | |||
30–31 | John Workman | Joe Orlando | |||
32-33 | Helen Vesik | Liz Berube | |||
34-35 | Bruce Patterson | John Costanza | George Roberts | ||
36-37 | Duncan Andrews | Tom Ziuko | |||
38–39 | Bob Pinaha | Joe Orlando | |||
40-41 | Agustin Mas | Adrienne Roy | |||
42-43 | Adrienne Roy | ||||
44-45 | David Ross | Bob Lappan | Bob LeRose | ||
46-47 | Todd Klein | Bob LeRose | |||
. Tom DeFalco. Gilbert. Laura. 1980s. Marvel Chronicle A Year by Year History. Dorling Kindersley. 2008. London, United Kingdom. 223. 978-0756641238. Horrified by the plight of starving children in Africa, writer/artist Jim Starlin and illustrator Bernie Wrightson convinced Marvel to publish Heroes For Hope. It was a 'jam' book...and all of Marvel's profits were donated to famine relief in Africa..