In comixfan  's collection
Torchy 1943 by Bill Ward - Comic Strip
2036 

Torchy 1943 by Bill Ward

Comic Strip
1943
Ink
Share

Comment

The Torchy comic strip was created by Bill Ward and was originally produced for the Fort Hamilton, Brooklyn, NY Army Base newspaper. It later saw syndication in the US Army newspapers around the world. After the war, Will Eisner contacted Bill Ward about producing a Torchy feature that later ran in Doll Man Quarterly and later moved onto Miltary Comics before moving into its own title. Torchy was one of the comics Fredric Werthem deemed most corruptive of the minds of the youth and it was discontinued. This strip featuring Torchy Todd was from those early Fort Hamilton years and was signed by Bill in 1980 where he included that he drew this strip in 1943. Another part of an amicable deal with the brothers Donnelly at San Diego 2018.

2 comments
To leave a comment on that piece, please log in

About Bill Ward

Bill Ward was an acclaimed "good girl" comics artist and cartoonist. Born in Brooklyn, New York, he grew up in Ridgewood, New Jersey. After his education at the Pratt Institute, he got a job with an ad agency in 1941. He ventured into the field of comic books as one of Jack Binder's assistants, working on such features as 'Captain Marvel' and 'Bullet Man' for Fawcett Publications. He eventually joined Quality Comics, where he took over 'Blackhawk' from Reed Crandall. He then created numerous romance strips, the most famous of which was 'Torchy'. The character started in a back-up feature in Doll Man and Modern Comics from 1946, and had her own title in the 1949-1950 period. After Dr. Wetham's 'Seduction of the Innocent', Ward moved from comics to his best known works, his countless pin-up cartoons (some of which also starred 'Torchy'). His best work appeared from 1957 to 1963 in the Humorama line of digest magazines, but he was also a regular in Cracked magazine. Occasional comic stories included 'The Adventures of Pussycat' in the men's magazines of Martin Goodman, and contributions to the 1980s underground comic Weird Smut Comics. Throughout the years, Ward's work became more and more erotic and even pornographic, like his illustrated stories for the men's magazines Leg Show and Juggs, and his illustrations for the porn books published by William Hamling. Text (c) L