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  1. Bob Kane, Legendary artist and co-creator of Batman (co-creator Bill Finger). He was inducted into both the comic book industry's Jack Kirby Hall of Fame in 1994 and then the Will Eisner Comic ...

  2. If one wants the credit, one has to cease being a ghost and become a leader or innovator. Bob Kane. Artist, Leader, Credit. 46 Copy quote. It is difficult to separate, at times, the myth from the truth. Bob Kane. Separation, Difficult, Myth. 9 Copy quote. To me, it's not work.

  3. Oct 21, 2015 · In 1989, Bob Kane shared a limo with Marvel’s Stan Lee on the way to the premiere of Tim Burton’s bigscreen adaptation of Kane’s greatest creation: “ Batman .”. Both men were comic-book ...

    • 30 min
    • Matthew K. Manning
  4. Bob Kane. 1915-1998. Born Robert Kahn in New York City in 1915, Bob Kane legally changed his name when he turned eighteen. He began working for Max Fleischer Studios in 1934 as a trainee animator, and in 1936, began his freelance comic book career. Kane did most of his work though Eisner & Iger, creating characters for two of the companies that ...

  5. Bob Kane, entretanto, foi quem apresentou a ideia aos editores, e foi o único a ficar com os créditos pelo personagem. [1] O homem-morcego alcançou rapidamente o sucesso depois de sua primeira aparição na edição número 27 da "Detective Comics", garantindo o emprego de Kane na National Publications (hoje DC Comics) por vários anos. [1]

  6. Nov 7, 1998 · Bob Kane, 83, Cartoonist Who Created 'Batman'. By SARAH BOXER. ob Kane, the cartoonist who created Batman the Caped Crusader and his sidekick, Robin the Boy Wonder, died Nov. 3 at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles. He was 83 and lived in Los Angeles. Batman and Robin, the characters that Kane created with his partner, Bill Finger ...

  7. Anticipating that Bob Kane would be drafted to serve in World War II, DC inventoried Sprang's work to safeguard against delays. Sprang's first published Batman work was the Batman and Robin figures on the cover of Batman #18 (Aug.-Sept. 1943), reproduced from the art for page 13 of the later-published Detective Comics #84 (Feb. 1944).

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