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  1. Feb 8, 2022 · I recently picked up my copy of Famous First Edition #F-5 — better known as DC’s mid-’70s treasury-sized reprint of Batman #1 — opened up the cover, and saw this: Yeah, a full-on acknowledgment of Bill Finger’s contributions to the creation of Batman.

  2. May 22, 2013 · In 25 years of writing Batman stories, including some of the most popular ever, Bill Finger was officially credited as a writer (or co-creator) precisely zero times. (By that I mean in a credit box within a first-run story. In the 1960s, editor Julie Schwartz, bless him, did sneak Bill’s name into the backmatter at least a couple of times.)

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    • Dishonorable Mention: Bob Kane
    • Marc Tyler Nobleman
    • Jerry Bails
    • Michael E. Uslan
    • Jerry Robinson & Carmine Infantino
    • Lyn Simmons
    • Charles Sinclair
    • Travis Langley
    • Alethia Mariotta
    • Fred Finger

    Though Kane fought for many years to discredit Finger's involvement, he later provided recorded admission that his former partner was in on 50-75% of Batman’s creativity. Biographer Thomas Andrae, the co-author of Kane's autobiography, convinced Kane to acknowledge Finger’s importance in his book. This testimony would prove crucial to Finger’s lega...

    Nobleman is a veteran writer of children's books, including 'Boys of Steel: The Creators of Superman', and 'Bill the Boy Wonder: The Secret Co-Creator of Batman'. Nobleman relates that he began his Bill Finger research unsure of where it would lead, but knew he wanted to be able to tell a great story. Interviewing well over 200 people, Nobleman beg...

    In 1965, Bails served as a moderator on the first "official" Comic-Con in New York City, which was also Finger's first and potentially only public appearance. Bails later began a campaign for Finger's credit line when he came to realize it couldn't just be Kane responsible for all of Batman's stories. After confirming Finger's involvement with DC C...

    As a producer on every Batman movie since 1989and the first instructor to teach a university-accredited course on comic books, Uslan has earned the respect of comic book fans worldwide. What fans may not know is that Uslan met Finger at that fateful first convention in New York. As Uslan recalls, he entered the sketchy hotel and went through the ba...

    Nobleman interviewed many respected figures within the comic book industry, perhaps none more notable than Robinson and Infantino. The legendary artists each confirmed Finger's role in co-creating Batman, with Infantino saying "He's genius, literally genius... He's the Batman. Everything that you'd think was good, that's Bill." RELATED: The Dark Kn...

    Finger's second wife proved invaluable to Nobleman's research, offering valuable insights into Finger's personal life as well as detailing the long fight she carried on after his death. When the 1989 smash hit Batmanwas in production, Simmons wrote a formal letter to the producers asking for Finger to receive credit in the movie. As noted in the do...

    A former writing partner of Finger's on the 1960's Batman television series, Nobleman considers Sinclair to be one of his greatest finds, as he provided a heartbreaking glimpse into the reclusive Finger's later years. During the writing of the series episode "The Clock King's Crazy Crimes," Sinclair noticed Finger was acting uncomfortably. When pre...

    Psychology professor and author of Batman and Psychology: A Dark and Stormy Knight, Langley sought to bridge the knowledge gap between fans and Bill Finger by introducing Athena Finger, Bill Finger's granddaughter and only living heir, to the world via the Comic-Con convention circuit. While Nobleman was the person who first approached Athena about...

    Despite the growing public support and Warner Bros./DC's own admissions of Finger's legacy, contesting a credit line would still require legal expertise. Thankfully, the Finger family knew an attorney they could trust: Athena's half-sister Alethia Mariotta. RELATED: Batman: The Animated Series - Why We Need A Reboot (& Why We Need A New Series) Mar...

    The discovery of Bill Finger's only son Fred was a huge boon for Nobleman; thinking he'd found the heir he needed, Nobleman was devastated to learn Fred had tragically died in 1992. Despite Fred's passing, Nobleman was able to speak to those who knew him and learn about the Finger family's legacy of hope. Fred actively campaigned for his father's t...

    • Devin Meenan
    • He Co-Created Several Of The Iconic Villains And Supporting Characters. Batman's rogues gallery is a big reason why he's a premier superhero; a hero is only as good as his villains, after all.
    • He Wrote Batman #1. After the success of Batman's adventures published in Detective Comics, he and Robin got their own starring series in 1940, titled simply Batman - Finger wrote issue #1.
    • Giant Props Were His Trademark. One of the trademarks of Bill Finger's Batman stories is the inclusion of giant versions of everyday items as props. Gotham City, as written by Finger, was filled with giant type-writers and sewing machines.
    • Bill Finger Created Robin. Superhero comics, especially in the early decades of their existence, are meant for kids. That's why sidekicks exist; if the hero was who the reader wanted to be, the sidekick was a closer reflection of who they were, and thus who they could more closely project themselves onto.
  4. Oct 10, 2012 · As author Marc Tyler Nobleman notes in his recent book, Bill: The Boy Wonder: The Secret Co-Creator of Batman, the Dark Knight was co-created by Bill Finger, who has never received credit, or ...

  5. Bill Finger (b. February 8th, 1914 – d.January 18, 1974) was a writer. Writer Bill Finger co-created Batman in 1939 with artist Bob Kane. Until 2015, Finger was not officially credited as Batman's co-creator.[2][3] Bill Finger was a prolific writer at DC Comics for many years. He died in 1974. Bill Finger/Writer Bill Finger/Creations Gallery of Bill Finger's images Since 2005, the Bill ...

  6. Sep 18, 2015 · Kane was indeed the artist on the original Batman comics and created that iconic character’s look. However, writer Bill Finger has gone decades without receiving similar name recognition or ...

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