Superheroes represented about 45% of DC's output during the Silver Age, while war comics made up somewhere around 13% of the total. But those overall numbers mask significant changes in their publication over time, and so I thought it might be interesting to do a year-by-year look at each category or genre of comics to see how things changed over time.
Some notes on categories; the ones chosen are simply my best guess as to where each comic fits best. For example, I put Challengers of the Unknown in Adventure, while Metal Men got lumped in with the Superheroes. I classified House of Mystery and House of Secrets as "horror" although of course they weren't very horrifying. HoM is considered Superhero from 143-173, during the Martian Manhunter/Robby Reed era. One comic is absolutely misclassified; I put Blackhawk in the war category rather than adventure. My bad, but I'm really looking more at changes over time, and Blackhawk didn't change much until the very end. I carefully classified the issues of Showcase and Brave and Bold individually.
Here's what DC's output looked like in 1955:
Category |
# |
Adventure |
19 |
Comedy |
22 |
Crime/Detective |
18 |
Funny Animal |
68 |
Horror |
12 |
Romance |
20 |
Science Fiction |
18 |
Superhero |
81 |
Teen |
18 |
War |
42 |
Western |
35 |
As you can see, Funny Animal was right up there with Superhero comics; that would not last long. For 1956 and thereafter, I'll add a column showing the change in each category since the prior year:
1956 |
Adventure |
19 |
0 |
1956 |
Comedy |
29 |
7 |
1956 |
Crime/Detective |
18 |
0 |
1956 |
Funny Animal |
56 |
-12 |
1956 |
Horror |
21 |
9 |
1956 |
Romance |
24 |
4 |
1956 |
Science Fiction |
18 |
0 |
1956 |
Superhero |
86 |
5 |
1956 |
Teen |
18 |
0 |
1956 |
War |
45 |
3 |
1956 |
Western |
45 |
10 | | | | | | | | | | | | | |
Funny Animal started to decline, while Western picked up nicely.
1957 |
Adventure |
24 |
5 |
1957 |
Comedy |
36 |
7 |
1957 |
Crime/Detective |
18 |
0 |
1957 |
Funny Animal |
50 |
-6 |
1957 |
Horror |
30 |
9 |
1957 |
Romance |
32 |
8 |
1957 |
Science Fiction |
18 |
0 |
1957 |
Superhero |
88 |
2 |
1957 |
Teen |
18 |
0 |
1957 |
War |
72 |
27 |
1957 |
Western |
26 |
-19 |
In 1957, DC inherited a couple of titles from Quality Comics, including Blackhawk and GI Combat, as well as Heart Throbs for the Romance line. Funny Animal continued to decline, and Western gave back all it had gained the prior year, and more.
1958 |
Adventure |
27 |
3 |
1958 |
Comedy |
35 |
-1 |
1958 |
Crime/Detective |
18 |
0 |
1958 |
Funny Animal |
40 |
-10 |
1958 |
Horror |
32 |
2 |
1958 |
Romance |
36 |
4 |
1958 |
Science Fiction |
20 |
2 |
1958 |
Superhero |
94 |
6 |
1958 |
Teen |
8 |
-10 |
1958 |
War |
72 |
0 |
1958 |
Western |
25 |
-1 |
Continuing declines in Funny Animal and a sharp decrease in Teen titles as Leave it to Binky and Buzzy were cancelled. You will note that Superhero still had only gained 13 issues a year or about one a month; the dizzying climb upwards for that genre was just about to start.
1959 |
Adventure |
28 |
1 |
1959 |
Comedy |
32 |
-3 |
1959 |
Crime/Detective |
3 |
-15 |
1959 |
Funny Animal |
27 |
-13 |
1959 |
Horror |
36 |
4 |
1959 |
Romance |
33 |
-3 |
1959 |
Science Fiction |
20 |
0 |
1959 |
Superhero |
104 |
10 |
1959 |
Teen |
6 |
-2 |
1959 |
War |
72 |
0 |
1959 |
Western |
21 |
-4 |
DC's Crime and Detective titles were mostly licensed properties like Mr District Attorney and Big Town, both of which had gone off the air by then; the New Adventures of Charlie Chan was cancelled early that year, emptying the category for the duration of the Silver Age.
1960 |
Adventure |
22 |
-6 |
1960 |
Comedy |
24 |
-8 |
1960 |
Funny Animal |
17 |
-10 |
1960 |
Horror |
36 |
0 |
1960 |
Romance |
38 |
5 |
1960 |
Science Fiction |
20 |
0 |
1960 |
Superhero |
113 |
9 |
1960 |
Teen |
9 |
3 |
1960 |
War |
48 |
-24 |
1960 |
Western |
18 |
-3 |
War dropped pretty significanty, and the overall number of comics declined quite a bit. DC was experiencing some financial pressure in 1960, which would eventually result in the price increase to 12 cents at the end of the next year. IIRC, the decrease in the War genre was not caused by any cancellations, but by DC switching most of their war titles to bi-monthly from monthly.
1961 |
Adventure |
28 |
6 |
1961 |
Comedy |
18 |
-6 |
1961 |
Funny Animal |
8 |
-9 |
1961 |
Horror |
36 |
0 |
1961 |
Romance |
38 |
0 |
1961 |
Science Fiction |
20 |
0 |
1961 |
Superhero |
125 |
12 |
1961 |
Teen |
6 |
-3 |
1961 |
War |
48 |
0 |
1961 |
Western |
10 |
-8 |
By this point, Funny Animal and Western, two of DC's top four lines in 1955, were limping along with essentially one title apiece, (Fox and Crow and Tomahawk), which would remain the case for most of the 1960s.
1962 |
Adventure |
32 |
4 |
1962 |
Comedy |
18 |
0 |
1962 |
Funny Animal |
7 |
-1 |
1962 |
Horror |
24 |
-12 |
1962 |
Romance |
39 |
1 |
1962 |
Science Fiction |
20 |
0 |
1962 |
Superhero |
141 |
16 |
1962 |
Teen |
6 |
0 |
1962 |
War |
50 |
2 |
1962 |
Western |
6 |
-4 |
Superhero makes another big jump; the decline in horror titles was again due to DC changing some titles from monthly publication to bi-monthly. Teen comics were now reduced to the
Many Loves of Dobie Gillis.
1963 |
Adventure |
24 |
-8 |
1963 |
Comedy |
18 |
0 |
1963 |
Funny Animal |
6 |
-1 |
1963 |
Horror |
22 |
-2 |
1963 |
Romance |
44 |
5 |
1963 |
Science Fiction |
27 |
7 |
1963 |
Superhero |
147 |
6 |
1963 |
Teen |
6 |
0 |
1963 |
War |
51 |
1 |
1963 |
Western |
6 |
0 |
Pretty modest changes in 1963. Sci-fi ticked up a bit due to temporary changes including the Strange Sports Stories series in Brave and Bold and Tommy Tomorrow tryouts in Showcase.
1964 |
Adventure |
18 |
-6 |
1964 |
Comedy |
18 |
0 |
1964 |
Funny Animal |
6 |
0 |
1964 |
Horror |
15 |
-7 |
1964 |
Romance |
50 |
6 |
1964 |
Science Fiction |
20 |
-7 |
1964 |
Superhero |
172 |
25 |
1964 |
Teen |
4 |
-2 |
1964 |
War |
56 |
5 |
1964 |
Western |
6 |
0 |
Strong gains again for DC's superhero line, which had more than doubled since 1955. Romance continued its steady upward momentum, while War comics reached their highest mark since 1959. The
Many Loves of Dobie Gillis was cancelled (well after the TV show), which left DC without a Teen title for the first time since the 1940s.
1965 |
Adventure |
18 |
0 |
1965 |
Comedy |
18 |
0 |
1965 |
Funny Animal |
6 |
0 |
1965 |
Horror |
12 |
-3 |
1965 |
Romance |
50 |
0 |
1965 |
Science Fiction |
20 |
0 |
1965 |
Superhero |
182 |
10 |
1965 |
Teen |
0 |
-4 |
1965 |
War |
57 |
1 |
1965 |
Western |
6 |
0 |
Not much change there other than the continuing domination by the Superheroes. And with Batmania around the corner, that was not going to change.
1966 |
Adventure |
12 |
-6 |
1966 |
Comedy |
18 |
0 |
1966 |
Funny Animal |
6 |
0 |
1966 |
Horror |
11 |
-1 |
1966 |
Romance |
50 |
0 |
1966 |
Science Fiction |
18 |
-2 |
1966 |
Superhero |
195 |
13 |
1966 |
Teen |
4 |
4 |
1966 |
War |
56 |
-1 |
1966 |
Western |
6 |
0 |
By now over 50% of DC's publications were Superhero, and I am sure that if we take circulation into account it was well over 70%. Teen comics returned with Scooter.
1967 |
Adventure |
9 |
-3 |
1967 |
Comedy |
26 |
8 |
1967 |
Funny Animal |
6 |
0 |
1967 |
Horror |
6 |
-5 |
1967 |
Romance |
50 |
0 |
1967 |
Science Fiction |
9 |
-9 |
1967 |
Superhero |
197 |
2 |
1967 |
Teen |
8 |
4 |
1967 |
War |
44 |
-12 |
1967 |
Western |
6 |
0 |
Financial pressures were again rearing their ugly head, with a lot of titles headed towards the chopping block. Comedy was the (temporary) gainer as DC tried titles like the Inferior Five and the Maniacs (in Showcase). Superhero titles showed only a modest gain.
1968 |
Adventure |
22 |
13 |
1968 |
Comedy |
23 |
-3 |
1968 |
Funny Animal |
1 |
-5 |
1968 |
Horror |
10 |
4 |
1968 |
Romance |
51 |
1 |
1968 |
Science Fiction |
0 |
-9 |
1968 |
Superhero |
200 |
3 |
1968 |
Teen |
11 |
3 |
1968 |
War |
36 |
-8 |
1968 |
Western |
10 |
4 |
Sci-Fi dropped off DC's radar in 1968, as Strange Adventures began featuring Deadman. Superhero titles increased for the thirteenth consecutive year, but again only by a smidgeon. Adventure showed temporary gains due to short-lived titles like Anthro, Secret Six, Bomba the Jungle Boy and Captain Action.
1969 |
Adventure |
14 |
-8 |
1969 |
Comedy |
19 |
-4 |
1969 |
Funny Animal |
0 |
-1 |
1969 |
Horror |
25 |
15 |
1969 |
Romance |
50 |
-1 |
1969 |
Science Fiction |
7 |
7 |
1969 |
Superhero |
168 |
-32 |
1969 |
Teen |
36 |
25 |
1969 |
War |
31 |
-5 |
1969 |
Western |
15 |
5 |
Financial pressures writ large there; the Superhero line finally collapsed, with DC switching resources to Horror and Teen. The Horror titles would work, while the Teen fad failed.
thanks for this resource. I find it facinating.
ReplyDeleteVery interesting, but why would Captain Action constitute adventure rather than superhero? Costume, secret identity, powers--it would seem he had all the trappings, surely.
ReplyDeleteCaptain Action was definitely a super hero comic.
ReplyDeleteIt must be hard to classify some comics, because genres overlap. Blackhawk could be considered a war comic (they were a paramilitary unit), or adventure. (It was also briefly a super hero comic.) Super hero comics are adventure stories, and many are science fiction. Plastic Man and Inferior Five could be both super-hero and comedy.
ReplyDeleteVery interesting analysis!
ReplyDeleteI have no problem with CAPTAIN ACTION classified as an adventure series.
Some series can be classified in many types after all.
Great job! and thank you for sharing.
Very interesting, a comparison of editors would prove interesting I am sure.
ReplyDeleteGreat post!