Hubbry Logo
Mike GrellMike GrellMain
Open search
Mike Grell
Community hub
Mike Grell
logo
8 pages, 0 posts
0 subscribers
Be the first to start a discussion here.
Be the first to start a discussion here.
Mike Grell
Mike Grell
from Wikipedia

Mike Grell (born September 13, 1947)[1] is an American comic book writer and artist, known for his work on books such as Green Lantern/Green Arrow, The Warlord, and Jon Sable Freelance.

Key Information

Early life

[edit]

Grell studied at the University of Wisconsin–Green Bay, the Chicago Academy of Fine Art, and took the Famous Artists School correspondence course in cartooning. To avoid getting drafted into Army service during the Vietnam War, he enlisted for four years in the U.S. Air Force, including a stint as illustrator in Saigon.[2][3][4] After the Air Force, Grell enrolled in the Chicago Academy of Fine Art, and also worked as a freelance graphics artist.[2]

Career

[edit]

Grell entered the comics industry as an assistant to Dale Messick on the Brenda Starr comic strip in 1972.

DC Comics

[edit]

In 1973 Grell moved to New York City, and began his long relationship with DC Comics. At DC, Grell worked on characters such as Aquaman, Batman, Green Arrow, and the Phantom Stranger in arcs or single-issue stories.[5] He and Elliot S. Maggin launched the Batman Family title in 1975[6] and Grell would work with Dennis O'Neil on the revival of the Green Lantern/Green Arrow series the following year.[7] For a time between 1976 and 1978, Grell was writing and penciling one series, Warlord, and providing pencil art on two others, Green Lantern and Superboy and the Legion of Super-Heroes.

Superboy and the Legion of Super-Heroes

[edit]

His regular first assignment at DC was on Superboy and the Legion of Super-Heroes,[5] a high-profile assignment for an artist with no prior experience illustrating a monthly comic book. Grell says he got that job because he was walking in the editor's door to ask for work, literally, as the previous artist, Dave Cockrum, was walking out the door, having just quit. Grell inked a Cockrum penciled story ("Lost: A Million Miles from Home!") in issue #202[8] and became the penciler of the book with issue No. 203 (August 1974) which featured the death of Invisible Kid.[9] These stories were written by Cary Bates with later issues by Jim Shooter. Grell drew All-New Collectors' Edition #C-55 (1978), a treasury-sized special written by Paul Levitz in which longtime Legion members Saturn Girl and Lightning Lad were married.[10][11]

The Warlord

[edit]
The cover of The Warlord #67 (March 1983). Art by Mike Grell.

A writer as well as artist, Grell cemented his status as a fan-favorite with his best-known creation, The Warlord. The character first appeared in 1st Issue Special No. 8 (Nov. 1975)[12] and was soon given his own ongoing title (The Warlord #1, Jan/Feb 1976). In this series, Air Force pilot Travis Morgan crash-lands in the prehistoric "hidden world" of Skartaris (a setting highly influenced by Jules Verne's A Journey to the Center of the Earth and Edgar Rice Burroughs' Pellucidar). For years thereafter, Morgan engages in adventures dressed only in a winged helmet, wristbands, boots, and breechclout, and armed with a sword and a .44 Auto Mag. Grell wrote himself and editor Jack C. Harris into the metafictional conclusion of the story in The Warlord #35 (July 1980).[13] Other artists took over pencil duties, while Sharon Grell, as revealed in the letter column of a later issue,[14][15] took over writing.

Tarzan

[edit]

Grell wrote and drew the Tarzan comic strip from July 19, 1981, to February 27, 1983 (except for one strip, February 13, 1983, by Thomas Yeates). These strips were rerun in newspapers in 2004 – 2005.

First Comics: Jon Sable Freelance and Starslayer

[edit]
Cover to Jon Sable Freelance #7 (December 1983). Art by Mike Grell.

Through the 1980s Grell developed creator-owned titles such Jon Sable Freelance and Starslayer.[5] Jon Sable Freelance was published by the now-defunct First Comics. Starslayer, a space-born science fiction series, started at Pacific Comics,[16][17] but shifted to First after Pacific went out of business.

The titular character of Jon Sable Freelance was a former Olympic athlete, later an African big-game hunter, who became a mercenary. First appearing with a cover date of June 1983, Jon Sable was a precursor to what would eventually be called, by some, "the Dark Age of Comics", when even long-established super-heroes would become increasingly grim and violent.

The character was heavily influenced by Ian Fleming's James Bond novels as well as drawing on pulp fiction crime stories. Many of the stories of Sable's hunting exploits in Africa were influenced by Peter Hathaway Capstick's novels. At a convention in the late 1980s, Grell stated that his idea for Sable was "something like a cross between James Bond and Mickey Spillane's Mike Hammer".

Sable was adapted into a short-lived television series and the character's origin tale, "A Storm Over Eden", from the comic book, was expanded and novelized by Grell under the title Sable, which was published in 2000 by Tor Books.

Back at DC: Green Arrow

[edit]

In 1987, Mike Grell wrote and drew the three-issue prestige format limited series Green Arrow: The Longbow Hunters.[18] He redesigned the character's costume, away from the costume Neal Adams had designed in 1969, and recast Green Arrow as an "urban hunter" going up against non-super-powered, real world villains such as serial killers, terrorists, street gangs, American mobsters and Japanese Yakuza. He did away with Green Arrow's arsenal of "trick arrows" and instead rearmed him with penetrating broadheads with which he actually killed his opponents. The Longbow Hunters showed the first instance in which Green Arrow ever deliberately killed someone.

The popularity of Longbow Hunters led to an assignment writing – and occasionally drawing – an ongoing Green Arrow series[19] for 80 issues from 1988 to 1993. During this run, Grell avoided references to the fantastical elements of the DC Universe (e.g., in a guest appearance by Green Lantern the character is out of costume and does not use his powers). Notably, believing "Green Arrow" was "a stupid name", in no Mike Grell Green Arrow story (with the exception of Longbow Hunters #1) is the character ever referred to as Green Arrow anywhere other than on the cover.[20]

Grell would write a retelling of Green Arrow's origin and first case in Secret Origins vol. 2 #38 (March 1989). He was the co-writer/cover artist for Green Arrow Annual (1991), drew the cover art for Annual #5 (1992), and wrote Annual #6 (1993). Grell wrote and illustrated the official Post-Crisis origin of Green Arrow in Green Arrow: The Wonder Year miniseries in 1993.[5]

In 1988, Grell had a run writing Blackhawk in the short-lived anthology series Action Comics Weekly, writing the Blackhawk serial from issues #601–608.

James Bond

[edit]

In 1988, Grell wrote and illustrated the graphic novel adaptation of the Timothy Dalton James Bond film Licence to Kill, and in 1989 wrote and drew an original Bond story, the three-issue mini-series Permission to Die, both co-published by Acme Press and Eclipse Comics.[5]

Shaman's Tears and Bar Sinister

[edit]

Shaman's Tears was a more ecologically themed outing for Grell. Main character Joshua Brand, the son of a half-Sioux father and an Irish mother, as an adult returns to the reservation he ran away from as a child. Discovering he mystically possesses the powers of all animals and the Earth itself, he becomes the protector of the planet. Jon Sable guest starred in issues #5–9 of this 12 issue series (May 1993 – Aug 1995). There was a number 0 issue published in November 1995.[5]

Grell wrote and drew the covers, but did none of the interior artwork, for issues #1–4 of the Shaman's Tears spinoff series Bar Sinister (June – September 1995) from Windjammer,[5] the creator-owned imprint of Valiant Comics. This series followed the adventures of a group of escaped government experimental subjects, animals genetically engineered to human intelligence and, basically, human form, as potential bio-weapons.

During this time period, Grell began work writing and penciling the unfinished and unpublished Shaman's Tears/Turok Dinosaur Hunter cross-over limited series for Valiant Comics. He did co-write the two issue Turok limited series entitled Turok The Hunted, as well as several fill-in issues of the ongoing Turok series.[5]

2000s

[edit]
Grell at the 2007 Pittsburgh Comicon.

From 2002 to 2003, Grell worked on Iron Man.[5] It was during a Grell written story from this period that Tony Stark revealed his secret identity to the world, a development met with mixed fan reaction.

After his work on Iron Man, Grell came back to comics in 2008, providing a variant incentive cover for Action Comics #861, part four of the Superman and the Legion of Super-Heroes story. DC sought variant drawings for this story from artists who had worked on the Legion in the past, such as Steve Lightle, Keith Giffen, and Grell.

Other work includes a new ongoing series of The Warlord launched to coincide with the 35th anniversary.[21][22] Grell brought the lead character's story to an end and drew some issues. Grell worked for Marvel drawing some stories of X-Men Forever.[23] His last collaboration with DC to date has been the Green Lantern story for the DC Retroactive series, in 2011, where he provided the art.[24]

As of 2008, Grell was rewriting the Jon Sable screenplay, working on an adaptation of Shaman's Tears, and writing two stories for ComicMix.com, a new Jon Sable story and The Pilgrim with Mark Ryan.[25] In December 2010 he was announced as editor-in-chief of Ardden Entertainment.[26]

In 2012, Grell provided the cover art for the 10-page preview comic produced by DC Comics for the 2012 San Diego Comic-Con to promote the TV series Arrow.[27] Grell did interior art for issues #6 and #11 of the digital comic based on the TV series.

Personal life

[edit]

In the 1980s, Grell was married to Sharon Wright. She ghost-wrote the last two years of The Warlord, while Grell concentrated his efforts on Starslayer; Jon Sable, Freelance; and the weekly Tarzan Sunday comic strip.

Awards

[edit]

Mike Grell received an Inkpot Award in 1982.[28]

Bibliography

[edit]

References

[edit]
[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Mike Grell (born September 13, 1947) is an American comic book writer and artist renowned for his influential contributions to the industry, particularly his realistic storytelling and detailed artwork in titles like The Warlord and Green Arrow: The Longbow Hunters. Born in Iron Mountain, Michigan, Grell grew up in Florence, Wisconsin, and developed an early interest in art through a correspondence course from the Famous Artists Schools. He later attended the University of Wisconsin–Green Bay and the Chicago Academy of Fine Arts, honing his skills in illustration. After serving in the U.S. Air Force as an illustrator, where he rekindled his passion for comics, Grell entered the professional field in 1972 as an assistant to artist Dale Messick on the Brenda Starr, Reporter comic strip. Grell's breakthrough came in 1973 when he joined DC Comics, starting with inking duties on Superboy and the . He quickly rose to prominence with his creation of the sword-and-sorcery series The Warlord in 1975, which ran for over 200 issues and showcased his penchant for adventure tales inspired by and his own experiences as a big-game hunter. Other key works include his acclaimed run on / in the late 1970s, where he contributed to socially conscious narratives, and the 1987 miniseries : The Longbow Hunters, which redefined the character with a mature, gritty tone and earned an Eisner Award nomination for Best Limited Series. Beyond DC, Grell pioneered independent with Starslayer at Pacific Comics in 1982 and the urban adventure series Jon Sable, Freelance at in 1983, the latter adapted into an ABC television series. He also created Shaman's Tears for in 1993, exploring Native American themes, and contributed to licensed properties like the Sunday strip from 1981 to 1983 and a graphic novel in 1988. In 1999, Grell expanded into prose with his novel Sable, based on his comic character. Throughout his career, Grell has received numerous accolades, including the 1982 Inkpot Award for Outstanding Achievement in Comic Art, inclusion in Wizard magazine's Top Ten Comics Writers list, induction into the Overstreet Comic Book Hall of Fame in 2017, and recognition in Wizard World's Hall of Legends in 2017. As of 2025, he remains active in the industry, with DC Comics releasing Mike Grell's The Warlord Omnibus Vol. 1. His emphasis on strong, human protagonists without superpowers has influenced generations of creators, cementing his legacy as a champion of character-driven comics.

Early life

Family and upbringing

Mike Grell was born on September 13, 1947, in Iron Mountain, Michigan, and grew up in northern Wisconsin, in a rural area near Florence. He was the son of a lumberjack father, who provided for the family through manual labor in a economically depressed region where hunting was essential for sustenance, and a mother who was a skilled amateur artist. Grell had two older brothers, Bob and Dick, with whom he shared a close bond, often engaging in creative activities together amid the isolation of their woodland surroundings. His childhood was marked by the rhythms of Midwestern rural life, without access to until he was about 11 years old, which fostered a reliance on radio dramas, books, and outdoor exploration. The family home environment emphasized self-sufficiency, with Grell recalling summers spent working in the woods at age 16 under his father's arrangement, exposing him to the harsh realities of manual labor and nature's challenges, including encounters with local like squirrels and chickadees during hunts. This backdrop of limited modern entertainment and direct immersion in the wilderness profoundly shaped his appreciation for adventure and survival themes. From an early age, Grell displayed a passion for drawing, encouraged by his mother's artistic talents, which she had inherited from her own father; she urged her sons to sketch regularly, turning it into a family pursuit. He and his brothers collected and traded comics with neighborhood children, favoring titles featuring superheroes, cowboys, adventures by Russ Manning, and EC horror stories, purchased with a modest 25-cent weekly allowance in the early . These experiences, combined with exposure to classic and movie serials evoking tales of exploration and heroism, ignited his lifelong interest in storytelling through visuals, steering him toward cartooning and laying the foundation for his future career in comics.

Military service and education

Mike Grell enlisted in the U.S. Air Force in 1967 to avoid being drafted into the Army during the , serving until his discharge in 1971. During his service, he worked as an illustrator and cartographer, creating technical illustrations and maps in , including a year-long stint in Saigon where he also produced instructional cartoons such as "Escape and Evasion Tips." Following his discharge, Grell enrolled at the Chicago Academy of Fine Art in 1971, studying fine arts and illustration under instructor Art Huhta for approximately two years. While in the , he had supplemented his training with the Famous Artists School correspondence course in cartooning, building on his earlier one-year stint at the studying illustration before enlisting. To support himself during his studies at the Chicago Academy, Grell took on moonlight jobs in , including at an art studio and paste-up work for a printer creating flyers and layouts; he prioritized the lower-paying role for its artistic value, which honed skills that later facilitated his transition into professional cartooning.

Career

Early work at DC Comics

Grell entered the comics industry in 1972 as an assistant to Dale Messick on the newspaper strip, after attending the University of Wisconsin–Green Bay to transition into professional illustration. After relocating to in 1973, he networked at the with artists Irv Novick and Allan Asherman, leading to an introduction to DC editor Julie Schwartz and his first freelance assignments at the publisher. His debut credits at DC appeared in 1973, including inking duties on The Flash and early contributions to Legion of Super-Heroes, where he succeeded as the primary artist. These initial roles focused on superhero action sequences, allowing Grell to experiment with bold line work and anatomical precision inspired by ' realistic approach evident in contemporary DC titles. By 1974, he had taken over penciling on and the Legion of Super-Heroes starting with issue #202, inking Cockrum's layouts before fully handling both pencils and inks from #203 onward. Between 1973 and 1976, Grell's primary collaboration was with writer on Superboy and the Legion of Super-Heroes, producing a run of issues (#197–225) that boosted the series to DC's best-selling title through intricate future-world adventures and character-driven plots. Notable arcs included "The Ultimate Revenge" (#211, 1975), co-plotted with , which explored time-travel threats and Legionnaire loyalties, and Bates' multi-issue sagas delving into 's integration with the team, where Grell's evolving style emphasized dramatic lighting, expressive faces, and expansive 31st-century settings to convey epic scale. This period marked Grell's shift toward mature, illustrative realism, moving beyond standard tropes. Grell's other early DC assignments diversified his portfolio, including a three-part Aquaman backup arc in Adventure Comics (#435–437, 1974), scripted by Steve Skeates, featuring underwater intrigue and a humorous production error in the first installment where Aquaman's trident was mistakenly drawn as a sword. He also provided full art for The Phantom Stranger #33 (Oct.-Nov. 1974), written by , in a story titled "Deadman's Bluff!" that integrated Deadman into a narrative with elements. Additionally, Grell illustrated backup features for the revived Green Lantern/Green Arrow team in The Flash (#217–245, 1973–1976), collaborating with Denny O'Neil on socially conscious tales that echoed the duo's earlier Adams-O'Neil run, such as confrontations with and environmental threats.

The Warlord

The Warlord debuted in #8 in November 1975, written and illustrated by Mike Grell as a one-shot introducing the character and his world. Following its positive reception, the series launched as an ongoing title with The Warlord #1 in January–February 1976, running bimonthly before transitioning to monthly in 1978; Grell wrote and drew the first 50 issues until November 1979, after which the series continued under other creators until its conclusion in 1988, supplemented by six annuals from 1982 to 1987. The protagonist, Travis Morgan, is a United States Air Force lieutenant colonel and skilled pilot who, during a covert mission over the , experiences instrument failure and crashes through a polar opening into Skartaris, a vast prehistoric realm hidden within the hollow . Stranded without modern resources, Morgan adapts by scavenging his for makeshift clothing and weaponry, including a distinctive and pistol, earning the title "Warlord" among the inhabitants as he navigates this savage landscape of eternal daylight, dinosaurs, and ancient civilizations. The story draws inspiration from pulp adventure literature, blending elements from Jules Verne's Journey to the Center of the Earth and ' series to create a where advanced technology is rare and often viewed with suspicion. At its core, The Warlord features sword-and-sorcery adventures emphasizing themes of survival and human resilience, as Morgan battles barbarians, wizards, and mythical beasts while grappling with isolation from his former life. Central to the narrative is his romance with Tara, the of the hidden city Shamballah, whose relationship evolves from initial alliance to deep partnership, providing emotional depth amid . An undercurrent of anti-technology motifs runs throughout, portraying Skartaris as a primordial paradise where reliance on guns or machines leads to downfall, contrasting Morgan's initial dependence on his pistol with his eventual embrace of sword-based combat and the land's natural rhythms. Grell's artistic innovations elevated the series, employing a detailed, realistic style that grounded the fantastical elements in anatomical precision and dynamic action, influenced by pulp magazine illustrations and contemporaries like . He structured most issues as self-contained tales, allowing standalone accessibility while building an overarching saga of exploration and conflict, a format that echoed the episodic nature of classic adventure pulps and enabled flexible storytelling across genres like fantasy, romance, and comedy. The character saw revivals after the original run, including a 1992 six-issue miniseries written by Grell that revisited Morgan's fate and Skartaris' threats. The most recent iteration, a 2009–2010 ongoing series of 16 issues, was also penned by Grell, reuniting Morgan with Tara and exploring ongoing perils in Shamballah.

Licensed properties

In the late and early , Mike Grell expanded his artistic range by contributing to licensed properties based on ' creations, moving beyond DC's superhero titles to immerse himself in pulp adventure genres. His most notable involvement was with the comic strip, syndicated by from July 19, 1981, to February 27, 1983, where he served as both writer and artist for the daily and Sunday features (with one exception by Thomas Yeates on February 13, 1983). Grell's strips captured the essence of Burroughs' lore through dynamic jungle action sequences, emphasizing Tarzan's physical prowess, survival instincts, and encounters with prehistoric beasts and lost civilizations, all rendered in his signature realistic style influenced by earlier Tarzan artists like and . Grell's approach to the strip prioritized fidelity to the source material while infusing personal flair, such as detailed environmental backdrops and fluid action choreography that highlighted the character's primal athleticism. This period marked a creative high point for him, as he later described it as "the most fun I've ever had as a ," allowing experimentation with serialized under tight deadlines that sharpened his pacing and visual narrative techniques. Although the financial rewards were modest—equivalent to rates from decades earlier—the project solidified his reputation for adapting adventure icons with authenticity and energy. Grell also engaged briefly with other Burroughs-inspired licenses, including elements drawn from the series, though his direct contributions were limited compared to . These experiences directly informed his world-building in original works, notably influencing the eternal daylight and prehistoric inner-Earth setting of Skartaris in The Warlord, which echoed Pellucidar's hollow-world concepts. Overall, Grell's licensed assignments in this era refined his expertise in high-stakes tales, bridging Burroughs' legacy to modern and paving the way for his creator-owned projects at .

Independent work at First Comics

In the early 1980s, Mike Grell shifted to creator-owned projects at , a publisher established in 1983 that capitalized on the direct market distribution model to grant creators full ownership of their and higher royalty rates than traditional work-for-hire deals at major publishers like DC. This approach enabled Grell to retain control over his characters and narratives, free from editorial interference, and positioned as a key player in the burgeoning independent comics scene. Grell debuted Jon Sable, Freelance in June 1983 as writer and artist, chronicling the exploits of protagonist Sable, a former African big-game hunter who relocates to as a freelance and while hiding his identity as the successful children's author B.B. Flemm. The series spanned 56 issues through February 1988, delivering grounded, realistic depictions of urban action and intrigue that prioritized tactical combat and personal stakes over fantastical elements. It incorporated social commentary, notably on animal rights through Sable's origin story, where poachers murder his family during a , fueling his lifelong disdain for illegal hunting. Grell also transferred his space opera Starslayer: The Log of the Jolly Roger to after six issues at Pacific Comics, completing the run with issues #7–10 from 1983 to 1985. Centered on Torin MacKai, a 1st-century Celtic warrior cryogenically preserved and revived as a 23rd-century , the title fused swashbuckling swordplay with interstellar adventure aboard the starship . This full creative autonomy at First echoed Grell's prior adventure-strip work on the newspaper feature from 1981 to 1983, refining his blend of pulp heroism and thematic depth.

Return to DC: Green Arrow

In 1987, Mike Grell returned to DC Comics as writer and artist for the three-issue prestige miniseries Green Arrow: The Longbow Hunters, which relocated Oliver Queen to an urban Seattle setting and emphasized gritty, realistic vigilantism without superpowers or fantastical elements. The story follows Queen and Dinah Lance (Black Canary) as they confront a serial killer and yakuza involvement in a drug trade, incorporating themes of violence and moral ambiguity that culminate in Queen killing for the first time, marking a permanent shift in his character from non-lethal methods to lethal force when necessary. This approach drew from Grell's prior independent work, applying a grounded tone to the superhero genre. The success of The Longbow Hunters launched an ongoing Green Arrow series in 1988, which Grell wrote for the first 80 issues until 1995, often in collaboration with editor Denny O'Neil on key elements like annuals. Notable arcs included "" (issues #1–6), where Queen pursues a child killer and a biological weapon threat, and stories addressing the drug trade, such as investigations into addiction and trafficking that highlighted societal decay. Grell portrayed Queen as an aging, flawed in his forties, focusing on social issues like AIDS, homelessness in Seattle's underbelly, and urban poverty, while emphasizing realistic techniques without trick arrows. The series received the Mature Readers label due to its adult themes of violence, sexuality, and ethical dilemmas, contributing to strong sales that made it a top performer for DC in the late 1980s and early 1990s. Critically acclaimed for redefining as a street-level akin to a modern , Grell's run established the character's enduring portrayal as a socially conscious archer grappling with real-world consequences, influencing subsequent depictions in DC continuity.

James Bond adaptation

In the late 1980s, Mike Grell expanded his portfolio into espionage fiction by creating original stories for , demonstrating his ability to adapt his signature action-oriented style to the spy thriller genre. His primary contribution was the three-issue James Bond 007: Permission to Die (1989–1990), which he wrote and illustrated as an original narrative set during the . In the story, Bond is tasked with rescuing a scientist's niece, only to uncover the scientist's megalomaniacal plot, leading to high-stakes confrontations that emphasize Bond's resourcefulness and lethality. Grell's artwork in Permission to Die featured dynamic action sequences and a strong characterization of Bond as a gritty, no-nonsense operative, drawing visual inspiration from Ian Fleming's description of the character resembling singer . The series incorporated homages to Fleming's novels, such as a pre-credits sequence depicting Bond in a during an embassy situation, echoing elements from On Her Majesty's Secret Service. Grell employed high-contrast inks and cinematic panel layouts to evoke the tension of spy thrillers, with splash pages reminiscent of Bond film opening sequences and poster compositions that heightened the dramatic flair. This project was part of a broader revival of James Bond comics in the late 1980s, following periods of dormancy in the franchise's comic adaptations, and it showcased Grell's versatility beyond his fantasy and superhero roots by applying his established action dynamics—honed in earlier works like The Warlord—to sophisticated intrigue and global espionage. Complementing Permission to Die, Grell also wrote and illustrated the single-issue comic adaptation of the 1989 film Licence to Kill for Eclipse, faithfully recreating the movie's plot of Bond's rogue pursuit of a drug lord in retaliation for an attack on his ally.

Mid-1990s projects

In the mid-1990s, Mike Grell created Shaman's Tears, a 12-issue series (plus a #0 special) published by from 1993 to 1995, in which he wrote and provided pencils and inks. The narrative centers on , a police officer of mixed Irish and ancestry, who undergoes a spirit journey to become the Wicasa Wakan—a mystical medicine man empowered to harness animal spirits and the Earth's forces against threats like demonic entities and environmental despoilers. Blending supernatural Western elements with Native American mysticism, the series emphasizes themes of cultural heritage, spiritual awakening, and ecological harmony. Building directly on Shaman's Tears, Grell wrote the four-issue miniseries Bar Sinister in 1995, published under Acclaim Comics' creator-owned imprint with pencils by Rick Hoberg and inks by Tim Burgard. The story tracks a group of grotesque, genetically engineered man-animal hybrids—escaped test subjects from a secret government lab—who navigate survival in the American Southwest while pursued by federal agents, incorporating fantastical horror with explorations of identity and monstrosity. Grell also contributed covers to issues #2–4. Grell's other mid-1990s endeavors included providing full artwork for Raver, a five-issue limited series in 1993 written by . The surreal plot follows schoolteacher Norman Walters, whose psychotic episodes transport him into nightmarish alternate realms where he transforms into the silver-haired hero Raver to battle shape-shifting villains and childish horrors, delving into psychological fantasy and mental fragility. These projects showcase Grell's shift toward integrating personal and esoteric into high-stakes action tales, influences traceable to the urban grit and moral introspection of his prior run.

2000s and 2010s

In the 2000s, Mike Grell focused on reprints and collections of his earlier works while providing cover art for DC Comics titles. released the first volume of Complete Mike Grell's Jon Sable, Freelance in 2005, a trade paperback collecting the initial issues of his creator-owned series about a freelance operative and big-game hunter turned protector of . This kicked off a series of six volumes through 2008, reprinting the full 56-issue run and introducing Grell's blend of urban adventure, animal rights themes, and pulp-style action to new readers. Grell's influence on Green Arrow persisted into the decade, as seen in the 2007 miniseries Green Arrow: Year One by writer and artist Jock, which retold Oliver Queen's origin with gritty realism echoing Grell's mature reimagining of the character in The Longbow Hunters. The six-issue story emphasized Queen's transformation from to through survival ordeals, including a and encounters with , much like the thematic depth Grell had established two decades earlier. A major project came in 2009 when DC Comics revived The Warlord for its 35th anniversary, with Grell writing all 16 issues of the that ran from April 2009 to May 2010. Returning to his 1970s creation, Grell penned tales of Travis Morgan's battles in the hidden world of Skartaris, incorporating elements from the original run such as sword-and-sorcery conflicts with sorcerers, warriors, and prehistoric beasts while updating the narrative for modern audiences. Grell also supplied painted cover art for every issue, featuring dynamic depictions of Morgan and his allies that captured the series' adventurous spirit. The revival, though short-lived, reaffirmed Grell's foundational role in the character's mythos. Throughout the 2010s, Grell continued contributing cover art to DC's superhero lineup, including a variant cover for Green Arrow #30 (April 2010) during the Blackest Night event, where he illustrated Oliver Queen wielding his bow amid cosmic horror threats. He also provided covers for Batman titles and Justice League anthologies, such as appearances in crossover projects, blending his realistic anatomy and dramatic posing with the publisher's ongoing narratives. These contributions highlighted Grell's enduring stylistic impact on DC's visual identity without shifting to full interior art or writing roles.

Recent activities

In the 2020s, Mike Grell has maintained active engagement with fans through convention appearances and personalized commissions. He regularly attends events such as the Baltimore Comic-Con (October 17–19, 2025) and the ICT Comic Con and Science Fiction Expo (August 30–31, 2025), where he interacts directly with attendees, showcases original artwork, and discusses his career. Additionally, Grell offers commissions via his official website and exclusive agent Scott Kress at Catskill Comics, allowing fans to request custom pieces featuring characters like Green Arrow or The Warlord, with recent openings announced as late as October 2025. A major highlight of Grell's recent activities is the 2025 reprint project for his seminal series The Warlord. DC Comics announced The Warlord by Mike Grell Omnibus Vol. 1, a hardcover collection of 736 pages encompassing 1st Issue Special #8, Warlord #1–50, and Amazing World of DC Comics #12, scheduled for release on December 23, 2025. This volume features a new wraparound dust jacket painted by Grell himself, emphasizing the enduring appeal of his sword-and-sorcery epic. A second omnibus volume is planned to follow, completing his full run on the title and preserving its legacy for new generations. As of 2025, Grell's efforts center on legacy art and archival projects rather than new , including detailed convention pieces like a six-month illustration debuted at the Comic-Con. His foundational work on , particularly the gritty realism of The Longbow Hunters, directly influenced the CW's television series (2012–2020), which adapted key elements from his comics into its portrayal of Oliver Queen as a grounded .

Personal life

Family and relationships

Mike Grell has been married three times. His second marriage was to Sharon Wright, a writer in the comics industry, during the early 1980s; the couple later divorced. Grell's current wife is Lauri La Sabre, with whom he has maintained a long-term partnership since 1993 and to whom he has been married since the late 1990s. Grell has no biological children but considers his stepson, Torrin Miller—whom he met when Torrin was six—a member of his ; Torrin has publicly expressed admiration for Grell as a and creative influence. Grell is also a grandfather to Torrin's daughter, Piper , who at age nine achieved her first medal in 2023. In contrast to his relatively public childhood in a working-class family in , Grell has consistently prioritized his adult family's privacy, rarely discussing personal relationships in interviews or public appearances.

Residence and interests

Mike Grell has resided in Washington state since the 1980s, when he relocated to Seattle, and currently lives in Chehalis with his wife. Among his personal interests, Grell is an avid big-game hunter and practitioner of archery, including horseback archery, which informed his realistic depiction of Green Arrow's skills in The Longbow Hunters and subsequent series. He frequently travels to attend comic conventions across the United States, engaging with fans and promoting his work. Regarding his health, in July 2024 Grell was hospitalized for ulcers, resulting in significant and temporary use of a walker for two months. He experienced a significant challenge in late 2024 when he lost use of his right hand due to , but by January 2025, he had regained sufficient mobility to resume drawing. In spring 2025, he underwent replacement and has been making steady progress in recovery while continuing creative projects.

Awards and recognition

Major awards

Mike Grell received the in 1982 for outstanding achievement in comic arts, recognizing his contributions to the industry through works such as The Warlord. His 1987 miniseries : The Longbow Hunters, which reimagined the character with a more mature tone, earned a nomination for the 1988 Eisner Award in the Best Finite/Limited Series category. Later in his career, Grell was inducted into the Overstreet Comic Book Price Guide Hall of Fame and Wizard World's Hall of Legends, and he was voted onto Wizard Magazine's Top Ten List of Comics Writers for his influential storytelling across titles like and Jon Sable, Freelance.

Industry influence and honors

Mike Grell's work on : The Longbow Hunters in 1987 introduced a mature, urban realism to , portraying Oliver Queen as a gritty vigilante confronting real-world issues like drug addiction, violence, and moral ambiguity without traditional superpowers or sidekicks. This shift from fantastical elements to street-level crime stories influenced the genre's evolution toward more grounded narratives, emphasizing psychological depth and consequence in heroism. The series' darker tone and character focus directly inspired the CW's Arrow television series (2012–2020), which adopted Grell's vision of a brooding, bow-wielding archer operating in a realistic urban environment, relocating Queen from Star City to Seattle-like settings and exploring his midlife crises and relationships. Showrunners have acknowledged this blueprint, crediting Grell's run for shaping the adaptation's emphasis on vigilantism as a psychologically taxing pursuit rather than escapist adventure. Grell's enduring legacy is evident in DC Comics' announcement of two Warlord omnibus editions for release in late 2025, collecting his complete run on the sword-and-sorcery series that debuted in 1975, with the first volume covering issues #1–50 and marking the 50th anniversary of the title and highlighting its sustained appeal among fans of . These volumes, with the first spanning over 1,000 pages, underscore the lasting popularity of Grell's world-building and dynamic artwork in the fantasy genre. In recognition of his contributions, Grell was inducted into the Wizard World Hall of Legends in 2017 at Chicago Comic-Con, where he received tributes from peers for his innovative storytelling across four decades. He was also honored in the Overstreet Comic Book Hall of Fame that year, celebrating his role in revitalizing characters like Green Arrow and creating enduring series like The Warlord. Grell frequently appears as a guest at Hall of Fame events and conventions, such as the Baltimore Comic-Con, sharing insights into comics history. His influence is cited in scholarly works on 1980s industry shifts, such as analyses of the prestige format's rise and the move toward mature themes in mainstream titles. Grell has mentored younger creators by advocating for creator rights, drawing from his pioneering role in the creator-owned movement with titles like Starslayer at Pacific Comics and Jon Sable, Freelance at , where he negotiated royalties and ownership—innovations that pressured DC and Marvel to adopt similar terms. In interviews, he advises aspiring artists to prioritize , warning against exploitative contracts and urging them to "force the hand" of publishers for fair compensation, as seen in his consistent royalty collections from DC spanning over 40 years.

Bibliography

DC Comics

Mike Grell's contributions to DC Comics spanned over four decades, beginning in 1973 and encompassing roles as , , , and cover artist across numerous titles, with a total output of approximately 200 issues under the DC imprint. His work emphasized dynamic artwork and character-driven storytelling, often blending elements with adventure and fantasy genres. Grell's debut major run was as on Superboy and the from 1973 to 1976, where he provided artwork for roughly 40 issues, starting with inks over Dave Cockrum's pencils in issue #202 (April 1974) and taking over full pencilling duties from issue #203 (August 1974) onward. His style brought a more mature, realistic tone to the futuristic team, collaborating with writers like and on stories involving and interstellar threats. In 1975, Grell served as inker on Aquaman stories featured in Adventure Comics #435–440, contributing to tales of underwater adventure scripted by Steve Skeates, where his detailed line work enhanced the aquatic settings and action sequences. That same year, he inked (and occasionally pencilled) Phantom Stranger #33, a supernatural mystery by Arnold Drake involving demonic possession and otherworldly intervention. Grell created and launched The Warlord in 1st Issue Special #8 (November 1975), introducing pilot Travis Morgan to the sword-and-sorcery realm of Skartaris; the series transitioned to its own ongoing title in 1976, with Grell as writer and artist through issue #59 (1982), continuing as writer through issue #93 (1985), and with later writing contributions through the series' end at issue #133 (1988), for a total of 133 issues. The run explored themes of conquest and survival, featuring Grell's signature realistic anatomy and epic battles, making it one of DC's top-selling titles during the . He also provided covers for many issues throughout the run. Returning to DC in the late 1980s, Grell revitalized Green Arrow with the three-issue prestige miniseries Green Arrow: The Longbow Hunters (1987), which he wrote and drew, relocating Oliver Queen to and shifting the character toward gritty, urban without superpowers. This led to his writer tenure on the ongoing Green Arrow vol. 2 from #1 (1988) to #80 (1992), writing the full run to #80 with varying artists including himself on early issues, totaling 80 issues where he emphasized Ollie's skills, moral dilemmas, and relationships. Grell co-wrote select issues in 2007, including contributions to Green Arrow/. He frequently handled covers and interior art, influencing the character's modern portrayal. In the mid-1990s, Grell wrote Sovereign Seven #1–12 (1995–1996), a creator-owned series published under DC's imprint about a team of interdimensional refugees led by Sovereign Seven, blending sci-fi action with ensemble dynamics; he provided covers for the full run. Throughout his DC tenure, Grell occasionally contributed to other titles like Batman and anthology specials as or cover artist, but his primary impact came from these extended runs that showcased his versatility in both and narrative.

Other publishers

In the 1980s, Mike Grell expanded his creator-owned work beyond DC Comics by partnering with independent publishers, beginning with Pacific Comics. There, he launched Starslayer: The Log of the Jolly Roger, a adventure series blending sword-and-sorcery elements with , serving as writer and artist for the initial six issues published from February to December 1982. Following Pacific's financial difficulties, Grell transferred the series to , where he continued contributing as writer and cover artist for issues #7–14 from 1984 to 1985, before the title evolved under other creators into a broader . At , Grell's most prominent project was Jon Sable, Freelance, a gritty about a former guide turned and children's book author, which he wrote and drew for all 56 issues from June 1983 to February 1988, emphasizing realistic action and pulp-inspired intrigue. Grell's collaboration with First Comics also included a reprint series titled Mike Grell's Sable in 1990, which repackaged early Jon Sable stories, though his direct involvement was limited to oversight. Shifting to other independents, Grell wrote and penciled the three-issue miniseries James Bond 007: Permission to Die for Eclipse Enterprises in 1989, an original story depicting Bond evading capture in the American West, marking one of his few licensed adaptations outside mainstream publishers. In the 1990s, Grell debuted at Image Comics with Shaman's Tears, a supernatural western exploring Native American mysticism and environmental themes through protagonist Joshua Brand, whom he wrote and illustrated across 10 issues from May 1993 to February 1995. He also penciled and wrote the 4-issue adaptation of the James Bond film Licence to Kill for DC Comics in 1989. Grell's engagements with Marvel Comics were more sporadic, starting with inking contributions on early 1970s titles like Master of Kung Fu #17–20 (1974), where he assisted on select pages under penciler Paul Gulacy. In the 2000s, he returned for a substantial run on Iron Man (vol. 3) #50–69 (2002–2003), writing and providing covers while collaborating with artists like Steve Epting, focusing on Tony Stark confronting the consequences of his arms-dealing past. Additional Marvel work included writing the 2004 miniseries Hercules #1–4 and covers for Thor: Heroes Return (1998–1999), showcasing his versatility in superhero narratives. These independent and rival publisher projects allowed Grell to explore mature themes and ownership rights, distinguishing them from his DC superhero output.

Collected editions

Mike Grell's works have been compiled in various trade paperbacks, hardcovers, and omnibuses by publishers including DC Comics and , with several reprints and digital editions available through as of 2025. These collections preserve his influential runs on characters like and The Warlord, often including bonus material such as introductions or restored artwork. For , the seminal three-issue miniseries The Longbow Hunters (1987) was first collected in a trade paperback edition by DC Comics in 1988, featuring an introduction by editor and marking a pivotal shift in the character's portrayal toward a more mature, urban vigilante narrative. This collection has seen multiple reprints, including a 2013 edition and a 2025 DC Finest volume that expands it to include issues from the ongoing Green Arrow series (#1-8) and Green Arrow Annual #1. The subsequent storyline, , comprising Green Arrow (1988) #1-6, was collected in a trade paperback titled Green Arrow Vol. 1: by DC Comics, originally released in the late 1980s and reprinted in 2013 to highlight Grell's gritty storytelling involving themes of crime and espionage. Additionally, Grell's contributions to Green Arrow origins appear in broader collections. The Warlord series, Grell's breakthrough sword-and-sorcery epic, has been gathered in the Showcase Presents: The Warlord paperbacks by DC Comics, with Volume 1 (2009) collecting 1st Issue Special #8 and The Warlord #1-28, while subsequent volumes incorporate annuals from 1983-1987 such as The Warlord Annual #1-4. In 2025, DC Comics released two oversized omnibus hardcovers to compile the full run: The Warlord by Mike Grell Omnibus Vol. 1 (December 2025), containing 1st Issue Special #8 and The Warlord #1-50 with new forewords and restored art, followed by Vol. 2 covering issues #51-133 and additional annuals to complete the saga. These editions emphasize Grell's dynamic artwork and world-building in the hidden realm of Skartaris. Grell's creator-owned series Jon Sable, Freelance (1983-1989) was reprinted by in a series of trade paperbacks titled The Complete Jon Sable, Freelance from 2005 to 2007, spanning four initial volumes that collect issues #1-33 from , with painted covers by Grell and additional material like sketches. Later expansions include omnibus editions, such as Jon Sable Freelance Omnibus Vol. 2 (covering #17-33), and deluxe hardcovers announced in 2023 mimicking DC's Absolute format for high-quality archival presentation. Digital versions are available via . Other notable collections include Shaman's Tears, Grell's 1993-1995 miniseries (12 issues), which received its first complete trade paperback edition in 2011 from , gathering the full story of Joshua Brand's supernatural encounters with urban hybrids and including Grell's original artwork. Grell's adaptations, such as the 1989 official comic book adaptation and the original three-issue prestige miniseries Permission to Die (also 1989, ), have been included in anthologies like James Bond Omnibus volumes by , compiling his cinematic-style illustrations and narratives alongside other Bond comic works.

References

Add your contribution
Related Hubs
User Avatar
No comments yet.