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|image=[[Image:Fred_Fredericks-70s.jpg|200px]]
|image=[[Image:Fred_Fredericks-70s.jpg|200px]]
|Born= August 9, 1929
|Born= August 9, 1929
|Died=2015
|Died= March 10, 2015  
|Nationality= [[Image:Mini_usa.gif]] American
|Nationality= [[Image:Mini_usa.gif]] American
|Occupation= [[:Category:Artists|Artist]], [[:Category:Cover artists|Cover artist]], [[:Category:Writers|Writers]]
|Occupation= [[:Category:Artists|Artist]], [[:Category:Cover artists|Cover artist]], [[:Category:Writers|Writers]]

Revision as of 11:37, 15 March 2015

Fred Fredericks
Biographical information
Born: August 9, 1929
Died: March 10, 2015
Nationality: American
Occupation: Artist, Cover artist, Writers
Website: N/A


Harold "Fred" Fredericks Jr. was born in 1929 in Atlantic City, New Jersey. His father was Harold Fredericks and his mother was Phyllis Fredericks.

Biography

Fredericks sold his first cartoon at the age of 18, and in the late 1940's he worked for The Press of Atlantic City. In 1950 he joined the marine corps and served in the Korean War. After ending his military career in 1953 he attended the School of Visual Arts in New York City. At the same time he began to create historical comics as well as commercial illustrations. Several of his historical comics were syndicated in the late 1950's and early 1960's.

In the 1960's he began to create comic books for "Gold Key" and "Dell", including Nancy, The Twilight Zone, Mighty Mouse, Barney Google and Snuffy Smith, Bullwinkle, Mister Ed and The Munsters.

In 1964, Fredericks created the comic strip "Rebel" which was published in Scholastic Scope, a magazine distributed to schools in USA. Fredericks produced the strip for over 30 years and it has also been reprinted in collections.

Mandrake the Magician

Fredericks became in April 1965 the new artist on the "Mandrake the Magician" newspaper strip, after Phil Davis had passed away. Creator Lee Falk modernized the comic when Fredericks took over the strip, making it more reality-based by focusing less on science fiction and fantasy, and making Mandrake operate more like a secret agent, often helping out the police with cases they could not solve.

Working on Mandrake (1972)

If in a story Lee wants someone to look a certain way he'll tell me the way to depict him; otherwise I can do it my own way.

I do my own lettering and decide where the word baloons are going to be. Then I try to vary my shots, almost like a movie. You have a long shot, then a close up, then a medium shot. Yoy try to keep the camera moving, just like in a film.

Five weeks (advance) for the daily strip and ten for the Sunday page.

I use an Esterbrook #22 pen point, with which I get a good thick and thin line. After I ink the figures with a pen, I put in the blacks with a #3 Windsor-Newton brush and always keep the white paint handy in case of mistakes!

Hobbies (1972)

Fredericks was also a film collector, and his interests included movie serials; "Red Barry", "Dick Tracy", "The Clutching Hand", "Daredevils of the Red Circle"... He also had a copy of the TV pilot of Mandrake from 1954.

Note: On often find the no 39013 on a picture of a convict or a mug shot.. It is the "heavy" from "Daredevils of the Red Circle".

Other Figures

Fredericks returned to comic books in the late 1980's, first as inker on the Defenders of the Earth comic book where he and penciller Alex Saviuk got the chance to draw Mandrake, the Phantom and Flash Gordon. After that, Fredericks remained as a productive inker until the mid-1990's on several comic books for Marvel Comics and DC Comics, for example The Punisher War Journal, Nth Man: the Ultimate Ninja, Daredevil, G.I. Joe and Ren & Stimpy.

He is also well known for inking "The Phantom" Sunday strips from 1995 to 2000, after which Graham Nolan took over the Sundays. He also inked one week of Phantom daily strips in 1996 that was published in American newspapers the same week that the Phantom movie premiered.

Writer and Artist of Mandrake the Magician

After creator Lee Falk died in 1999, Fredericks has also been responsible for writing the scripts for the Mandrake strip by himself. He retired from the Sunday strip in 2002, but continues to produce new daily strip stories as of 2008, often with guest appearances or cameos by The Phantom or other characters from the Phantom strip.

After making 6 weeks of "Vanguard of the Shadows" Fred Fredericks announced his retirement. From July the 8th of 2013 the ongoing daily strip are reprints.

See also

Spotlight on Fred Fredericks - Other Comics

Sources

  • King Features Syndicat (??), Fred Fredericks,
  • Riggs, Ed (ed.) (1969). Film Fan Fredericks Is a Man of Pictures, Film Collectors Registry, January-February 1969, 1-2
  • Greim, Martin L (1972). Mandrake's Magic Maker, Comic Crusader, 14, 11-16