Batton Lash facts for kids
Quick facts for kids Batton Lash |
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Lash in 2007
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Born | Brooklyn, New York, U.S. |
October 29, 1953
Died | January 12, 2019 San Diego, California, U.S. |
(aged 65)
Nationality | American |
Area(s) | Cartoonist |
Batton Lash (October 29, 1953 – January 12, 2019) was an American comics creator who came to prominence as part of the 1990s self-publishing boom. He is best known for the series Wolff and Byrd, Counselors of the Macabre (a.k.a. Supernatural Law), a comedic series about law partners specializing in cases dealing with archetypes from the horror genre, which ran as a strip in The National Law Journal, and as a stand-alone series of comic books and graphic novels. He received several awards for his work, including an Inkpot Award, an Independent Book Publishers Association's Benjamin Franklin Award, an Eisner Award, and nominations for two Harvey Awards.
Career
Batton Lash was born Vito Marangi in Brooklyn, New York, and studied cartooning and graphic arts at Manhattan's School of Visual Arts.
In 1979, he began writing and drawing Wolff and Byrd, Counselors of the Macabre, as a weekly newspaper strip which appeared in The Brooklyn Paper until 1996 and The National Law Journal from 1983 to 1997. In 1980 Lash was a courtroom sketch artist during the trial against John Gotti. In 1994, he and his wife Jackie Estrada founded Exhibit A Press to publish the series as a full-length comic book stories, renaming it Supernatural Law. It was later made available as a digital download on the Comics+ and Graphicly apps.
In 1994 he wrote Archie Meets the Punisher, a well-received crossover between the teen characters of Archie Comics and Marvel Comics' grim antihero the Punisher. He wrote eight issues of Radioactive Man for Bongo Comics, which received an Eisner Award for Best Humor Publication in 2002.
In 2009 he began working with writer James Hudnall on "Obama Nation", a conservative political comic strip on Andrew Breitbart's website BigGovernment. The series drew national attention in 2011, when MSNBC commentator Lawrence O'Donnell criticized one of the strips as racist, accusing it of caricaturing Barack and Michelle Obama using stereotypes of African Americans.
Death
He died at his home on January 12, 2019, from brain cancer at the age of 65.
Awards and nominations
- 1996: Don Thompson Award – Best Achievement by a Cartoonist (tie)
- 1997: Don Thompson Award – Best Achievement by a Writer & Artist
- 2002: Radioactive Man – Eisner Award for Best Humor Publication
- 2003: Mister Negativity and Other Tales of Supernatural Law – nominated for Harvey Special Award for Humor
- 2003: Supernatural Law #35 – nominated for Harvey Award for Best Single Issue
- 2004: Inkpot Award
- 2009: The Soddyssey, And Other Tales of Supernatural Law – Independent Book Publishers Association's Benjamin Franklin Award for Graphic Novel