Early career Born in New York City, Jack Burnley began his comics career working for the
King Features Syndicate, providing cartoons for the sports section (including work for
Damon Runyon). In 1929 he became the then-youngest artist to have a syndicated feature, and also produced illustrations for advertising. In 1938, Burnley began to freelance, producing "single-page sports fillers" for
DC Comics, by whom he was subsequently hired in 1940. Burnley went on to provide uncredited artwork for
Action Comics until 1947. Burnley's work was often credited to other artists. In the 1945 Batman newspaper strips which Burnley penciled, the stylized Bob Kane signature logo appears, although Kane had not worked on the sequence. The version of Superman he created was noted for its carefully drawn musculature, which set the style of superheroes for years to come. “I gave Superman a lot more muscle than he had originally,” he told a
Charlottesville, Virginia newspaper in 2000. “When I came into comics I had a background in drawing the musclemen and heroes of sports, so it was rather easy for me to make the transition to drawing the comic figures.”
Later DC work Burnley co-created (with writer
Gardner Fox) the superhero
Starman, which first appeared in
Adventure Comics (April 1941). He "became DC's top
ghost artist," working on the main characters and titles. Burnley left DC and the comic book field in 1947, and returning to newspaper sports cartooning. He worked for the
Pittsburgh Sun-Telegraph for four years, then for the
San Francisco News until his retirement in 1976. Burnley and his wife, former cabaret dancer Dolores Farris relocated to
Charlottesville, Virginia in 1981. Burnley died on December 19, 2006, at the Heritage Hall senior facility in Charlottesville, following a fall that broke his hip. ==Notes==