The one mystery the Dark Knight Detective can’t solve? The
riddle of his own creation.
Crack open the cover to any Batman comic – Batman, Detective
Comics, World’s Finest, whatever – and you’ll find one
commonality: The phrase "Batman created by Bob Kane."
But Many insiders will tell you that this simple statement of
seeming fact is every bit as fictional as the Bat-tale it
introduces. At the very least, they’ll tell you the statement is
incomplete. Oh, they’ll admit, sometimes grudgingly, that Kane
should be there. But they’ll also tell you that you wouldn’t be
reading the book today – hell, you probably even wouldn’t have heard
of Batman – were it not for the contributions of another man.
Bill Finger.
Haven’t heard of him? You’re not alone. Finger’s cautionary
tale is not well known, but it’s every bit as compelling as that
of Batman himself.
"We’re all attracted to tragedy, and he’s a tragic
figure," says current Detective Comics writer Ed
Brubaker. "He did so much so well for so long! He was the most
inventive guy on the book, worked on it for decades, and in the end,
it got him nothing."
Just what did Finger do? At the very least, he wrote Batman tales
for over 20 years, introducing the character in Detective Comics
#27, penning the first Robin story in Detective #38, and
introducing the Joker, Penguin, Catwoman, Bat-Mite, and the very
Batcave itself. At the most, he may have ensured that Batman existed
at all.
DC Comics (then called National Periodical Publications) saw it
had a hit on its hands when Superman debuted in 1938. The order came
down to editors Whitney Ellsworth and Vin Sullivan: Bring us another
long underwear-type. Ellsworth turned to Bob Kane, a 22-year-old
cartoonist doing some humor strips for the publisher at the time,
who drew up something called "The Bat-Man." Kane’s
design was influenced by Superman, Zorro, a silent film called
"The Bat," and a Leonardo da Vinci design of a flying
machine. Kane’s original Batman wore red tights with a
Zorro-styled mask, and had two stiff-looking wings mounted to the
back of the costume. The mish-mashed combination didn’t wow
anyone, Kane included.
Kane wasn’t sure if his design would pass muster, so he called
an old high school classmate for a friendly chat and a second
opinion, a man he knew to be a creative sort. He called Bill Finger.
The 25-year-old Finger came over to Kane’s apartment and agreed
the design needed work. He set to that work immediately. Pulling a
dictionary off Kane’s shelf, he opened to a picture of a bat.
"Bill said, ‘Why not make him look more like a bat and put a
hood on him, and take the eyeballs out and just put slits for eyes
to make him look more mysterious?" Kane recounts in his 1989
autobiography, Batman & Me.
Batman’s domino mask changed into a full cowl. Finger also
suggested making the color scheme darker. "Color it dark gray
to make it look more ominous," Kane recalls him saying. Finger
also got rid of the wings, evolving them into Batman’s now famous
cape. In mere hours, the Batman we all know today was born of
Finger’s tinkering with Kane’s awkward design. If Kane was
indeed Batman’s father, Finger was at least the doctor who
delivered the baby – and probably prevented a dud.
DC loved Batman and immediately commissioned Kan to produce it.
Kane, knowing Finger was up to the task and knowing Finger desperately
wanted to be a writer, sub-contracted Finger to write Batman’s
first story for Detective Comics #27. Kane also did something
else: He got a contract.
Kane came from a well-to-do New York family with enough money to
employ lawyers to nail down Kane’s interest in the character. Soon
after the conception, Kane secured an ownership percentage in Batman
and the ironclad legal guarantee that for now and forever, all
Batman tales would start with the tag "Batman created by Bob
Kane."
Finger came from a poor background in the Bronx, and in fact had
been bedridden for months with a case of scarlet fever as a child.
It was there in bed, with nowhere to go, that he fell in love with
reading. He devoured books by the dozens, and it became his lifelong
dream to one day become a writer himself. When Kane made his fateful
call to Finger, the writer was barely scraping by with a low-paying
job as a shoe salesman. Given the opportunity to write for a living,
He leapt at the chance. For the first six Batman stories, Finger was
Kane’s employee, nothing more. It wasn’t until the seventh
script that Finger got paid via DC. They may not have even known he
existed at the time.
Batman was booming and Kane, realizing where his financial
interests lay, hired a stable of artists to produce more material.
The work was very collaborative. One day, Kane mentioned to Finger
that Batman needed a boy sidekick. Finger said that he’d dream one
up, and went out for a sandwich. By the time he returned, Kane and
inker Jerry Robinson had already nailed a name: Robin. Finger then
wrote the first Robin tale.
Similarly, Finger "found" the Joker for Kane to draw.
Accounts vary as to if Kane or Robinson came up with the notion of
the psychotic villain, but it was definitely Finger who delivered
the visual. "Bill came in with a photograph of Conrad Veidt,
who played in a movie called ‘The Man Who Laughs,’" Kane
relays in Batman & Me. "Here’s a picture of the
Joker character,’ Bill exclaimed. ‘Copy it and I’ll write the
first Joker story."
Kane, "a superb copyist" in his own words, copied; and
Bill Finger wrote the Joker’s first two stories, in Batman #1
and #2. But every story, regardless of who wrote it, drew it, or
came up with a new character, came out with the same byline:
"By Bob Kane," as per Kane’s contract.
"In the early days, only the originators put their names on
the strips, regardless of whether they had ghost-writers or
ghost-artists doing their features," Kane says in Batman
& Me. "I never thought of giving [Finger] a byline, and
he never asked for one." Still, as the originator and co-owner,
Kane enjoyed healthy bonuses based on sales. Finger made his script
rate of $12 a page, and still lived with his parents, helping his
poor family make ends meet.
Finger wanted too desperately to be a writer; he would do
anything to remain in his position, and rise out of poverty.
"He was so overwhelmed that he was getting steady jobs that he
never thought of anything else," says Sheldon Moldoff, an
artist who ghosted for Kane for 16 years. "He just wanted to be
a writer. Bill was so happy he was working, he didn’t think about
royalties, rights, any of that. He was very grateful to Bob."
Perhaps too grateful. Golden Age artist Martin Nodell once
visited Kane’s apartment with Finger in tow. "We rang the
bell, and Bob Kane came to the door," Nodell recalls.
"When Bill entered the room, it was if he was greeting the
king. Bill was bowing down, his hands out, just to say hello. That,
in essence, was the way it was. Bill felt as if he had to condescend
before Kane."
The love was not returned. "Bob Kane never was a nice
guy," Moldoff says flatly. "He had a tremendous ego. If I
came up with an idea, he had no problem stealing it and claiming it
as his own. Was Bob generous to Bill Finger? No. Was he nice with
him? No. Bob wasn’t nice to anybody."
Finger, on the other hand, was known for his kindness and
generosity. Jerry Robinson was only 17 years old, consumed by school
all day and drawing all night, when he started in the Kane studio.
Finger took the youngster under his wing. "Bill was very much
my cultural mentor," Robinson remembers. "He exposed me to
potential. He brought me to museums, to fine movies. That inspired
us both."
Finger’s love of learning, born of his bedridden childhood,
never stopped. "I don’t think he had a college education of
any kind, but he was very auto-didactic, always self-teaching,"
said 15-year Batman Editor Denny O’Neil, who credits Finger with
mentoring him when O’Neil began his career in 1965. "He made
notes constantly. He was very observational."
Finger was famous for taking his job seriously. He kept huge
files of articles clipped from newspapers and Popular Science.
Whenever Batman needed a way out of a tough situation, Finger could
refer to his files and find one. The technical wonders of the
Batcave, with its computers, submarine pens, and Giant Penny, sprang
from the imagination and files of Finger. Other comic writers of the
time surely knew his importance. A Golden Age Green Lantern villain
who pulled his crimes from a huge book of tricks was named
"William Hand," an obvious riff on Bill Finger’s name.
But Finger was more than just a book of tricks. "He was one of
the guys who showed us how to do this work in this new medium,"
O’Neil maintains. "Comics were really brand-new at the time
– the umbilical cord hadn’t even been cut. And Bill really
understood, almost instinctually, how to do it. He really had a
handle on writing for comics. I’ve seen some of [Superman
co-creator] Jerry Siegel’s original scripts, and it was these two
guys, Siegel and Finger, who really first understood writing for
comics. They taught the next generation.
But that which made Finger great was also his downfall. Finger
cared too much about his work, and refused to turn in a
script until it was perfect. For a poor man who never made much
money … this was a problem.
"Bill was the greatest comics writer of his time, and maybe
since," says Jerry Robinson. "But he was not a natural
writer. Things didn’t flow from his pen. He really struggled every
time."
Finger once delivered a first page of a script stapled to a bunch
of blank pages to an editor, hurriedly grabbing his check and
bolting the office before his editor could see that the work
wasn’t finished. Missing deadlines led to lack of income, which
led to paralyzing fear, alcoholism, and more missed deadlines. By
the mid-1950s, Kane had moved to California and was comfortably out
of comics, with a massive studio producing work in his name. Finger
still struggled, with both deadlines and money.
"The second Batman story he ever did for me [in the early
‘60s], I made him sign a little note that went roughly as follows:
‘I, William Finger, will not ask for the check for this story
until I’ve completed it," says longtime DC Editor Julius
Schwartz. "He had a habit of always needing money, and before
he’d finish a story, he’d ask for a check. And he was invariably
late."
By the mid-1960s, things were changing. New editors were coming
in at DC, and Kane hadn’t been personally involved for years.
Finger’s assignments dwindled away, and he fell off editors’
radar. Finger, once known as the best writer in comics, became
almost an urban legend to new editors. He’d occasionally be seen
haunting a bar, but no one would give him an assignment, faring
certain deadline problems. By 1965, Finger was out of comics. He
resurfaced very briefly writing mystery stories at DC in the early
‘70s, but at the time of his death in 1974, Finger had lost the
only thing that really mattered to him. He wasn’t a writer
anymore.
All that’s left today of Finger is his place in history – a
place that’s largely misplaced. His contributions are lost to the
mists of time, and the fact that Bob Kane had the power of an
ironclad contract on his side.
"It’s impossible to tell exactly who created what
anymore," says Denny O’Neil. "The truth is, it’s 60
years since, and nobody really kept notes then. But I’ve spent a
lot of time looking at Batman history. It was my main professional
concern for 15 years. And near as I have been able to learn,
Bill’s contributions were considerable.
Even Michael Uslan, the producer of the "Batman" movies
and a close personal friend of Kane’s, agrees. "It was such a
great creative effort by so many people over so many decades that
really ‘created’ Batman," Uslan says. "But you still
have to look at Bill Finger as one of the two essentials. It’s
Kane-and-Finger – and I say that in one breath – who were there
at the beginning."
Even Kane could give Finger his due. "I must admit that Bill
never received the fame and recognition he deserved. He was an
unsung hero," Kane wrote in Batman & Me, which he
dedicated, among others, to Finger. "I ran into Bill a year
before he died in 1974. Bill was disheartened by the lack of major
accomplishments in his career. He felt that he had not used his
creative potential to its fullest and that success had passed him
by."
But crafting Batman is a major accomplishment, and more people
are learning of the man behind Batman’s mask. Julius Schwartz has
long been an advocate of getting Finger the credit he is due.
O’Neil, too. "I certainly think he deserved more than what he
got, both in terms of credit and in terms of money," O’Neil
says. "There was no way for me to get him money, because of the
legalities involved. It may not be fair, but it’s the law."
Official credit may be out of the question. "Short of adding
his name to the credits, which I don’t think can legally be done,
I don’t think there’s anything DC can do," says comic
writer and historian Mark Waid. "The Bob Kane estate is
protected. Bob Kane’s selfishness continues from beyond the
grave."
Kane grew rich off Batman and lived a comfortable life until he
passed away in 1998. Finger died an unfulfilled man, never enjoying
the late-life accolades or money that did eventually come to
Superman co-creators Jerry Siegel and Joe Shuster.
"Siegel and Shuster are looked at as these guys who really
got screwed until later in life. Bill Finger is like them, except he
never got un-screwed," says Ed Brubaker.
And Finger has left something more behind than just Batman for
other creators to follow. "It’s a different scene,"
Brubaker says. "If you write Batman right now and create
a new character, regardless of the fact that Bob Kane created the
comic, you would get money for that character. Chuck Dixon
got money when they used Bane in the ‘Batman and Robin’ movie.
The business is more human now."
Finger also has a final, more chilling legacy, according to
Brubaker. "The greatest thing, but also the most fucked thing
about Bill Finger is that if you’re ever in a situation where
you’re worried that you’re not getting proper credit for what
you’re doing, you can say to your editor, ‘Hey, I’m feeling
like Bill Finger over here. And I don’t want to get Fingered.’
And they’ll understand. Everybody gets it. I guarantee it."
"Bill Finger deserves co-credit for the creation of Batman,
simple as that," [Jerry Robinson] states. "It's nice to
see that more people are learning about him today. But I wish
something could have happened for him in his lifetime."
Thanks to T.J. Grech for providing
me with the above article. Most appreciated, my friend.