Bill Mantlo began his Marvel career on Deadly Hands of Kung Fu, in which he   introduced White Tiger, one of the industry’s earliest Hispanic super heroes.   Eventually writing stories for almost every Marvel title, he did some of his   most fondly remembered work on Incredible Hulk and Spectacular Spider-Man. He also launched Cloak and Dagger in a pair of miniseries and guided Alpha   Flight through some of its most harrowing ordeals.   Mantlo excelled at integrating licensed properties into the Marvel Universe,   as demonstrated by Micronauts and Rom: Spaceknight, both of which he wrote from start to finish. At DC, he wrote   the Invasion miniseries   for one of the company’s biggest crossover events.
After a start as inker to his older brother John, Sal Buscema penciled Captain America, Defenders, Incredible   Hulk and more. Famed for his ability to meet tight   deadlines, he spread his talents across multiple genres. His 1970s work   ranged from Ms. Marvel   and Nova to Sub-Mariner and Spider-Woman’s first   appearance in Marvel Spotlight. He was the uninterrupted artist on Spectacular   Spider-Man for more than one hundred issues and   penciled the web-slinger’s adventures in Marvel   Team-Up, in which he and writer Bill Mantlo   introduced Captain Jean DeWolff. After handling more team-ups in the Thing’s Marvel Two-in-One, he reunited with   brother John on Steve Englehart’s Fantastic Four. He later provided inks for Tom DeFalco’s Spider-Girl titles and Thunderstrike miniseries.
Formerly a regular artist on Solo Avengers, as well as West Coast, Mark Bright is noted for working with writer Christopher Priest on Falcon, Power   Man and Iron Fist, Quantum   and Woody and other titles. He has also drawn   Marvel’s incarnation of G.I. Joe and several DC flagship characters in Action Comics Weekly, Batman and Green   Lantern.
Steve Ditko (1927 - 2018) began his comics   career in the anthologies of the 1950s, where his unique style and   perspective quickly earned recognition and respect. Recruited to join Stan   Lee’s Atlas Comics, later Marvel, in 1958, his nuances contrasted well with   Jack Kirby’s bombast. In 1962, in the pages of Amazing   Fantasy, Ditko and Lee brought to life Peter   Parker, the Amazing Spider-Man, changing the industry forever. Leaving Marvel   in 1966, he drew Blue Beetle and Captain Atom for Charlton, Creeper and Shade the Changing Man for DC, and his independent effort Mr.   A. Ditko returned to Marvel during the late 1970s   and remained for much of the 1980s, co-creating Speedball, Squirrel Girl and   other characters who would prove of unexpected importance in Marvel’s later   years.