Steve Dillon


Steve Dillon was a British comic book artist, best known for his work with writer Garth Ennis on Hellblazer, Preacher and The Punisher.

Early life

Dillon was born in London in 1962 and raised in Luton, Bedfordshire. He was the oldest of three siblings, a sister younger by three years, Julie, and a brother younger by nine years who is cartoonist/costume designer Glyn Dillon.
While attending Icknield High School, Dillon first realised his potential as a serious comic book artist during the production of a school comic book called Ultimate Sci Fi Adventures with school friends Neil Bailey & Paul Mahon in 1975. His first strip in this comic was "The Space Vampire". This was followed by the Escape from the Planet of the Apes series.

Career

Dillon got his first professional work at the age of 16, drawing the title story in the first issue of Hulk Weekly for Marvel UK, later working on the Nick Fury strip. In the 1980s he also drew for Warrior and Doctor Who Magazine, where he created the character of Abslom Daak. He did a considerable amount of work for the comics 2000 AD and Warrior.
Along with Brett Ewins, Dillon started the seminal comic magazine Deadline in 1988, which continued for another seven years and was instrumental in supporting young, underground, comic artists such as Jamie Hewlett as well as championing and supporting new bands of the period such as The Senseless Things and Blur. Deadline is highly regarded for bringing underground comics and graphic novels into the mainstream during the 1990s. and can be considered as a precursor for publications such as Loaded and Dazed and Confused, as well as defining and promoting the nascent Britpop movement of the time.
In mid-1989, Dillon met writer Garth Ennis, with whom he eventually had his most notable professional collaborations. During a social gathering about a year later in Dublin, Ennis recalls, "After everyone else had passed out, we sat up 'til dawn and killed off a bottle of Jameson, talking about what we wanted to do in comics- what we thought could be done with them, what the medium was for. I can recall a sort of mutual 'Oh yes, you. You're the one. You get it.' This was to pay off handsomely in the years to come." With Ennis, Dillon worked on Hellblazer and, later, on Preacher which concluded in 2000 after 66 issues. Dillon also created the character Dogwelder, featured in Ennis's series Hitman, and the aptly named Sixpack and Dogwelder comic series, that ran from 2016 to 2017.
Preacher was made into a critically acclaimed TV show in 2016, starring Dominic Cooper. Dillon is credited as co-executive producer on the series.

Death

Dillon's younger brother, concept artist Glyn, announced on social media on 22 October 2016 that Dillon had died in New York City. The cause was complications of a ruptured appendix which Dillon had initially mistaken for food poisoning. His death was met with an outpouring of grief and a number of tributes from the comics creator community, as well as the following statement from DC Group editor Marie Javins:
Dillon's long-time collaborator Garth Ennis paid tribute to Dillon thus:
The first episode of season two of the Preacher TV series is dedicated to Dillon.

Awards

Self-published

  • Sci-Fi Adventures
  • *Issue #5 Nov 1974 "The Space Vampire"
  • *Special Issue Feb 1975 " Escape From the Planet of the Apes" Chapter 1
  • *Issue #9 Apr 1975 "Escape From the Planet of the Apes" Chapters 2 & 3
  • *Issue #10 May 1975 "Escape From the Planet of the Apes" Chapter 4
  • *Issue #11 June 1975 "Escape From the Planet of the Apes" Chapter 5
  • *Issue #12 July 1975 "Escape From the Planet of the Apes" Chapter 6
  • *Issue #13 Aug/Sept 1975 "Conquest of the Planet of the Apes" Chapter 1
  • Ultimate Science Fiction
  • *Story in #1–3

    Marvel UK

  • Hulk Comic
  • *Nick Fury stories in #1–19
  • *Hulk story in #2
  • *Ant-Man story in #48–49
  • Doctor Who Magazine
  • *Kroton stories in #5–7 and #23–24
  • *Plutar story in #9-11
  • *Ogron story in #13–14
  • *Abslom Daak stories in #17–20 and #27–29
  • *Moderator story in #84 and #86–87
  • Blake's 7
  • *Stories in #9 and #11–12

    Fleetway

  • 2000 AD
  • *Judge Dredd stories in Sci-Fi Special 1980, #205, #242–243, #305–307, #322–328, #353, #374–375, #393, #397–399, #404–405, #409, #443, #450, Sci-Fi Special 1986, #505, #511–512, #610, #702–706, #727–732, #783, and Judge Dredd Yearbook 1993
  • *Ro-Jaws story in #189–190
  • *Mean Arena stories in #199–200 and #218–223
  • *Ro-Busters story in Annual 1982
  • *Rogue Trooper stories in #379–380, #495–499, #520–531, #535–539, #553–554, #568–572, #574–575, #589, #598–600, #602–603, #624–630, #633–635, Winter Special 1989, and Rogue Trooper Annual 1991
  • *ABC Warriors story in Annual 1985
  • *Future Shocks in #442, #479, #572, and #588
  • *Hap Hazzard stories in #561, #567, #588, #609–610, and #1164
  • *Tyranny Rex stories in #566–568, #582–584, and Sci-Fi Special 1988
  • *Bad Company story in #601
  • *Harlem Heroes story in #671–676, #683–699, and #701–702
  • Diceman
  • *ABC Warriors story in #2
  • *Diceman stories in #4–5
  • The Comic Relief Comic One-shot

    Quality

  • Warrior
  • *Laser Eraser and Pressbutton stories in #1–3, #5–11, and #15
  • *Marvelman story in #4

    Deadline

  • Deadline
  • *Stories in #1–20

    Other

IPC Magazines
  • Scream! #8
Pyramid Books
  • Spitting Image: The Giant Komic Book OGN
Atomeka Press
  • A1 #5 and #6A
John Brown
  • Blast! #1

    DC Comics

Main artist
  • Skreemer #1–6
  • Animal Man #29, #33–38, #40–41, #43, #45, and #47–50
  • Hellblazer #49, #57–58, and #62
  • The Atom Special #1
  • Legion Worlds #5
Contributor
  • Who's Who: The Definitive Directory of the DC Universe #19
  • Focus One-shot
  • Hitman #60
  • Superman: American Alien #4

    Vertigo

Main artist
  • Hellblazer #63–76, #78–83, #157, #175–176, and #200
  • *Confessional One-shot
  • *Heartland One-shot
  • Preacher #1–66
  • *Cassidy: Blood and Whiskey OGN
  • *Tall in the Saddle OGN
Contributor
  • Vertigo Jam One-shot
  • The Vertigo Gallery: Dreams and Nightmares One-shot
  • Vertigo: Winter's Edge #1
  • Transmetropolitan: I Hate It Here One-shot
  • Vertigo X Anniversary One-shot
  • Scalped #50

    Paradox

Contributor
Main artist
  • Wildcats #20–21
  • Global Frequency #3

    Marvel Comics

Main artist
  • The Punisher: Countdown One-shot
  • Wolverine: Origins #1–25
  • X-Men: Hope One-Shot, collecting:
  • *Psylocke #1
  • *Dark X-Men #1
  • *X-Men Legacy #230
  • *X-Force #22
  • Wolverine #304
  • Incredible Hulk #8
  • Avenging Spider-Man #11
  • Thunderbolts #1–6 and #12
  • Scarlet Witch #3
  • The Punisher #1–6
Contributor
  • Daredevil #1/2 One-shot
  • Scarlet Witch #4
  • The Punisher #7

    Epic

Main artist
  • Doctor Zero #5
  • Car Warriors #1–4

    Marvel Knights

Main artist
  • Punisher #1–12
  • Punisher #1–7, #13–14, #18–23, and #32
  • Bullseye: Greatest Hits #1–5
  • Punisher vs. Bullseye #1–5
  • Punisher War Zone #1–6

    Ultimate

Main artist
  • Ultimate X-Men #58
  • The Ultimates 2 Annual 1
  • Ultimate Avengers #13–18

    MAX

Main artist
  • Supreme Power: Nighthawk #1–6
  • Punisher MAX #1–22

    Image Comics

WildStorm

Main artist
  • Gen13 Annual 1
  • Gen13 Bootleg Annual 1

    Other publishers

Eclipse Comics
Penthouse
  • Penthouse Men's Adventure Comix
  • * Kodiak story in #6