Short lived hero from 1977 based in the 1950s. Cover for issue #35 was by Jack Kirby, issues #36 & 37 were by Gil Kane
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Pulp Action from the Wild West through the Dirty 30s and More.
Short lived hero from 1977 based in the 1950s. Cover for issue #35 was by Jack Kirby, issues #36 & 37 were by Gil Kane
THE GREEN HORNET – THE WORLD’S FAVORITE SUPER-HERO!
CRUSH – THE WORLD’S FAVORITE FAMILY OF SOFT DRINKS!
During the 30’s and 40’s people were tuned in to “The Adventures of the Green Hornet” and delightfully refreshing Orange CRUSH with a taste that’s all its own. Familiar displays and ads like these made Orange CRUSH the world’s favorite fruit-flavored drinks. Sponsoring “The Adventures of the Green Hornet” furthered the popularity of these great taste treats. still enjoyed by people all over the world.
For his third solo outing, Cooper ditched the guillotines and ghouls for a fedora and a revolver. Alice portrays “Maurice Escargot,” a streetwise detective. “This guy’s a real gum chew. He tries to be cool all the time, but keeps getting his fingers stuck in machine gun barrels.”
Just posting this fantastic cover
Alice Cooper’s Greatest Hits gate-fold cover art was designed by Ernie Cefalu and features a sepia-toned Drew Struzan illustration consisting of the Alice Cooper band and various movie stars of the silver screen from the 1920s & 1930s, gathered in front of “Big Al’s” garage.
Seen from left to right: Humphrey Bogart, Robert Taylor, Clark Gable, Edward G. Robinson, William Powell, Jean Harlow, Peter Lorre, St. Valentine’s Day Massacre scene (top), Alice Cooper band members (Glen Buxton, Dennis Dunaway, Alice Cooper, Michael Bruce, Neal Smith), Groucho Marx