![]() ![]() In 1973 Andru got his proper debut on Amazing Spider-Man, doing what turned into a five-year run on the title including penciling the debut of the Punisher. But Marvel saw something in Andru, and put him to work doing work for Marvel Feature and Marvel Team-Up, the latter of which featured Spider-Man in many of its stories. Romita recovered sooner than expected, and Andru’s Marvel debut was shifted over to Marvel Super-Heroes #14. It came in 1968 when he was brought in at the last minute to do a fill-in issue of Amazing Spider-Man for John Romita Sr., who had injured his wrist. Trained by Burne Hogarth, Andru had a long career penciling newspaper strips and across town at DC before he made his Marvel debut. ![]() Although his name may not have the glitz and glamour that Steve Ditko, Mark Bagley, or Todd McFarlane have accumulated, the first-generation Russian-American Ross Andru is for many people the definitive Spider-Man artist of their youth. ![]()
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