Sid Jacobson, R.I.P.

Sid Jacobson died last Saturday at the age of 92 in a hospice in Redwood City, California. He had a long, fascinating career as a writer and editor of comic books and, for a time, writing popular songs. Songs that Sid wrote were recorded by, among others, Frankie Avalon, Johnny Mathis and Dion and the Belmonts.

Sid was born in Brooklyn and attended Abraham Lincoln High School, followed by New York University. A brief career in journalism led to a wide array of writing jobs and he connected with Harvey Comics in the early fifties. Several online sources say he wrote Casper the Friendly Ghost, Little Lotta and Little Dot in 1950 but Harvey didn't begin publishing Casper until 1952 and Little Lotta until 1953. However and whenever he started there, Sid quickly moved into the job of assistant editor and then editor, working — sometimes on a part-time basis — for Harvey until the company ceased publication in 1982.

During all that time, he wrote for and served as editor for all kinds of comics but mainly Casper, Richie Rich, Sad Sack and other titles affiliated with those three or similar in style. He forged a close friendship with one of Harvey's best artists, Ernie Colón, and the two of them would later collaborate on a series of graphic novels, mostly based on true events in the news.

After '82, the story of Harvey Comics got especially complicated with the firm and its various assets being sold and re-sold with publication (mostly reprints) starting and stopping. Between 1984 and 1988, Sid edited and wrote for Star Comics, an imprint of Marvel Comics aimed at a younger audience that employed many of the longtime Harvey Comics artists like Warren Kremer and Howie Post. Some of the comics like Royal Roy and Wally the Wizard even looked a lot like Harvey Comics and there was at least one lawsuit which ended when Star Comics ended. Later, when the then-current owner of Harvey resumed publishing new stories, mostly of Hanna-Barbera properties, Sid returned as editor until that line collapsed.

Mostly in later years, Sid worked with Ernie Colón on the aforementioned graphic novels which included The 9/11 Report: A Graphic Adaptation, After 9/11: America's War on Terror, A Graphic Biography: Che, Anne Frank: The Anne Frank House Authorized Graphic Biography and The Torture Report.  Some of these, I thought, were outstanding.

I worked with Sid a few times and found him genial and easy to get along with.  Mostly, I knew him from Comic-Con where he often appeared on panels and delighted audiences with his tales of working in comics for an awful long time.  I had not spoken to him in twenty-or-so years but I'm reasonably sure that as long as he was able, he was writing and trying to sell something somewhere.