Larry Nadle

[4] Todd Klein has noted that Nadle's career in comics began "around 1943-44", as an editor for All-American Publications.

[8] Nadle also wrote scripts for radio and television,[9] and (under the joint pseudonym "Bob Lawrence", which he shared with cartoonist Bob Oksner) produced the comic strip version of the situation comedy I Love Lucy.

[10] As well, he served as Robert Lewis May's ghost writer on the Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer comic strip,[1] and created the character "Yankee Doodle Dandy" (although, due to Nadle's sudden death, the character went unpublished until Grant Morrison repurposed him in 1992).

[14] Craig Shutt has noted that Nadle participated in the practice of "redo(ing) stories", whereby a comic would "replicate major plot points or complete storylines [of earlier comics], often using the same scenes if not the exact pacing".

[15] As editor unless otherwise noted: Nadle's brother was cartoonist Martin Naydel, perhaps best known as the creator of the Jumble.

Larry Nadle in the 1950s