
OUR MAN MOY
The Archie Legion
owes its fan nickname as much to the simpler tone of its rebooted
stories as the cartoonish, seemingly manga-inspired artwork of Jeffrey
Moy. Some fans loathed the style, but more than enough loved it
to help sustain the title more than five years after the Zero Hour
restart
and Jeff practically drew every one of those issues.
But he wasn't just a Legion artist. Jeff
was also a big Legion fan from a young age, and together with editor
KC Carlson and inker Cory (WC) Carani, helped maintain fan interest
in the title by constantly plugging the book at conventions and
via forums, offering Legion prints, posters, tee-shirts and stickers,
and generally spreading the good word every chance he got. Arguably,
he did more to promote the book than any other Legion penciller.
This blog entry pays tribute to Jeff's work.
Jeff got his big break when inker Karl
Story asked him if he would like to try out for the LEGIONNAIRES
book, which Karl and penciller Chris Sprouse were about to depart
from. To get the green light for the assignment, Jeff had to provide
some samples to Carlson for approval.

Jeff
described the combination of Brainy and Andromeda as "Beauty,
brawn and brains".
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A sample of Jeff's
work shown to KC Carlson.
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Jeff
was given the green light for the fill-in issue (LEGIONNAIRES
15), and a few other Legion stories after that. Eventually
he impressed enough to be chosen as the regular penciller for the
rebooted LEGIONNAIRES title.
Over the next few years, Jeff contributed much
to the overall look of the Legion, with his designs, concepts and
imagination. Not many people know he created XS' symbol .. nor that
he designed her features on actress Halle Berry.
He
also came up with the looks for the likes of Magno, Sneckie, Karate
Kid, Spider-Girl, Inferno, Lori Morning, Morlo, the
Golden Age Legionnaires, and different uniforms for male
and female Science Police officers. With Lee Moder, he helped develop
Kinetix, Monstress, and the Emerald Legion. Jeff cleverly inserted
an "M" over a starfield for M'Onel's costume, which he
felt could also be interpreted as a "V" for Valor, his
previous codename.
A trademark of Jeff's drawings was the use of
tongues on character faces. As Jeff explains: "They're fun
and an easy way to give the characters a little more personality."
"Some fans loved them and kept a list of
appearances. Others found it another reason to dislike my art,"
he said. "KC even tried to dissuade me from using them, but
I like to think he came around to my side."
In a little homage to the quirky fetish, Tom
Peyer later came up with a French-speaking Legion reject named Ze
Tongue, who boasted a prehensile tongue with a tip that could change
into the shape of any weapon.
Tongues
a-plenty! From a piece Jeff did for the APA Klordny.

Ze Tongue attacks
Umbra.
Carani and Jeff produced
a series of three Legionnaires prints that they handed
out at conventions or later sold, one each for 1996, 97 and 98,
as a reward for the fans' loyalty and support. The second print
was in fact a rejected tee-shirt design. A different piece was used
for the shirt, officially
released by DC in 1996.
There was to have been a fourth official print,
featuring Legionnaires in their bathing costumes, but the idea was
canned after the book got cancelled. Interestingly, a sketch with
Legionnaire beach boys and bunnies was used on the cover of COMBO
MAGAZINE 30.
But wait, that's not all. Carlson and Jeff next
decided to create a
massive flowchart detailing the relationships connecting
all the Legionnaires, which was done, according to Carlson, as much
for the writers' benefit as well a general promotion.
"I had suggested that DC do a retail version
of the poster, due to the demand, but it was thought that the project
wasn't that commercial enough. (And besides, it seemed like 4000
people had them already). I disagreed, but had no authority in that
area," Carlson said.
Jeff's contribution cannot be underestimated.
He made each individual headshot look unique and distinguishable
from each other. The poster is bigger than the Giffen mega-character
piece, and because of the limited numbers, copies today can fetch
a handsome price.
To complement the poster, a
set of stickers was also issued, but to the general public
and in much greater quantities. These are therefore easier to acquire,
and feature all but three of the headshots from the poster. The
missing ones are Kid Quantum I, Leviathan and Atom'x.
Along the way, Jeff was commissioned to create
pieces for a collectible trading card series named Overpower
3: Universal Forces. Unfortunately, just as the project looked
like getting off the ground, the Overpower owners Fleer Corporation
(principally involved with baseball cards) sold the product to Marvel
Interactive, thereby rendering any DC Comics involvement impossible.
But there's no doubt that Jeff's art for the project looked very
nice.
In 2000,
the National Fluid Milk Processor Promotional Board launched its
well-known "Got Milk" promotion. DC Comics produced a
giveaway comic as part of this program, called ADVENTURES
WITH DC SUPER-HEROES, which was a mixture of comics,
puzzles, and games. A page featuring the Legion was illustrated
by, you guessed it, our man Moy. But to get a copy of the comic,
you had to buy two gallons of milk!
The
uncolored art for the milk giveaway.
This was actually a second version as Jeff was asked to make the
piece look more cartoon-ish.
Jeff's other big passion growing up was Star
Trek, so it must have been a fanboy's dream for him when he was
given the plum assignment of drawing the STAR
TREK/LEGION crossover series for IDW. Published
in 2011, the books reunited Jeff with the Legion more than a decade
after he stopped drawing the group for DC. Once again, Jeff's creative
talents were to the fore, exemplified best by his merging of the
Fatal Five with Star Trek influences.

Alien races from Star Trek make up this Fatal
Five.
These
days, Jeff is still active on the convention circuit, and is often
asked by fans for Legion-inspired commissions. His ubiquitous sketches
and prolific output can be found all over the net and various social
media, and he shows no signs of losing interest in drawing characters
from his favourite comic book title.
Perhaps the final words should go to KC Carlson,
who by chance lived in the same town as Jeff for several years:
"Jeff had exactly the skills I was looking for in a Legion
artist."
"He could draw cute kids. Really cute kids.
That was a really big plus for the book!
"His style was light and open, a plus for
a series that I was deliberately trying to steer away from the grim'n'gritty
style that was overwhelming comics at the time.
"My favourite artistic trait of his was
his ability to come up with great character designs for anything
we threw at him. "Jeff, we need a new costume for Kinetix
and by the way, she now has a tail!" "Jeff, what would
three different Triads look like?" "Jeff, Morlo is one
of the lamest characters in Legion history
can you make him
look cool?" And my personal favourite: "Jeff, we're bringing
back Princess Projectra .. except now she's a snake!!!"
"Jeff had to come up with dozens of wannabe
Legionnaires (see LEGIONNAIRES
43), designs for characters at different ages, out-of-uniform
clothes for the entire cast (many times over), and Jeff's favourite,
stylish swimwear for everybody!
"I was proud to give him his first professional
job at DC. And now I'm one of his biggest fans."
See more of his work here.
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