Alvin C. Hollingsworth (February 25, 1928 – July 14, 2000),[1][2] whose pseudonyms included Alvin Holly,[1] was an American painter, educator, and one of the first Black artists in comic books.
Circa 1941, he began illustrating for crime comics.[1] Since it was not standard practice during this era for comic-book credits to be given routinely, comprehensive credits are difficult to ascertain; Hollingsworth's first confirmed comic-book work is the signed, four-page war comics story "Robot Plane" in Aviation Press' Contact Comics #5 (cover-dated March 1945), which he both penciled and inked.[5] Through the remainder of the 1940s, he confirmably drew for Holyoke's Captain Aero Comics (as Al Hollingsworth),[6] and Fiction House's Wings Comics, where he did the feature "Suicide Smith" at least sporadically from 1946 to 1950. He is tentatively identified under the initials "A. H." as an artist on the feature "Captain Power" in Novack Publishing's Great Comics in 1945.[5]
In the following decade, credited as Alvin Hollingsworth or A. C. Hollingsworth, he drew for a number of publishers and series, including Avon Comics' The Mask of Dr. Fu Manchu; Premier Magazines' Police Against Crime; Ribage's romance comicYouthful Romances; and such horror comics as Master Comics' Dark Mysteries and Trojan Magazine's Beware.[5] As Al Hollingsworth, he drew at least one story each for Atlas Comics, Premier Magazines, and Lev Gleason Publications.[6] One standard source credits him, without specification, as an artist on stories for Fox Comics (the feature "Numa" in Rulah, Jungle Goddess, and "Bronze Man' in Blue Beetle) and on war stories for the publisher Spotlight.[1]
Historian Shaun Clancy, citing Fawcett Comics writer-editor Roy Ald as his source, identified Hollingsworth as an artist on Fawcett's Negro Romance #2 (Aug. 1950).[7]
Hollingsworth graduated from City College of New York in 1956, Phi Beta Kappa, as a fine arts major, and earned his master's degree there in 1959.[4][8] In the mid-1950s, while still a student, he worked on newspaper comic strips including Kandy (1954-1955)[9] from the Smith-Mann Syndicate, as well as Scorchy Smith (1953-1954)[9] and, with George Shedd, Marlin Keel (1953-1954).[9]
Hollingsworth was married to wife Marjorie, and had children Kim, Raymond, Stephen, Kevin, Monique, Denise and Jeanette.[15] He was living in New York's Westchester County at the time of his death on July 14, 2000, at age 72.[2]
Hollingsworth, A. C. I'd Like the Goo-Gen-Heim: writer-illustrator, children's book (1970; reprinted Guggenheim Foundation, 2009)[17]
Hollingsworth, Alvin C. (illustrator), with Arnold Adoff (compiler), Black Out Loud: an anthology of modern poems by Black Americans (Atheneum, 1970),[18] Atheneum, ISBN978-0027001006
^"Hollingswoth, Alvin C."Harvey B. Gantt Center for African-American Arts+Culture. Levine Center for the Arts. Retrieved 24 December 2023.
^ abcHoltz, Allan (2012). American Newspaper Comics: An Encyclopedic Reference Guide. Ann Arbor: The University of Michigan Press. pp. 222, 254, 343–344. ISBN9780472117567.
^Hollingsworth (illustrator), Alvin C. (1970). Adoff, Arnold (ed.). Black Out Loud: an anthology of modern poems by Black Americans. New York: Atheneum. ISBN978-0027001006.