After college, McLaughlin, an avid baseball player, went to work for the brake manufacturer Raybestos, where he played for its internationally ranked fast-pitch softball team.[5] After a year there, he was drafted into the U. S. Army, then returned to civilian life as a technical illustrator for Sikorsky Aircraft.[5]
McLaughlin entered the comic book industry in the early 1960s. A college friend recommended him to editor Pat Masulli at Charlton Comics in Derby, Connecticut, who hired McLaughlin as his assistant. "There were no art directors or assistant editors or any other job titles", McLaughlin said in a 2000 interview.[5] "[I did] everything from proofreading to art corrections, lettering titles for [editor] Ernie Hart's books, traffic managing, liaison with the Comics Code, and anything else, including cleaning the storeroom".[5] He did occasional, uncredited inking on late comic books, including on "a couple" of stories by Steve Ditko.[6]
Creator credits were not routinely given in comics during this era, and McLaughlin's earliest known probable credit is inkingpencilerDick Giordano on the cover of, and a seven-page story in, Charlton's Battlefield Action #39 (Dec. 1961).[7] McLaughlin's first confirmed credit is full pencil and ink art on the five-page story "And the Light Shall Come" in the same publisher's Reptisaurus #8 (Dec. 1962).[7]
Giordano later became Charlton's editor after, McLaughlin said, he himself had turned down the job: "[Giordano] was a freelancer at the time, and then he hired me to work with him after I got through working at Charlton 9 to 5, and I'd go over to his studio, and then later on, we kind of swapped jobs, because there was a change at Charlton, and I think Pat [Masulli] was moving up, and they offered me his job. I opted to stay freelance and suggested Dick for the job. He became editor and I took over the studio," which artist Jon D'Agostino and writer Joe Gill would soon join.[5]
That character, Judomaster, debuted in Special War Series #4 (Nov. 1965), the final issue of that series, and continued in his own series, beginning with Judomaster #89 (June 1966), taking over the numbering of the defunct Western series Gunmaster. The series, which McLaughlin almost immediately began scripting as well, starred an American soldier in the South Pacific during World War II, who, after saving a native island girl from a Japanese sniper, was taught martial arts by her grateful grandfather. He acquired a costume based on the Japanese military flag, and, in issue #93 (Feb. 1967), a sidekick, Tiger. The series ended at #98 (Dec. 1967), and the character was later purchased by DC Comics in 1983, during Charlton's final years.[7][8]
Marvel and DC
Following McLaughlin's final Charlton work, penciling the cover and both penciling and inking the seven-page story "The Living Legend" in the comic strip spin-off comic book The Phantom #30 (Feb. 1969), McLaughlin began to freelance. After a smattering of work that including inking an eight-page teen humor story in DC Comics' Debbi's Dates #10 (Nov. 1970) and a seven-page story in Warren Publishing's black-and-white horror-comics magazine Eerie #34 (July 1971), McLaughlin circa 1971 began assisting comic-strip artist Stan Drake on the naturalisticsoap-opera strip The Heart of Juliet Jones.[9] McLaughlin, at Giordano's suggestion, had shown samples of his work to the Westport, Connecticut-based Drake, who hired him to succeed assistant Tex Blaisdell, who had left to draw Little Orphan Annie. "I would pencil and ink just about everything that wasn't a main figure," McLaughlin said.[4]
In the 1980s McLaughlin was regular inker on penciler Carmine Infantino's The Flash, Gene Colan's Wonder Woman, and Dan Jurgens' Green Arrow, among other assignments. He also inked Steve Ditko on the first two issues of A.C.E. Comics' short-lived series What Is...The Face? (Dec. 1986 and April 1987), and for the same company wrote, co-penciled and co-inked the single issue of Big Edsel Band (Sept. 1987), starring the modern-day retro-1950s band.[7][10] During the following decade, while continuing to draw for DC, McLaughlin expanded to Acclaim Comics and Broadway Comics. His last known comics work is Broadway's Fatale #6 (Oct. 1996), inking J. G. Jones.[7]
McLaughlin practiced judo from ages 18 to 50, initially studying at Joe Costa's Academy of Judo.[18] He married at age 30, in 1965, living then in Derby, Connecticut, and working in a studio in nearby Ansonia before moving back to his home town of Stratford.[3] As of 2000, he had two grown children: daughter Erin and son Terry.[5] His brother James’ daughter, Anne McLaughlin, is also a professional artist.[19]
^Leiffer, Paul; Ware, Hames, eds. "McLaughlin, Frank". Who's Who of American Comic Strip Producers at The Comic Strip Project. Archived from the original on June 9, 2011. Retrieved December 20, 2010. {{cite web}}: |first2= has generic name (help)CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
^ ab"About Me". Frank McLaughlin (official site). Archived from the original on July 11, 2011.
^Leiffer, Ware. "Credit Updates 2 (Additions): Nancy". The Comic Strip Project. Archived from the original on November 17, 2016. Retrieved December 20, 2010.
^Weizel, Richard (January 25, 2009). "It's a bird, it's a plane, it's a superhero artist". Manchester, Connecticut: Journal Inquirer. Archived from the original on March 26, 2016. During the decades to follow, McLaughlin also drew for such comic strips as Brenda Starr,Nancy, and The World's Greatest Superheroes.