Mitchell Hooks
Artist from the United States

Mitchell Hooks

The basics
Quick facts
Intro
Artist from the United States
Gender:
Male
Work field:
Birth:
2 April 1923
Death:
17 March 2013
Star sign:
Biography menu
Menu

Jump to

Introduction Biography Awards
The details
Biography

Introduction

Peggy Mann's first novel, A Room in Paris (Doubleday, 1955) was adapted for The Philco Television Playhouse (August 7, 1955), and a few months later, the Popular Library paperback featured this cover by Mitchell Hooks.

Mitchell Hooks (1923 – March 2013)was an American artist and illustrator known for his artwork for paperback books and magazines.

Biography

Born in Detroit, Michigan, Hooks served with the U.S. military, including occupation duty in Germany, then began his freelance illustration career in New York City. He painted paperback covers for Avon, Bantam Books, Dell Books, Fawcett Publications and others, and illustrated for magazines including Cosmopolitan, The Saturday Evening Post, The Ladies' Home Journal, Redbook, McCall's, and Woman's Day. He illustrated romance novels, science fiction and crime fiction, such as Ross Macdonald's Lew Archer, Peter Corris's Cliff Hardy and B.B. Johnston's Superspade series.

Hooks illustrated the 36-page booklet How to Respect and Display Our Flag for the U.S. Marine Corps. He also designed film posters, including the first James Bond movie,Dr. No — for which he painted"the iconic image of Sean Connery as Bond" — and The Face of Fu Manchu.

In later years he also illustrated hardcover books for The Franklin Library, Reader's Digest Books and Coronado Publishers, and did advertising art.

Hooks was 89 when he died.

Awards

In 1999, he was inducted into the Society of Illustrators Hall of Fame.