Monday, November 12, 2018
Thursday, October 25, 2018
Creem of the Crop: Three Marvel articles from the 1970s
A long, long time ago, in a childhood far, far away, it was
not at all common to see magazine articles seriously discussing comic
books. The Batman TV show got a great
deal of attention, but little of that was about the actual comics.
Here are three articles, the first from Creem Magazine, April
1973, the People Magazine January 1979, and then a TV Guide from Sept 2, 1978
After the images of the Creem and People's articles. to make it easier to
read, I typeset the entire article. In the Creem they made a few mistakes and I corrected some spelling, and put in parentheses some
out of place sentences.
The Marvel Age of Comics has its
beginnings with Timely Publications whose Publisher, Martin Goodman, brought
out the first Timely comic magazine, Marvel Comics, in 1939. This first issue
introduced two of the great heroes of all time, The Human Torch and the
Sub-Mariner. The Human Torch was a lousy android, but his tradition lives on in
Johnny Storm, member of Marvel's Fantastic-Four, who came by his powers
legitimately, in a freak rocket accident. That very same Sub-Mariner is still
with us, drawn by his creator, Bill Everett.
In 1940, Timely summoned forth
Captain America to do battle with the Hun. The Captain was the work of Joe
Simon and Jack Kirby; Simon had assisted in the construction of Superman, and
Kirby has left his mark on just about every stage of modern comic activity.
Captain America and his sidekick
Bucky battled the Nazis with ferocity and cunning all through the war, but when
peace came, they were left a little out to lunch. Rolling with the punches, as
was the rest of post-war America, Timely changed its name to Atlas and Goodman
hired a writer and editor named Stan Lee.
Many of Lee's science fiction
epics for the middle and late fifties show the humanistic traits he was later
to apply to the Marvel Age heroes. Artists such as Don Heck and Steve Ditko
illustrated Lee's morality plays about cruel intergalactic governors and their
confrontations with egalitarian space rebels. The style and tone was there;
the wisecracking hero, the sledge-hammer use of irony, but they had not yet
found the perfect characters.
Then, in 1961, Stan Lee brought
out two titles using Jack Kirby's art: Amazing Adventures and The Fantastic
Four. The Marvel Age was born in a spectacular space accident that left its
four passengers, John and Sue Storm, Reed Richards, and Ben Grimm, mutated into
super-heroes. Lee's forte has always been establishing strong characters
through dialogue. On the comic page, no line can seem too outrageous or
clichéd. Somehow, the very medium precludes dramatic excess and a sentence
that would seem offensively melodramatic on stage is reduced through the magic
of comic art to a forceful, natural statement on the comic book page. So Stan
Lee's hopelessly dated dialogue and plot ideas meshed with the Fantastic Four
and the formula was finalized.
The thing that Marvel has always
had going for it, and the others have not, is this outrageousness of character.
Most comic book heroes, until very recently, were pretty bland, one-dimensional
people. Along came Ben "The Thing" Grimm bellowing, "It's
clobberin' time!" followed by the solicitous, square, stern father figure
Reed "Mr. Fantastic" Richards with a word of caution, and both
followed by the hot headed Johnny "Torch" Storm . . . who could
resist?
Marvel has recently moved into
new offices on Madison Avenue. The floor they occupy was not quite finished
when I visited, and Marvel had the only office which looked habitable. The
waiting room was frigid modern, pastel plush furniture and not a hint of the I
comic book source. ,The home ofl Spiderman, Thor and the Fantastic Four might
just as well have been the reception room of an accounting firm. But once you
pass beyond the secretary's pillbox and into the offices and halls beyond, the
walls come alive with the icons of the new age. There are comics everywhere;
pasted to the walls and on the bookshelves. Every room has a commercial
magazine stand stuffed with the latest from Marvel, National, Gold Key, Archie
and even . . . yech! . . . Charlton. They read undergrounds, too.
In a couple of large drafting
rooms, the staff artists, Herb Trimpe (The Hulk), Marie Severin (King Kull),
and John Romita (Spiderman) labor away. The rest of Marvel's considerable production
is handled free-lance. Great artists such as Gene Colan (Daredevil),
contributors for years, work on a freelance basis.
(with fine artists taken off important strips so they can fill in
elsewhere on a?)
Marvel is in the business of
producing 46 titles a month, come blackout or postal breakdown. Mighty Marvel
has much in common with the Ford Motors plant for, in Stan Lee's own words,
"We are a production line. We are committed to so many titles . . . I
think we have a total of 69 now . . . and we have to get those out. Now if
someone gets sick, suppose Herb Trimpe gets sick and can't do the Hulk. Then we
have to pull someone off something else. We take Bill Everett off Sub-Mariner
and have him do Hulk, but then we have to get someone to do Sub-Mariner which
means we have to pull him off something else. It's like the domino theory. If
someone falls behind, we fall behind all over."
The theory of production line
does not sit well with theories of art. The clashes Marvel feels have been
many, better-selling, but esthetically less successful character. A recent,
glaring example of the production line drawbacks has been in the shoddy
coloring and inking of certain issues of Conan the Barbarian, Marvel's artistic
star of late.
Barry Smith's illustrations for
Conan have been without peer and Dan Adkins' inking has been mostly up to the
challenge; but in issue No.19, the latter half of the comic wasn't inked at all
because of "truly fearsome" deadline problems. Without Adkins' crisp,
sensitive inking, Smith's pencils are almost indiscernible, resulting in a
mushy, ink-splotch scenario. Adkins was needed elsewhere and Conan had to
suffer.
Conan, the most detailed comic
Marvel (or anyone) has ever produced, winner of SHAZAM and ACBA awards, is
indicative of all that is good in contemporary straight comics and much that is
bad. In Marvel Editor Roy Thomas, it has a writer who understands and
appreciates Robert E. Howard's prose. Thomas' exquisite adaptations and
consistently imaginative characterizations represent intelligent literary
communication through comics. And 23-year old Smith, easily the most immaculate
craftsman presently working for Marvel, is also devoted to the character and
has helped to plot most of the episodes. Marvel policy is that the artist
decides how best to lay out the story.
When all the penciling is done,
the writer supplies the dialogue which is inked in by the letterer. Then the
rest of the art is inked in. The complicated lay-outs can prove mighty
discouraging to uninitiated readers, so editors tend to discourage tricky
lay-out artists. And a remarkable title like Neal Adams' Dead-man withers and
dies for lack of sales.
Marvel took many chances with
Conan, primarily in the way the material was adopted. Gone was the Wap! Pow!
of the bread and butter comics stuff. Enter Thomas and Smith. When the story
could progress without words, it was allowed to do so in the wordless,
cinematic sequences which Smith has become famous for.
But then trouble started.
Apparently, Lee wanted something easier to follow than Howard adaptations and
he rang in a series of plots by modern fantasy writers, such as Michael
Moorcock and John Jakes. This did nOt sit well with Smith. He wanted more money
and he wanted his original artwork back —that's right, Marvel keeps all
original artwork except for unique cases such as Jim Steranko, who is
responsible for all aspects of his art, from pencilling to inking and coloring.
The upshot of all this is that Conan No.24 might very well be the last complete
Smith adventure.
But think about the Marvel Warehouse
of Original Art! Since there is some disagreement as to whom finished art truly
belongs (the penciller merely pencils, the inker merely inks, the letterer
letters), Marvel prudently settles the question by appropriating all. imagine
the fabled Seven Cities of Cibola, discovered by Scrooge McDuck in 1952, paved
in gold and dripping with jewels! Imagine the ancient Egyptian
super-civilization, Karnopolis, discovered by the X-Men, in 1969!
Stan Lee, wearing a turtle neck
and a luxuriant, salty moustache, leans back on the sofa in his office and
spreads his hands. "Look at it this way, that original art is much like
diamonds and the diamond market. Do you know how many diamonds the big mines
have salted away down in South Africa? If they were to release all those diamonds
at once, their value would be virtually nothing. It's the same with the
original art. This way if a fan gets some piece of original art, he will look
upon it as being much more valuable, much more desirable, then if the art were
everywhere. I think that the art should be hard to get; it should be something
of an adventure."
The present comic book scene is
largely the work of this Stan Lee, Publisher and former Editor of Marvel. It
was Lee who personalized the superhero with his neurotic Spiderman, alias
Peter Parker, an adolescent with more problems than a T.B. ward. While National
slipped into the doldrums, the fascinating personalities at Marvel ventured
into the wilds of New York looking for trouble and always finding it. One of
Superman's greatest powers, until quite recently, was his astounding ability to
bore readers to death. He not only had no sense of humor, but was totally
lacking of any semblance of what might be called political consciousness. He
didn't even know about pollution and ecology.
Meanwhile, Marvel's
orange-skinned Thing and his short-tempered partner the Torch were enmeshed in
a serio‑comic battle that perpetually threatened to rend the Fantastic Four
asunder. Peter Parker was stuck for rent. It took time for the ol' Caped Crusader
to catch on, but he eventually did, and National went to town with a string of
committed, liberal super-heroes whose sense of collective guilt would make a
landlord weep. Their best was Green Lantern and his emerald partner, Green
Arrow. Together, the intrepid, slightly inept duo confronted slumlords,
pollution, and over-population.
"They're much more into
relevancy than we are," says Lee. "We're not selling relevancy, we're
selling fairy tales for adults. If a little relevance happens to fit into the
story, or if we feel we have something to say that will contribute to the
story, that's fine. But National puts it up front every story. It's like
they're saying, 'Hey, look how relevant we are!' "
Smilin' Stan is about six foot
three, with pleasant, tired eyes, wavy grey/ brown hair, and that expressive
moustache which is all that remains of the famous Stan Lee beard. Stan's own
stories have dragged Thor on an intergalactic odyssey ending in a struggle
with Ego, the Living Planet. He has stacked Reed Richards up against the
nefarious Doc Doom, a fiend so evil that he once blew up an entire village of
"peasants" to test a new bomb. Along with Jack Kirby, Stan created an
increasingly heavy string of villains that threatened to tear the comic book
world apart. Lee had already invented Galactus, an immense, soulless creature
who roamed the cosmos in search of supper. Galactus would tuck in his bib and
dispassionately proclaim, "I eat to live. I am not good, I am not bad. I
eat because I must." Then he would eat a world. Galactus was ever on the
verge of scarfing down Earth but somehow Thor or the Silver Surfer always managed
to dissuade him.
Like with the Beatles, when Kirby
and Lee parted company both of them were left artistically the poorer. Lee's
recent scripts for Spiderman tend to be corny and preaching, and Kirby's
one-man show at National looks forced and lacks details.
But then, Stan Lee is corny. He
loves to think up practical jokes for Marvel's current Monster Madness, a
collection of standard horror movie stills with corny captions. He's a real
Nice Guy, the kind of fella who ought to lead a Boy Scout troop. Swear words do
not issue from his mouth and it is somehow reassuring to hear him add a
resounding "By Heck!" to the conversation. He acts like Sgt. Fury of
the Howling Commandos (protagonist of Marvel's "war comic for people who
hate war").
On the wall of Stan's office is a
print by Jim Steranko, one of Marvel's premier artists and author of the brilliant
History of Comics. It's a silk screen photo-process depicting Smilin' Stan with
a thought balloon over his head enclosing the entire pantheon of Marvel heroes and
villains. When Stan Lee talks, and speaks of Marvel's many accomplishments, he
doesn't have to say, "And then I did this . ." because when he gives
credit to Marvel, he gives credit to himself.
"Now, as Publisher, I find
that I have the opportunity to do all the things I've wanted to do for so long.
I like to think we did something new with Conan and King Kull. We have several
projects planned, some aren't even comics. New ideas . . . new types of
publishing . . . new types of books . . . I think you're going to find in the
next year or so that Marvel is going to come out with a lot of things that will
take people by surprise. Some will be good, some may even be disappointing,
although I hope not . . ."
Exit Sgt. Fury, enter J. Jonah
Jameson, Publisher and Editor of the Daily Bugle in Spiderman. Jameson is the
arrogant, but basically right- principled publisher for whom Peter "Spidey"
Parker works as a free-lance photographer. J. Jonah bears many Lee trademarks:
he's gruff, he's tough, he's a real cream-puff. He shoots from the hip and
misses a lot.
Stan goes on: "We have no
intention of becoming very sexy or becoming very violent. We're not into that,
what we hope . ."
Whoops, excuse me Stan, but there
does seem to be an awful lot of, uh, violence in certain of your titles, what
with the bodies being tossed around, the excessive gunplay, and, in the
instance of Conan, scarlet trickles of blood . . .
"I don't even consider what
we show violence. I know some people will consider them violent, but other
people will say, 'My God, you're not going to call a Tom and Jerry cartoon
violent,' but it is violent . . . To me, violence is a threat of danger that
scares people, or that people relate to and it affects them. I don't consider
violence in the average animated cartoon violent; I consider it silly, fantastic
action. I think when a reader reads about Thor fighting Ego or something, I
don't think the reader considers that violent. You get a story about somebody
being mugged in the street and that's violence. I mean somebody is really
being killed! It's a flesh and blood person . . . that's the real tragedy of
the world today."
One piece of quasi-violence that
people could relate to was a fairly recent edition of Spiderman that involved
Spidey's friend and roommate Harry Osborn being hooked on drugs. The drugs were
pills, vaguely defined. They could have been hallucinogens, downs, or speed,
but, whichever, they put poor Harry in drug heaven. The Comics Code Authority
refused to bestow the Good Housekeeping seal of approval on the cover of the
magazine because its subject matter violated section B of the code. I asked
Stan about this particular Spiderman story, a tale that was destined to upset
the staid code and contribute greatly towards its liberalization.
"You know, I was against the
use of drugs in that story. I wasn't at all sure that this was the proper way
to treat the story, but Gerry (Conway) managed to convince me that it should be
included. It was just a sub-plot anyway."
Then National ventured forth with
their Green Lantern/Green Arrow smack epic, which portrayed Arrow's ward Speedy
as a junkie and even showed a few needles and an overdose death in psychedelic
black. It is doubtful as to whether National could have gotten away with it if
it weren't for Marvel's precedent-breaking Spider-man.
So where does Marvel go from
here? That's just what Marvel is wondering. They have grown into a giant, but
their problems have grown with them. The entire future of the comic magazine is
in doubt. Plainly, the Comics Code Authority has outlived its usefulness and
comic readers have outlived the code. The publishing world in general is hardly
stable, as folded operations from Life to Tower Comics attest, but the future
of comics is particularly foggy. Within the past five years, the price of the
comic magazine has fluctuated from 15 cents to 20 to 25 and to 20 again and
rumors in the wind say that the Feds are forcing them back down to 15.
One thing is certain: there has
been a tremendous flowering of above-ground comic talent in recent years, and
it has been brought about largely through the efforts of Marvel. Not since the
halcyon days of EC Comics have so many talented illustrators thrown themselves
into the graphic story-telling arts. Since the early sixties, Marvel has had at
least one spectacular showcase, from Steve Ditko's Spiderman to Jim Steranko's
Nick Fury to Barry Smith's Conan.
But then again, the art often
seems secondary to the commercial aspects, with those vulgar ads breaking up
the story more and more frequently every year; the stories themselves have become
shorter, and numerous Cassandras are predicting the death of comics. It would
be a shame to lose them now that they're just beginning to realize their
unbounded potential.
Heroes and villains
Spider-Man
He's not just your average
radiation-infected geek or castaway alien, for Peter Parker, Spidey's alter
ego, is closer to the heart of the average Marvel fan than any other hero
going. Peter got his start some years back when, as a scientifically talented
teen, he was bitten by a spider that had gotten a dose of radiation, and that's
when the trouble started ...
The real appeal here is probably
not so much Spider-Man as Peter himself, and the impossible situations he gets
into. After some years as a social nonentity and tormented super-hero (as a
wall-crawler, he can scurry along the sides of tall buildings until alerted by
his "spider-sense" that danger is near, at which point he checks his
cartridges of sticky, super-powerful "web-fluid"), Peter moved out of
his frail old aunt's home and into an apartment. He got a motorcycle — albeit a
small one —continued his success as a science whiz in college, and even got
himself an old lady. Gwen is the dazzling lady in question and she knows
nothing of Peter's crypto-arachnoid activities, but bears with his habit of
disappearing into the woodwork (to change into costume, natch) whenever trouble
looms. Pete's most convenient excuse is that he was off taking hot action shots
for J. Jonah Jameson, the tyrannical, Spider-Man hating newspaper publisher who
also happens to be Peter's boss.
For Peter Parker, all this
inevitably leads to anxiety and self-doubt. Lately, it's gotten so bad that the
celebrated Spidey has gotten an ulcer, which is in constant danger of flaring
up while he battles Doc Ock, the Kingpin, Kraven, Puppet-Master, or his own
fear of the existential void.
Like other Marvel heroes, Petey
has grown up some, gotten older and wiser, but still moves in the same ambiance
as the perpetual teenager with the perpetual face full of zits, facing the
perpetual classroom full of snide punks who seem to have limitless cool.
Sample: After drinking a weird potion he concocts to cure him of his socially
untenable spider-powers, Peter discovers that he has sprouted four more arms
and become the complete spider. The .telephone rings. The caller is luscious
Gwen:
S-M: Huh? Now who the devil's
that? Whoa, Mr. P ... that way lies the ever-lovin' paranoid ward. After all,
nobody but you knows about your "delicate condition."
Gwen: Peter? I was hoping I'd
corner you at home. Now, don't say a word . . . Just settle back and listen.
This is your lucky night, man o' mine. In honor of Betty Friedan's birthday,
I've decided to play liberated woman and treat you to the r-rated flick of your
choice. I should warn you, I've already seen Love Story . . . but I've got
enough Kleenex left to sit through it again. Or we could take in "I Am
Curious (Yellow)." You could cover my eyes during the spicy parts.
S-M: “Gwendy I ...”
What else could the poor boy say?
Six arms or not, there's lots here for everybody to identify with.
The Fantastic Four
One of the most durable
super-hero teams of the Marvel lineup, the Fantastic Four always manage to
combine their talents to escape from the tightest clutches and schemes of a
variety of super-villains. None of the FF tries to hide their identity, and
they run an up-front research lab on the top floor of the Baxter Building in
New York. Their leader is Reed Richards, Mr. Fantastic, who has the uncanny
ability to stretch any part of his body a considerable distance. A handy talent
when it comes to tying up baddies without rope, turning into a parachute when
thrown from incredible heights and catching high flies. Mr. Fantastic is also
the husband of the lone woman in the group, Sue. Besides having the power to
make herself invisible, Mrs. Richards has a certain telekinetic weirdness that
lets her move objects without touching them and she can set up powerful mental
force fields to resist the aggressions of ungentlemanly heavies. Sue's brother,
Johnny, is the junior member of the group. When he cries "Flame On!",
his body is covered with a sheet of flame which he can throw as fireballs,
propel himself through the air, or in its most devastating form, use to
produce a super-nova. Ben Grimm is the fourth member of the group and, though
he be blessed with the strength of at least a hundred men, his skin looks like
it is made from jagged chunks of orange concrete.
Ben, or "the ever-lovin'
blue-eyed Thing," as he is affectionately known, helps make the FF what
may be the best team of super-heroes Marvel has to offer. He's gruff,
impetuous, ugly, and always ready for a fight; and if not a fight, at least a
spirited squabble with Johnny. Their "squabbles" sometimes result in
the near-destruction of the Baxter Building as Reed's totally impossible
inventions get utterly smashed and the landlord runs up to threaten eviction
only to be faced down by the untouchable Thing. The Thing, you can be sure, has
little patience with threats.
Dr. Doom
In the world of Marvel, villains,
almost by definition, are uninteresting people. One may be an ex-gangster
disfigured by Gamma radiation but also given strange powers by it. Added to his
normal criminal tendencies, one might find a hefty dose of Gamma-induced megalomania
and presto! we have a potential universal tyrant for some hero to thwart.
The evil plan might be the construction
of hydraulic lifts under every city of the world. Sink every city into the
earth for a million mindless sub-terraneans to control, or suspend it in the
clouds at the mercy of bird-men. Either way, the baddy can proclaim himself
world ruler and get down to the heavy work of rapine and pillage. The villain's
only singular quality is his plan, and no matter how many times he gets his ass
kicked, he'll somehow escape and be back with another plan. The villain is the
same single-minded paranoid schiz when he returns, but this time he wants to
drain all the oceans in the world and send them flying off into outer space.
Doctor Doom is a villain who
escapes the shallowness of many of his cohorts in evil. Doom, from behind his
thick body armor, rules the mysterious European country of Latveria. There, he
plots and plans, governs his army, develops dangerous weapons and prepares for
world domination. Doom is most often the nemesis of the Fantastic Four and his
powers are sometimes their equal, but his vanity or submerged sense of humanity
always results in his speedy retreat to Latveria.
Doom is a large villain.
He seldom gets stalled by petty animosities and avoids mayhem if it doesn't
work toward his ultimate goal. He also is not immune to self-doubt, but rest
assured, there's no doubt as to whose side he's on.
Captain America
Captain America is a living
anachronism, as he continually reminds himself. Cap became a semi-superman
back during World War II when American scientists developed a way of
producing men who would be perfect soldiers. Cap, however, was the only
graduate before the whole thing went bust.
Sometime near the end of the war,
Cap's right hand man, Bucky, got totaled in close fighting with the sneering
Nazis, when he rode one of Der Fuehrer's rockets to destruction. Not long
after, Cap somehow was frozen in an iceberg, and it was only a few years ago
that he was discovered and thawed out. Needless to say, he had to cope with a
dose of culture shock. He's still coping, and still tormented by guilt about
his faithful sidekick's fiery demise.
Captain America, with his
indestructible red, white and blue shield and matching costume (with little
white wings above the ears) is indeed from another era; one that smacks of
militarism and white America right or wrong, even more than our own age.
Trusty Marvel, however, has seen to this and made Cap something of a liberal.
His ideals are equality and individualism, and the idea of cultural diversity
seems to sit well with him. And just to prove it, he pals around with a black
social worker from Harlem, who has his own secret identity as the Falcon.
Captain America may be something
of a relic and super-hero cum liberal to boot, but he's also a flashy,
indispensable aid when it comes to battling the forces of immoderation.
Important Villains
Captain America is not without favorite
villains of his own. The ghastly, scarlet head of the Red Skull is another
holdover from the 40's who seems to have survived the ravages of time as well
as Cap himself. There was once a suggestion that the Red Skull, who got his
start as a dedicated, remorseless Nazi, had his identity pirated by a Commie
who had the same ideals of world domination as the original Red Skull. Whether
this was just a flight of Cold War paranoia or whether Red is just another high
technology kraut has yet to be determined.
Hydra is another nefarious
organization to be reckoned with. Hydra has a stupendous technology of its own
and Cap is not above teaming with Nick Fury of S.H.I.E.L.D. to deal with the
threat of the Head Hydra's numerous minions.
Hulk
The Hulk definitely veers toward
the anti-hero side of the Marvel lineup. Originally a rather spindly looking
physicist named Bruce Banner, Hulk is often described as "the
green-skinned gargoyle." Mr. Banner, after suffering a dose of radiation
in his lab, turned into a dim-witted, tousle-headed green monster who wants
nothing more than to be left alone and perhaps enjoy himself with a friend or
two.
It seems, however, that the Army,
under the command of General "Thunderbolt" Ross is not too happy
having a creature as powerful as the Hulk roaming around. Consequently,
"Project Greenskin" is always trying to nail the poor guy down. Faced
with all this antagonism, Hulk, who happens to, be the most powerful creature
on earth, is not above a little aggression of his own. And, as Hulk says,
nothing can hurt him because the madder they make him, the stronger he gets. He
even accommodates . contradictions of the sort that let us see him cast adrift
in space without an air supply, and then see him later, completely, if
temporarily, subdued by a new tranquilizing gas' that the CBW guys have cooked
up.
Hulk is a paradoxical creature
with some of the qualities of Frankenstein's monster. He exists in a basically
hostile environment, lacks the brains to deal with it, and is given to childish
excess. When he is particularly relaxed, the Hulk turns back into Bruce Banner,
who puts his head in his hands and wonders just what in hell is going on. The
love interest enters here, for Banner is enamored of General Ross's fair
daughter and it seems that whenever he gets it together to do something about
improving his love life, poof! he turns back into the Hulk and heads out to the
desert for some peace and quiet.
Dr. Strange
The venerable Dr. Strange of the
East Village moves out of the mainstream of Marvel heroes and villains. Strange
is "master of the mystic arts" and is unfailingly guided toward the
right incantation or insight of the mysterious amulet he wears around his neck
— the "all-seeing eye of Agamotto."
Dr. Strange moves in odd circles.
His battles against evil are sometimes carried out in uncharted dimensions that
give full moon signals his lycanthropic transformation, and inbetween full
moons he searches out mystic tomes for the cure to his toothy problem.
Naturally, he encounters a full share of villains on the way.
The other mags, like Crypt of Shadows,
are basically mortality plays. The man-hating vamp is lured by her latest love
interest to a witch's feast, whereupon the man is revealed as Satan and the
woman becomes a tortured, immortal witch forever. The blind man, constantly
made fun of by the kids in the park, saves the earth from an alien horror who
frightens all the earthlings into submission with his awesome visage. The blind
man, of course, only has to act like he can see and the frustrated alien leaves
the earth in fear of human powers of resistance. Like most titles in Marvel
world, the wicked are crushed or damned, and the meek vindicated.
Terry Bynes
From Beyond The Grave:
Spiderman Made Flesh
Spiderman made his first grope toward
appearance in flesh with the issuance of a record album. From Beyond the
Grave, the first in a projected series of "Rockomics" (put out by
Buddah Records and Marvel) is a perfect introduction to both Marvel and the
Web-slinger for the semi-, post- and illiterate few who don't know already. It
chronicles Spidey's acquisition of Spidey power (from an insect — er, arachnid
bite) the death of his uncle (more precisely, Peter Parker's uncle) and his
(Spiderman/Peter Parker, it doesn't make any difference because they're the
same by that time) alienation from both overground society and the criminal
underbelly.
It's not quite what Jan &
Dean had in mind with their ingenious Batman album, since it's mostly played
straight (well, almost straight) but From Beyond the Grave is a whole lot like
the Batman TV show. (Which we loved, even if you didn't.) The music is updated,
but still a little on the cornball side of heavy; the dialogue is straight
comic-book stuff and you can almost see the "Screech" and
"Thwip!" bursts (full color) on the screen. It's great, like the
return of a radio serial. Airplay being the reason, we suppose, that the album
is divided into 5 cuts per side. A perfect ten day serial.
Future issuances from Buddah/Marvel
Rockomics could be great. Who wouldn't be thrilled to hear the Hulk shout
"IT'S CLOBBERIN' TIME!" from a pair of Voice of Theaters at full
volume? And there are all kinds of interesting possibilities for Marvel music
too. How about Pink Floyd scoring Doctor Strange? Or the Beatles singing on an
album by the Fantastic Four? Or even, the remotest of fantasies being fully
permissible in the Rockomics world, the Beach Boys and Black Sabbath having a
battle of the bands while The Silver Surfer and Doc Doom fight it out in outer
space?
Dave Marsh
TV Guide, 1978
People Magazine, 1979
At two minutes past midnight, the plot thickens. In his dark
bedroom, Stan Lee —publisher and creative director of Marvel Comics—clicks on
the miniature tape recorder beneath his pillow. Dictating in mumbled phrases,
he spins a web of adventures. He has hit on the idea of having "the
Incredible Hulk meet Spider-Man in the greatest power trip in the history of
comic books!" Lee switches off the tape. "Why is it that I always
come up with the most brilliant plots just when I'm about to fall asleep?"
The next morning at 6:30 he bounds out of bed in a single
leap, plugs in for a shave and then brushes his teeth. "Half the time I
brush without Crest," he claims. "I will not be the prisoner of
American advertising!" Ten minutes later he is dressed. "I do not
believe in bathrobes," Lee says firmly. "It's the kind of in-between
garment that gets you nowhere. You can't go outside in it. You can't go to
sleep in it. I'm the kind of guy who likes to always feel ready to go!" On
his wrist hangs a heavy link silver bracelet. His feet are contained in
thoroughbred Guccis. Piercing green-gray eyes are hidden behind prescription
shades, but their hip image is offset by a conservative Paul Stuart
herringbone jacket and tan slacks.
He struts through the lobby of his New York condominium with
an armload of dirty laundry and proceeds along boutique-lined Third Avenue.
His virile features are tawny and relatively unlined at age 56. His stomach is
fiat, "like iron," he brags. His legs are muscular "from
walking to and from the office. You know, after 31 years my wife still thinks I
have a perfect body."
He drops off his laundry and picks up the New York Times and
the Daily News. "I do not believe in deliveries," he declares.
"They inhibit perfectly natural activities."
Back in his 14th-floor apartment, decorated in exotic pieces
grouped like a furniture showroom, wife Joan is still asleep. "Why should
I get up to make him breakfast?" she asks, not unpleasantly. "He
doesn't bother to make it for me."
As a husband liberated by the independence of his wife,
Stan Lee has reduced breakfast to a domestic science. "For hundreds of
years" he has thrust one Pepperidge Farm apple turnover into a 400 oven
and set the timer to go off before "the neighbors holler 'fire.' "
While waiting, he carries his tape recorder into the study,
ready to decode, when the phone rings. Lee throws down his Bic, cringing.
"There is nothing I hate more than the telephone!" On the line is John
Romita, who draws Spider-Man. A crisis is at hand. "Stan," he cries,
"either you come up with a plot for the Sunday page by tomorrow or the
syndicate will kill Spider-Man!"
"Don't worry, John," Lee reassures him and
promises to call back in five minutes. An alarm sounds in the distance.
"I've got to save an apple turnover from burning!" In the swashbuckling
tradition of one of his own comic book heroes, Lee first rescues breakfast and
then, with a flick of his Bic, Spider-Man.
An era in comic book history dates from 1961. That was the
year Stan Lee began to create the family of cartoon characters that eventually
included Spider-Man, the Fantastic Four, the Incredible Hulk and Dr. Strange.
They had a profound impact on many youngsters that was hardly as negative as
parents feared and educators preached. Gene Simmons of Kiss,
who grew up with Marvel comics, says, "His stories taught me that even
superheroes like Spider-Man and the Incredible Hulk have ego deficiencies and
girl problems and do not live in their macho fantasies 24 hours a day. Through
the honesty of guys like Spider-Man, I learned about the shades of gray in human
nature."
Lee's arch rival, Jenette Kahn, publisher of Superman
comics, adds, "Stan Lee created characters who related to the experience
of the alienated youth of the 1960s." As publisher, creative director,
active writer and even spokesman for the comic book business on the college
lecture circuit, Lee is, according to the gracious Kahn, "the living
superhero for the American comic industry."
Cary Grant has phoned Lee to express his appreciation of
Marvel comics, introduced to him by his daughter, Jennifer. Federico Fellini,
the Italian film director, showed up in Lee's office with an admiring
entourage. French director Alain Resnais wanted Lee to write a script for a
film. "But most of the phone calls," says Martha Conway, Lee's
24-year-old secretary, "are from 12-year-old boys inviting him to their
bar mitzvahs or 13-year-old girls who want to know how to attract a superhero."
Marvel sells about six million comic books a month in 15
languages. With upwards of $25 million a year in sales, it is the largest and
most successful business of its kind in the world—"if not the
universe." For the past few years Lee has written the narrative for only
two of the strips—Spider-Man, which appears in about 500 newspapers, and the
Hulk, in 200 papers. He devotes the rest of his time to supervising the
transition of his characters into other media. The Hulk was a prime-time
sensation last season and continues among the top 20 shows. Spider-Man made
five specials last season, and CBS has scheduled more this year. Dr. Strange
and another hero, Captain America, also have starred in specials from
Universal.
With so many pop groups fascinated by comic heroes these
days, Stan has become the Werner Erhard of the rock world. Paul McCartney asked
him to come up with vivid characters to give personality to his second band.
One of Meat Loaf's songwriters wants Lee to do a script for a Broadway musical
for the singer, and Lee has already submitted an outline.
In turn, Stan has made some rock superstars into comic book
heroes themselves. The Kiss edition was a huge seller. The Beatles flopped because
the company misjudged their popularity. But Mick Jagger and the Stones, soon to
be published, should do well, and Alice Cooper was recently signed up.
In recognition of Lee's unique role in American mythmaking,
Harper and Row has paid out a "sizable" advance for his
autobiography. "But I asked them to give me five years to write it,"
he says, "because I haven't done an eighth of the things I want to do. You
know," he adds wistfully, "I still feel as if I'm waiting to be
discovered."
Stanley Martin Lieber was born December 28, 1922 in Manhattan.
In his family's cramped three-room apartment, "I slept in the living room
until I was old enough to need my privacy." Then he switched rooms with
his parents. Nine years after he was born, his brother, Larry, who now draws
the Hulk, arrived. Lee says, "I have no idea where he slept. I always
considered him only a guest." By the time he was 10, Stan's mother, Celia,
already thought of her little boy as some kind of superior human being.
"Whenever I walked in the door, she'd ask me why some talent scout hadn't
whisked me off the street and taken me straight to Hollywood." Stan saw
every Errol Flynn movie "a hundred times" and loved adventure books.
During the Depression, his father, Jack, found it hard to
get work as a dress cutter. The frustration turned his older son into a
workaholic. "School was just something to get past."
After graduation from DeWitt Clinton High, Lee was offered an
$11-a-week job as a gofer at the firm that would become Marvel Comics—"I
was probably the only one who applied." A few months later both editor and
art director walked out over a disagreement with the publisher, leaving Lee in
charge. He was 17. "I knew the position was only temporary. I figured I
would last maybe two or three weeks." That was in 1939.
While the company grew, Stan achieved a reputation as a
formidable ladies' man. Then in November 1947 he strolled up Fifth Avenue from
his offices in the Empire State Building to have a look at a "gorgeous
redhead" recommended as a date by his cousin Morty. When Lee opened the
door to her office, he took one long look at "that face and hair" and
surrendered. "I love you!" he cried. Joan Clayton Boocock, a hat
model, was flattered. She was also married.
He insists that her first marriage "wasn't so
great." Joan corrects him without hesitation. "I had only known my
first husband 24 hours when we decided to get married," she explains.
"It really was a great marriage in many respects. But after living with
him a year, I was finding him sort of boring ..." Lee was nothing if not
interesting. Joan recalls, "He wore a marvelous floppy hat and a scarf and
spouted Omar Khayyam when he took me for a hamburger at Prexy's. He reminded
me of that beautiful man, Leslie Howard." They dated for a passionate two
weeks, and then he proposed. "But first I had to send her to Reno for a
divorce."
So Joan took off for Nevada and met another—and richer—man,
a cowboy who also wanted to marry her. "I thought for a moment, maybe this
is better ..." But when Stan got a letter mistakenly addressed to
"Jack," the Reno rival, he grabbed his scarf and flew to Joan's side.
The judge who granted her divorce married them.
For the next 19 years they lived on Long Island, where Joan
Lee raised their daughter, Joanie (a younger daughter, Jan, died in infancy).
Wife and daughter became accustomed to hearing the cries and whispers of creativity
as Lee acted out his heroes' tales of adventure. "Don't worry,"
Joa-nie would assure her friends at the strange noises coming from the study.
"That's just my father at work." In 1969 the couple moved to New York
City, where Joanie was in acting school.
One reason for Lee's 40-year loyalty to Marvel may be that,
unlike other creators of comics such as Garry Trudeau or Charles Schulz, Lee
does not own the rights to any of his heroes. The company does. To leave would
mean walking out on his creations. "I'm not a man to turn his baq,k on his
children," he says. His job is not without its rewards, however. His
salary is upwards of $100,000 a year, plus fees and royalties from TV scripts
and books.
At 9:30 Lee enters the tacky offices of Marvel Comics on
Madison Avenue. He is singing the Alka-Seltzer jingle. The phones are ringing.
Before anything else, he has a heavy problem to resolve. Spider-Man's Aunt May
has been pressuring him to get married. Unfortunately, Lee killed off the
hero's girlfriend, Gwendolyn, in an earlier episode. Ignoring the phones, Lee
reaches for a pen and begins to scribble. He bites his thumb. He pulls out a
tissue and blows his nose. "I always have a cold," he cries.
"Even when I don't have a cold, I sound like I do."
Pacing the floor, he wanders into the hallway and puts a
quarter in the machine for a cup of chicken soup. "I will not drink
coffee after 7 a.m." A parade of employees, eager and young, marches in
and out his door. They represent the "20,000 different projects"
going on at the moment. Lee concentrates on each visitor but remains offhand
and cool. Things get tense only when John Romita pops in. "Is Spider-Man
getting married next week or isn't he?"
Lee tenses and asks his secretary to hold the calls. He
shuts the door and puts a hand on Romita's shoulder. "John," he says
thoughtfully, "I'd like to have a wedding, but do you really think
Spider-Man is mature enough?
Thursday, August 23, 2018
What Stan Lee do after Steve Ditko and Jack Kirby left Marvel?
Let’s start with one important fact: The decade of the 1960s
was Marvel’s most creative especially during the first five years. No company
since has ever created so much great material in such a short time, especially
with so few people.
I am often puzzled by people who try to diminish the
accomplishments of Stan Lee by asking, “What did he do after Steve Ditko and
Jack Kirby left?” That is an ambiguous
statement and it shows that they may not understand Stan’s job at Marvel in
those days. Stan was not just a writer; he was the editor and art director for
much of the decade. The question is ambiguous because Steve Ditko left in 1965,
five years before Kirby did, in 1970, and we need to count those years,
although many detractors don’t.
Of course, an equally valid question may be: “What did Kirby
and Ditko do after they left Marvel?”
No matter what fans want to think, producing comics is a
business, the art and story come second. Stan’s job was to make money for
Marvel, produce comics on time, and increase sales. He did that very well. Even
Jack Kirby would say that his job was “to sell magazines.” Not create good
ones, but to sell them. In 1960, Marvel was selling 16,000,000 copies a year.
By 1966, Steve Ditko leaves and we no longer have his version of Spider-Man. Marvel then was selling 35,000,000 comics a
year. Without missing a beat, Stan assigns John Romita to Spider-Man and adds many aspects to the character Ditko had rejected. Aunt May becomes younger, Peter becomes better
looking and he gets a girlfriend or two that he can actually keep. The new team not only produces great stories (I loved Spider-Man #39-40, Romita’s first issues) but soon, a great villain, the Kingpin. This version of Spider-Man draws in new readers and becomes a college sensation, drawing in the older readers that had abandoned comics a decade earlier. Spider-Man becomes Marvel’s biggest seller. By 1970, annual circulation at Marvel had increased to 60,000,000. Five years after Ditko left circulation doubles. That was Stan’s job. If you’re going to give him blame later you have to give him the credit now. With circulation up, and more money coming in, publisher and owner Martin Goodman enables Stan to recruit not just Romita, but Gene Colan and John Buscema at higher page rates than Marvel had offered before. Iron Man and Daredevil are further developed and sell more comics with the team of Lee and Colan. Buscema adds to Spider-Man too, but does well with everything he touches.
Different from DC’s Earth I and II, the concept of a
singular Marvel Universe was Stan’s vision. While artists, including Steve
Ditko, did not appreciate putting in guest stars, Stan loved the idea and did it
often. With circulation increasing it
would have been hard to quibble with that idea. Stan’s vision though, has been
incorporated into the last ten years of Marvel movies with incredible success. Those
movies have taken in over 17 billion dollars.
From the beginning of the Marvel Age, Stan injected many
adult themes, including the cold war, unemployment, handicapped people and ageing
into his stories. This was something his
main competitors did not do. He even retitled Amazing Adventures to Amazing
Adult Fantasy, and advertised it as "The Magazine that Respects Your
Intelligence."
Lee wanted to push the limits of creating comics and he and
Romita produced the black and white Spectacular Spider-Man, aimed at older
readers. Marvel also published the first
Savage Tales, another magazine for adults that was also outstanding. Sadly,
Goodman cancels them both. He was fearful that he would run into trouble with
the Comics Code. It took courage, then, in 1971, for Stan to publish a three
part anti-drug story in Amazing Spider-Man #96-98. It was published without the
Comics Code approval. No other publisher or editor had done that before and
there was a risk that no dealer would put in on the stands without a Comics
Code seal.
Stan was the editor of at least sixteen comics a month during
the 1960s and writer for about half the stories. At DC, several editors produced only five or
so comics a month and of them, only Robert Kanigher wrote. So, beginning in 1965, Stan hired Roy Thomas.
Roy worked his way up to the Avengers,
partnered with Buscema, Sgt. Fury
with Dick Ayers, and the X-Men with
Neal Adams. Roy and his partner produced great stories that sold well.
Nick Fury of S.H.I.E.L.D. was created by Jack Kirby, but
assigning it to Steranko was inspired. Nick Fury’s circulation was not the
highest, but his readers were very loyal. In other words, they kept buying the
book. While at DC reprints were often from a generation earlier, Lee started
(in 1965) reprint titles of fairly current stories. This catered to new readers
and brought them up to date. Oh, and I
loved Not Brand Echh, which was a
funny, satirical look at Marvel comics at first and the entire industry as time
went by. By the end of the 1960s, circulation had reached 60,000,000.
In 1968 Marvel is bought by Perfect Film and Chemical, Goodman is no longer the owner. Jack Kirby leaves in 1970. His last year at Marvel was not inspired, but it was still Kirby. According to Mark Evanier’s Kirby bio, the new owners don’t really negotiate or try hard to keep Kirby. This is foolish on their part, of course. Soon Kirby leaves and Stan takes an extended vacation and doesn’t write.
In 1968 Marvel is bought by Perfect Film and Chemical, Goodman is no longer the owner. Jack Kirby leaves in 1970. His last year at Marvel was not inspired, but it was still Kirby. According to Mark Evanier’s Kirby bio, the new owners don’t really negotiate or try hard to keep Kirby. This is foolish on their part, of course. Soon Kirby leaves and Stan takes an extended vacation and doesn’t write.
The new owners had a new direction for the company:
1. Initially, no more continued
stories disrupting what had been established over the last decade.
2. They wanted, instantly, a huge
amount of new titles, to compete, one on one with DC.
3. Whereas comics initially had 24
pages of art, then 20, by the mid 1970s it was down to 17. In 1970 Marvel comics were to have two half-pages, which DC’s had done but
Marvel’s never did.
4. The prices on comics triple, from
12 cents to 35 cents in just a few years.
5. The black and white line was
started.
6. And they wanted to go after the
international market.
7.
Stan Lee had to adapt to those changes. So what did Stan do
with this burden? Stan worked with Roy
Thomas and creates a big hit with Conan
the Barbarian and later Kull; Marvel returns to horror with great talent in
Chamber of Darkness and Tower of Shadows; and takes the Silver
Surfer to new heights with John Buscema.
But here is the big thing: In 1973 Stan Lee becomes publisher. This fact is ignored by the dissenters. This was a big step up in his career; it meant more money and more prestige and no writing or deadline pressure. He increases circulation at Marvel to 70,000,000. This is what a businessman is paid to do.
By the early 1970s the industry was not drawing in many new
readers and total sales were declining. This meant that Marvel’s new readers came
at the expense of DCs readers. Under Stan Lee, Marvel sales exceed DC for the
first time and have remained that way ever since.
There were successes in the mid-1970s, Stan introduced many
successful new comics. In 1972’s America it took courage to produce Luke Cage, the
first African America hero to have his own national title. By having to produce
so many new titles, in so many genres, and there were also many failures.
Unlike publisher Goodman, Stan was not an owner and had to follow instructions.
With so many new titles there was no time to develop new talent and the
bookkeepers often decided what titles were to be cancelled. Often within a
failure there is a success. The magazines of the mid 1970s mostly failed, but Conan,
Deadly Hands of Kung Fu and a few others were successful. Marvel did, lose most of its female readers.
Roy Thomas (Comic Book Artist #2 1998): There was a great
drop off in female readers in the early ‘70s. We came up with three strips for
which you made up the names and concepts: Shanna the She-Devil, Night Nurse and
the Claws of the Cat. (We were) trying to woo the female readers back” Stan
Lee said, “The failure of the Cat was my biggest disappointment.”
But Stan did give it the old college try.
There is no question that Lee, Kirby and Ditko did
outstanding work and nothing like that has happened since at any company. While
Ditko and Kirby continued drawing and writing, Stan’s career took a successful
turn up the company ladder. Stan’s later trajectory does not parallel the other
two, it was more perpendicular!
Monday, August 13, 2018
The Other Stan Lee: Not giving Credit where it’s due!
This is the most difficult blog I have written because I am a fan of the Marvel Age and everyone who was a part of it. Over the
last few decades I have met with many of the artists and writers who worked
with Stan and they genuinely like him. They describe a nice, even
generous person. But when you talked to
them about “Stan, the Promoter,” they often smiled and rolled their eyes. It
was as if you were talking about a different person. Forgive me for keeping a
source confidential, but one famous artist told me that he liked Stan very
much, he just wished he would not take credit for things he didn’t do.
Stan Lee changed comics for the better and forever and this is no way should be seen as diminishing his accomplishments. The major point of this blog is that I just feel the credit for Marvel's success in the 1960s should be shared. It should not be seen as taking away from Stan's many accomplishments. In the fifteen years between 1960 and 1975, Marvel’s sales
increased from 13 million to over 70
million comics a year and Stan Lee, as editor, oversaw this rise in sales. There is no question that we should also remember the work
of Jack Kirby, Steve Ditko and many others for the incredible creative work at Marvel during the 1960s. When promoting Marvel Stan often did not mention his creative staff.
In the 1960s and 1970s, comic books were too often considered junk reading by parents and librarians and monitors of good taste. Reporters sent to get a story on the topic, didn’t read comics, and in their ignorance, their questions and conclusions often lacked depth and ignored the contributions of others. Here are a few examples:
In the 1960s and 1970s, comic books were too often considered junk reading by parents and librarians and monitors of good taste. Reporters sent to get a story on the topic, didn’t read comics, and in their ignorance, their questions and conclusions often lacked depth and ignored the contributions of others. Here are a few examples:
New York Herald
Tribune, January 9th, 1966: … Stan Lee dreamed up the “Marvel Age of Comics
in 1961.”
Dallas Times Herald,
1975: In the beginning was Stan Lee. And Stan Lee created the Fantastic Four.
And he saw that it was good. And the Fantastic Four begat the Hulk and
Spider-Man.
New York Times
Magazine, May 2 1971: The turnabout came in 1961, when Stan Lee
metamorphosed the Marvel line and very likely saved comic books from an
untimely death.
Chicago Tribune:
July 17, 1975 : STAN LEE, 53, is the great bard of the superhero epics, the
creator of a modem mythology avidly devoured by 72 million readers a year.
The Press Telegram
Newspaper of Long Beach Calif., Aug, 19, 1977: First, he begot The
Fantastic Four, a cosmic powered quartet….AND THE Fantastic Four begot The Hulk
and The Hulk begot Spider-Man, who begot a whole lot of success for Stan Lee,
who is now 55, and the publisher of Marvel Comics, a definite cult hero and
rich like you wouldn’t believe.
New York Newsday,
June 8th, 1978: It was Lee’s fertile mind that created the many superheroes who
were eventually to make Marvel mighty. Among them: “The Incredible Hulk,” “The
Amazing Spider-Man,” “The Mighty Thor,” “Captain America,” “Ms. Marvel,” “The
Fantastic Four,” “The Avengers,” “Dr. Strange” and “Daredevil.”
Time Magazine:
Monday, Feb. 5, 1979: Marvels of The Mind: The man chiefly responsible for all
the TV superdoing is Stan Lee, 56, the mustached and irrepressible publisher of
Marvel Comics. Ideas pop in and out of his head so fast that Lee keeps a tape
recorder by his bed to catch them late at night.
Even early Comic book fanzines gave Stan all the credit
Super Star Heroes by Gene Wright, 1978: THE ORIGINS OF STAN LEE… he’s Super Stan!—inventor of the hung-up hero. “The result of Lee’s brainstorm was a 1961 comic book entitled The Fantastic Four.”
Super Star Heroes by Gene Wright, 1978: THE ORIGINS OF STAN LEE… he’s Super Stan!—inventor of the hung-up hero. “The result of Lee’s brainstorm was a 1961 comic book entitled The Fantastic Four.”
Stan cannot be blamed for those headlines. Those came from reporters and editors and that was the playing field of that time. Marvel and Lee listed the creators of every story at a time when most comics did not. I learned their names from those credits.
Stan received criticism for his introductions to the
Fireside series of reprints which started with Origins of Marvel Comics in 1974. Fans
need to accept a few realities. Concerned with ownership and copyright issues,
Stan, then a publisher, and a true company man, was not about to suggest that a single creator was responsible for a character’s creation. They all belonged
to Marvel, so a creator’s role was often downplayed, and even sometimes
ignored. When an artist left Marvel he was never referred to again. This is
common among all media companies. When
someone leaves the Today show and
joins the competition, they are never mentioned. While Steve Ditko was drawing the Amazing Spider-Man letters were addressed to “Dear Stan and Steve.” Two issues before his
last story was printed, in the spring of 1966, Steve’s name was removed from the
greeting in the letters pages and they just read, “Dear Stan.”
We cannot lose sight of the fact that Stan was running a
business. Just glance at any cover from that era. Every story was “the best” or
“the greatest,” chock-full of “the most” thrills of any comic magazine. So each
artist was equally talented, he was not about to promote one artist over another. With Jim Steranko replacing
Jack Kirby on S.H.I.E.L.D. or John Romita replacing Kirby on the Fantastic
Four, each was generating work that was described in superlatives in the
Bullpen Bulletins or the letters pages.
Stan eventually began
to understand what many of Marvel’s artists and writers were complaining about. He recognized the problem and
admitted to it. On the Today show (June
15, 2008) Stan said: “The artists felt
that I was getting too much credit for everything so occasionally there would
be a little dissatisfaction. But that was normal and we got over that.”
At a Caps Banquet in 2007: “Comic books is (sic) a collaborative medium. Had I not worked with
artists like Jack Kirby, Steve Ditko … my stories would not have looked as
good. These guys were writers themselves. But they would write with pictures.… And
they really deserve as much credit as I ever get.”
An example of self-promotion came in an article he wrote for the July/August 1977 issue
of Quest magazine. For the record, I
placed the entire article at the bottom of this blog. It was entitled “How I Invented Spider-Man.” . The editor, not Stan, might have written the title.
The article begins with Lee discussing his own background: “I heard of a job opening at a comic book
publishing company. In those days it was called Timely Comics.” What Stan neglects to say is that
Timely’s publisher was Martin Goodman and that Martin’s wife Jean was Stan’s
cousin.
Lee continues: “Not
long afterward, the editor and the head artist left and I was asked if I thought
I could fill in as editor until the publisher could find someone else.”
The editor and artist were Joe Simon and Jack Kirby,
creators of the very successful Captain America. At the
N.Y. Comic Con in 2008 I was next to Stan when he said to Joe Simon “I have never had the chance to thank you.
You taught me so much and I have used what you taught me throughout my entire
career.”
A little later in the article, Stan writes: “In 1961… For the first time within memory there
seemed to be no special trend in the comic book field. No single title or group
of titles seemed to excite the readers.” That year, the
Justice League of America was definitely exciting comic book readers it was
outselling Superman! The rebooted Flash and Green Lantern were also gaining in
popularity. When Goodman found out how successful the JLA was he asked Stan to
create a super-powered group for Marvel.
In displaying what Stan wrote in that 1977 article on
Spider-Man, I will make some some comments. I will also
discuss, when necessary, two other titles: The
Fantastic Four because they were the first of Marvel’s new line and Sgt. Fury because that was an unexpected
success.
Stan Lee may not be scripted but he certainly is rehearsed, he knew how to entertain an audience. When he begins the version of his sole the creation of
Spiderman he would say: “I’ve told the story so many times it must be true.” (which
he did on Larry King Live, May 4, 2002; Barbara Bogave National Public Radio (2002);
Comic Book Artist #2 (1998) and 60 Minutes (Oct. 13, 2002).
Stan: “But most of all
I wanted to do Spider-Man….in searching for a title for our newest superhero, I
remembered [an] old pulp favorite [The Spider: Master of Men]—and the title
Spider-Man instantly hit me.”
Stan also has another version describing his
searching for the character where he tries to look spontaneous. He will first mention that he saw a fly or insect walk up a wall... “I
thought what will I call him….it seemed to me that Fly-Man didn’t work; that
Insect-Man didn’t sound good, Mosquito-Man was awful, and then it hit me:
Spider-Man. It was an epiphany!” This was said on a CBS interview in 1992;
The Overstreet Quarterly (April 1994),
Interview, Maryland’s Fredrick News Post on May 2, 2002, National Educational
Association, 2008 and National Public Radio 2002.
Stan: “Even the man I
chose to illustrate the web-spinner's adventures marked a departure from the
usual superhero strip. Steve Ditko was as fine a draftsman and graphic continuity
artist as one could find.”
It has been established, most notably by Joe Simon in 1990, that Stan Lee first gave the
character to Jack Kirby, who provided six pages of a very different character
than Ditko’s. In Comic Scene Spectacular
#1 (1989), Stan says: “I think Ditko was
tremendously responsible for the popularity (of Spider-Man)… Kirby did a few
pages. When I saw them, I said, “No, no, this isn’t what I want.” I took him
off the hook and gave it to Ditko. I felt Spider-Man should not look like the
typical superhero. And Ditko’s style at the time was just perfect.”
There were great differences in the Ditko and Kirby versions. Ditko told Comic Fan #2 (Summer 1965):
"Stan Lee thought the name up. I did costume, web gimmick on wrist &
spider signal." And in 2001, Ditko added the following: “So for 30-plus
years, the ‘one and only creator’ theme continued to pollute various
publication outlets. The subjective and intrinsic mentalities continued their
unquestioning, unchallenging, and self-blinding support of the non-validated
claims.” Stan did say in 2007, "If
Steve wants to be called co-creator, I think he deserves (it)." Note that
he added the word “think” instead of stating explicitly he deserves it. Ditko
noticed this and expressed his displeasure.
In 2007, BBC
host Jonathan Ross asked Lee, “Do you, yourself, believe that (Ditko) co-created
Spider-Man?” Lee, looking uncomfortable says, “I’m willing to say so. No, and that's the best answer I can give you.
I really think the guy who dreams the thing up created it! You dream it up, and then you give it to
anybody to draw it!” Ross then says, “But
if it had been drawn differently, it might not have been successful or a hit.” Lee
replies, “Then I would have created something
that didn't succeed.”
In an interview published in Eye Magazine in 1966, Lee
said: “I don’t plot Spider-Man any
more. Steve Ditko, the artist, has been doing the stories.” But in the article,
Stan takes credit for everything and does not mention Ditko again. Nor does he
mention John Romita, who followed Ditko as artist on Spider-Man.
Again from the Quest article, Stan writes as if he was
working solo: “The deeper I dug under
Spidey's skin to see what made him tick, the more I realized how embarrassingly
banal had been the comics of the past few decades in terms of characterization;
Whenever Spidey was in a tight spot, I'd only have to think of what I would
say or do in the same predicament. I merely tried to imagine what would happen
if someone with superhuman power really existed, and if he dwelled—for
example—in Forest Hills, New York.”
In Comic Book
Marketplace, Lee recalls the beginnings of Sgt. Fury. Lee, in 1963, says to publisher Goodman. “How about a book of war stories?” He said,
“Nobody’s going to buy a war book. Point number two: Let’s call it Sgt. Fury
and his Howling Commandos?” Martin said, “Are you joking? That’s the worst
title... “I said, “I’ll bet I could do that book and make it sell.” I tried to
concentrate on getting a platoon of soldiers that the readers would care about,
I think it was one of the first multi-ethnic comic books ever done.”
In his biography of Jack Kirby (Tales to Astonish) Ronin Ro quotes respected artist John Severin as saying that in the late 1950s, Jack Kirby had wanted to do a war series “set in Europe during World War Two; the hero would be a tough, cigar-chomping sergeant with a squad of oddball GIs — sort of an adult Boy Commandos." This doesn’t mean that Lee did not come up with the idea of a war comic with “Commandos” in the title, he just does not acknowledge the input Kirby must have had in its creation and execution. Kirby’s group would really not be unique in comics, the Blackhawks, created in 1941 for Quality Comics, which also featured a similar culturally diverse group of fighting men. And a nod of appreciation should also go to Milton Caniff’s Terry and the Pirates.
In his biography of Jack Kirby (Tales to Astonish) Ronin Ro quotes respected artist John Severin as saying that in the late 1950s, Jack Kirby had wanted to do a war series “set in Europe during World War Two; the hero would be a tough, cigar-chomping sergeant with a squad of oddball GIs — sort of an adult Boy Commandos." This doesn’t mean that Lee did not come up with the idea of a war comic with “Commandos” in the title, he just does not acknowledge the input Kirby must have had in its creation and execution. Kirby’s group would really not be unique in comics, the Blackhawks, created in 1941 for Quality Comics, which also featured a similar culturally diverse group of fighting men. And a nod of appreciation should also go to Milton Caniff’s Terry and the Pirates.
In 1999, in an interview with James Cangialosi for Comics Interview, Stan is asked the beginnings
of the Fantastic Four: “I was sitting and
I thought, “What powers would be interesting for these characters to have?” One
thing I remembered was that when I was younger I loved the original Human Torch
and I thought I would like to bring him back. I also liked the idea — and I
don’t know how I particularly thought of the idea — of a scientist who was a
little bit stuffy…. Then I wanted to have another guy on the team who was
always bored.” In Stan’s 250-word answer Jack Kirby is never mentioned. On WFMU-FM radio in 1967 Stan says: “Jack is the greatest artist in the world. He
also is a great story man. He does all the breakdowns and basic plots and I
provide the dialogue.”
In the Quest
article, Stan writes about how he created the various characters of the
Fantastic Four, without mentioning Jack Kirby. “Improbable as they all sound, I was attempting to place these
fantastic characters in the real world, trying to give them human traits and
believable reactions, trying to combine fairy-tale concepts with down-to-earth
reality, and the results really grabbed me. I was doing what Joanie (his wife)
had suggested. I was writing stories for myself, trying for the kind of offbeat,
irreverent feeling that had always attracted me to Mark Twain, Bernard Shaw,
and yes, Woody Allen.” In The Overstreet Lee says: “Jack was about the best. He was really the
most creative artist of all, because he was more than an artist. I call him a
great conceptualizer. He could conceive of stories and follow them through. All
I would have to do with Jack is give him a very brief outline on what to do,
and he would just do the whole story. After a while when we were rushed, I
didn’t even give him an outline, he just did whatever story he wanted.”
In Quest, Lee
continues: “To me, the most gratifying
result of our new approach was a startling change in the comic book audience.
The age range of our readers, previously six to about 13—suddenly zoomed to
college age and beyond. In fact, the additional sales were corning mainly from
older readers, and the beauty of it was that we were gaining those older
readers without losing the younger ones.”
Jim Galton, former President of Marvel, says in Comic Scene #1 (1981): "When comics (in
the 1960s and early 1970s) were at their height the average age was between 10
and 12." Galton said that the “average age of a Marvel reader was 11½ despite Marvel’s widely publicized
popularity among college students.
Stan was aware that he spoke to two different
audiences. To those who knew comics, he often included comments about the
artists who worked for him. But to a more general audience he often just spoke about
himself.
One last time to the Quest article. Stan: “You'd be amazed
at the range of queries that have been flung at me, questions ranging from “How
can Spider-Man see through those obviously opaque eye panels in his mask?” Beyond grownup language and drawing, there
seems to be something about Peter Parker and his costumed alter ego that
mesmerizes his millions of admirers, including myself.” These statements refer directly to Ditko’s
creative costuming of Spider-Man, but he is not mentioned here.
Think what you like. Whether it was showing off or
simply toeing the company line, by not giving
credit where credit was due, it caused some heartache for the creators. Mark Evanier recalls the aftermath of the 1966 Herald Tribune story, briefly mentioned here. “That article did enormous damage to Jack, personally and professionally.” And Jack would never forget it. Stan did not write it or approve it and it was a surprise to him too. But some of the tarnishing of
Stan Lee’s reputation, among fans, is seen as self-inflicted.
If we accept that Stan may have come up with the
original concept and the name of Spider-Man, but the actual character is a
co-creation with Steve Ditko, then we must also accept that Stan is the
co-creator of many concepts that Jack Kirby originated, such as the Silver
Surfer and the Inhumans.
“How I
Invented Spider-Man.” By Stan Lee
In case
you've been living outside the solar system, and therefore haven't heard of
Spider-Man, let me introduce him as painlessly as possible. The Amazing
Spider-Man, to use his full title, appears on the covers of six million comic
books a year and plays starring roles in an additional 10 million. Beyond comic
books, he shows up everywhere from toys to T-shirts to television. He's a
celebrity not only in the United States but also in Britain, France, Germany,
Italy, Spain, Sweden, Canada, Mexico, Japan, Australia, New Zealand, Indochina,
and most of South America. He is, in fact, the world's most popular fantasy
hero—and the bestselling as well.
Now that
we've more or less established his fame, let's explore how it happened and, of
far greater importance, what it all means—mainly in order to learn a little
more about ourselves.
To that end,
I've been asked to tell you something about the guy who reputedly started the
whole thing—namely me.
Unlike most
New Yorkers, who come from somewhere else, I was born right in the middle of
Manhattan. I attended De Witt Clinton High School and, in my spare time, was a
member of the Washington Heights branch of the WPA Federal Theatre. I loved
acting. I was always a ham. But acting didn't pay the rent, and since my father
was one of the legions of unemployed at that time, I had to set my greedy
little sights elsewhere.
While
completing my senior year in high school, I became the world's most inept
theater usher, whose greatest claim to fame was showing Eleanor Roosevelt to
a seat at the Rivoli Theatre and suffering the indignity of having her help mc
to my feet solicitously after I had tripped over someone's outstretched kg in
the aisle with the theater manager and half the nation's Secret Service force
looking on. From that debacle, I went to a job writing obituaries of famous
people for a news service, so they'd have the obit all ready to print when the
notable finally went to his or her reward. I soon got depressed writing about
living people in the past tense, so I abandoned what might have been the
springboard for a glorious career in journalism. After other forgettable
part-time stints, such as writing publicity releases for a hospital (I was
never sure what I was supposed to publicize: "We'll cure you faster than
other hospitals"? "Our doctors arc safer than theirs, I reached the
turning point of my 161/2-year-old life.
At that
point the long arm of coincidence took over. Within a matter of hours, I heard
of a job opening at a comic book publishing company. In those days it was
called Timely Comics. A "gofer" was needed to round out the tiny
staff: a kid to do some proofreading, write copy, answer letters, and
"gofer" the coffee and sandwiches. I applied and I got the job. Not
long afterward, the editor and the head artist left and I was asked if I
thought I could fill in as editor until the publisher could find someone else.
I said sure. At the age of 17, I didn't know any better. Apparently no one else
was ever found, and I've been there ever since.
In the past
three decades, I've held the titles Editor, Art Director, and Head Writer.
Then, in 1972, I was named Publisher of what is now called Marvel Comics.
Although I never made it as a thespian, I've found enough temperament, talent,
and theatrics in the way-out world of comic books to make it all worthwhile.
Now back to
Spider-Man and the events that led to his creation.
In their own simplistic way, comic books have
usually mirrored the tenor of the times. In the late thirties and early
forties, colorful pulp heroes like Captain America and Captain Marvel almost single-handedly
decimated the forces of fascism between the multicolored covers of their
monthly magazines. After World War II, when the public was satiated with tales
of diabolical dictators, the comic books turned to Westerns, crime, and monster
stories. For a brief period in the early fifties, when the nation enjoyed an
illusory hiatus between crises, the biggest-selling comics dealt with the
innocuous antics of the animated animals created by Walt Disney, Paul Terry, Walter
Lantz, and their ilk.
In 1961,
something happened. For the first time within memory there seemed to be no
special trend in the comic book field. No single title or group of titles
seemed to excite the readers. Oh, they were still buying the comics—kids always
will—but with‑ out any discernible enthusiasm. Even the superhero titles, long
the staple of the industry, were declining in sales and apparently going
nowhere.
At first
blush, it didn't make sense. Everyone said it was a time for heroes. The youth
of America had been inspired by John Kennedy and the vision of Camelot;
astronauts and cosmonauts performed incredible exploits as they raced for
supremacy in space. It was a time for daring concepts, deeds far bigger than
life—a time when comic book superheroes should have been selling better than ever.
What was wrong?
Personally,
I was bored. I had 20 years of writing and editing comics behind me. Twenty
years of "Take that, you rat!" and "So, you wanna play,
huh?" Twenty years of worrying whether a sentence or phrase might be over
the head of an eight-year-old reader. Twenty years of trying to think like a
child. And then an off‑ hand remark by my wife caused a revolution in comics
tantamount to the invention of the wheel. Eighteen simple words, electrifying
in their eloquence and their portent for the future. Each momentous syllable is
engraved in my memory:
"When
are you going to stop writing for kids and write stories that you yourself
would enjoy reading?" It was a casual question, posed in a casual way, but
it really rocked me. It made me suddenly realize that I had never actually
written anything for myself. For two unsatisfying decades I'd been selling
myself short, sublimating any literary ability I might have in a painful effort
to write down to the level of drooling juveniles and semicretins.
"Nevermore!"
I shouted. "Never‑ more will I fashion my tales for the nameless, faceless
'them' out there. Henceforth, I will write for an audience of one; an audience
I should have no trouble pleasing, for I cer‑ tainly know what turns me
on."
When the
time came to create a teenaged hero for Marvel Comics, I decided to depict him
as a bumbling, real-life teenager who
by some miracle had acquired a super power. He'd have to be bewildered,
insecure, inept, ungainly, and often out of step with those around him. He'd be
my kind of teenager. A loser. A schlepp. Just like I was when I was young. And
I know if I had gotten a super power when I was a teenager, the only change
would be—I'd simply have become a super-powered schlepp.
After all,
who ever said that extra strength, or talent, or ability has to make a guy a
winner? If you suddenly gained the muscle power of a hundred men, OK—so you'd
be able to lift heavy weights and outwrestle King Kong; but that doesn't mean
you still wouldn't have to worry about dandruff, or acne, or hemorrhoids,
right? And suppose you could crawl on walls and ceilings like a human spider.
Wouldn't you still be concerned about postnasal drip, or warts, or the
heartbreak of psoriasis? Wouldn't you still have trouble balancing your
checkbook, or scoring with a girl who doesn't happen to dig costumed
wall-crawlers?
The more I
thought about it, the faster the ideas came to me. Sure, I was still writing
comic book yarns about freaky, farfetched superheroes, but I suddenly realized
I was beginning to enjoy it. An extra dimension had been added. I was now
playing with characters like the Human Torch, a pushy extravert able to burst
into flame and fly like a bird with his blazing lighter-than-air body; Mr.
Fantastic, a stuffy, brilliant, egocentric scientist with the ability to
stretch his body like a piece of elastic; the Thing, a monstrous being with a
temper to match whose superhuman strength is exceeded only by his popularity
with our fans; and the Invisible Girl, Mr. Fantastic's fiancee, whose chief
claim to fame is exactly what her name implies. In addition to the Fantastic
Four, who battle for truth, justice, and monetary compensation, there was the
Incredible Hulk, the most powerful mortal on earth. His distinctions include a
green skin and the fact that he weighs in at about 700 pounds. Improbable as
they all sound, I was attempting to place these fantastic characters in the
real world, trying to give them human traits and believable reactions, trying
to combine fairy-tale concepts with down-to-earth reality, and the results
really grabbed me. I was doing what Joanie had suggested. I was writing stories
for myself, trying for the kind of offbeat, irreverent feeling that had always
attracted me to Mark Twain, Bernard Shaw, and yes, Woody Allen.
But most of
all I wanted to do Spider-Man.
When I was
about 10 years old, I used to read a pulp magazine called The Spider and
subtitled "Master of Men." Perhaps it was the Master of Men that got
me, but to my impressionable, preteen way of thinking, the Spider was the most
dramatic character I had ever encountered. He ranked right up there with Doc
Savage and the Shadow. Even better, he wasn't as well known as the others,
which gave mc the warm feeling that his fans belonged to an elite club. At any
rate, in searching for a title for our newest superhero, I remembered my old
pulp favorite—and the title Spider-Man instantly hit mc. I didn't mind borrowing
the Spider part of his name because everything else about our new character
would be completely different. I was determined to make our next production the
most original, most unique comic book character ever to swoop down the pike.
Even the man
I chose to illustrate the web-spinner's adventures marked a departure from the
usual superhero strip. Steve Ditko was as fine a draftsman and graphic continuity
artist as one could find. Instead of depicting unreal creatures, with muscles
bulging on muscles, Steve's characters looked like the guy next door. Where the
average superhero strip was exaggerated and overblown, his artwork was low-key
and understated. It was just what I wanted. It was vitally important to me
that Spider-Man be the kind of character with whom any ordinary Joe could identify.
I was certain that Steve's untypical, uncliched artwork would help.
The deeper I
dug under Spidey's skin to see what made him tick, the more I realized how
embarrassingly banal had been the comics of the past kw decades in terms of
characterization. The so-called good guys were always invincible, infallible,
and totally triumphant at the end of each story. The bad guys were always dastardly,
deadly, and irrevocably eradicated by the time the final curtain rang down.
The good guys talked lyrically. The bad guys grunted. The good guys were pure
at heart, proud, and passionately patriotic. The bad guys were cowards,
cutthroats, and craven to the core. The heroes were one scant step removed from
sainthood, while nary a villain had a single redeeming feature. Nonsense: I'll
bet that even Attila the Hun was good to his mother; Albert Schweitzer probably
snored in his sleep.
And so
another mighty Marvel concept was born. Our villains would no longer
necessarily be the epitome of evil incarnate; our heroes had not only feet of
clay, but kneecaps and thighbones as well.
But how
could the reader learn what motivated them? After all, their dialogue was
usually limited to "I've got to stop him before he captures Buckey,"
or "Great Scott! It's a creature from another planet!" The solution
was obvious: give the reader a chance to get inside our characters'
heads—emphasize cogitation as well as conversation. Those of you who are
steeped in Marvel lore, who have faithfully followed the adventures of our
amazing arachnid, how well you know our penchant for thought balloons wherever
we have the slightest millimeter of empty space within a panel. Our characters
soliloquize enough to make Hamlet seem like a raging extravert. Never before
have comic books exhibited such interminable soul-searching; such agonizing
reappraisals on the part of hero and villain alike; such a dogged quest for
truth, understanding, and basic motivation, even while Spider-Man is getting
his lumps.
Thus, for
the first time, comic book stories began to be written with the same concern
for human speech and characterization as movies, novels, and plays. I'm not
trying to imply that the end result would have made Ibsen jealous. We were
still writing for a mass market and grinding out dozens of pages a day. But we
were trying—and we were on our way.
There were
plenty of voices of doom out there. I can't tell you how many times I heard,
from those who were "older, wiser, and we've been in the business far
longer than you," how my innocent little crusade to upgrade comic books
would bring about the total collapse of our valiant little company, if not the
entire industry itself. I can still hear the voices—wise, persuasive, and unrelenting.
"Are
you out of your mind? Comics are for kids. For little kids!"
"You
can't produce comic books to suit your own tastes. You'll lose your entire
audience!"
"They
just wanna look at the pictures. Give 'em anything that requires real reading
and you've had it!"
"Don't
ruin what we've got goin' here. Don't be a jerk and mess up a good thing!"
We managed
to stick to our guns. We kept writing and drawing Spider-Man stories that
featured surprisingly realistic situations, carefully contrived motivation,
and the sharpest dialogue I could invent. One of my favorite devices was the
old "What if . . . ?" ploy. What if Spider-Man, while fighting for
his life against some deadly foe, is suddenly hit with an allergy attack? What
if he has to rush out at midnight to don his hidden costume and save mankind,
but his Aunt May won't let him go because of an impending snowstorm and he's
just getting over a cold? What if Spidey receives a huge check as a reward for
apprehending some deadly dastard, but he can't cash the check because it's made
payable to Spider-Man, and he has no bank account under that name, nor does he
have any way of identifying himself without revealing his secret identity? For
the first time in years, comic books began to amuse me again.
After the
first few stories of this type, I felt I really knew our friendly neighborhood
web-spinner. Referring to him as Spidey seemed as natural to me as calling my
wife Joanie. Writing his dialogue was ridiculously easy; I simply let him speak
exactly as I would. Talk about empathy! Whenever Spidey was in a tight spot,
I'd only have to think of what I would say or do in the same predicament, and
presto—I had my dialogue as well as my course of action. But I've always tried
to keep it in the right perspective. I've never personally. attempted to
shinny up a wall or cling to the nearest ceiling.
But what
about the readers? What sort of impact did the widely heralded (mostly by us)
"Marvel style" have on the hard-to-please hordes of Spider-dom
Assembled? I'm glad you asked.
The Amazing
Spider-Man first went on sale early in 1963. Prior to that time we were selling
about 17 million comic books a year. In 1964, spearheaded by Spidey's
phenomenal popularity, we sold 28 million. By 1968 we were selling 49 million
copies per year. Last year, still led by Spider-Man as our flagship character,
Marvel Comics sold more than 70 million comic books and our sales arc still
growing. Throughout the world, Spidey outsells even Superman by about 800,000
copies per year.
To me, the
most gratifying result of our new approach was a startling change in the comic
book audience. The age range of our readers previously six to about 13—suddenly
zoomed to college age and beyond. In fact, the additional sales were corning
mainly from older readers, and the beauty of it was that we were gaining those
older readers without losing the younger ones.
It seems
that Spider-Alan and other Marvel Comics titles were being accepted and enjoyed
on two levels. For the younger reader, there were colorful costumes, action,
excitement, fantasy, and bigger-than-life adventures. For the newly
proselytized older reader, we offered unexpectedly sophisticated plots and
subplots, a college level vocabulary,
satire, science fiction, and as many philosophical and sociological concepts
as we could devise. In the beginning, the satire wasn't completely intentional.
I merely tried to imagine what would happen if someone with superhuman power
really existed, and if he dwelled—for example—in Forest Hills, New York. Then I
tried to confront him with real-life situations and problems. I thought I was
being realistic; older readers thought I was waxing satirical. If they called
it satire, who was I to contradict them?
I was also
delighted to discover that our younger readers were not turned off by the
college-level vocabulary we were dishing out. They seemed to absorb the meaning
of words like cataclysmic, misanthropic, subliminal, phantasmagoric. We
actually received hundreds of letters from bewildered parents telling us that
"Johnny's reading ability has improved 100 percent, as has his
schoolwork—especially gram mar and composition—since reading Marvel
Comics"!
For the past
decade, I've traveled around the country extolling the virtues of Spidermania
on the campuses of virtually every college and university from Portland to
Phoenix, from Seattle to Sarasota. You'd be amazed at the range of queries that
have been flung at me, questions ranging from "How can Spider-Man see
through those obviously opaque eye panels in his mask?" to
"Philosophically, how do you equate Spidcy's guilt syndrome with his hyper
neurotic extraversion and manic-depressive tendencies?" And I'm not even
laying the tough ones on you!
Beyond
grownup language and drawing, there seems to be something about Peter Parker
and his costumed alter ego that mesmerizes his millions of admirers, including
myself. Let me venture a theory as to why Spider-Man has enjoyed such a vast
and ever-growing popularity all these years.
It's a
pretty safe bet that you and I have one thing in common with the whole human
race. Cute, cuddly, and captivating though we may be, we all possess a certain
degree of rotten-ness—just enough to make us interesting. We may be genuinely
fond of our friends; we may respect and admire any number of people, wishing
them success in all their endeavors; and yet, we never quite want them to
succeed too much. If a close friend or relative does well, you rejoice for him.
But if he does an awful lot better than you, it wouldn't really break your
heart to have him stumble once in a while. We never really want anyone to be
too much better, richer, handsomer, smarter, sexier, or luckier than we arc.
Not too much. In fact, if a loved one can be something of a loser now and then,
it's usually a lot easier for that love to flourish and grow. Nothing breeds
genuine, long-lasting affection as much as the knowledge that the recipient is
just a teensy bit—just slightly, mind you, just the merest soupcon—inferior to
you!
Well, that's
how it is with Spider-Man. For all his power, brains, and fame, the poor kid
has far more problems, far more hang-ups than a sterling soul like you. As
you read his weird and wondrous adventures, even as you thrill to his
superhuman prowess, you find yourself pitying the guy, sympathizing with
anyone who can have as many tough breaks and as much crummy luck as he does.
Sure, he's a superhero. Sure, he's a regular one-man army. Sure, he's
practically indestructible. But you're a lot better off. You seem to handle
life's little vicissitudes far better than he can. Even though he's a living legend,
you can feel superior to him. Now, how can you help but love a guy like that?
And perhaps,
when all is said and done, that's what Spider-Man is telling us about
ourselves and our time. Even though it is fashionable to lament our lack of
heroes—the vanishing of our Joe DiMaggios or Winston Churchills—it's just
possible that the day of the bigger-than-life hero is gone forever. We've grown
too sophisticated. We've become too cynical. The events of the past few
decades have made us suspicious, have made us distrust our leading citizens,
our public figures, our politicians. Whatever happened to the time when we
could refer to a politician as a statesman without feeling foolish?
All our
Vietnams, Kent States, and Watergates have taken their toll. It's not that we
don't want heroes. It's not that we don't search for someone to emulate, to
admire, to idolize. But until the shock waves of our recent past have worn off,
and we're finally ready and able to believe once again, our heroes will have to
be fashioned of a different mold. They'll be flaky, fallible, and fault-ridden.
They'll be no better or worse than we ourselves. We've endured too much. We
won't let ourselves be hurt anymore.
So here's to
Spider-Man. Here's to the new breed of superhero. He'll never disillusion us
because we'll never expect too much from him. We can understand him and
sympathize with him. If his powers arc greater than ours, so arc his problems.
He's our kind of guy.
Quest July/August
1977
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