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Sean Howe - Marvel Comics: The Untold Story

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Sean Howe Marvel Comics: The Untold Story

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An unvarnished, unauthorized, behind-the-scenes account of one of the most dominant pop cultural forces in contemporary America.

Operating out of a tiny office on Madison Avenue in the early 1960s, a struggling company called Marvel Comics presented a cast of brightly costumed characters distinguished by smart banter and compellingly human flaws. Spider-Man, the Fantastic Four, Captain America, the Incredible Hulk, the Avengers, Iron Man, Thor, the X-Men, Daredevilthese superheroes quickly won childrens hearts and sparked the imaginations of pop artists, public intellectuals, and campus radicals. Over the course of a half century, Marvels epic universe would become the most elaborate fictional narrative in history and serve as a modern American mythology for millions of readers.

Throughout this decades-long journey to becoming a multibillion-dollar enterprise, Marvels identity has continually shifted, careening between scrappy underdog and corporate behemoth. As the company has weathered Wall Street machinations, Hollywood failures, and the collapse of the comic book market, its characters have been passed along among generations of editors, artists, and writersalso known as the celebrated Marvel Bullpen. Entrusted to carry on tradition, Marvels contributorsimpoverished child prodigies, hallucinating peaceniks, and mercenary careerists among themstruggled with commercial mandates, a fickle audience, and, over matters of credit and control, one another.

For the first time, Marvel Comics reveals the outsized personalities behind the scenes, including Martin Goodman, the self-made publisher who forayed into comics after a get-rich-quick tip in 1939; Stan Lee, the energetic editor who would shepherd the company through thick and thin for decades; and Jack Kirby, the World War II veteran whod co-created Captain America in 1940 and, twenty years later, developed with Lee the bulk of the companys marquee characters in a three-year frenzy of creativity that would be the grounds for future legal battles and endless debates.

Drawing on more than one hundred original interviews with Marvel insiders then and now, Marvel Comics is a story of fertile imaginations, lifelong friendships, action-packed fistfights, reformed criminals, unlikely alliances, and third-act betrayalsa narrative of one of the most extraordinary, beloved, and beleaguered pop cultural entities in Americas history.

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Marvel Comics

The Untold Story

Sean Howe

To the Merry Marvel Bullpen In the beginning Marvel created the Bullpen and - photo 1

To the Merry Marvel Bullpen In the beginning Marvel created the Bullpen and - photo 2

To the Merry Marvel Bullpen

In the beginning Marvel created the Bullpen and the Style.

And the Bullpen was without form, and was void; and darkness was upon the face of the Artists. And the Spirit of Marvel moved upon the face of the Writers.

And Marvel said, Let there be The Fantastic Four. And there was The Fantastic Four.

And Marvel saw The Fantastic Four. And it was good.

Stan Lee

Ideas can never be traced to any one source. They are tossed back and forth between people until the decision makers step in and choose what they think is a success formula.

Jack Kirby

Contents

I n 1961, Stanley Martin Lieber was pushing forty, watching the comic-book industry, in which hed toiled for over two decades, fade away. Recently forced to fire his staff of artists, he sat alone in the comics division of publisher Martin Goodmans perfunctorily named Magazine Management Company, where hed been hired, as a teenager, at eight dollars a week. Hed once wanted to be a novelist, but he never managed to get around to it, and it seemed unlikely that hed be able to work Big Ideas into the monster, romance, and western comics that were still dribbling out from the vestiges of the company. Tucked away in a quiet corner, the highlights of Liebers days were writing corny jokes for toss-off humor books like Blushing Blurbs: A Ribald Reader for the Bon Vivant and Golfers Anonymous . Not wanting to use his real name, he signed them Stan Lee.

F ate intervened (or so the story went) in the form of a golf game between Martin Goodman and Jack Liebowitz, publisher of rival publisher DC Comics. Liebowitz reportedly told Goodman that DC had thrown together some of its most popular charactersSuperman, Batman, Wonder Woman, Green Lanterninto a single supergroup title, The Justice League of America , and found itself with a surprise hit. Goodman marched into the office with a mandate for Lee: steal this idea and create a team of superheroes . But Lee had been through attempted superhero revivals before. He went home to his wife, Joanie, and announced that he was finally going to quit. She talked him out of it. Just do it the way you want to, she insisted. Work your ideas into the comic book. What are they going to do, fire you?

It took a few days of jotting down a million notes, Lee would remember years later, crossing them out and jotting down a million more until I finally came up with four characters that I thought would work well together as a team.... I wrote an outline containing the basic description of the new characters and the somewhat offbeat story line and gave it to my most trusted and dependable artist, the incredibly talented Jack Kirby.

That was how Stan Lee recalled the genesis of The Fantastic Four , and how he related it over and over again through the following decades, in his inimitably jaunty manner. Jack Kirby, whod launched to stardom in the 1940s, when hed co-created the iconic Captain America for Goodman, would later tell it differently. Marvel was on its ass, literally, and when I came around, they were practically hauling out the furniture, Kirby said. They were beginning to move, and Stan Lee was sitting there crying. I told them to hold everything, and I pledged that I would give them the kind of books that would up their sales and keep them in business.

This much is certain: in the middle of 1961, Lee and Kirby threw together twenty-five pages of story and art, attached a crude logo, and thousands of copies of Fantastic Four #1 were shipped off to take their places on newsstand tables and spinner racks across the country, wedged between the latest issues of Millie the Model and Kid Colt Outlaw .

T he Fantastic Four wasnt quite the Justice League rip-off that Goodman had orderedin the first issue, the protagonists didnt even wear costumes; stranger still, they were constantly bickering. Never before had a comic-book team been shaded with such distinct personalities. In a nearly revolutionary flourish, the Thing was even conceived as a heavynot really a good guy, who might go rogue at any moment, a far cry from the upstanding citizenship of Superman and Green Lantern. But copies sold, quickly, and fan letters poured in to the Magazine Management offices. The book had sparked something, a fervor unfamiliar to Lee.

Lee and another of the monster-comics regulars, artist Steve Ditko, soon introduced Spider-Man, who behind his mask was just Peter Parker, an angsty teenage nerd who sometimes struggled to make good choices. A moody, outcast kid as a superhero? It had never been done. But Spider-Man, too, struck a chord with readers.

Magazine Management quickly cranked out more off-kilter creations, heroes with just enough moral ambiguity for Cold War children in the last moments before Lyndon Johnson and the Beatles. In a matter of months, they introduced a test-site researcher metamorphosed by radiation into a violent green beast, a crippled physician transformed into the God of Thunder, an arms dealer with a heart condition who built a metal suit with which to fight communists, and a washed-up, egomaniacal surgeon who found his true calling in the occult. Heroes with feet of clay, many of them were marked by loneliness and self-doubt. Even the more confident among them carried the knowledge that they didnt fit in with the rest of the world.

Lee and the small stable of middle-aged freelance artists, plugging away in a medium that was ignored or ridiculed by most of society, were, in their way, misfits, too. But their work began to attract and foster a dedicated community of admirers. It was a fellowship that existed below the radar of media attention, at first, without even a name to rally around: Goodmans comics line, once best known as Timely Comics, was published under dozens of different nearly anonymous company names, from Atlas to Zenith, visible only in the small print of the copyright notices. Finally, at the end of 1962, Goodman and Lee settled on branding their reinvigorated line as Marvel Comics.

M arvels colorful creationsthe Fantastic Four, Spider-Man, the Incredible Hulk, Thor, Iron Man, and Doctor Strangebuilt the groundwork for a self-contained fictional construct called The Marvel Universe, in which all heroes adventures were intertwined with great complexity. Soon their rapidly expanding world also included the likes of the X-Men, a gang of ostracized mutant schoolchildren whose struggle against discrimination paralleled the civil rights movement, and Daredevil, a blind lawyer whose other senses were heightened to inhuman levels. The Black Widow, Hawkeye, the Silver Surfer, and countless others followed. For twelve cents an issue, Marvel Comics delivered fascinatingly dysfunctional protagonists, literary flourishes, and eye-popping images to little kids, Ivy Leaguers, and hippies alike.

In 1965, Spider-Man and the Hulk both infiltrated Esquire magazines list of twenty-eight college campus heroes, alongside John F. Kennedy and Bob Dylan. Marvel often stretches the pseudoscientific imagination far into the phantasmagoria of other dimensions, problems of time and space, and even the semi-theological concept of creation, one Cornell student gushed to the magazine. They are brilliantly illustrated, to a nearly hallucinogenic extent. Even the simple mortal-hero stories are illustrated with every panel as dramatically composed as anything Orson Welles ever put on film.

F ace Front, True Believers!

Stan Lee addressed Marvels audience colloquially and excitedly in the comics back pages, making readers feel like they were part of an exclusive club. Although most of the stories were produced in the silence of freelancers homes, Lee painted the drab Marvel offices as a crowded and chatty House of Ideas, a throwback to the bustling, desk-filled rooms that hed known in earlier years but that now existed only in his mind. With a jazzy string of didja know s and all-caps accents and exclamation-point backslaps, Lees Bullpen Bulletins columns could confer excitement even on the very idea of a workplace. It isnt generally known, but many of our merry Marvel artists are also talented story men in their own right! For example, all Stan has to do with the pros like JACK KING KIRBY, dazzling DON HECK, and darlin DICK AYERS is give them the germ of an idea, and they make up all the details as they go along, drawing and plotting out the story. Then, our leader simply takes the finished drawings and adds all the dialogue and captions! Sounds complicated? Maybe it is, but its another reason why no one else can bring you that old Marvel magic! Entranced readers, poring over every behind-the-scenes glimpse, soon learned the name of each contributor, from the inkers and letterers to the receptionist and production manager. When Lee started an official fan clubThe Merry Marvel Marching Societyfifty thousand fans paid a dollar each to join. Like one of its own characters, the weakling underdog Marvel Comics had become a great American success story.

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