2019-01-01_SciFiNow

(singke) #1

PORTAL


010 |


We remember the life of one of the most important


and beloved creators in genre and beyond


FEW PEOPLE CAN be said to
have created an entire universe,
but Stan Lee did just that. Along
with such legendary artists as
Jack Kirby and Steve Ditko, Lee
contributed more characters
and worlds to the pop culture
landscape than just about anyone
else. Spider-Man is his most
lauded creation, but that’s barely
scratching the surface.
Born in 1922 in Manhattan
and spending most of his
childhood in The Bronx, Stanley
Martin Lieber was the son of
Romanian Jewish immigrants.
Stanley was a voracious reader
who loved movies and dreamt
of being a serious writer – so it
was with some reluctance that
he took a job working for Timely
Comics at 17, later going
on to be a writer at
the company that
would eventually be
renamed Marvel. He
was so embarrassed
by the silly comic
book stories he was
writing that he adopted
a pen name: Stan Lee (he
would later legally change his
surname to Lee).
During the Fifties he became
disillusioned with his work,
bashing out thousands of
romances, westerns, adventures
and more. He was on the verge
of quitting when the editor,
Martin Goodman, asked him to
come up with a new superhero
team in response to DC’s hugely
successful revamp of The Flash
and Green Lantern and their
creation of the Justice League
of America. Deciding to fi nally
create what he wanted to create



  • or get fi red trying – Lee worked
    with Jack Kirby to create The
    Fantastic Four. Launching under
    the newly renamed Marvel
    Comics in 1961, The Fantastic


Four was an immediate hit.
Encouraged by that success,
Lee was given more or less
free-rein over creating superhero
characters for Marvel. In 1962
Lee and Kirby created The
Incredible Hulk and Thor. Lee’s
brother, Larry Lieber, wrote the
script for Thor’s fi rst appearance
in ‘Journey Into Mystery’ as Lee
was too busy to write it himself


  • perhaps because Spider-Man
    debuted in the same month as
    Thor. Co-created with artist Steve
    Ditko, Peter Parker fi rst appeared
    in Amazing Fantasy before
    getting a self-titled book when
    Amazing Fantasy 15 became one
    of Marvel’s best-selling issues.
    Lee initially worked with Kirby
    on Spider-Man, but found Kirby’s
    ideas too heroic – Lee was
    adamant that, behind
    the mask, Spidey
    should be a teenager
    with normal teenage
    problems, someone
    readers could
    actually relate to.
    But Lee was far from
    done – across the Sixties
    he co-created the likes of Iron
    Man, the X-Men, Doctor Strange,
    Daredevil, Black Panther, Ant-
    Man, Wasp and redefi ned the
    old Fourties character, Captain
    America, bringing some of them
    together to form The Avengers.
    The Sixties were no doubt
    Lee’s creative heyday, and he
    created a universe of superheroes
    rooted fi rmly in our world
    that commented on current
    affairs (Tony Stark was initially
    profi ting from the Vietnam War)
    and presented very human
    superheroes. Lee eventually
    stepped down from writing
    comics in 1972, when he became
    publisher of Marvel – his fi nal
    scripts were for Fantastic Four
    and Spider-Man, although he


STAN LEE


1922-


WORDS ABIGAIL CHANDLER


© Rex Features

ROBERT
DOWNEY JR
“I owe it all to you.
Rest in peace Stan.”

SAMUEL L
JACKSON
“Thank you @TheRealStanLee
for the escape from this world
and great joy inhabiting the ones
you created! You made so many
believe in the good, the heroic, the
villainous, the exciting, most of
all, you were giving and
gracious to us all.”

TOM
HOLLAND
“How many millions of us
are indebted to this guy, none
more so than me. The father
of Marvel has made so many
people incredibly happy. What
a life and what a thing to
have achieved. Rest in
peace Stan.”
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