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{{Superherobox| |image=|caption=Promotional art for
The Amazing Spider-Man vol. 2, #50 (April 2003)
by J. Scott Campbell and Tim Townsend.]|debut=
Amazing Fantasy #15 (Aug. 1962)]
Steve Ditko|alliances =[New Avengers (comic book)Daily Bugle
Civil War (comics)#The Secret AvengersFantastic Four#"Alternate Fantastic Four" members|aliases = Ricochet (comics), Dusk (comics)#Dusk II, Prodigy (comics), Hornet (comics)#Hornet II,
Captain Universe,
Ben Reilly
Ability to produce both [biotic material and synthetic fiber spider-webbing-->
Spider-Man is a fictional character
Marvel Comics superhero created by
Stan Lee and Steve Ditko. Since his First appeared in
Amazing Fantasy #15 (Aug. 1962), he has become one of the world's most popular, enduring and commercially successful
superheroes and is arguably Marvel's most popular character.
When Spider-Man first saw print in the 1960s,
teenage characters in superhero comic books were usually sidekicks. The Spider-Man series broke ground by featuring a hero who himself was an adolescent, to whose "self-obsessions with rejection, inadequacy, and loneliness" young readers could relate.Wright, Bradford W.
Comic Book Nation. (Johns Hopkins, 2001) p. 210 Spider-Man has since appeared in various media including several animated and live-action
Spider-Man on television, syndicated newspaper
The Amazing Spider-Man#Newspaper comic strip and a successful Spider-Man film series.
Marvel has published several
Bibliography of Spider-Man titles, the first being
The Amazing Spider-Man. Over the years, the Peter Parker character has developed from shy
high school student to troubled college student to a married teacher and a member of the superhero team the New Avengers (comics).
Publication history
By 1962, with the success of the
Fantastic Four and other characters, Marvel editor and head writer Stan Lee was casting about for a new superhero idea. He said that the idea for Spider-Man arose from a surge in teenage demand for comic books, and the desire to create a character with whom teens could identify.O'Neill, Cynthia, DeFalco, Tom, and Lee, Stan.
Spider-Man: The Ultimate Guide (DK CHILDREN, 2001), p.1. ISBN 0-789-47946-X In his autobiography, Lee cites the non-superhuman
pulp magazine crime fighter The Spider as an influenceLee, Stan, and Mair, George.
Excelsior!: The Amazing Life of Stan Lee (Fireside, 2002), p.130. ISBN 0-684-87305-2 and both there and in a multitude of print and video interviews said he was inspired by seeing a fly climb up a wall — adding in his autobiography that he has told that story so often he has become unsure of whether or not it is true.Lee, Mair, p.126: He goes further in his autobiography, claiming that even while pitching the concept to publisher Martin Goodman, "I can't remember if that was literally true or not, but I thought it would lend a little color to my pitch". Artist Ditko, in a 1990 article by himself, gave a more prosaic origin story for the name:
Lee approached Marvel publisher Martin Goodman (publisher) to seek approval for the character. In a 1986 interview, he described in detail his arguments to overcome Goodman's objections. Goodman agreed to let Lee try out Spider-Man in the upcoming final issue of the canceled
science-fiction/supernatural anthology series
Amazing Adult Fantasy, which was renamed
Amazing Fantasy for that single issue, #15 (Aug. 1962).
Les Daniels,
Marvel: Five Fabulous Decades of the World's Greatest Comics (Harry N. Abrams, New York, 1991), p. 95. ISBN 0-8109-3821-9
Jack Kirby, in a 1982 interview, claimed Lee had minimal involvement in the character's creation, and that it had originated with Kirby and Joe Simon, who in the 1950s had proposed a character called The Silver Spider for the
Crestwood comic
Black Magic until the publisher went out of business.
Simon, in his 1990 autobiography, disputes Kirby's account, asserting that the
supernatural anthology
Black Magic was not a factor, and that he (Simon) devised the name "Spiderman" (later changed to "The Silver Spider"), while Kirby outlined the character's story and powers. Simon later elaborated that his and Kirby's character conception became the basis for Simon's Archie Comics superhero
The Fly (Archie Comics), introduced in early 1959. (penciller) &
Steve Ditko (inker).
Comics historian
Greg Theakston says that Lee, after receiving Goodman's approval for the name Spider-Man and the "ordinary teen" concept, approached Kirby. Kirby told Lee about his 1950s Silver Spider/Spiderman, in which an orphaned boy living with an old couple finds a magic ring that gives him superpowers. Lee and Kirby "immediately sat down for a story conference" and Lee afterward directed Kirby to flesh out the character and draw some pages. Steve Ditko would be the inker.Ditko,
Robin Snyder's History of Comics: "Stan said a new Marvel hero would be introduced in #15 what became titled
Amazing Fantasy. He would be called Spider-Man. Jack would do the penciling and I was to ink the character". At this point still, "Stan said Spider-Man would be a teenager with a magic ring which could transform him into an adult hero — Spider-Man. I said it sounded like
The Fly (Archie Comics), which Joe Simon had done for Archie Comics. ... Stan called Jack about it but I don't know what was discussed. I never talked to Jack about Spider-Man.... Later, at some point, I was given the job of drawing Spider-Man". "A day or two later", Kirby showed Lee the first six pages, and, as Lee recalled, "I hated the way he was doing it. Not that he did it badly — it just wasn't the character I wanted; it was too heroic".Theakston, Greg.
The Steve Ditko Reader (Pure Imagination, Brooklyn, NY, 2002; ISBN 1-56685-011-8), p. 12 (unnumbered) Simon concurs that Kirby had shown the original Spiderman version to Lee, who liked the idea and assigned Kirby to draw sample pages of the new character but disliked the results — in Simon's description, "Captain America with cobwebs".
Lee turned to Ditko, who developed a visual motif Lee found satisfactory, although Lee would later replace Ditko's original cover with one penciled by Kirby. Ditko said,
Ditko also recalled that,
Much earlier, in a rare contemporaneous account, Ditko described his and Lee's contributions in a mail interview with Gary Martin published in
Comic Fan #2 (Summer 1965): "Stan Lee thought the name up. I did costume, web gimmick on wrist & spider signal". "Steve Ditko - A Portrait of the Master."
Comic Fan #2, Summer 1965. Published by Larry Herndon Additionally, Ditko shared a Manhattan studio with noted
fetish artist Eric Stanton, an art-school classmate Ditko Looked Up: "Ditko & Stanton" who, in a 1988 interview with Theakston, recalled that although his contribution to Spider-Man was "almost nil", he and Ditko had "worked on storyboards together and I added a few ideas. But the whole thing was created by Steve on his own... I think I added the business about the webs coming out of his hands".Theakston, p. 14 (unnumbered, misordered as page 16)
Commercial success
. Cover art by co-creator
Steve Ditko.A few months after Spider-Man's introduction in
Amazing Fantasy #15 (Aug. 1962), publisher Martin Goodman saw the sales figures for that issue and found it had been one of the nascent Marvel's highest-selling comics.Daniels, p. 97 A solo series followed, beginning with
The Amazing Spider-Man #1 (March 1963). The title eventually became Marvel's top-selling seriesWright, pg. 211 and the character a cultural icon; a 1965
Esquire (magazine) poll of college campuses found that college students ranked Spider-Man and fellow Marvel hero
The Hulk alongside Bob Dylan and Che Guevara as their favorite revolutionary icons. One interviewee selected Spider-Man because he was "beset by woes, money problems, and the question of existence. In short, he is one of us".Wright, pg. 223 Following Ditko's departure after issue #39, John Romita, Sr. replaced him as artist, and would pencil the character over the next several years.
An early 1970s Spider-Man story led to the revision of the Comics Code Authority. Previously, it was taboo to depict illegal drugs, even negatively. However, in 1970 the
Richard Nixon administration's
Department of Health, Education, and Welfare asked Stan Lee to run an anti-drug message in one of Marvel's top-selling titles.Wright, p. 239 Lee chose the top-selling
The Amazing Spider-Man; issues #96–98 (May–July 1971) feature a story arc that shows the negative effects of
drug abuse. In the story, Peter Parker's friend Harry Osborn starts taking pills and becomes so ill that when Spider-Man fights the Green Goblin (Norman Osborn), Spider-Man defeats Norman by simply showing him his sick son. While the story had a clear anti-drug message, the Comics Code Authority refused to issue its seal of approval. Marvel nevertheless sold the three issues without the Comics Code Authority's approval or seal and sold so well that the industry's self-censorship was undercut.
In 1972, a second monthly
ongoing series starring Spider-Man began:
Marvel Team-Up, in which Spider-Man is paired with other superheroes. In 1976, his second solo series,
The Spectacular Spider-Man began, running parallel to the main series; a third solo series,
Web of Spider-Man, launched in 1985, replacing
Marvel Team-Up. The launch of a fourth monthly title in 1990, written and drawn by popular artist Todd McFarlane, debuted with multiple variant covers and sold in excess of three million copies, an industry record at the time.Wright, p. 279 There have generally been at least two ongoing Spider-Man series at any time. Several limited series,
One-shot (comics) and loosely related comics have also been published, and Spider-Man makes frequent cameos and guest appearances in other comic series. issues that prompted the Code's first update, allowing comics to show the negative effects of illegal-drug use. Note cover-blurb reference to "The last fatal trip!" Cover art by
Gil KaneThe original
Amazing Spider-Man ran through issue #441 (Nov. 1998). Writer-artist
John Byrne then revamped the origin of Spider-Man in the 13-issue
miniseries Spider-Man: Chapter One (Dec. 1998 - Oct. 1999, with an issue #0 midway through and some months containing two issues), similar to Byrne's adding details and some revisions to Superman's origin in DC Comics'
The Man of Steel (comic book). Running concurrently,
The Amazing Spider-Man was restarted with vol. 2, #1 (Jan. 1999). With what would have been vol. 2, #59, Marvel reintroduced the original numbering, starting with #500 (Dec. 2003). This flagship series has reached issue #542 as of mid-2007.
As of 2007, Spider-Man regularly appears in
The Amazing Spider-Man,
New Avengers (comic book),
The Sensational Spider-Man (vol. 2),
Friendly Neighborhood Spider-Man,
Spider-Man Family and various
limited series in mainstream Marvel Comics continuity, as well as in the
Parallel universe (fiction) series
Spider-Girl, and
Ultimate Spider-Man, the alternate-universe tween series
Spider-Man Loves Mary Jane, and the alternate-universe children's series
Marvel Adventures Spider-Man and
Avengers (comics)#Marvel Adventures: The Avengers.
Spider-Man has become Marvel's flagship character, and is often used as the company mascot. When Marvel became the first comic book company to be listed on the New York Stock Exchange in 1991, the
Wall Street Journal announced "Spider-man is coming to
Wall Street"; the event was in turn promoted with an actor in a Spider-Man costume accompanying Stan Lee to the Stock Exchange.Wright, p. 254 When Marvel wanted to issue a story dealing with the immediate aftermath of the September 11th, 2001 attacks, the company settled on the December 2001 issue of
The Amazing Spider-Man. In 2006, Spider-Man garnered major media coverage with the revealing of the character's secret identity, an event detailed in a full-page story in the
New York Post before the issue containing the story was even released.
Fictional character biography
In his first appearance, Peter Parker is introduced as a science
whiz kid teenager from the Forest Hills, Queens section of
New York City who gets bitten by a radioactive spider during a science demonstration. He gains powers and at first attempts to become a TV star. He fails to stop a thief, and weeks later the same criminal kills his Benjamin Parker. Learning that with great power comes great responsibility, Spider-Man becomes a vigilante.
Amazing Fantasy vol. 1, #15 (Aug. 1962) After his uncle's death, he and his aunt become desperate for money, so he gets a job as a photographer at the
Daily Bugle selling photos to J. Jonah Jameson, who vilifies his alter ego in the paper.
The Amazing Spider-Man vol. 1, #1 (March 1963) As he battles his enemies for the first time, Parker finds juggling his personal life and costumed adventures difficult, even attempting to give up.
The Amazing Spider-Man vol. 1, #50, (July 1967)
The Amazing Spider-Man vol. 1, #100 (Sept. 1971) Enemies constantly endanger his loved ones,
The Amazing Spider-Man Annual #1, 1963 with the Green Goblin managing to kill his girlfriend Gwen Stacy.
The Amazing Spider-Man vol. 1, #121 (June 1973) Though haunted by her death, he eventually
The Wedding! (Spider-Man) Mary Jane Watson, and much later reveals his civilian identity to the world,
Civil War #2 (June 2006) furthering his already numerous problems.
Powers and equipment
.A bite from an irradiated spider causes a variety of changes in Peter Parker's body, giving him List of comic book superpowers. In the original
Stan Lee-Steve Ditko stories, Spider-Man has the ability to cling to walls, superhuman strength, a sixth sense ("spider-sense") that alerts him to danger, perfect balance and equilibrium, as well as superhuman speed and agility. In story-lines published in 2005 and 2006 (such as Spider-Man: The Other), he develops additional spider-like abilities including biological web-shooters, toxic stingers that extend from his forearms, the ability to stick individuals to his back, better control over Spider-sense for detection, and night vision. Spider-Man's strength and speed have also increased beyond his original limits.
Spider-Man's overall metabolic efficiency has been greatly increased, and the composition of his skeleton, inter-connected tissues, and nervous system have all been enhanced. Spider-Man's musculature has been augmented so that he is superhumanly strong and flexible. He has developed a unique fighting style that makes full use of his agility, strength, and equilibrium.
Peter Parker is intellectually gifted, excelling in applied science,
chemistry and
physics. He uses his wits in addition to his powers. Besides outsmarting his foes, he constructs many devices that complement his powers, most notably mechanical web-shooters (ejecting an advanced adhesive compound which dissolves after two hours), which he developed in his teenage years. They are capable of releasing web-fluid in a variety of configurations, including a single strand to swing from, a net, and a simple glob to foul machinery or blind an opponent. He can also weave the web material into simple forms like a shield, a spherical protection or hemi-spherical barrier, a club, or a hang-glider wing. Other equipment includes spider-tracers (spider-shaped adhesive homing beacons keyed to his own spider-sense), a light beacon which can either be used as a flashlight or project a "Spider-Signal" design, a specially modified
camera that can take pictures automatically. He has also used an invention of Ben Reilly's (a clone of Peter Parker), called "impact webbing": a pellet that explodes on impact into a wrap-around net of webbing.
Though lacking in directed training, Spider-Man is one of the most experienced superheroes in the Marvel Universe. He has worked with virtually everyone in the superhero community at one time or another. Due to this experience, he has beaten foes with far greater powers and abilities. His fighting style is purely freestyle, which incorporates his speed, agility, strength and spider-sense. A very large part of his combat ability is improvisation and using his wits to out-think his opponents. One constant is his habit of using jokes, puns and insults. This not only causes his adversaries to become angry and distracted, but it also helps Spider-Man deal with any fears or doubts that he might have during a battle.
Spider-Man has had a few costume changes over his history, with three notable costumes -- his traditional red-and-blue costume, the black-and-white alien
symbiote (comics) (later developed into a regular costume for stealth) and the technologically advanced
Spider-Man's powers and equipment#Stark Armor costume designed by Iron Man. In early comics and sporadically throughout his run depending on a given artist's interpretation, Spider-Man's costume included webbing that extended from his underarms to his torso. Although the eyes of the costume are made of fabric, in some continuities the eyes will change depending on Peter's facial expression.
Enemies
Spider-Man has one of the best-known
rogues gallery in comics. Spider-Man's most infamous and dangerous enemies are generally considered to be the
Green Goblin,
Doctor Octopus, and
Venom (comics). Others include the Lizard (comics), Chameleon (comics),
Hobgoblin (comics), Kraven the Hunter, the
Scorpion (comics), the
Sandman (Marvel Comics), the Rhino (comics), Mysterio, Vulture (comics),
Electro (comics), Carnage (comics), the Kingpin (comics), Shocker (comics), Hydro-Man , and
Morlun. As with Spider-Man, the majority of these villains' powers originate with scientific accidents or the misuse of scientific technology, and they tend to have animal-themed costumes or powers. At times these villains have formed groups such as the Sinister Six to oppose Spider-Man.
Supporting characters
Spider-Man was conceived as an ordinary person given great power, and the comics detail his civilian life, friends, family and romances as much as his super-heroic adventures.
Some of the more important and well-known members of his extensive supporting cast include:
- Aunt May – Peter Parker's loving aunt, who raises him after his parents die. After the murder of her husband, Peter's Benjamin Parker, May is virtually his only family, and they are very close.
- Mary Jane Watson – originally merely Gwen Stacy's competition, 'MJ' eventually became Peter's best friend and wife.
- J. Jonah Jameson – the irascible publisher of the Daily Bugle newspaper. While he employs Peter Parker as a photographer, he is also Spider-Man's greatest critic and largely responsible for public distrust of the hero.
- Joseph "Robbie" Robertson – Editor-in-chief at the Daily Bugle, a moderating influence on Jameson, and a father figure to Peter after Uncle Ben's death.
- Betty Brant – Secretary at the Daily Bugle who was once in love with Peter.
- Gwen Stacy – Peter's college girlfriend, who is tragically killed by the Green Goblin.
- Flash Thompson – Peter Parker's high school bullying, later one of his closest friends. Due to brain damage, he suffers amnesia and regresses to his bullying personality.
- Harry Osborn – Peter's best friend in college, who eventually follows his father's footsteps and becomes the second Green Goblin, which destroys him.
- Black Cat (comics) – a reformed cat burglar who was Spider-Man's girlfriend and partner at one point.
Other versions
In addition to his Marvel Universe incarnation, Spider-Man has had been depicted in other fictional universes.
In other media
Spider-Man has been adapted in various other media.
Television
Spider-Man has appeared on television numerous times, in both live-action and animation
television programs.
Film
Spider-Man appears in three theatrical
movies all starring Tobey Maguire.
Bibliography
In addition to
The Amazing Spider-Man, Spider-Man has been featured in many different series since.
Footnotes
Stan Lee, 1986: "He gave me 1,000 reasons why Spider-Man would never work. Nobody likes spiders; it sounds too much like Superman; and how could a teenager be a superhero? Then I told him I wanted the character to be a very human guy, someone who makes mistakes, who worries, who gets acne, has trouble with his girlfriend, things like that. replied, 'He's a hero! He's not an average man!' I said, "No, we make him an average man who happens to have super powers, that's what will make him good'. He told me I was crazy".
:
Detroit Free Press interview, quoted in
The Steve Ditko Reader by
Greg Theakston (Pure Imagination, Brooklyn, NY; ISBN 1-56685-011-8), p. 12 (unnumbered)
Jack Kirby, 1982: "Spider-Man was discussed between Joe Simon and myself. It was the last thing Joe and I had discussed. We had a strip called the 'The Silver Spider'. The Silver Spider was going into a magazine called
Black Magic.
Black Magic folded with Crestwood (Simon & Kirby's 1950s comics company) and we were left with the script. I believe I said this could become a thing called Spider-Man, see, a superhero character. I had a lot of faith in the superhero character that they could be brought back... and I said Spider-Man would be a fine character to start with. But Joe had already moved on. So the idea was already there when I talked to Stan".
:"Shop Talk: Jack Kirby",
Will Eisner's The Spirit Magazine #39 (Feb. 1982)
Joe Simon, 1990: "There were a few holes in Jack's never-dependable memory. For instance, there was no
Black Magic involved at all. ... Jack brought in the Spider-Man logo that I had loaned to him before we changed the name to The Silver Spider. Kirby laid out the story to Lee about the kid who finds a ring in a spiderweb, gets his powers from the ring, and goes forth to fight crime armed with The Silver Spider's old web-spinning pistol. Stan Lee said, 'Perfect, just what I want.' After obtaining permission from publisher Martin Goodman (publisher), Lee told Kirby to pencil-up an origin story. Kirby... using parts of an old rejected superhero named Night Fighter... revamped the old Silver Spider script, including revisions suggested by Lee. But when Kirby showed Lee the sample pages, it was Lee's turn to gripe. He had been expecting a skinny young kid who is transformed into a skinny young kid with spider powers. Kirby had him turn into... Captain America with cobwebs. He turned Spider-Man over to Steve Ditko, who... ignored Kirby's pages, tossed the character's magic ring, web-pistol and goggles... and completely redesigned Spider-Man's costume and equipment. In this life, he became high-school student Peter Parker, who gets his spider powers after being bitten by a radioactive spider. ... Lastly, the Spider-Man logo was redone and a dashing hyphen added".
:Simon, Joe, with Jim Simon.
The Comic Book Makers (Crestwood/II, 1990) ISBN 1-887591-35-4.
External Links
- Marvel.com: Spider-Man Official Site
- Grand Comics Database
- Marvel.com: "Venom: The Sordid History of Spider-Man's Black Costume"
{{Superherobox| |image=|caption=Promotional art for
The Amazing Spider-Man vol. 2, #50 (April 2003)
by J. Scott Campbell and Tim Townsend.]|debut=
Amazing Fantasy #15 (Aug. 1962)]
Steve Ditko|alliances =[New Avengers (comic book)Daily Bugle
Civil War (comics)#The Secret AvengersFantastic Four#"Alternate Fantastic Four" members|aliases = Ricochet (comics), Dusk (comics)#Dusk II, Prodigy (comics), Hornet (comics)#Hornet II,
Captain Universe,
Ben Reilly
Ability to produce both [biotic material and synthetic fiber spider-webbing-->
Spider-Man is a fictional character
Marvel Comics superhero created by Stan Lee and
Steve Ditko. Since his
First appeared in
Amazing Fantasy #15 (Aug. 1962), he has become one of the world's most popular, enduring and commercially successful
superheroes and is arguably Marvel's most popular character.
When Spider-Man first saw print in the 1960s,
teenage characters in superhero comic books were usually
sidekicks. The Spider-Man series broke ground by featuring a hero who himself was an adolescent, to whose "self-obsessions with rejection, inadequacy, and loneliness" young readers could relate.Wright, Bradford W.
Comic Book Nation. (Johns Hopkins, 2001) p. 210 Spider-Man has since appeared in various media including several animated and live-action
Spider-Man on television, syndicated newspaper
The Amazing Spider-Man#Newspaper comic strip and a successful
Spider-Man film series.
Marvel has published several Bibliography of Spider-Man titles, the first being
The Amazing Spider-Man. Over the years, the Peter Parker character has developed from shy
high school student to troubled college student to a married teacher and a member of the superhero team the New Avengers (comics).
Publication history
By 1962, with the success of the Fantastic Four and other characters, Marvel editor and head writer Stan Lee was casting about for a new superhero idea. He said that the idea for Spider-Man arose from a surge in teenage demand for comic books, and the desire to create a character with whom teens could identify.O'Neill, Cynthia, DeFalco, Tom, and Lee, Stan.
Spider-Man: The Ultimate Guide (DK CHILDREN, 2001), p.1. ISBN 0-789-47946-X In his autobiography, Lee cites the non-superhuman pulp magazine crime fighter The Spider as an influenceLee, Stan, and Mair, George.
Excelsior!: The Amazing Life of Stan Lee (Fireside, 2002), p.130. ISBN 0-684-87305-2 and both there and in a multitude of print and video interviews said he was inspired by seeing a fly climb up a wall — adding in his autobiography that he has told that story so often he has become unsure of whether or not it is true.Lee, Mair, p.126: He goes further in his autobiography, claiming that even while pitching the concept to publisher Martin Goodman, "I can't remember if that was literally true or not, but I thought it would lend a little color to my pitch". Artist Ditko, in a 1990 article by himself, gave a more prosaic origin story for the name:
Lee approached Marvel publisher
Martin Goodman (publisher) to seek approval for the character. In a 1986 interview, he described in detail his arguments to overcome Goodman's objections. Goodman agreed to let Lee try out Spider-Man in the upcoming final issue of the canceled science-fiction/
supernatural anthology series
Amazing Adult Fantasy, which was renamed
Amazing Fantasy for that single issue, #15 (Aug. 1962).
Les Daniels,
Marvel: Five Fabulous Decades of the World's Greatest Comics (Harry N. Abrams, New York, 1991), p. 95. ISBN 0-8109-3821-9
Jack Kirby, in a 1982 interview, claimed Lee had minimal involvement in the character's creation, and that it had originated with Kirby and
Joe Simon, who in the 1950s had proposed a character called The Silver Spider for the Crestwood comic
Black Magic until the publisher went out of business.
Simon, in his 1990 autobiography, disputes Kirby's account, asserting that the supernatural
anthology Black Magic was not a factor, and that he (Simon) devised the name "Spiderman" (later changed to "The Silver Spider"), while Kirby outlined the character's story and powers. Simon later elaborated that his and Kirby's character conception became the basis for Simon's Archie Comics superhero
The Fly (Archie Comics), introduced in early 1959. (penciller) & Steve Ditko (inker).
Comics historian
Greg Theakston says that Lee, after receiving Goodman's approval for the name Spider-Man and the "ordinary teen" concept, approached Kirby. Kirby told Lee about his 1950s Silver Spider/Spiderman, in which an orphaned boy living with an old couple finds a magic ring that gives him superpowers. Lee and Kirby "immediately sat down for a story conference" and Lee afterward directed Kirby to flesh out the character and draw some pages. Steve Ditko would be the inker.Ditko,
Robin Snyder's History of Comics: "Stan said a new Marvel hero would be introduced in #15 what became titled
Amazing Fantasy. He would be called Spider-Man. Jack would do the penciling and I was to ink the character". At this point still, "Stan said Spider-Man would be a teenager with a magic ring which could transform him into an adult hero — Spider-Man. I said it sounded like The Fly (Archie Comics), which Joe Simon had done for Archie Comics. ... Stan called Jack about it but I don't know what was discussed. I never talked to Jack about Spider-Man.... Later, at some point, I was given the job of drawing Spider-Man". "A day or two later", Kirby showed Lee the first six pages, and, as Lee recalled, "I hated the way he was doing it. Not that he did it badly — it just wasn't the character I wanted; it was too heroic".Theakston, Greg.
The Steve Ditko Reader (Pure Imagination, Brooklyn, NY, 2002; ISBN 1-56685-011-8), p. 12 (unnumbered) Simon concurs that Kirby had shown the original Spiderman version to Lee, who liked the idea and assigned Kirby to draw sample pages of the new character but disliked the results — in Simon's description, "
Captain America with cobwebs".
Lee turned to Ditko, who developed a visual motif Lee found satisfactory, although Lee would later replace Ditko's original cover with one penciled by Kirby. Ditko said,
Ditko also recalled that,
Much earlier, in a rare contemporaneous account, Ditko described his and Lee's contributions in a mail interview with Gary Martin published in
Comic Fan #2 (Summer 1965): "Stan Lee thought the name up. I did costume, web gimmick on wrist & spider signal". "Steve Ditko - A Portrait of the Master."
Comic Fan #2, Summer 1965. Published by Larry Herndon Additionally, Ditko shared a Manhattan studio with noted fetish artist Eric Stanton, an art-school classmate Ditko Looked Up: "Ditko & Stanton" who, in a 1988 interview with Theakston, recalled that although his contribution to Spider-Man was "almost nil", he and Ditko had "worked on storyboards together and I added a few ideas. But the whole thing was created by Steve on his own... I think I added the business about the webs coming out of his hands".Theakston, p. 14 (unnumbered, misordered as page 16)
Commercial success
. Cover art by co-creator
Steve Ditko.A few months after Spider-Man's introduction in
Amazing Fantasy #15 (Aug. 1962), publisher Martin Goodman saw the sales figures for that issue and found it had been one of the nascent Marvel's highest-selling comics.Daniels, p. 97 A solo series followed, beginning with
The Amazing Spider-Man #1 (March 1963). The title eventually became Marvel's top-selling seriesWright, pg. 211 and the character a cultural icon; a 1965
Esquire (magazine) poll of college campuses found that college students ranked Spider-Man and fellow Marvel hero
The Hulk alongside Bob Dylan and Che Guevara as their favorite revolutionary icons. One interviewee selected Spider-Man because he was "beset by woes, money problems, and the question of existence. In short, he is one of us".Wright, pg. 223 Following Ditko's departure after issue #39, John Romita, Sr. replaced him as artist, and would pencil the character over the next several years.
An early 1970s Spider-Man story led to the revision of the Comics Code Authority. Previously, it was taboo to depict
illegal drugs, even negatively. However, in 1970 the Richard Nixon administration's
Department of Health, Education, and Welfare asked Stan Lee to run an anti-drug message in one of Marvel's top-selling titles.Wright, p. 239 Lee chose the top-selling
The Amazing Spider-Man; issues #96–98 (May–July 1971) feature a
story arc that shows the negative effects of drug abuse. In the story, Peter Parker's friend
Harry Osborn starts taking pills and becomes so ill that when Spider-Man fights the Green Goblin (Norman Osborn), Spider-Man defeats Norman by simply showing him his sick son. While the story had a clear anti-drug message, the Comics Code Authority refused to issue its seal of approval. Marvel nevertheless sold the three issues without the Comics Code Authority's approval or seal and sold so well that the industry's self-censorship was undercut.
In 1972, a second monthly
ongoing series starring Spider-Man began:
Marvel Team-Up, in which Spider-Man is paired with other superheroes. In 1976, his second solo series,
The Spectacular Spider-Man began, running parallel to the main series; a third solo series,
Web of Spider-Man, launched in 1985, replacing
Marvel Team-Up. The launch of a fourth monthly title in 1990, written and drawn by popular artist
Todd McFarlane, debuted with multiple variant covers and sold in excess of three million copies, an industry record at the time.Wright, p. 279 There have generally been at least two ongoing Spider-Man series at any time. Several limited series,
One-shot (comics) and loosely related comics have also been published, and Spider-Man makes frequent cameos and guest appearances in other comic series. issues that prompted the Code's first update, allowing comics to show the negative effects of illegal-drug use. Note cover-blurb reference to "The last fatal trip!" Cover art by
Gil KaneThe original
Amazing Spider-Man ran through issue #441 (Nov. 1998). Writer-artist
John Byrne then revamped the origin of Spider-Man in the 13-issue
miniseries Spider-Man: Chapter One (Dec. 1998 - Oct. 1999, with an issue #0 midway through and some months containing two issues), similar to Byrne's adding details and some revisions to Superman's origin in
DC Comics'
The Man of Steel (comic book). Running concurrently,
The Amazing Spider-Man was restarted with vol. 2, #1 (Jan. 1999). With what would have been vol. 2, #59, Marvel reintroduced the original numbering, starting with #500 (Dec. 2003). This flagship series has reached issue #542 as of mid-2007.
As of 2007, Spider-Man regularly appears in
The Amazing Spider-Man,
New Avengers (comic book), The Sensational Spider-Man (vol. 2),
Friendly Neighborhood Spider-Man,
Spider-Man Family and various
limited series in mainstream Marvel Comics continuity, as well as in the
Parallel universe (fiction) series
Spider-Girl, and
Ultimate Spider-Man, the alternate-universe
tween series
Spider-Man Loves Mary Jane, and the alternate-universe children's series
Marvel Adventures Spider-Man and
Avengers (comics)#Marvel Adventures: The Avengers.
Spider-Man has become Marvel's flagship character, and is often used as the company mascot. When Marvel became the first comic book company to be listed on the New York Stock Exchange in 1991, the
Wall Street Journal announced "Spider-man is coming to Wall Street"; the event was in turn promoted with an actor in a Spider-Man costume accompanying Stan Lee to the Stock Exchange.Wright, p. 254 When Marvel wanted to issue a story dealing with the immediate aftermath of the
September 11th, 2001 attacks, the company settled on the December 2001 issue of
The Amazing Spider-Man. In 2006, Spider-Man garnered major media coverage with the revealing of the character's secret identity, an event detailed in a full-page story in the
New York Post before the issue containing the story was even released.
Fictional character biography
In his first appearance, Peter Parker is introduced as a science
whiz kid teenager from the Forest Hills, Queens section of
New York City who gets bitten by a
radioactive spider during a science demonstration. He gains powers and at first attempts to become a TV star. He fails to stop a thief, and weeks later the same criminal kills his
Benjamin Parker. Learning that with great power comes great responsibility, Spider-Man becomes a vigilante.
Amazing Fantasy vol. 1, #15 (Aug. 1962) After his uncle's death, he and his aunt become desperate for money, so he gets a job as a photographer at the
Daily Bugle selling photos to J. Jonah Jameson, who vilifies his alter ego in the paper.
The Amazing Spider-Man vol. 1, #1 (March 1963) As he battles his enemies for the first time, Parker finds juggling his personal life and costumed adventures difficult, even attempting to give up.
The Amazing Spider-Man vol. 1, #50, (July 1967)
The Amazing Spider-Man vol. 1, #100 (Sept. 1971) Enemies constantly endanger his loved ones,
The Amazing Spider-Man Annual #1, 1963 with the
Green Goblin managing to kill his girlfriend Gwen Stacy.
The Amazing Spider-Man vol. 1, #121 (June 1973) Though haunted by her death, he eventually The Wedding! (Spider-Man)
Mary Jane Watson, and much later reveals his civilian identity to the world,
Civil War #2 (June 2006) furthering his already numerous problems.
Powers and equipment
.A bite from an
irradiated spider causes a variety of changes in Peter Parker's body, giving him List of comic book superpowers. In the original Stan Lee-Steve Ditko stories, Spider-Man has the ability to cling to walls, superhuman strength, a sixth sense ("spider-sense") that alerts him to danger, perfect balance and equilibrium, as well as superhuman speed and agility. In story-lines published in 2005 and 2006 (such as Spider-Man: The Other), he develops additional spider-like abilities including biological web-shooters, toxic stingers that extend from his forearms, the ability to stick individuals to his back, better control over Spider-sense for detection, and night vision. Spider-Man's strength and speed have also increased beyond his original limits.
Spider-Man's overall metabolic efficiency has been greatly increased, and the composition of his skeleton, inter-connected tissues, and nervous system have all been enhanced. Spider-Man's musculature has been augmented so that he is superhumanly strong and flexible. He has developed a unique fighting style that makes full use of his agility, strength, and equilibrium.
Peter Parker is intellectually gifted, excelling in
applied science, chemistry and
physics. He uses his wits in addition to his powers. Besides outsmarting his foes, he constructs many devices that complement his powers, most notably mechanical web-shooters (ejecting an advanced adhesive compound which dissolves after two hours), which he developed in his teenage years. They are capable of releasing web-fluid in a variety of configurations, including a single strand to swing from, a net, and a simple glob to foul machinery or blind an opponent. He can also weave the web material into simple forms like a shield, a spherical protection or hemi-spherical barrier, a club, or a hang-glider wing. Other equipment includes spider-tracers (spider-shaped adhesive homing beacons keyed to his own spider-sense), a light beacon which can either be used as a flashlight or project a "Spider-Signal" design, a specially modified
camera that can take pictures automatically. He has also used an invention of Ben Reilly's (a clone of Peter Parker), called "impact webbing": a pellet that explodes on impact into a wrap-around net of webbing.
Though lacking in directed training, Spider-Man is one of the most experienced superheroes in the Marvel Universe. He has worked with virtually everyone in the superhero community at one time or another. Due to this experience, he has beaten foes with far greater powers and abilities. His fighting style is purely freestyle, which incorporates his speed, agility, strength and spider-sense. A very large part of his combat ability is improvisation and using his wits to out-think his opponents. One constant is his habit of using jokes, puns and insults. This not only causes his adversaries to become angry and distracted, but it also helps Spider-Man deal with any fears or doubts that he might have during a battle.
Spider-Man has had a few costume changes over his history, with three notable costumes -- his traditional red-and-blue costume, the black-and-white alien symbiote (comics) (later developed into a regular costume for stealth) and the technologically advanced
Spider-Man's powers and equipment#Stark Armor costume designed by
Iron Man. In early comics and sporadically throughout his run depending on a given artist's interpretation, Spider-Man's costume included webbing that extended from his underarms to his torso. Although the eyes of the costume are made of fabric, in some continuities the eyes will change depending on Peter's facial expression.
Enemies
Spider-Man has one of the best-known rogues gallery in comics. Spider-Man's most infamous and dangerous enemies are generally considered to be the
Green Goblin,
Doctor Octopus, and
Venom (comics). Others include the Lizard (comics),
Chameleon (comics),
Hobgoblin (comics),
Kraven the Hunter, the Scorpion (comics), the
Sandman (Marvel Comics), the Rhino (comics),
Mysterio,
Vulture (comics), Electro (comics), Carnage (comics), the Kingpin (comics), Shocker (comics),
Hydro-Man , and Morlun. As with Spider-Man, the majority of these villains' powers originate with scientific accidents or the misuse of scientific technology, and they tend to have animal-themed costumes or powers. At times these villains have formed groups such as the Sinister Six to oppose Spider-Man.
Supporting characters
Spider-Man was conceived as an ordinary person given great power, and the comics detail his civilian life, friends, family and romances as much as his super-heroic adventures.
Some of the more important and well-known members of his extensive supporting cast include:
- Aunt May – Peter Parker's loving aunt, who raises him after his parents die. After the murder of her husband, Peter's Benjamin Parker, May is virtually his only family, and they are very close.
- Mary Jane Watson – originally merely Gwen Stacy's competition, 'MJ' eventually became Peter's best friend and wife.
- J. Jonah Jameson – the irascible publisher of the Daily Bugle newspaper. While he employs Peter Parker as a photographer, he is also Spider-Man's greatest critic and largely responsible for public distrust of the hero.
- Joseph "Robbie" Robertson – Editor-in-chief at the Daily Bugle, a moderating influence on Jameson, and a father figure to Peter after Uncle Ben's death.
- Betty Brant – Secretary at the Daily Bugle who was once in love with Peter.
- Gwen Stacy – Peter's college girlfriend, who is tragically killed by the Green Goblin.
- Flash Thompson – Peter Parker's high school bullying, later one of his closest friends. Due to brain damage, he suffers amnesia and regresses to his bullying personality.
- Harry Osborn – Peter's best friend in college, who eventually follows his father's footsteps and becomes the second Green Goblin, which destroys him.
- Black Cat (comics) – a reformed cat burglar who was Spider-Man's girlfriend and partner at one point.
Other versions
In addition to his
Marvel Universe incarnation, Spider-Man has had been depicted in other fictional universes.
In other media
Spider-Man has been adapted in various other media.
Television
Spider-Man has appeared on
television numerous times, in both
live-action and
animation television programs.
Film
Spider-Man appears in three theatrical
movies all starring Tobey Maguire.
Bibliography
In addition to
The Amazing Spider-Man, Spider-Man has been featured in many different series since.
Footnotes
Stan Lee, 1986: "He gave me 1,000 reasons why Spider-Man would never work. Nobody likes spiders; it sounds too much like Superman; and how could a teenager be a superhero? Then I told him I wanted the character to be a very human guy, someone who makes mistakes, who worries, who gets acne, has trouble with his girlfriend, things like that. replied, 'He's a hero! He's not an average man!' I said, "No, we make him an average man who happens to have super powers, that's what will make him good'. He told me I was crazy".
:
Detroit Free Press interview, quoted in
The Steve Ditko Reader by
Greg Theakston (Pure Imagination, Brooklyn, NY; ISBN 1-56685-011-8), p. 12 (unnumbered)
Jack Kirby, 1982: "Spider-Man was discussed between
Joe Simon and myself. It was the last thing Joe and I had discussed. We had a strip called the 'The Silver Spider'. The Silver Spider was going into a magazine called
Black Magic.
Black Magic folded with
Crestwood (Simon & Kirby's 1950s comics company) and we were left with the script. I believe I said this could become a thing called Spider-Man, see, a superhero character. I had a lot of faith in the superhero character that they could be brought back... and I said Spider-Man would be a fine character to start with. But Joe had already moved on. So the idea was already there when I talked to Stan".
:"Shop Talk: Jack Kirby",
Will Eisner's The Spirit Magazine #39 (Feb. 1982)
Joe Simon, 1990: "There were a few holes in Jack's never-dependable memory. For instance, there was no
Black Magic involved at all. ... Jack brought in the Spider-Man logo that I had loaned to him before we changed the name to The Silver Spider. Kirby laid out the story to Lee about the kid who finds a ring in a spiderweb, gets his powers from the ring, and goes forth to fight crime armed with The Silver Spider's old web-spinning pistol. Stan Lee said, 'Perfect, just what I want.' After obtaining permission from publisher
Martin Goodman (publisher), Lee told Kirby to pencil-up an origin story. Kirby... using parts of an old rejected superhero named Night Fighter... revamped the old Silver Spider script, including revisions suggested by Lee. But when Kirby showed Lee the sample pages, it was Lee's turn to gripe. He had been expecting a skinny young kid who is transformed into a skinny young kid with spider powers. Kirby had him turn into... Captain America with cobwebs. He turned Spider-Man over to Steve Ditko, who... ignored Kirby's pages, tossed the character's magic ring, web-pistol and goggles... and completely redesigned Spider-Man's costume and equipment. In this life, he became high-school student Peter Parker, who gets his spider powers after being bitten by a radioactive spider. ... Lastly, the Spider-Man logo was redone and a dashing hyphen added".
:Simon, Joe, with Jim Simon.
The Comic Book Makers (Crestwood/II, 1990) ISBN 1-887591-35-4.
External Links
- Marvel.com: Spider-Man Official Site
- Grand Comics Database
- Marvel.com: "Venom: The Sordid History of Spider-Man's Black Costume"
Spider-Man Official Site
Official site for the motion picture.
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