Spider-Man is a fictional
Marvel Comics superhero. The character was created by writer and
editor
Stan Lee and artist and co-plotter
Steve Ditko. He
first appeared in
Amazing Fantasy #15 (August 1962). Lee
and Ditko conceived of the character as an orphan being raised by
his
Aunt May and
Uncle
Ben as an ordinary teenager, having to deal with the normal
struggles of youth in addition to those of a costumed crime
fighter. Spider-Man's creators gave him super strength and stamina,
the ability to cling to most surfaces, shoot spider-webs using
devices of his own invention which he called "web-shooters," and
react to danger quickly with his "spider-sense", enabling him to
combat his foes, including
Doctor
Octopus,
Mysterio,
Vulture,
Sandman,
Electro,
Kraven the Hunter,
Scorpion,
Lizard,
Rhino,
Shocker,
Green
Goblin. although it doesn't work for his
symbiote foes such as
Venom and
Carnage because of his own exposure to the
symbiote.
When Spider-Man first appeared in the early 1960s, teenagers in
superhero comic books were usually relegated to the role of
sidekick to the protagonist. The Spider-Man series broke ground by
featuring
Peter Parker, a teenage high school
student to whose "self-obsessions with rejection, inadequacy, and
loneliness" young readers could easily relate. Unlike previous teen
heroes such as
James Buchanan "Bucky" Barnes
and
Robin, Spider-Man did not benefit
from being the protege of any adult mentors like
Captain America and
Batman, and thus he had to learn for himself that
"with great power comes great responsibility" — a line included in
a text box in the final panel of the first Spider-Man story, but
later
retroactively attributed to his
guardian, the late Uncle Ben.
Marvel has featured Spider-Man in several
comic book series, the
first and longest-lasting of which is titled
The Amazing
Spider-Man. Over the years, the Peter Parker character has
developed from shy high school student to troubled but outgoing
college student to married high school teacher to, in the late
2000s, a single freelance photographer, his most typical adult
role. He is now a member of an unofficial splinter group of the
Avengers, one of Marvel's flagship
superhero teams. In the comics, Spider-Man is often referred to as
"Spidey," "web-slinger," "wall-crawler," or "web-head."
Spider-Man is one of the most popular and commercially successful
superheroes. As Marvel's flagship
character and company mascot, he has appeared in many forms of
media, including several animated and live-action
television shows,
syndicated newspaper
comic strips
and a successful
series of
films starring actor
Tobey Maguire
as the "friendly neighborhood" hero. Spider-Man was named
Empire magazine's
fifth-greatest comic-book character.
Publication history
Creation and development
In 1962, with the success of the
Fantastic Four, Marvel Comics 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. In his autobiography, Lee
cites the non-superhuman
pulp magazine
crime fighter
The Spider as a great
influence, and in a multitude of print and video interviews, Lee
stated he was further inspired by seeing a
spider climb up a wall---adding in his autobiography
that he has told that story so often he has become unsure of
whether or not this is true. Looking back on the creation of
Spider-Man, 1990s Marvel editor-in-chief
Tom
DeFalco stated he did not believe that Spider-Man would have
been given a chance in today's comics world, where new characters
are vetted with test audiences and marketers. At that time,
however, Lee had to get only the consent of Marvel publisher
Martin Goodman for the
character's approval. In a 1986 interview, Lee described in detail
his arguments to overcome Goodman's objections. Goodman eventually
agreed to let Lee try out Spider-Man in the upcoming final issue of
the canceled science-fiction and supernatural anthology series
Amazing Adult Fantasy, which was renamed
Amazing Fantasy for that single issue,
#15 (August 1962).
Comics historian
Greg Theakston says
that Lee, after receiving Goodman's approval for the name
Spider-Man and the "ordinary teen" concept, approached artist
Jack Kirby. Kirby told Lee about an
unpublished character on which he collaborated with
Joe Simon in the 1950s, in which an orphaned boy
living with an old couple finds a magic ring that granted him
super-human powers. 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. When
Kirby showed Lee the first six pages, 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". Lee
turned to Ditko, who developed a visual style Lee found
satisfactory. Ditko recalled:
In an early recollection of the character's creation, 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." At the time, Ditko shared a Manhattan studio with
noted
fetish artist
Eric Stanton, an art-school classmate 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".
Kirby disputed Lee's version of the story, and claimed Lee had
minimal involvement in the character's creation. According to
Kirby, the idea for Spider-Man had originated with Kirby and
Joe Simon, who in the 1950s had developed
a character called The Silver Spider for the
Crestwood comic
Black Magic,
who was subsequently not used. Simon, in his 1990 autobiography,
disputed Kirby's account, asserting that
Black Magic was
not a factor, and that he (Simon) devised the name "Spider-Man"
(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. Artist
Steve Ditko stated that Lee liked the name
Hawkman from
DC
Comics, and that "Spider-Man" was an outgrowth of that
interest. The hyphen was included in the character's name to avoid
confusion with DC Comics'
Superman.
Simon concurred that Kirby had shown the original Spider-Man
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". Writer
Mark
Evanier notes that Lee's reasoning that Kirby's character was
too heroic seems unlikely -- Kirby still drew the covers for the
first issues of
Spider-Man. Likewise, Kirby's given reason
that he was "too busy" to also draw
Spider-Man in addition
to his other duties seems false, as Kirby was, in Evanier's words,
"always busy". Neither Lee's nor Kirby's explanation explains why
key story elements like the magic ring were dropped; Evanier states
that the most plausible explanation for the sudden change was that
Goodman, or one of his assistants, decided that Spider-Man as drawn
and envisioned by Kirby was too similar to the Fly.
Blake Bell, author and Ditko scholar, writes that it was Ditko who
noted the similarities to the Fly. Ditko recalled that, "Stan
called Jack about the Fly", adding that "[d]ays later, Stan told me
I would be penciling the story panel breakdowns from Stan's
synopsis". It was at this point that the nature of the strip
changed. "Out went the magic ring, adult Spider-Man and whatever
legend ideas that Spider-Man story would have contained". Lee gave
Ditko the premise of a teenager bitten by a spider and developing
powers, a premise Ditko would expand upon to the point he became
what Bell describes as "the first
work-for-hire artist of his generation to
create and control the narrative arc of his series". On the issue
of the initial creation, Ditko states, "I still don't know whose
idea was Spider-Man". Kirby noted in a 1971 interview that it was
Ditko who "got
Spider-Man to roll, and the thing caught on
because of what he did". Lee, while claiming credit for the initial
idea, has acknowledged Ditko's role, stating, "If Steve wants to be
called co-creator, I think he deserves [it]". Writer Al Nickerson
believes "that Stan Lee and Steve Ditko created the Spider-Man that
we are familiar with today [but that] ultimately, Spider-Man came
into existence, and prospered, through the efforts of not just one
or two, but many, comic book creators".
Commercial success
A few months after Spider-Man's introduction in
Amazing
Fantasy #15 (August 1962), publisher Martin Goodman reviewed
the sales figures for that issue and was shocked to find it to have
been one of the nascent Marvel's highest-selling comics. A solo
series followed, beginning with
The Amazing Spider-Man #1 (March
1963). The title eventually became Marvel's top-selling series with
the character swiftly becoming a cultural icon; a 1965
Esquire 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."
Following Ditko's departure after issue #38 (July 1966),
John Romita, Sr. replaced him as artist,
and would provide the pencil drawings of the character over the
next several years. In 1968. Romita would also draw the character's
extra-length stories in the magazine-format series
The Spectacular
Spider-Man, a
graphic novel
precursor designed to appeal to older readers but which lasted only
two issues. Nonetheless, it represented the first Spider-Man
spin-off publication aside from the original series'
summer annuals begun in 1964.
An early 1970s Spider-Man story led to the revision of the
Comics Code. Previously, the Code
forbade the depiction of the use of
illegal drugs, even negatively. However, in
1970, the
Nixon administration's
Department
of Health, Education, and Welfare asked Stan Lee to publish an
anti-drug message in one of Marvel's top-selling titles. Lee chose
the top-selling
The
Amazing Spider-Man; issues #96–98 (May–July 1971) feature
a
story arc depicting the negative effects
of drug use. In the story, Peter Parker's friend
Harry Osborn becomes addicted to pills. When
Spider-Man fights the
Green Goblin
(Norman Osborn, Harry's father), Spider-Man defeats the Green
Goblin, by revealing Harry's drug addiction. While the story had a
clear anti-drug message, the Comics Code Authority refused to issue
its seal of approval. Marvel nevertheless published the three
issues without the Comics Code Authority's approval or seal. The
issues sold so well that the industry's self-censorship was
undercut and the Code was subsequently revised.
In 1972, a second monthly
ongoing
series starring Spider-Man began:
Marvel Team-Up, in which Spider-Man was
paired with other superheroes and villains. In 1976, his second
solo series,
The
Spectacular Spider-Man vol. 2, began, running parallel to
the main series. A third series featuring Spider-Man,
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 several different covers, all with the same interior
content. The various versions combined sold over 3 million copies,
an industry record at the time. There have generally been at least
two ongoing Spider-Man series at any time. Several
limited series,
one-shots and loosely related comics have
also been published, and Spider-Man makes frequent cameos and guest
appearances in other comic series.
The original
Amazing Spider-Man ran through issue #441
(November 1998). Writer-artist
John Byrne
then revamped the origin of Spider-Man in the 13-issue
miniseries Spider-Man: Chapter One
(December 1998 - October 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. 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
(December 2003).
By the end of 2007, Spider-Man regularly appeared in
The
Amazing Spider-Man, New Avengers, Spider-Man Family and various limited
series in mainstream Marvel Comics continuity, as well as in the
alternate-universe
series
The Amazing Spider-Girl,
the
Ultimate Universe title
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
Marvel
Adventures: The Avengers.
When primary series
The Amazing Spider-Man reached issue
#545 (December 2007), Marvel dropped its spin-off ongoing series
and instead began publishing
The Amazing Spider-Man three
times monthly, beginning with #546-549 (each January 2008).
Fictional character biography
In his
first appearance, Peter Parker is introduced as an orphaned
science whiz
teenager living with his aunt and uncle in the Forest
Hills
section of New York City. He is a brilliant
student but the subject of mockery by his peers who regard him as a
bookworm, and perpetual victim of bullying by Eugene "Flash"
Thompson, who would call him "Puny Parker" and humiliate him daily.
One day, he is bitten by a radioactive spider during a science
demonstration. As a result, he gains spider-like powers such as
super-strength, the ability to climb walls, and a phenomenal
jumping skill. Peter's own intelligence allows him to develop
gadgets which fire adhesive webbing.
As Spider-Man, he becomes a successful TV star. One day at a studio
he refuses to stop a thief, saying that it is the job of the
police, not that of a number one star. Minutes later his beloved
guardian,
Uncle Ben, is murdered and an
angry Spider-Man sets off to capture the killer. When he does, he
is horrified to find that the man is none other than the
burglar he refused to subdue. Learning that
with great power comes great responsibility, Spider-Man becomes a
vigilante.
After his uncle's death, Peter and his
Aunt
May become desperate for money, so he gets a job as a
photographer at the
New York Daily
Bugle selling photos to
J.
Jonah Jameson, who proves to be
jealous of Spider-Man and has begun to vilify Spider-Man in the
paper. As he battles his enemies for the first time, Parker finds
juggling his personal life and costumed adventures difficult. In
time, Peter graduates from high school, and enrolls at Empire State
University, where he meets roommate and best friend
Harry Osborn and his second girlfriend (having
been romantically involved with Betty Brant before)
Gwen Stacy, and Aunt May introduces him to
Mary Jane Watson. As Peter deals
with Harry's drug problems, and Harry's father is revealed to be
Spider-Man's nemesis the
Green Goblin,
Peter even attempts to give up his costumed identity. In the course
of his adventures Spider-Man has made a wide variety of friends and
contacts within the superhero community, who often come to his aid
when he faces problems that he cannot solve on his own.
Enemies frequently endanger his loved ones, with the Green Goblin
managing to cause the death of Gwen Stacy. Though haunted by the
death of Gwen, he begins to date Mary Jane Watson. Peter discovers
what he thinks is a black version of his Spider-Man costume, which
turns out to be an alien
symbiote;
Peter is able to reject the symbiote after a difficult struggle,
though the symbiote returns several times as
Venom for revenge. Peter eventually
marries Mary Jane Watson. In a
controversial storyline, Peter becomes convinced that Ben Reilly,
the
Scarlet Spider (a clone of Peter
created by his college professor
Miles Warren) is the real Peter
Parker, and that he, Peter, is the clone. Peter gives up the
Spider-Man identity to Reilly for a time, until Reilly is killed by
the returning Green Goblin and revealed to be the clone after all.
In stories published in 2005 and 2006 (such as "
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, enhanced Spider-sense and night vision,
and increased strength and speed. Peter later becomes a member of
the
New Avengers, and reveals his
civilian identity to the world, furthering his already numerous
problems. His marriage to Mary Jane and public unmasking are later
erased due to a
deal made
with the demon
Mephisto, resulting
in several adjustments to the timeline, such as the resurrection of
Harry Osborn and the return of Peter's mechanical web-shooters and
loss of his additional spider-like abilities. After months of the
new status quo in the Marvel Universe where nobody but Peter
himself knew the identity of Spider-Man, he unmasks to his
teammates on the
New Avengers at the
request of
Ronin, the team's new
leader, in order to earn the team's trust. Around this time he also
unmasks for the
Fantastic Four.
Powers and equipment
A bite from a radioactive spider on a school field trip causes a
variety of changes in the body of Peter Parker and gives him
superpowers. In the original
Lee-
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. Some of his comic series have him
shooting webs from his wrists. Brilliant, Parker excels in applied
science, chemistry and physics. The character was originally
conceived by Stan Lee and Steve Ditko as intellectually gifted, but
not a genius. However, later writers have depicted the character as
a genius. With his talents, he sews his own costume to conceal his
identity, and constructs many devices that complement his powers,
most notably mechanical web-shooters. (This mechanism ejects an
advanced adhesive, releasing web-fluid in a variety of
configurations, including a single rope-like strand to swing from,
a net to bind enemies, a single strand for yanking opponents into
objects, strands for whipping foreign objects at enemies, 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 hemispherical barrier, a club, or a hang-glider
wing.) Other equipment include 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, and a specially modified camera that can
take pictures automatically.
Enemies
Writers and artists over many years have managed to establish an
exciting and notable
rogues gallery
of villains to face Spider-Man. The three most infamous and
dangerous enemies as voted by fans are the
Green Goblin,
Doctor
Octopus (both 1960s Lee-Ditko creations) and
Venom, a later addition introduced in 1988.
Other characters include the
Lizard,
the
Chameleon, the
Hobgoblin,
Kraven the Hunter,
Carnage, the
Scorpion, the
Sandman, the
Rhino,
Mysterio, the
Vulture,
Electro, the
Kingpin,
Hydro-Man, the
Shocker, 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,
and many have green costumes. At times these villains have formed
groups such as the
Sinister Six to
oppose Spider-Man. It is revealed that Spider-Man has new enemies
in
New Avengers.
Supporting characters
Spider-Man was conceived as an ordinary person given great power.
The comics detail his civilian life and family, friends, and his
romances. Spider-Man is most famous for; however, his super-heroic
adventures. Peter was raised by his loving aunt,
May Parker, and his uncle and father figure,
Ben Parker (usually referred to simply as
Aunt May and Uncle Ben), after his parents died. Uncle Ben is
tragically murdered by a burglar that Peter had allowed to escape
before. Peter believes that his uncle's death was morally his
fault, and he decides to use his powers responsibly and become a
super-hero. After the murder of her husband, Aunt May is virtually
Peter's only family, and she and Peter are very close.
Peter's first love interest is his college girlfriend
Gwen Stacy, who is later
tragically killed by the
Green Goblin. It is later revealed in the
comics that she refused to give custody of her children to their
biological father Norman Osborn, (the Goblin's true identity), with
whom she had had an intimate relationship behind Peter's back.
Originally merely Gwen Stacy's competition,
Mary Jane Watson (or, 'MJ') eventually
became Peter's best friend and then
became his wife. Her marriage to Peter
was later erased due to a
deal made with
Mephisto to save Aunt May's life. Felicia
Hardy, the
Black Cat, is a
reformed cat burglar who was Spider-Man's girlfriend and partner at
one point, but rejected him when he revealed his identity to her,
as she was only interested in his costumed persona. She eventually
learned to love Peter on his own merit, but never on the level at
which she loved Spider-Man.
Eugene "Flash" Thompson was
originally Peter Parker's high school tormentor, and later one of
his closest friends. Due to brain damage, he suffered amnesia and
regressed to his bullying personality, though he eventually
recovered from this.
Harry Osborn, son
of Norman Osborn, was Peter's best friend in college, who
eventually follows his father's footsteps and becomes the second
Green Goblin, ultimately resulting in
Harry's death. He was resurrected due to the erasure of Peter's
marriage to Mary Jane, and all related events, from history.
J. Jonah Jameson, the irascible publisher of
the
Daily Bugle newspaper, is
Peter's first employer. While he employs Peter Parker as a
photographer, he is also Spider-Man's greatest critic by dint of
being jealous of Spider-Man, and hence, he is largely responsible
for public distrust of the hero.
Joseph "Robbie"
Robertson was the 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 was
the secretary at the Daily Bugle, and was once in love with
Peter.
Cultural influence
Comic-book writer-editor and historian Paul Kupperberg, in
The
Creation of Spider-Man, calls the character's superpowers
"nothing too original"; what was original was that outside his
secret identity, he was a "nerdy high school student". Going
against typical superhero fare, Spider-Man included "heavy doses of
soap-opera and elements of melodrama." Kupperberg feels that Lee
and Ditko had created something new in the world of comics: "the
flawed superhero with everyday problems." This idea spawned a
"comics revolution." The insecurity and anxieties in Marvel's early
1960s comic books such as
The Amazing Spider-Man,
The
Incredible Hulk, and
X-Men ushered in a new type of
superhero, very different from the certain and all-powerful
superheroes before them, and changed the public's perception of
them. Spider-Man has become one of the most recognizable fictional
characters in the world, and has been used to sell toys, games,
cereal, candy, soap, and many other products.
Spider-Man has become Marvel's flagship character, and has often
been 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. Since 1962, hundreds of millions of comics
featuring the character have been sold around the world.
Spider-Man joined the
Macy's Thanksgiving Day
Parade from 1987 to 1998 as one of the balloon floats, designed
by
John Romita Sr., one of the
character's signature artists. A new, different Spider-Man balloon
float is scheduled to appear from at least 2009 to 2011.
In 1981,
Dan Goodwin donned a Spider-Man suit and
scaled the Sears
Tower
in Chicago
, Illinois
, and the
Renaissance
Tower
in Dallas
, Texas
, to promote
high-rise firefighting and rescue.
When Marvel wanted to issue a story dealing with the immediate
aftermath of the
September
11, 2001 attacks, the company chose the December 2001 issue of
The Amazing Spider-Man. In 2006, Spider-Man garnered major
media coverage with the revelation 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.
In 2008, Marvel announced plans to release a series of educational
comics the following year in partnership with the United Nations,
depicting Spider-Man alongside
UN
Peacekeeping Forces to highlight UN peacekeeping missions. A
BusinessWeek article listed
Spider-Man as one of the top ten most intelligent fictional
characters in American comics.
Non-Marvel versions and parodies
Marvel made its own parodies of Spider-Man in such comics as
Not Brand Echh, which was
published in the late 1960s and featured such characters as Peter
Pooper alias Spidey-Man; and Peter Porker, the Spectacular
Spider-Ham who appeared in the 1980s.
Japanese
artist
Ryoichi Ikegami drew a manga version of Spider-Man for the
Japanese market between 1970 and late 1971. Peter Parker was
renamed Yu Komori and various other Marvel characters, such as
Electro and
the Lizard, also featured but with different
backgrounds.
Another Japanese manga was
Hideshi
Hino's
The Bug Boy, which
has been cited as inspired by Spider-Man. Like Peter Parker, Sanpei
Hiromoto is bitten by a strange and tiny creature which turns him
into a being with powers — in this case, a huge, poisonous bug.
Unlike Parker, the bullying Sanpei experienced at school has not
been balanced by a loving family home, and thus he becomes a
supervillain rather than a hero.
The French comic
Télé-Junior published strips
based on popular TV series. In the late 1970s, the publisher also
produced original Spider-Man adventures. Artists included
Gérald Forton, who later moved to America
and worked for Marvel. These strips were short stories with little
or no continuity between them.
Télé-Junior's version
included regular characters from the comics like
J. Jonah
Jameson,
Robbie
Robertson and
Flash Thompson, who
is at the friendly stage of his relationship with Parker. Villains
including
the Vulture and
Electro also appeared.
In the
1973 Turkish
film
3 Dev Adam (known in English as Three Mighty Men or
Turkish Spider-Man vs. Captain Turkish America) Spider-Man
is portrayed as the villain of the film, confronted by Captain America and Santo (a Mexican
wrestler
character). He has no spider powers in the film,
however.
The Indian version of Spider-Man,
Spider-Man: India was created by
Sharad Devarajan, Suresh Seetharaman and Jeevan J. Kang along with
Marvel Comics.
In other media
Spider-Man has appeared in comics, cartoons, movies, coloring
books, novels, records, and children's books. On television, he
appeared as the main character in the animated series
Spider-Man, which aired
from 1967–1970 on
ABC,
the live-action series
The Amazing
Spider-Man (1978-1979), starring
Nicholas Hammond, the
syndicated cartoon series
Spider-Man
(1981-1982),
Spider-Man and His Amazing
Friends (1981-1983),
Spider-Man: The Animated
Series (1994-1998),
Spider-Man Unlimited (1999-2000),
Spider-Man: The
New Animated Series (2003) and
The Spectacular
Spider-Man (2008-present).
A
tokusatsu show featuring Spider-Man was
produced by
Toei and aired in Japan. It is
commonly referred to by its Japanese pronunciation "
Supaidā-Man".
Spider-Man also appeared in other print forms besides the comics,
including novels,
children's
books, and the daily newspaper
comic
strip The Amazing
Spider-Man, which debuted in January 1977, with the
earliest installments written by Stan Lee and drawn by
John Romita, Sr. Spider-Man has been
adapted to other media including games, toys, collectibles, and
miscellaneous memorabilia, and has appeared as the main character
in numerous
computer and video
games on over 15 gaming platforms. Spider-Man was also the
subject of a
series of
films directed by
Sam Raimi and
starring actor
Tobey Maguire as the
title character. The original
Spider-Man film was released May 3,
2002, its first sequel,
Spider-Man
2, premiered June 30, 2004, and the next sequel,
Spider-Man 3, premiered on May
4, 2007.
Spider-Man 4 is
currently scheduled to be released May 6, 2011.
A Broadway musical,
Spider-Man: Turn Out the Dark, is
slated for production in 2010. The score and lyrics were written by
Bono and
The Edge of
U2.
Awards and honors
From the character's inception, Spider-Man stories have won
numerous awards, including:
- 1962 Alley Award: Best Short Story — "Origin of
Spider-Man" by Stan Lee & Steve Ditko, Amazing Fantasy
#15
- 1963 Alley Award: Best Comic:
Adventure Hero title — The Amazing Spider-Man
- 1963 Alley Award: Top Hero — Spider-Man
- 1964 Alley Award: Best
Adventure Hero Comic Book — The Amazing Spider-Man
- 1964 Alley Award: Best Giant Comic - The Amazing Spider-Man
Annual #1
- 1964 Alley Award: Best Hero — Spider-Man
- 1965 Alley Award: Best
Adventure Hero Comic Book — The Amazing Spider-Man
- 1965 Alley Award: Best Hero — Spider-Man
- 1966 Alley Award: Best Comic
Magazine: Adventure Book with the Main Character in the Title —
The Amazing Spider-Man
- 1966 Alley Award: Best Full-Length Story - "How Green was My
Goblin", by Stan Lee & John Romita, Sr., The Amazing
Spider-Man #39
- 1967 Alley Award: Best Comic
Magazine: Adventure Book with the Main Character in the Title —
The Amazing Spider-Man
- 1967 Alley Award Popularity Poll: Best Costumed or Powered Hero
— Spider-Man
- 1967 Alley Award Popularity Poll: Best Male Normal Supporting
Character — J. Jonah Jameson, The Amazing
Spider-Man
- 1967 Alley Award Popularity Poll: Best Female Normal Supporting
Character — Mary Jane Watson,
The Amazing Spider-Man
- 1968 Alley Award Popularity
Poll: Best Adventure Hero Strip — The Amazing
Spider-Man
- 1968 Alley Award Popularity Poll: Best Supporting Character -
J. Jonah Jameson, The Amazing Spider-Man
- 1969 Alley Award Popularity
Poll: Best Adventure Hero Strip — The Amazing
Spider-Man
- 1997 Eisner Award:
Best Artist/Penciller/Inker or Penciller/Inker Team — 1997 Al
Williamson, Best Inker: Untold Tales of Spider-Man
#17-18
- 2002 Eisner Award: Best Serialized Story —
The Amazing Spider-Man vol. 2, #30–35: "Coming Home", by
J. Michael Straczynski, John Romita, Jr., and Scott Hanna
- No date: Empire
magazine's fifth-greatest comic-book character.
See also
Notes
- Detroit Free Press interview with
Stan Lee, quoted in The Steve Ditko Reader by
Greg
Theakston (Pure Imagination, Brooklyn, NY; ISBN 1-56685-011-8),
p. 12 (unnumbered). "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. [Goodman 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".
- "'Stan said a new Marvel hero would be introduced in #15 [of
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,
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'".
- Jack Kirby in "Shop Talk: Jack Kirby", Will Eisner's Spirit Magazine #39
(February 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".
- thehotspotonline.com: Spider-Man: The Birth of an
Icon
- Simon, Joe, with Jim Simon. The Comic Book Makers
(Crestwood/II, 1990) ISBN 1-887591-35-4. "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, 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".
- Bell, Blake. Strange and Stranger: The World of Steve
Ditko (2008). Fantagraphic Books.p.54-57.
- Skelly, Tim. "Interview II: 'I created an army of characters,
and now my connection to them is lost.'" (Initially broadcast over
WNUR-FM on the "The Great Electric Bird," May 14, 1971. Transcribed
and published in The Nostalgia Journal #27.) Reprinted in
The Comics Journal Library Volume One: Jack Kirby, George,
Milo ed. May, 2002, Fantagraphics Books. p. 16
- Ross, Jonathon. In Search of Steve Ditko, BBC 4,
September 16, 2007.
- Nickerson, Al. " Who Really Created Spider-Man?" P.I.C.
News, 5 February 2009. Accessed 2009-02-17. Archived
2009-02-17.
- Saffel, Steve. Spider-Man the Icon: The Life and Times of a
Pop Culture Phenomenon (Titan Books, 2007) ISBN 1845763246, ISBN
978-1845763244, "A Not-So-Spectacular Experiment", p. 31
- As, for example, in The Amazing Spider-Man Annual #1
(1963)
- Gresh, Lois H., and Robert Weinberg. "The Science of
Superheroes" (John Wiley & Sons, Inc., 2002) ISBN 0471024600 (
preview)
- [1]
- http://www.spiderfan.org/fans/topten/2003/0901.html
- "Spider-Man Returning to Macy's Thanksgiving Day
Paradede", Associated Press via WCBS , 17 August 2009
- Spurlock, J. David, and John Romita. John Romita
Sketchbook. (Vanguard Productions: Lebanon, N.J. 2002) ISBN
1-887591-27-3 ISBN 1-887591-29-X, p. 45: Romita: "I designed the
Spider-Man balloon float. When we went to Macy's to talk about it,
Manny Bass was
there. He's the genius who creates all these balloon floats. I gave
him the sketches and he turned them into reality".
- examples of "Not Brand Echh" comics
- McCarthy, Helen, 500 Manga Heroes and Villains
(Barron's Educational Series, 2006), ISBN 0764132016, ISBN
978-0764132018, page no.?
- Lambiek Comiclopedia: Gérald Forton
- SpidermanBroadway.Marvel.com
References
External links