Welcome
to CBH, today we're talking about interesting Golden Age Precursors to Silver
Age Marvel Characters. Marvel Silver Age Superhero’s are a lot of fun, and get a lot of screen
time in movie theatres these days. Some
fans will check out the 1960s comic books and have a great time watching these
characters being created by people like Jack Kirby, Steve Ditko, Bill Everett,
Stan Lee, etc.
As incredible as these people were, they also read their own
entertainment when they were younger, and a lot of that was found in earlier
pulp magazines, newspaper comic strips, and golden age comic books. This episode focuses as an introduction to
some golden age comic precursors to some of our favorite Silver Age
characters. Just to clarify a point,
there is no verification that the 1960s guys read all these particular comics,
however they are antecedents and are astonishingly similar to the listed 1940s
characters.
In 1940, Jack Binder created the original Daredevil for Lev Gleason publications. The original Daredevil had red hair, a yellow costume, was disabled with the inability to speak and was labeled the “master of courage.”
Jack Cole, the creator of Plastic Man, revamped him into a red
suit, and his popularity really took off.
This Daredevil got removed from his comic due to waning popularity in
1950, and eventually Lev Gleason lost the rights to the use of the name
Daredevil due to falling out of trademark.
In 2003, Stan Lee said in an interview that Martin Goodman told Stan to
revive the character in 1964, and Bill Everett, Kirby, Ditko & Lee worked
on the first issue also giving this new Daredevil red hair, yellow costume, a
disability of blindness and was instead called “the man without fear.”
Much like the original Daredevil, he would subsequentily be changed from yellow
to red by Wally Wood & Stan Goldberg.
1940 Golden Age vision was created by Jack Kirby and Joe Simon in
Marvel Mystery Comics 13 as an alien cop from a smoke world dimension. He
was revived by Roy Thomas in Avengers 57, 1968 with a whole new origin as an
android who can control his mass. Roy
has mentioned this freely in interviews.
The Human Torch first premiered in 1939, Marvel Comics 1 as an android created by Carl Burgos, and was written out of his comic in issue 93, 1949. Young Men 24, 1953 had Martin Goodman's pre-code 50s attempt to revive his golden age superhero triumvirate (Torch, Cap & Namor) for Atlas comics.
He wanted to compete with DC's Superman and possibly start his own
version of a 50s TV show, but it wasn't successful. The human torch
revival that did stick however was the 1961 fantastic four 1, where this silver
age take by Jack Kirby and Stan Lee was given a whole new origin and name.
The three Thor's of Jack Kirby. Jack Kirby had a long
relationship with the norse God’s. His
first rendition of Thor was after his first Captain America run, the character
he co-created with Joe Simon.
After leaving Timely comics he worked at DC and one story he made
was with a Golden Age Thor in DC's Adventure Comics 75, 1942, "The Villain
from Valhalla." He would return to
the character in DC's Tales of the Unexpected 16, 1957, "The Magic
Hammer." His official true Silver Age Thor was the one he co-created
with Stan Lee in Journey into Mystery 83, 1962, "The Stone Men from
Saturn." With Jack Kirby, there is a Thor for each decade. Why would the 3rd Thor fight
aliens from Saturn?
Well something really fun about the first appearance of the Silver
Age Thor and his defeat of aliens from Saturn, is that Jack Kirby and Joe Simon
worked on a similar story for Fawcett’s Captain Marvel Adventures 1 more than
20 years earlier in 1941 where they had Shazam be referred to as the “Thunder
God” as he fights aliens from Saturn.
Another prelude to Thor from Kirby is found from Young Romance 13, 1949
where a women fantasizes about a man she loves as a handsome Viking lover and
note the headdress on the bottom of the first panel.
Speaking of Captain Marvel, the original Golden Age Captain Marvel originally appeared in Fawcett's Whiz Comics 2, 1940. Due to ongoing court battles with the company later known as DC Comics who felt that Captain Marvel was a plagiaristic copy of their Superman (I know, its total bullcrap) Fawcett ceased using the character in 1953. The name hadn't been used in over a decade, so Martin Goodman, owner of Marvel Comics at the time wanted the name. He ordered Stan Lee to write a Captain Marvel book and put it in use so they could take the name before anyone else, hence Marvel Super-Heroes 12, 1967 by Gene Colan and Stan Lee with a costume enhancement in 1969.
The company later known as Marvel, put their Tarzan pulp clone, Ka-Zar into his own Golden Age comic with its setting in Africa. This was present in Marvel Comics 1, 1939. More than 20 years later, Kirby & Lee revamped him into a new Silver Age version with a new first and last name and then combined him with a Tarzan themed Antarctic Savage Land in Uncanny X-Men 10, 1965 titled "The World that Time Forgot."
The company later known as Marvel, put their Tarzan pulp clone, Ka-Zar into his own Golden Age comic with its setting in Africa. This was present in Marvel Comics 1, 1939. More than 20 years later, Kirby & Lee revamped him into a new Silver Age version with a new first and last name and then combined him with a Tarzan themed Antarctic Savage Land in Uncanny X-Men 10, 1965 titled "The World that Time Forgot."
Looking at black panthers, there were quite a few before the one
we know created in 1966, and about to get his own movie.
The first was in Stars & Stripes 3, 1941 created by an
unknown writer and artist, then the Tarzan newspaper strip had a run in 1951
with an evil black panther tribe, then there was Atlas comics’ Jungle Tales in
1954 by Rico & Pike about Waku the African prince who swears to his dead
father to protect his people. Then in
Two-Gun kid 77, 1965 had a Black Panther type of character by Dick Ayers/Al
Hartley. Finally we have the definitive
Silver Age Black Panther currently in movies that appear to fuses with the
African tribe motif into the Fantastic Four 52, 1966 (Kirby/Lee).
Marvel’s Cyclops premiered in 1963, and his visor with
uncontrollable eye beam powers are certainly well known to most fans.
However he does appear to have a Golden Age literary ancestor
which is found in 1940 Pep Comics 1, The Comet by Jack Cole.
Thru scientific self-augmentation, he constantly shoots laser
beams from his eyes and needs a glass uni-visor to prevent everything he looks
at from getting disintegrated. This is the key gift/curse that also
affects Cyclops. Of course, there are as
many differences as there are similarities between the Comet and Cyclops, this
character has that Golden Age charm of flying and murdering criminals in a
psychotic rage.
The super-fast Quicksilver has been a Marvel Comics character
since 1964 when he was created by Jack Kirby and Stan Lee, and although the
official explanation for his powers changes throughout the decades, he also
appears to have a literary ancestor.
This literary ancestor can be found in Quality Comics'
Quicksilver premiering in National Comics 5, 1940 also created by the
incredible Jack Cole and Chuck Mazoujian.
Although he has a totally different origin, his name and powers
of super speed are the same. Something
notable to look out for with speedsters is how their speed powers are drawn by
the artist, its always both fun and interesting to watch.
There are many comic book characters who got their powers from
“cosmic rays, notably Jack Kirby and Stan Lee’s Fantastic Four.
However the FF’s power source appear to have a literary ancestor
in Quality Comics' Smash Comics 14, 1940. Possibly written by Will Eisner
and penciled by Lou Fine we have the Ray, a super human originally augmented by
a cosmic glowing storm of light in a low level space trip in a
"strato-balloon."
This sounds remarkably similar to the FF’s cosmic ray exposure
in a shuttle.
Even the Amazing Spider-Man has a literary ancestor found in
1941, the “Tarantula” who is (I believe) comic's first "Spider-Man"
created by Mort Weisinger for what was later to be called DC comics. He
crawls, has a web-gun, and is out to get criminals.
Something interesting is a panel in this comic showing that he
was actually called “Spider-Man” from a radio announcer.
This appears to be a precursor to Kirby & Simon's Fly
character 1959,
and Ditko and Lee's Spider-Man 1962.
Bruce Banner, scientist mutated by Gamma Rays into Jack Kirby and Stan Lee’s the Hulk in 1962 found a kid side-kick, Rick Jones which immediately endeared a lot of fans to the character. The Heap, created by Harry Stein and Mort Leav for Hillman Periodicals in 1942 was a German pilot mutated by death, swamps, and a "will to live" into a horrifically changed anti-hero monster.
In 1946, the Heap also found a similar side-kick named Rickie
Wood who wore very close to the same outfit as Rick Jones. The Heap also
emotionally bonded with Rickie, as the Hulk did with Rick 20 years later
because he subconsciously recognized Rick’s German model plane. The Heap, as with the Hulk was both a friend,
protector and a curse to the young sidekick.
Iron Man’s Golden Age precedent looks like it could be the 1942 Iron Ace, on a superficial level they are both armored hero’s and have the same title iron font with bolts on the outer edge, but on a deeper level they share the same type of origin.
In Tales of Suspense, 39 1963,
Tony Stark was holed up from Vietnamese soldiers and protected by a
self-sacrificing Professor Ho Yinsen.
The Professor’s sacrifice allowed Tony to don his Iron Suit of science
to fight off and then escape enemy soldiers becoming Iron Man.
There was an odd trend in 1960s Marvel where Kirby and Lee’s Dr Doom, & Dr Druid as well as Ditko and Lee’s Dr Strange all got their medical/magical degrees in Tibet. Dr Droom (Amazing Adventures 1, 1961), Dr Doom (FF5, 1962), and Dr Strange (Strange Tales 115, 1963) went to these foreign medical mystical schools in the same area, and each had their own "astonishing" outcome. Dr Droom actually turned from Caucasian to "Oriental."
Roughly 20 years before, there was a Golden Age story of a
wealthy playboy named Jethro DuMont who traveled to Tibet and was augmented by
the transformative spirit of "Lamaism" becoming the Green Lama.
He first appeared in a 1940 pulp, and got his own comic in Green
Lama 1, 1944 with art by Mac Raboy where kids could join the Green Lama
club.
This has been another episode of Comic Book Historians. Literary precursors are an interesting
thing. In some cases like the Golden Age
Daredevil, there is a direct link established by interviews, and other times
there aren’t. So does that mean these
characters were maliciously plagiarized or does that mean that they were
probably read and subconsciously carried over or were they completely original
both times or the names/origins were benignly and intentially utilized and the
rest made new, or maybe there are some primal themes that genuinely arise from
parallel thinking? Its really tough to guess what is exactly what without
direct quotes, but its interesting and fun to see the lineage of these literary
Super beings, and if its not a literary ancestor, then its at the very least a
precedent, or antecedent. Cheers.
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Daredevil ©Marvel, Avengers ©Marvel, Marvel Comics ©Marvel, Young Men ©Marvel, Fantastic Four ©Marvel, Adventure Comics ©DC, Tales of the Unexpected ©DC, Journey into Mystery ©Marvel, Captain Marvel ©Marvel, Uncanny X-Men ©Marvel, Tarzan ©ERB, Jungle Tales ©Marvel, Two-Gun Kid ©Marvel, Fantastic Four ©Marvel, Amazing Fantasy ©Marvel, The Fly ©Simon, The Hulk ©Marvel, Tales of Suspense ©Marvel, Amazing Adventures ©Marvel, Fantastic Four ©Marvel, Strange Tales ©Marvel
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