Comics legend helped create
icons from Spider-Man and Iron Man to X-Men and Black Panther.
NATHAN MATTISE
Stan Lee—the Marvel Comics
legend responsible for cultural icons from Spider-Man and Iron Man to X-Men and
Black Panther—has died, according to multiple reports from places like TMZ and
The Hollywood Reporter.
THR spoke with a source
that said Lee died early Monday morning at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los
Angeles. TMZ spoke to Lee's daughter, J.C., who said an ambulance rushed to
Lee's Hollywood Hills home early Monday morning to take him to Cedars-Sinai.
That outlet noted Lee had suffered several illnesses over the last year or so,
including dealing with pneumonia. Lee was 95 years old.
"My father loved all
of his fans," J.C. Lee told TMZ. "He was the greatest, most decent
man."
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Indisputably, Lee's
decades-spanning career has spawned some of the most beloved pop-culture
characters and franchises of all time. He began working on comics as an
assistant at Timely Comics in 1939; that entity would eventually morph into
Marvel Comics in the 1960s. Alongside other eventual giants of the industry
like Jack Kirby and Steve Ditko, Lee helped create seemingly every adored comic
hero this side of Batman, Superman, and Wonder Woman: in addition to the
credits above, Lee had a hand in the Hulk, Doctor Strange, the Fantastic Four,
Daredevil, and characters like Ant-Man and Thor, among others.
Over time, the industry
veteran held virtually every position within Marvel Comics—writer, editor,
publisher, media producer, television host, actor, and perhaps most notably,
president and chairman. In the 1980s, he even moved west to help the company
start its then-nascent film and TV initiatives, something Marvel has arguably
become better known for than the comics themselves (take your pick—Captain
America, Iron Man, Spider-Man, Logan, Deadpool, Guardians of the Galaxy,
Jessica Jones, and on and on). Lee also publicly advocated for the storytelling
potential in video games, famously saying the medium had surpassed film itself
in the late aughts.
That unparalleled body of
work helped Lee earn just about every award available within the comics world:
Lee entered the Will Eisner Award Hall of Fame in 1994 and the Jack Kirby Hall
of Fame in 1995. He received a National Medal of Arts in 2008.
Lee's career was not
entirely without controversy, of course. Around the time of the first Avengers
movie, for instance, media reflections on his relationship with Kirby renewed a
discussion about content creators versus those who receive the ultimate credit
within the industry (see Grantland, Comics Alliance, Slate, etc.). And over the
last two decades, Lee himself has been tangled up in lawsuits over various
rights—he sued Marvel directly in the early 2000s for not fulfilling the terms
of his employment contract (specifically, payments Lee believed he deserved
when Marvel film franchises finally took off). Just this year, Lee dropped a $1
billion lawsuit against his former company, POW! Entertainment, regarding
rights to use his name and likeness.
Still, the impact of Lee's
work and contributions to today's pop culture landscape likely cannot be
overstated. Tributes from the larger community have started popping up—Dark
Knight ink master Frank Miller tweeted that Lee "was a childhood
inspiration, an instructor to me when I was just getting started, and a
genuinely sweet man." DC Entertainment Chief Creative
Officer-Publisher/legendary comics artist Jim Lee (no relation) offered his own
deeply personal tribute through Twitter:
Stan Lee gave so much to so
many, but to me, a shy, awkward kid—growing up as an immigrant in a strange,
new world—Stan Lee gave me the greatest gift of all. He gave me a place to
escape into—an endless, imaginative playground filled with the most amazing,
fantastic, and uncanny heroes ever. And through these characters, Stan Lee gave
me my childhood and showed me the value of being different. To embrace heroism
and to shun prejudice. That it was cool to want to be the goody and that there
was a price for not standing up for the downtrodden, the oppressed, the little
guy...
After today, comic book
fans of all stripes hope to see at least one more famed Lee cameo in a
superhero film, depending on what productions have wrapped. For now, we all at
least have the last Lee cameo that hit any screen, courtesy of Insomniac Games'
well-received Spider-Man game from earlier this year.
https://arstechnica.com/gaming/2018/11/legendary-marvel-comics-creator-stan-lee-has-died/
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