Stanley Martin Lieber, known to us mere mortals as Stan Lee died yesterday at the age of 95.
I have often said that my own "Appendix N" would consist of 70s rock, Hammer Horror films, and comics. Marvel Comics was a huge part of how my D&D world was shaping up.
I grew up being a DC fan, and I still consider myself to this very day a true DC fan. But in the 70s and the 80s in what was coexistent with my formative D&D years. I dropped DC in favor of Marvel's Spider-Man, X-Men and of course their Horror and Mystic-themed comics like "Tomb of Dracula", Dr. Strange, Blade, and Ghost Rider. Much of what went on in my D&D worlds was very Marvel influenced.
I had a character named "Rogue" after my favorite bad-girl (at the time she was not in the X-Men yet), and nearly all my character had an illustration that I cut or copied from the pages of Marvel. While over in DC my first magical-love was still for Zatanna, I also loved reading about the exploits of Dr. Strange and Clea. I read with a voracious appetite every Tomb of Dracula I could my hands on to. I read Red Sonja, X-Men, hell...every X-everything in the Mutant 80s. This leads me to read other comics.
Stan gave us great characters and stories. I LOVED Black Panther. Here was a guy who was brilliant, a physicist, a king, he all sorts of superpowers, and yet he still fretted over his people, his lands and doing the right thing. Peter Parker was so neurotic he could have been a Woody Allen character. Stephen Strange was an arrogant prick, Stark was an alcoholic arrogant prick. The X-Men had so much pathos it was almost Shakespearian. These were relatable characters or at least approachable ones. Jim Croce once sang "You don't tug on Superman's cape" and it is true. Superman, for everything he stands for, is still a god, unapproachable. Even Batman for that matter. But Stan's characters and the ones he influenced were still more like us.
My introduction to Stan Lee, the man or rather his persona, was via the "Spider-man and his Amazing Friends" cartoons where Stan would narrate the intros. I first heard his "True Believers" here as I suspect most of us did. (Though the FIRST time I heard "True Believers" was on the Electric Company's "Spidey" on PBS in the 70s.) A generation later he would be known to a new audience via his Marvel Cinematic Universe cameos. But I always felt it was us, the old fans, the ones that remember them smell of comics back in the 70s and 80s (and for others the 60s), that he was there for.
Stan Lee was a flawed, imperfect man. Just like his characters. He didn't always say the right thing or maybe he took credit for some ideas that were not his. At some future date, we can go back and debate the issues of the Stan Lee/Jack Kirby split. But not today.
Today I want to remember the man that gave us all so much. A man that took his own words "with great power comes great responsibility" to heart. Stan knew the power he wielded and he used it to create worlds for us to enjoy.
Several years ago, when Stan Lee was in his late 80s I asked a question on Facebook, "Who has had a larger impact on our culture, (Playboy founder) Hugh Hefner or Stan Lee?" The results were fairly predictable, with Stan beating Hugh by nearly a 2 to 1 margin.
We will miss Stanley Lieber, the man. But Stan Lee, the icon and the personality will live on forever. Excelsior!
I remember those weird Spidey vignettes on The Electric Company, too! Good times. :)
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