Site banner
.
Home Forums Blogs Articles Photos Videos Contact FAQ                    
.
.
Wisdom Archive
Body Mind and Soul
Faith and Belief
God and Religion
Law of Attraction
Life and Beyond
Love and Happiness
Peace of Mind
Peace on Earth
Personal Faith
Spiritual Festivals
Spiritual Growth
Spiritual Guidance
Spiritual Inspiration
Spirituality and Science
Spiritual Retreats
More Wisdom
Buddhism Archives
Hinduism Archives
Sustainability
Theology Archives
Even more Wisdom
2012 - Year 2012
Affirmations
Aura
Ayurveda
Chakras
Consciousness
Cultural Creatives
Diksha (Deeksha)
Dream Dictionary
Dream Interpretation
Dream interpreter
Dreams
Enlightenment
Essential Oils
Feng Shui
Flower Essences
Gaia Hypothesis
Indigo Children
Kalki Bhagavan
Karma
Kundalini
Kundalini Yoga
Life after death
Mayan Calendar
Meaning of Dreams
Meditation
Morphogenetic Fields
Psychic Ability
Reincarnation
Spiritual Art, Music & Dance
Spiritual Awakening
Spiritual Enlightenment
Spiritual Healing
Spirituality and Health
Spiritual Jokes
Spiritual Parenting
Vastu Shastra
Womens Spirituality
Yoga Positions
Site map 2
Site map


Dream Sharing Forum

at Global Oneness Community.

Share your dreams and let others help you with the interpretation!
Dream Sharing Forum



.

Stan Lee - Biography

Stan Lee - Biography: Encyclopedia II - Stan Lee - Biography

Stan Lee - Early career. Lee was born to Celia and Jack Lieber, Jewish immigrants from Romania. His father, trained as a dress cutter, worked only sporadically after the Great Depression. The family moved further uptown to Manhattan's Washington Heights neighborhood. When he was nine, his only sibling, brother Larry Lieber, was born. Lee attended DeWitt Clinton High School in the Bronx. A voracious reader who enjoyed writing as a teen, he worked such part-time jobs as writing obituaries for a news service and pre ...

See also:

Stan Lee, Stan Lee - Biography, Stan Lee - Early career, Stan Lee - Marvel revolution, Stan Lee - Later career, Stan Lee - Awards, Stan Lee - Fictional portrayals, Stan Lee - Footnotes

Stan Lee, Stan Lee - Awards, Stan Lee - Biography, Stan Lee - Early career, Stan Lee - Fictional portrayals, Stan Lee - Footnotes, Stan Lee - Later career, Stan Lee - Marvel revolution

Stan Lee: Encyclopedia II - Stan Lee - Biography



Stan Lee - Biography

Stan Lee - Early career

Lee was born to Celia and Jack Lieber, Jewish immigrants from Romania. His father, trained as a dress cutter, worked only sporadically after the Great Depression. The family moved further uptown to Manhattan's Washington Heights neighborhood. When he was nine, his only sibling, brother Larry Lieber, was born. Lee attended DeWitt Clinton High School in the Bronx. A voracious reader who enjoyed writing as a teen, he worked such part-time jobs as writing obituaries for a news service and press releases for the National Tuberculosis Center; delivering sandwiches for the Jack May pharmacy to offices in Rockefeller Center; working as an office boy for a trouser manufacturer; ushering at the Rivoli Theater on Broadway; and selling subscriptions to the New York Herald-Tribune newspaper. He graduated high school early, at age 16 1/2, in 1939, and joined the WPA Federal Theatre Project.

With the help of his uncle, Robbie Solomon, the husband of pulp magazine and comic-book publisher Martin Goodman's sister1, Lee became an assistant at the new Timely Comics division of Goodman's company. Timely, by the 1960s, would evolve into Marvel Comics. Lee, whose cousin Jean was Goodman's wife, was formally hired by Timely editor Joe Simon.2

Lee's first published work, the text filler "Captain America Foils The Traitor's Revenge" in Captain America Comics #3 (May 1941), used the pseudonym "Stan Lee", which years later he would adopt as his legal name. He graduated from writing filler to actual comics with a backup two issues later. When Simon and his creative partner Jack Kirby left later that year, following a dispute with Goodman, the publisher told Lee, just under 19 years old, to be the interim editor. The youngster showed a knack for the business that led him to remain as the comic-book division's editor-in-chief until 1972, when he would succeed Goodman as publisher.

Lee enlisted in the U.S. Army in early 1942 and served stateside in the Signal Corps, writing manuals, training films, and slogans, and occasionally cartooning. His military classification, he says, was "playwright"; he adds that only nine men in the U.S. Army were given that title. Vincent Fago, editor of Timely's "animation comics" section, which put out humor and funny animal comics, filled-in until Lee returned from his World War II military service in 1945.

In the mid-1950s, by which time the company was now generally known as Atlas Comics, a decency campaign led by psychiatrist Dr. Frederic Wertham and Senator Estes Kefauver blamed comic books for corrupting young readers with images of violence and sexuality. Comic-book companies responded by implementing strict internal regulations, and eventually adopted the stringent Comics Code.

During this period, Lee wrote comics in a various genres including romance, Westerns, humor, science fiction, medieval adventure, horror and suspense. By the end of the decade, he had become dissatisfied with his career and considered quitting the field.

Stan Lee - Marvel revolution

In the late 1950s, DC Comics revived the superhero genre and experienced a significant success with its updated version of the Flash, and later with super-team the Justice League of America. In response, publisher Martin Goodman assigned Lee to create a new superhero team. Lee's wife urged him to experiment with stories he preferred, since he was planning on changing careers and had nothing to lose.

Lee acted on that advice, giving his superheroes a flawed humanity, a change from the ideal archetypes that were typically written for pre-teens. His heroes could have bad tempers, melancholy fits, vanity, greed, etc. They bickered amongst themselves, worried about paying their bills and impressing girlfriends, and even were sometimes physically ill. Before him, superheroes were idealistically perfect people with no problems: Superman was so powerful that nobody could harm him, and Batman was a billionaire in his secret identity.

Lee's superheroes captured the imagination of teens and young adults who were part of the population spike known as the post World War II baby boom. Sales soared.

The first superhero group Lee and artist Jack Kirby created was the family the Fantastic Four. Its immediate popularity led Lee and Marvel's illustrators to produce a cavalcade of new titles. With Kirby, Lee created the Incredible Hulk, Iron Man, the Mighty Thor and the X-Men; with Bill Everett, Daredevil; and with Steve Ditko, Doctor Strange and Marvel's most successful character, Spider-Man,

Throughout the 1960s, Lee scripted, art-directed, and edited most of Marvel's series; moderated the letters pages; wrote a monthly column called "Stan's Soapbox"; and wrote endless promotional copy, often signing off with his trademark phrase, "Excelsior!" (which is also the New York state motto). To maintain his taxing workload yet still meet deadlines, he used a system that was used previously by various comic-book studios, but due to Lee's success with it, is now known as the "Marvel method" or "Marvel style" of comic-book creation. Typically, Lee would brainstorm a story with the artist and then prepare a brief synopsis rather than a full script. Based on the synopsis, the artist would fill the alloted number of pages by determining and drawing the panel-to-panel storytelling. After the artist turned in penciled pages, Lee would write the word balloons and captions, and then oversee the lettering and colouring. In effect, the artists were co-plotters, whose collaborative first drafts Lee built upon.

Because of this system, the exact division of creative credits on Lee's comics is still disputed, especially in the cases of comics drawn by Kirby and Ditko. Although Lee has always effusively praised these artists, some observers argue that their contribution was greater than for which they are given credit. The dispute with Ditko over Spider-Man has sometimes been acrimonious.

In 1971, Lee indirectly reformed the Comics Code. The US Department of Health, Education and Welfare asked Lee to write a story about the dangers of drugs and Lee wrote a story in which Spider-Man's best friend becomes addicted to pills. The three-part story was slated to be published in Amazing Spider-Man #96-98, but the Comics Code Authority refused it because it depicted drug use; the story context was considered irrelevant. With his publisher's approval, Marvel published the comics without the CCA seal. The comics sold well and Marvel won praise for its socially conscious efforts. The CCA subsequently loosened the Code to permit negative depictions of drugs, among other new freedoms.

Stan Lee - Later career

In later years, Lee became a figurehead and public face for Marvel Comics. He made appearances at comic book conventions around the country, lecturing and participating in panel discussions. He moved to California in 1981 to develop Marvel's TV and movie properties. He has been an executive producer for, and has made cameo appearances in, Marvel film adaptations. He can be spotted as a jury foreman in the TV movie The Trial of the Incredible Hulk (1989), as a beach hot-dog vendor in X-Men (2000), as a festival salesman in Spider-Man (2002), about to cross a street with a newspaper in Daredevil (2003), as a security guard leaving a building (with former TV series Hulk Lou Ferrigno) in Hulk (2003), dodging debris in Spider-Man 2 (2004), and as Willie Lumpkin, the title characters' mail carrier in Fantastic Four (2005).

Lee also made a cameo in Kevin Smith's motion picture Mallrats (1995) recorded interviews with Smith as in the non-fiction video Stan Lee's Mutants, Monsters, and Marvels (2002), and appeared as himself on the thirteenth season of The Simpsons ("I am Furious Yellow", April 28, 2002). He voiced himself as a character on a Spider-Man animated series in 1998 ("Spider Wars, Chapter 2: Farewell Spider-Man", January 31, 1998) and on the MTV-produced series in 2003 ("Frank Elson" in "Mind Games" Part 1 & 2, Aug. 15 & 22, 2003). Lee also appears as himself in the Mark Hamill-directed Comic Book: The Movie (2004), a direct-to-video mockumentary primarily filmed at the 2002 San Diego Comic-Con.

Lee befriended Hollywood entrepreneur Peter Paul when Lee was tapped by movie legend Jimmy Stewart in 1989 to chair the American Spirit Foundation established by Paul and Stewart to direct entertainment industry resources and creativity to education reform and democracy movements in the Communist world. Lee's Entertainers for Education initiative was launched by former President Ronald Reagan at a gala in Beverly Hills in 1991. Paul attempted to liberate Lee from his figurehead position at Marvel first by trying to buy Marvel in 1992, then by approaching major Hollywood studios to create a Stan Lee Super Hero production division. While Marvel was being reorganized and sold to Toy Biz in bankruptcy in 1998, Paul helped Lee obtain a $1 million a year contract with Marvel, as Chairman Emeritus. He was given the right to spend 90% of his time engaging in his own competitive endeavors with the right to use the names and images of his Marvel creations to compete with Marvel.

Paul joined with Lee to create an online animation studio, Stan Lee Media, in 1999. It grew to 165 people and went public, but by the following year was out of business.

Some of Stan Lee's projects at Stan Lee Media included The 7th Portal where he played Izayus. The Drifter, and The Accuser were his other webisode works. The licensed characters of 7th Portal even became part of a touring interactive 3-D movie attraction that played at several amusement parks. In 2005, Lee recovered a settlement of more than $10 million from Marvel for the profits of Marvel's blockbuster movies.

In the 2000s, Lee did his first work for DC Comics, launching the Just Imagine... series, in which Lee reimagined the DC superheroes Superman, Batman, Wonder Woman, Green Lantern and the Flash.

In 2001, he did the narration for the film "Citizen Toxie: The Toxic Avenger Part IV", under the pseudonym "Peter Parker".

Lee created the risqué animated superhero series Stripperella for Spike TV, and in 2004 announced plans to collaborate with Hugh Hefner on a similar superhero cartoon featuring Playboy Playmates.

In August 2004, Lee announced the launch of Stan Lee's Sunday Comics [1], to be hosted by Komikwerks.com, where monthly subscribers will be able to read a new, updated comic every Sunday. As well, "Stan's Soapbox" will be a weekly column run alongside the Sunday strip.

Other related archives

1922, 1963, Alan Moore, American, Atlas Comics, Batman, Beverly Hills, Bill Everett, Broadway, Comics Code, Comics Code Authority, Communist, DC Comics, Daniel Clowes, Daredevil, December 28, Department of Health, Education and Welfare, Doctor Strange, Dr. Frederic Wertham, Estes Kefauver, Fantastic Four, Federal Theatre Project, Flash, Funky Flashman, Great Depression, Green Lantern, High School, Hugh Hefner, Hulk, Incredible Hulk, Iron Man, Jack Kirby, Jack Kirby Hall of Fame, Jewish, Jimmy Stewart, Joe Simon, Just Imagine..., Justice League of America, Kevin Smith, Komikwerks.com, Larry Lieber, Lou Ferrigno, MTV, Mallrats, Manhattan, Mark Hamill, Martin Goodman, Marvel Comics, Mighty Thor, Mister Fantastic, Mister Miracle, New York, New York City, New York Herald-Tribune, Playboy, Rockefeller Center, Romania, Ronald Reagan, San Diego Comic-Con, Sgt. Fury and His Howling Commandos, Signal Corps, Spider-Man, Spider-Man 2, Spike TV, Steve Ditko, Stripperella, Superman, TV movie, TV series, The Simpsons, The Toxic Avenger, Timely Comics, Toy Biz, U.S. Army, Vincent Fago, WPA, Washington Heights, Westerns, What If, Willie Lumpkin, Wonder Woman, World War II, X-Men, bankruptcy, billionaire, cartooning, comic books, corporation, democracy, editor, education, funny animal, genres, horror, humor, memoirist, military service, motion picture, multimedia, naturalistic, news service, newspaper, obituaries, post World War II baby boom, press releases, psychiatrist, publisher, publishing, pulp magazine, romance, science fiction, shared universe, superhero, suspense, the Bronx, the Flash, word balloons, writer



Adapted from the Wikipedia article "Biography", under the G.N U Free Docmentation License. Please also see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki

More material related to Stan Lee can be found here:
Main Page
for
Stan Lee
Index of Articles
related to
Stan Lee


« Back








Search the Global Oneness web site
Global Oneness is a huge, really huge, web site. Almost whatever you are searching for within health, spirituality, personal development and inspirationals - you will find it here!
Google
 
 

Rate this article!

Please rate this article with 10 as very good and 1 as very poor.

.








Sneak-Peek of Global Oneness Community

Hi friend! The Global Oneness Community, the place for information and sharing about Oneness is not really launched yet (you will see there is still some clean up to do) ...but it is now open for a sneak-peek! And if you wish - please register and become one of the very first members to do so! Jonas

Forum Home, Articles, Photo Gallery, Videos, News, Sitemap
...and much more!


Dream Sharing Forum

at Global Oneness Community.

Share your dreams and let others help you with the interpretation!
Dream Sharing Forum



Forum
Articles
Images Pictures
Videos
News
Sitemap




 

 

 

 

 


 








  » Home » » Home »