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Can you see what’s missing from Spider-Man?

Posted by: Scott    Tags:  comics, Marvel Comics, Spider-Man, Stan Lee    Posted date:  February 19, 2012  |  5 Comments


Over the past week or so, I’ve shared scans of pages I found in a Marvel Bullpen file cabinet during the mid-’70s—so far, you’ve seen the X-Men, Captain America, Thor, the Sub-Mariner, Doctor Strange, and the Hulk—and along the way I mentioned I had a feeling based on the content that these were written no later than the mid-’60s.

Today’s sheet will give you more of an idea of why I think this. Take a look at Spider-Man and his supporting cast and tell me what you see.

Or rather … what you don’t see.

Well? Did you not see what I thought you might not see?

That’s right—the only love interest here for Peter Parker is Betty Brant. No Mary Jane Watson (who was introduced—though referenced earlier—in Spider-Man #42 (November 1966). No Gwen Stacy (who first came onto the scene in Spider-Man #31 (December 1965).

Could these descriptions really have been written that early in the creation of the Marvel Universe, before those characters mattered? And if so—for what purpose? And by whom?

I’m still thinking Stan Lee wrote these … but I’ve been hearing other suggestions, such as Stan’s brother Larry Lieber, or even Superman co-creator Jerry Siegel, who did a bit of work for Marvel in the early days.

What do you think?

As soon as my continuing research yields any nugget of truth, I’ll let you know!

Meanwhile—only two more write-ups remain. Check back tomorrow for Iron Man, and then … the Fantastic Four!





5 Comments for Can you see what’s missing from Spider-Man?


Matthew David Surridge

Weren’t those characters the only recurring supporting cast in the first Spider-Man animated series? If so, that and the focus on Spider-Man’s voice would seem to support the idea of these documents having something to do with cartoons. I’m kind of curious about the strikeout through “Loves Peter,” though.

    Scott

    Which is why my presumption is that these were prepared as guides either for selling the show or for the writers of the show after it was sold. Still hoping to uncover the truth, though!

Steve Green

The other clue is that Betty is described as loving Peter, but that comment has been crossed through, so this document either predates her change of mind or it had already changed, but the author got his/her facts wrong.

My memory – possibly in error – is that Gwen was around prettty much from the start, but she and Peter didn’t become an item till later. However, I’m not home right now to check that.

    Scott

    According to Wikipedia’s Gwen Stacy entry:

    “Created by writer Stan Lee and artist Steve Ditko, she first appeared in The Amazing Spider-Man #31 (December 1965).”

    And:

    “Gwen first appears in The Amazing Spider-Man #31 (December 1965). Peter Parker meets Gwen while both study as undergraduates at Empire State University.”

    To be honest, though, I also thought she was introduced earlier!

      Steve Green

      I suspect I’m confusing her with Liz Allan, who (unnamed) appears in the very first strip.



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