Scott Edelman
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Celebrating Superman’s creators

Posted by: Scott    Tags:  Jerry Siegel, Joe Shuster, Superman    Posted date:  April 20, 2023  |  No comment


Irene and I drove to Ohio this week to take in the exhibition The Tudors: Art and Majesty in Renaissance England at the Cleveland Museum of Art, and while I enjoyed that part of our trip, what I was looking forward to the most was our visit to the neighborhood where Superman co-creators Jerry Siegel and Joe Shuster met in 1930 when they were on the staff of the Glenville High School student newspaper.

And so, 85 years and one day after Action Comics #1 went on sale, introducing the world to the Man of Steel, an event without which I would not have had my life, we made a pilgrimage to two of the spots where it all began.

While Joe Shuster’s apartment building no longer exists, Jerry Siegel’s boyhood home still stands. So we started with a visit to 10622 Kimberly Avenue, which is a private residence. It’s obvious, from both the whimsical window dressing and the decorations surrounding the lot, that the current owners are well aware of the property’s importance.

I have no idea how many others make the journey to pay their respects, but we were the only ones gawking for the 15 of so minutes we were there.

The street signs at the corner of Kimberly and Parkwood also read Jerry Siegel Lane and Lois Lane.

We then drove nine blocks away to the vacant lot where the apartment building Joe Shuster lived in once stood, which is now a vacant lot. If you’d also like to visit this location, plug “Parkwood Drive and Amor Avenue” into your GPS. (more…)

What Manischewitz got wrong about Jerry Siegel and Joe Shuster

Posted by: Scott    Tags:  comics, food, Jerry Siegel, Joe Shuster, Superman    Posted date:  September 7, 2014  |  1 Comment


While I was down in Florida last week visiting my mother, I spotted a box of Manischewitz matzoh which celebrated the creators of Superman, those two Jewish kids from Cleveland, Jerry Siegel and Joe Shuster. My first thought was, how cool is that?

My second thought was … well … take a look at the back of the box and see whether you can guess.

ManischewitzSiegelShuster

Did you spot it? (more…)

The time DC Comics almost did right by Bill Finger

Posted by: Scott    Tags:  Batman, Bill Finger, comics, DC Comics, Jerry Siegel    Posted date:  July 25, 2012  |  1 Comment


I know all about Superman co-creator Jerry Siegel’s 1975 letter putting a curse on the company that wouldn’t do right by him. After all, it wasn’t history to me, as I was on staff at Marvel Comics at the time, and we were all well aware of the letter that began—

It has been announced in show business trade papers that a multi-million dollar production based on the Superman comic strip is about to be produced. It has been stated that millions of dollars were paid to the owners of Superman, National Periodical Publications, Inc., for the right to use the famous comic book super-hero in the new movie. The script is by Mario Puzo, who wrote The Godfather and Earthquake. The film is to have a star-filled cast.

I, Jerry Siegel, the co-originator of Superman, put a curse on the Superman movie! I hope it super-bombs. I hope loyal Superman fans stay away from it in droves. I hope the whole world, becoming aware of the stench that surrounds Superman, will avoid the movie like a plague.

And ended—

WHAT AN INFERNAL, SICKENING SUPER-STENCH EMANATES FROM NATIONAL PERIODICAL PUBLICATIONS, INC. We hope the public will never forget this when seeing the Superman character, or National Periodical comic books. Do not patronize Superman because of this injustice.

Amazing, huh? If you want to read the whole thing, you can find it here.

But what I never knew (which surprises me) is that there was also intriguing correspondence out there related to Bill Finger, the man responsible for most of what we like about Batman.

Thankfully, Marc Tyler Nobleman, author of Bill the Boy Wonder: The Secret Co-Creator of Batman, has enlightened me about those letters and the scenario that spawned them. (more…)

Whatever the lawyers say, Ohio IS the birthplace of Superman

Posted by: Scott    Tags:  DC Comics, Jerry Siegel, Joe Shuster, Superman    Posted date:  June 22, 2012  |  1 Comment


There’s a new wrinkle to the war against Jerry Siegel and Joe Shuster and Superman that goes beyond what’s in the play The History of Invulnerability, which I told you about earlier this week. It seems Ohio wants to offer a special license plate commemorating that state as the “Birthplace of Superman” for the 75th anniversary of the creation of the Man of Steel, but DC Comics and Warner Bros. have objected to the wording.

Nate Beeler, a staff cartoonist for the Columbus Dispatch commented on the brouhaha with the cartoon below, which I spotted over at Daryl Cagle’s blog.

No one’s really sure why there’s an objection to the wording of the plate, but Ohio is attempting to come up with an acceptable alternative. Beeler worries that those alternatives might also be found unacceptable:

Everybody knows Superman is a fictional character who comes from the fictional planet Krypton and grew up in the fictional town of Smallville. What people might not know is that he was created in Cleveland by the legendary Jerry Siegel and Joe Shuster. The license plate is a nice way of bringing attention to the great cultural contribution of these Ohioans. If the wording is changed to something like “Birthplace of the creators of Superman,” I just hope that DC Comics won’t object by saying, “But Superman’s parents, Jor-El and Lara, were also from Krypton!”

As for me, there’s something I find unacceptable, but believe me, it ain’t the slogan.

Why I was vulnerable to The History of Invulnerability

Posted by: Scott    Tags:  comics, DC Comics, Jerry Siegel, Superman, theater    Posted date:  June 20, 2012  |  1 Comment


I went to Theater J on Sunday to catch a matinee performance of The History of Invulnerability, a play based on the real-life tragedy of how Jerry Siegel and Joe Shuster got screwed out of the rights to Superman, and my feelings are complex. What isn’t complex, though, is my feeling that you should rush to see it if you can, so let’s get that out of the way first. The final performances are on July 8, so you have a few weeks, but don’t dawdle. It’s well worth your time.

But I’ve been wondering, as I struggle to parse my reaction to this play, whether it’s possible to be too close to the material to see it clearly.

Oh, who am I kidding? Of course I’m too close to the material to see it clearly! I’ve been a hardcore comics fan as far back as I can remember, I was working in comics when the first Superman movie was about to be released and justice was being demanded for Siegel and Shuster, I already know all the crimes committed against the Man of Steel’s creators, and last year I even attempted to win some of Jerry Siegel’s hair at auction!

Plus (and this ought to give you an idea of how invested I am in this shameful tale out of comics history) I already had such a feeling of hatred for Harry Donenfeld and Jack Liebowitz going in that I literally started hissing at a certain point when one of them took the stage and started speaking, and had to squelch that visceral reaction once I realized what I was doing. So I don’t come to this play with a clean slate, able to judge this play the way I would a different one not based on a topic already embedded in my DNA. (more…)

The unique comics collectible the universe didn’t want me to own

Posted by: Scott    Tags:  comics, DC Comics, Jerry Siegel, Superman    Posted date:  November 30, 2011  |  2 Comments


Half an hour ago, I was outbid for a unique piece of comics memorabilia. Such a thing had never been sold before, so I had no way of gauging its value or eventual price. I was willing to pay a couple of hundred bucks, but it ended up going for $1,000, far too rich for my blood, especially considering the plans I had, about which more below.

So what just sold for $1,000? Why, this—

Any idea, before you scroll down, exactly what that is? Well, yes … hair. Anyone could tell that.

But whose hair? (more…)

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