Stan Lee Interview (1994)
Stan Lee Interview (1994)
Stan Lee Interview (1994)
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ENTERTAINMENT
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or deans, and they would say to me how wonderful comics are from the
point of view of fighting illiteracy. As thev exolained to me, comics are the onty things that young people will read voluntarily. You sort of have to force a kid to read Dickens or Shakespeare; it gets worse all the time, because we're living
was the best of what each ofus did best: He was able
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like these and others are the stuff of modern-day m]'ths, then Stan Lee is a veritable Brother Grimm. And, indeed, as the creator or co-creator
the same token, when I got his artI was free to write it any way
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I wanted."
Lee was born in Manhattan on Dec, 28, 1922, the elder son of an immigrant
in an age where
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ing and screaming," the ?l-year.old writer-publisher beams. in his liltingly gravelly voice. "In fact, theyjust gave me a lifetime contract. It's sort of, I guess, like a life sentence with
no hope of parole. Pleose mention I said that with a smile!" No problem he says almost ev- smile. Lee is about erlthing with a as close to an elf as a rans/, 6-footplus guy can be. Dressed casually in
suede Oxfords and a Members Ouly
'Comic books teach kids to equate reading with enjoyment. And the best thing iq once they become readers, they don't read comics exclusively; they go on to read other things.'
visual bites. But comic books teach kids to equate reading with enjoyment. And the best thing is, once they
Larry Lieber, draws the "Spider-Man" comic strip.t Father Jack "worked for
while, but then when things got bad,
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was unemployed. I have this memory of him alv'rays sitting and reading the
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want ads."
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School in the Bronx, and. just shy of l?, answered a want ad for a pub-
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lishing-company assistant. It turned out to be for Timely Comics. precursor of Marvel. run by the husband of one of Lee's first cousins. Comic books had just been born. opportunities abounded, and.within months. never left. Lee became editor - and model Joan Married to former Clayton Boocock since Dec. 5,1947.
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cornics exclusively; they go on to read Lee, mostly in collaboration with the legendary illustrator Jack Kirby (who
he has a grown daughter. also named Joan, who paints and is "also a bit of an actress," Lee says. "Bit parts and
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timedia conglomerate
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comic-book, moYie, animation, toy and trading-card divisions. Once a small wing - just an offrce. really of a family'owned magazine publisher, it was bought by moviemaker New world Entertainment in 1986, and by Iinancier Ron Perelman in 1989; he took it public, and it remains the industry leader. Lee, as chairman and publisher, spends most of his time as a Marvel Films executiveproducer, overseeing the "X-Men" animated series (Fox, Saturdays). the upsoming "SpiderMan" and "Marvel Action Hour" TV toons, and such live-action frlms as James Cameron's planned "Spider-
largely responsible for Laking comic books from primarily kiddie fare to allages reading. Starting with 'The Fan-
tastic Four" in
revolutionized the field with characters who weren't, well, comic-booky. The members of the FF squabbled, had money problems, lived in Man-
some voiceovers. She doesn't work that hard at it." A second daughter, Jan. died a few days after birth. His other child. Marvel. goes on strong. "My dream of success when I was a kid was to have an apartment that faced the street." Lee says, remembering the cheaper, back-wall apartments in which he grew up. "I never imagined I'd be working with the top names in Hollywood," he adds earnestly. "l mean. I almost feel
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"Spider-Man" daily newspaper comic strip and occasional comic books, and travels as Marvel's goodwill ambassador.
"I don't think there's a college in the countrv I haven't been to (to lecI ture) at leist twice," he frgures. "For a period of 15 years, I never went less than once a week, 52 weeks a year.
And often I would'speak to professors
"Jack was just the greatest guY in the world to work with," he remembers. "I would give him the basic idea for a story or a new character, Jack woulil then go home and draw it, and
he would add a lot of elements I hadn't even thought of or told him. And he'd bring (the artworb back to me and I would write the dialogue
Stan Lee