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Humans

Stan Lee鈥檚 legacy isn鈥檛 just superheroes but the humanity he gave them

By Sean O'Neill

13 November 2018 Last updated 13 November 2018

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Twelve minutes into the pilot episode of the 1970s TV series, The Amazing Spider Man, a young Peter Parker, played by Nicholas Hammond, is bitten in a lab by a radioactive spider. Moments later out on the street, his brand-new spidey sense already tingling, he is chased by a car to the end of a blind alley. Without thinking, he launches himself onto the smooth wall and effortlessly climbs several storeys – much to his own surprise.

I was 6 or 7 years old when I saw this for the first time, and it blew my tiny mind. Rewatching today gave me a physical shiver of nostalgia. Those moments were my gateway drug into Stan Lee鈥檚 comic-book world. Four decades later, it鈥檚 an entire Marvel Universe, and one which Lee sadly left on 12 November, aged 95.

Lee鈥檚 decades as Marvel鈥檚 top writer and editor helped to revolutionise comic-book superheroes and villains. Much of his success came because he focused on depth of character as much as spectacle. Sure, his characters had cool superpowers, but they also had flaws, and personal difficulties to deal with.

Peter Parker鈥檚 adolescent angst, David Banner鈥檚 anger management issues, Tony Stark鈥檚 battle with alcoholism. As often as not, his heroes鈥 powers caused them great personal difficulty – yes, Hulk, I鈥檓 looking at you – making them more relatable, and attractive to a wider audience.

Captain diversity

In the 1960s, Lee was instrumental in increasing聽diversity in superhero characters, says psychologist and mental health counsellor Parker Shaw, based in Tulsa, Oklahoma, who has researched the psychological effects of reading superhero comics. 鈥淢ost people had a superhero that looked like them, and struggled with the same challenges,鈥 says Shaw. 鈥淪tan鈥檚 contributions of diverse characters allowed a larger audience to feel recognised, valued, and understood.鈥

Today, Shaw sometimes uses comic book narratives in therapy. 鈥淎s a mental health counsellor, I am trying to connect with my patients in a way that both of us can relate to. Superheroes offer a safe, relatable outlet for children, adolescents and adults to openly discuss superheroes鈥 struggles, while indirectly processing their own struggles.鈥

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Radiation – is there nothing it can鈥檛 do?

Tributes have been pouring in for Lee. The current Hulk, Mark Ruffalo, : 鈥淵ou let us be extra human… superhuman even.鈥 And that 鈥渆xtra human鈥 was a key to Lee鈥檚 success. While DC comics served up superheroes often destined for greatness (think Superman and Aquaman), Lee took everyday people, and thrust superpowers upon them, often courtesy of, let鈥檚 face it, some very dubious science. Where would Lee be without radiation?

A radioactive spider created Spider-Man, exposure to gamma radiation produced the Hulk, while cosmic rays turned four astronauts into the Fantastic Four. As Lee admitted in : 鈥淚鈥檓 the least scientific person you鈥檒l ever know, but I try to seem scientific with our characters. I wouldn鈥檛 know a gamma ray if I saw it鈥 But if it sounds good, I鈥檒l use it.鈥

But perhaps Lee was being too self-deprecating. From artificial silk with curious properties (though unlikely to catch thieves just like flies), to power-lifting exoskeletons (though without Tony Stark鈥檚 jet boots – yet), the futuristic technology that features in many Marvel creations may be just around the corner.

As well as his extraordinary creativity, Lee鈥檚 own superpowers included his longevity. 鈥淚 was first interviewed for Stan Lee’s obituary about 20 years ago,鈥 writer. 鈥淚 was happy he defied the reaper and carried on. With Stan gone, an era really does come to an end. He was the happy huckster that comics needed. And he really did alliterate like that when you talked to him.鈥

Perhaps Chris Evans, who plays Captain America, summed it up best, ending with Lee鈥檚 own trademark sign-off: 鈥淭here will never be another Stan Lee. For decades he provided both young and old with adventure, escape, comfort, confidence, inspiration, strength, friendship and joy. He exuded love and kindness and will leave an indelible mark on so, so, so many lives. Excelsior!!鈥

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