Wednesday, February 24, 2021

Roy Thomas on "True Believer: The Rise and Fall of Stan Lee" by Abraham Riesman

Roy Thomas, who was hired by Stan Lee in 1965, and then took over as its editor-in-chief in 1972, has issues with the new Stan Lee biography "True Believer: The Rise and Fall of Stan Lee" by Abraham Riesman.

In The Hollywood Reporter, he writes a guest column arguing that the book "undercuts Lee's recollections in favor of artist Jack Kirby's version of events." 

 

"That Stan Lee was the co-creator, and not the sole creator, of the key Marvel heroes from the Fantastic Four and Spider-Man through Daredevil and the Silver Surfer can hardly be in dispute at this late stage.  I myself, back in the '80s when I wasn't working for him, had a friendly argument with him on that score over lunch. I soon realized that, as much as he respected the talents and contributions of artists (Riesman would say 'artist/writers' and he's right, at least in one sense) such as Jack Kirby and Steve Ditko to the characters introduced in the 1960s, he could never really bring himself, in his own mind, to think of them as "co-creators." The two of us had to agree to disagree, and I never saw any use in bringing it up again.

"If I can judge from Riesman's writings, and from other sources over the years, I'm sure I'd have encountered the same kind of blinders-on stubbornness in Jack Kirby, who (as oft quoted in this book) saw Stan as little more than the guy who scribbled a few words of dialogue and rode to unearned glory on his back.

"Both men were, I think, wrong… and that's why Riesman is so ill-advised to use nearly every opportunity he gets to weight things in Jack's favor and against Stan. (By the way, if someone objects to my referring to Jack Kirby as well by his first name, it's because the two of us were on a first-name basis from 1965 till the last time we met, sometime in the 1980s. I considered him then, and I consider him now, to be by far the greatest superhero artist in the history of the medium, and, along with Stan, one of its preeminent pop-culture geniuses.)"

 

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