Author: Glenn Hauman

Joanne Siegel, R.I.P.

Joanne SiegelJoanne Siegel, the widow of Superman co-creator Jerry Siegel and model for the original likeness of Lois Lane and the person who inspired Lois’s middle name, has passed away at 93. Word hit the comics community yesterday through a Tweet from Brad Meltzer and was later confirmed by the Cleveland Plain Dealer.

CBR quoted Meltzer:

“I got the word from the people at the Siegel and Shuster Society. I met her when I was doing [my novel] ‘The Book of Lies’ because I was researching who killed Jerry Siegel’s father. I met Laura first, who is Jerry and Joanne’s daughter. We became really good friends, and she said to me ‘Of all the people who have ever researched Jerry Siegel, you’re the only one who’s ever called us.’ I became really close with the family, and they seemed really excited that someone was going to tell their story.”

“The crazy part is– of everyone I’ve ever spoken to in my life, there’s nothing like speaking to Lois Lane. When I finally met her at the unveiling of the repaired Siegel and Shuster house, which I flew to because I wanted to meet her face-to-face and see all the work everyone in Cleveland had done, everyone said to me ‘She’s beautiful. You won’t believe how beautiful she is.’ And I was thinking that this is a 90-year-old woman…how beautiful can she be? But she was beautiful. It was the only way to describe her. You saw here, and there was this stunning, elegant, amazing woman that was a spitfire.”It wasn’t like talking to your grandmother. You really saw ‘intrepid reporter’ as part of her personality. I just got a note from her in December talking about everything we’ve been doing on the [History] show and it’s still amazing to see how much she had going even at that age.”

The former Joanne Carter met her future husband and his artist partner Joe Shuster in Cleveland in the late ’30s when she responded to an ad the two had placed looking for local models. The original sketch Shuster did of her grew to become the foundation for fast-talking reporter Lois Lane, and Joanne later married Jerry in 1948. In the years since, she stood by the struggling writer as he saw the financial benefit and artistic credit for Superman pass him by while his publisher pushed the character to wider cultural acceptance, and later took a very public and prolific role in fighting DC owner Warner Bros. for the rights to the character after her husband’s passing in 1996. Along with her family and the family of Shuster, Siegel teamed with well-known intellectual property lawyer Marc Toberoff to push for more rights on the character than Superman’s creators had ever been able to earn in their lifetimes, which led to various reversions and much wrangling over settlements and compensation. The suit has been on hold since October, and it is unknown how Siegel’s death will affect the proceedings.

Here’s a photo from Alan Light of the Siegels (Jerry, Joanne, and daughter Laura) from the 1976 San Diego Comic Con.

Jerry Siegel, Joanne Siegel, Laura Siegel Larson

It’s Official: The Movie is Called ‘The Amazing Spider-Man’

The Amazing Spider-Man is going to be the title of the next film, scheduled to come out July 3rd, 2012, and starring Andrew Garfield and Emma Stone. There’s a new web site and everything, with a picture of that costume that’s been changed just enough to justify a new round of toys…

Prince William and Kate Middleton Become Comic Book Couple

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It’s Valentine’s Day, so let’s give you a story about a good old fashioned romance comic, complete with a beautiful woman and a dashing young prince.

Cashing in on the royal wedding hoopla of Prince William and Kate Middleton, the comic Kate and William: A Very Public Love Story has been written by Bleeding Cool‘s Rich Johnston for Markosia and tells the story of the couple’s past in two parts.

The first half is told from Kate’s perspective, with a fictional diary and illustrations in the style of a 1970s girls’ comic by Mike Collins (artist on Thunderbolt and painter of the covers to my Star Trek: Starfleet Corps of Engineers stories). The second half is by the Gary Erskine and follows William from the rugby pitches of Eton to army officer training at Sandhurst before his RAF service, told by newspaper headlines and mission briefings.

Publisher Markosia calls it a “dramatic biography” with two separate stories that “come together in the middle, a fictional look at the wedding day itself, with a kiss. How could it end any other way?”

Kate and William: A Very Public Love Story is set to go on sale in stores and online on April 2 (yes, a Saturday). The wedding is planned for April 29.

One hopes it goes better for Kate in the comics than it has for Princess Diana…

How Comics Inspired the Egyptian Revolution

Martin Luther King Jr. Egypt ComicJesse Singal at The Boston Globe points to the Comics Alliance blog post connecting “The Montgomery Story,” a comic book that relates Martin Luther King Jr.’s philosophy of nonviolent civil disobedience (particularly as it pertained to the Montgomery bus strike) to the recent non-violent revolution in Egypt:

Dalia Ziada, Egypt Director of the American Islamic Congress, arranged to have the comic book translated into Arabic and distributed 2,000 copies across the Middle East. In a newsletter, Ziada described what happened when she tried to get the book printed in Egypt: When, at first, we went to print the comic book, a security officer blocked publication. So we called him and demanded a meeting. He agreed, and we read through the comic book over coffee to address his concerns. At the end, he granted permission to print and then asked: “Could I have a few extra copies for my kids?”

Of course, we aren’t surprised. We’ve known for a very long time that comic books promote truth, justice and the American Way… this is just a bit more than usual.

‘Comic Book Legends Revealed’ Hits #300

Congratulations to Brian Cronin on the 300th installment of Comic Book Legends Revealed, his ongoing series of examinations of comic book legends and whether they are true, false, or somewhere in between. Click here for an archive of the previous two hundred and ninety-nine, or buy the book he got out of it, Was Superman A Spy?

Now if he ever finds about that time with the thing in the men’s room at the Wizard World in… but I’ve probably said too much already.

Welcome A New Addition To The ComicMix Extended Family!

And we’re not just talking about the new site here…

We’d like to welcome Caleigh Elizabeth, daughter of ComicMix colorist and flatter Shannon Weaver (Jon Sable Freelance: Ashes Of Eden, Munden’s Bar) and her husband Tom.

Baby Caleigh was born at 8:47am on Wednesday, weighing 7lbs, 6oz and measuring 19 inches long. Baby is doing very well, mom was sending out updates from her phone mere hours later.

Our warmest congratulations to the happy family.

You can help save Comics Archives in Detroit!

The word came over Twitter: “Unless we raise $3,100 by tonight, like some cheesy 80’s flick, it looks like Comics Archives will be closing its doors.”

Comics Archives apparently has fallen behind in paying Diamond for new comics, and needs to scrape together funds quickly. They had been in discussions to sell off some of their inventory to another store, but the buyer back out.

So now they’re under the gun. The store closes at 8 PM tonight… unless you can help.

Comics Archives
25650 Plymouth Road
Redford, MI 48239-2027
(313) 937-8860

A quick call to the store confirms that they will take orders over the phone, if need be.

C’mon, people. We can do this.

Here’s what the place looks like, if you want to head on over:

UPDATE: Nope. Too little, too late.

Read ‘Maus’ for International Holocaust Rememberance Day

I know what I’m re-reading today. And if you haven’t read Maus: A Survivor’s Tale yet yourself, you should. Comics really don’t get much better.

Consider it a rebuttal to all the people who insist that the Holocaust never happened, and that it’s a shame that it didn’t.

On the comic spoiler of the day

I’m going to be writing a longer rant about the subject, but for now I just want to remind you what we got the last time this happened.

<obvious spoiler alert> (more…)

Monday Mix-Up: ‘Family Guy’ meets ‘The Incredible Hulk’

While the rest of you were watching the Golden Globes, Seth McFarlane was going back to mining his childhood for laughs. Boy, it sure seems like that new Hulk TV series is getting more and more inevitable, ain’t it?

Useless trivia/weird coincidence of the day: the narration of the original credits were done by Ted Cassidy, who, although best known for saying “You rang?” as Lurch in The Addams Family TV series, had other connections to Marvel Comics– he was the voice of the Thing in the Fantastic Four animated series from 1978, and the voice of Galactus in the series before that. And if that’s not enough comics work, he also did the voices for Black Manta and Brainiac in Challenge Of The Super Friends.