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Marvel Boy

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Marvel Boy is the name of several fictional characters created and published by Marvel Comics and its predecessors, Timely and Atlas

Timely Comics

Atlas Comics' Marvel Boy #1 (Dec. 1950): Cover artist uncertain; possibly Sol Brodsky.
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Atlas Comics' Marvel Boy #1 (Dec. 1950): Cover artist uncertain; possibly Sol Brodsky.

Martin Burns is the 1940s Marvel Boy. After a mysterious shadow revealed to him that he possessed the power of Hercules, he became a superhero. The character made only two appearances — Daring Mystery Comics #6 (June 1940), by Joe Simon & Jack Kirby, and USA Comics #7 (Feb. 1943), by writer-artist Bob Oksner — each of which featured a wildly disparate version of his origin, although both shared the basics noted above. The Official Handbook to the Marvel Universe: Golden Age 2004 reconciles these different origins by suggesting that there were two Marvel Boys named Martin Burns active in the 1940s.

Atlas Comics

Robert Grayson is the 1950s Marvel Boy, debuting in Marvel Boy #1 (Dec. 1950) and continuing to appear when the series title was changed to Astonishing with issue #3. Created by writer-editor Stan Lee and artist Russ Heath, with writer-artist Bill Everett taking over with issue #2, this Marvel Boy is the son of Dr. Horace Grabshield (later Anglicized as Grayson), a scientist who fled Earth with his infant during the rise of Nazi Germany. The Graysons landed on Uranus, where they were greeted by the native Eternals. Robert was given a costume and a pair of powerful bracelets, and returned to Earth to battle crime. His final story was in Astonishing #7 (Dec. 1951).

He returned much later as an antagonist in The Fantastic Four #164-165 (Nov.-Dec.1975), having been driven by grief into insanity and calling himself The Crusader (no relation to the medieval character from the Atlas Comics title The Black Knight). When his power bracelets — which writer-editor Roy Thomas here dubbed "Quantum Bands" — overloaded, he was vaporized.

The anthology What If (What If (vol.1) #9 - June 1978) showed a world where Marvel Boy was a member of a team of the 1950s Avengers; this alternate world was destroyed in the pages of Avengers Forever. The manipulative mastermind Thanos created a duplicate of Marvel Boy via the Infinity Gauntlet; this double was later renamed the Blue Marvel and attempted to become the Punisher's sidekick, but was rejected and was later exiled to a limbo dimension.

Reprints

Marvel Comics reprints of 1950s Atlas Comics stories, listed chronologically from date of earliest original publication:

: "Marvel Boy and the Lost World" (Marvel Boy #1, Dec. 1950; art by Russ Heath)
: "Eyes of Death" (Marvel Boy #1, Dec. 1950; art by Russ Heath)
: "Caves of Doom" (Astonishing #5, August 1951; art by Bill Everett)
: "The Serpent Strikes" (Astonishing #5, August 1951; art by Bill Everett)
: "The Deadly Decision" (Astonishing #5, August 1951; art by Bill Everett)
: "Verdict By Magic" (Astonishing #6, Oct. 1951; art by Bill Everett; originally titled "Murder By Magic")

Marvel Comics

Character gallery

Image:DaringMystery6.jpg|Daring Mystery Comics #6 (Sept. 1940): Martin Burns. Art by Jack Kirby and Joe Simon. Image:Astonishing5.jpg|Astonishing #5 (Aug. 1951): Robert Grayson. Art by Bill Everett. Image:FantasticFour164.jpg|The Fantastic Four #164 (Nov. 1975): Robert Grayson. Art by Jack Kirby and Joe Sinnott. Image:Quasar2.jpg|Quasar #2 (Nov. 1989): Wendell Vaughn, with Eon. Art by Paul Ryan and Danny Bulanadi. Image:FantasticFour356.jpg|The Fantastic Four #356 (Sept. 1991): Vance Astrovik. Art by Paul Ryan and Al Williamson. Image:MarvelBoy1-2000.jpg|Marvel Boy #1 (Aug. 2000): Noh-Varr. Art by J.G. Jones.

References

 


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