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Creator/s First Appearance Tara Olson (Tarene) Currently: Designate Former: Thor Girl 2000 (April) Dan Jurgens, John Romita Jr. Thor Vol 2 #22 Talia Josephine "T.J" Wagner: Nocturne 2000 (June) Jim Calafiore: X-Men: Millennial Visions #2000 Noh-Varr: Currently: Marvel Boy Former: Captain Marvel, Protector 2000 (August) Grant Morrison, J. G ...
X-Men #107 (first full appearance) Will o' the Wisp: 1977-04 Len Wein, Ross Andru: The Amazing Spider-Man #167 Doctor Minerva: 1977-05 Scott Edelman, Al Milgrom: Captain Marvel #50 Doughboy: 1977-05 Jack Kirby: Captain America #209 Druig: 1977-05 Jack Kirby: Eternals #11 Primus: 1977-05 Jack Kirby: Captain America #209 Warrior Woman: 1977-05 ...
Download QR code; Print/export ... Creator/s First Appearance Captain Video: 1955 (April 1) ... Ultimate Marvel characters 2001 Marvel various Ultimate Spider-Man #1
After Parker had fully developed Captain Marvel's character and backstory, artist Clarence "C.C." Beck was brought in to flesh out the character's look, to which Parker contributed the ideas for the Hessian cape and the lightning bolt logo. [11] Captain Marvel's first appearance was in Whiz Comics #2, which went on sale in December 1939. [12]
Captain Rex (designation number CT-7567 [a]) is a fictional character in the Star Wars franchise created by George Lucas. He was introduced as a main character in the animated The Clone Wars 2008 film and the related television series of the same name .
The idea was eventually modified into a single character with all these powers, and thus Captain Marvel, known later as Shazam, was born. [2] The first issue published of Whiz Comics was issue #2, published with a cover-date of Feb. 1940. Fawcett created two black-and-white ashcan #1 issues to solicit advertisers and to secure the copyrights to ...
This character was almost the inverse of Captain Marvel in appearance and coloration, but with very different powers. [17] Then in 1973 he was the initial artist for DC Comics' revival of Captain Marvel, titled Shazam! due to trademark issues. Beck left after the tenth issue due to "creative differences" regarding plotlines.
Lloyd Bloch is an agent of the second Secret Empire, who intend to discredit Captain America and take his place as America's "symbolic" hero. The Empire had previously damaged Captain America's reputation by accusing him of vigilantism and framing him for the death of small-time criminal the Tumbler. [2]