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The Marvel Super Heroes [1] is an American animated television series starring five comic book superheroes from Marvel Comics. The first TV series based on Marvel characters, it debuted in syndication on American television in 1966.
He is most famous for his voice acting in various animated television series, especially in the 1960s The Marvel Super Heroes (1966) and Spider-Man (1967), both from Marvel Comics as the first voices of J. Jonah Jameson, General Ross, Red Skull, Krang, Mole Man and Power Man (Erik Josten).
The Marvel Super Heroes: 1 65 1966 Grantray-Lawrence Animation / Marvel Comics Group: ABC: Anthology with rotating segments. Fantastic Four: 1 20 1967–1968 Hanna-Barbera Productions / Marvel Comics Group Spider-Man: 3 52 1967–1970 Grantray-Lawrence Animation (season 1) / Krantz Films (seasons 2–3) / Marvel Comics Group The New Fantastic ...
Released in 1966, “The Marvel Super Heroes” is the great-grandfather of today’s Marvel Studios entertainment. Not just the first-ever series based on characters from Marvel, its cartoons ...
Captain America, as he appeared in the 1966 animated television series The Marvel Super Heroes. Captain America appears in a self-titled segment of the 1966 The Marvel Super Heroes, voiced by Bernard Cowan. [1] [2] Peter Fonda parodies Captain America in Easy Rider (1969). Peter Fonda in 2009 on a ″Captain America″ style chopper
1960s. Hulk as depicted in The Marvel Super Heroes.. Hulk debuted in television in 1966 as part of The Marvel Super Heroes animated series. It was produced by Grantray-Lawrence Animation, which was headed by Grant Simmons, Ray Patterson and Robert Lawrence.
Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings (2021) Welcoming the first Asian superhero of the Marvel Cinematic Universe, Shang-Chi and the Legend of Ten Rings sees actor Simu Liu in a breakout ...
The first was the one-shot Marvel Super Heroes Special #1 (Oct. 1966) produced as a tie-in to The Marvel Super Heroes animated television program, [1] reprinting Daredevil #1 (April 1964) and The Avengers #2 (Nov. 1963), plus two stories from the 1930s-1940s period fans and historians call Golden Age of comic books: "The Human Torch and the Sub-Mariner Meet" (Marvel Mystery Comics #8, June ...