Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Aunt May, May Reilly, May Fitzgerald, Golden Oldie, May Morgan Maybelle " May " Parker-Jameson ( née Reilly ), commonly known as Aunt May , is a fictional character appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics , commonly in association with the superhero Spider-Man .
After tracing the event back to Kingpin, Spider-Man confronts the Kingpin in prison and badly beats him in front of his fellow inmates. Spider-Man decides to let the Kingpin live with the humiliation of his defeat, news of which will quickly spread through the Underworld. Parker vows, however, to kill the Kingpin if May dies. [42]
Peter Parker, Mary Jane, and Aunt May are outside reminiscing about Uncle Ben and Peter when he was a kid, when an assassin shoots May. Mary Jane attempts to contact 911, but they have no time, so Peter (without taking the time to change into his Spider-Man costume) transports May to the hospital via web-slinging.
Peter Parker (), Bobby Drake (), and Angelica Jones are all college students at Empire State University.After working together to defeat the Beetle and recovering the "Power Booster" he stole from Tony Stark (a.k.a. Iron Man, who rewards them with the advanced computer systems seen in several episodes and the opening titles) the trio decide to team-up permanently as the "Spider-Friends".
Peter Benjamin Parker (voiced by Christopher Daniel Barnes [1] [2] and briefly as an old man by Peter Mark Richman) is the main protagonist of the series. A one-time high school "science geek", Peter was the subject of much ridicule, especially at the hands of Flash Thompson.
Teresa Parker - Peter Parker's long lost sister who is introduced in the graphic novel Spider-Man: Family Business. [1] She later appeared in the comics. Ben Parker - Peter Parker's uncle. Shot by the Burglar. May Parker - Peter Parker's loving aunt who raises him after his parents died. After the murder of her husband Ben, May is virtually his ...
He ultimately was shot and killed in a confrontation with Richard's men in the Catskills after he had kidnapped Peter Parker's Aunt May and wife Mary Jane Watson, mistakenly thinking that Peter had discovered information that would blow the lid off of the Kingpin's organization, thus revealing Blume as a double agent. [4]
The character design for Peter Parker (as well as other supporting characters including Aunt May and J. Jonah Jameson) was quite faithful to the comic books of the period and hearkened back to the illustrations by John Romita Sr. of the young hero in Spider-Man's newspaper strip adventures from the 1970s. Due to network constraints and demands ...