Difference between pages "Invisible Woman" and "Iron Man"

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{{Apocrypha banner|''[[Fantastic Four/Gargoyles]]''}}
 
{{Apocrypha banner|''[[Fantastic Four/Gargoyles]]''}}
  
The '''Invisible Woman''' (real name: '''Dr. Susan "Sue" Storm-Richards''') is the wife of [[Mister Fantastic|Reed Richards]] and a member of the [[Fantastic Four]].
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'''Iron Man''' (real name: '''Anthony Edward "Tony" Stark''') is the head of [[Stark Industries]], a superhero, and a founding member of the Avengers.
  
 
==History==
 
==History==
Susan Storm, and her younger brother, [[Human Torch|Jonathan]] grew up in the town of Glenville, Long Island, children of the physician Franklin Storm and his wife Mary. The parents left their kids alone one night to travel to a dinner honoring Dr. Storm. On the way, a tire blew out and Mary was injured. Franklin escaped injury and insisted on operating on his wife. He was unable to save her. After his wife's death, Dr. Franklin Storm became a gambler and a drunk, losing his medical practice, which led him to the accidental killing of a loan shark. Franklin did not defend himself in court, because he still felt guilty over Mary's death. With their father in prison, Susan had to become a mother figure for her younger brother.
 
  
While living with her aunt, Susan, at the young age of seventeen, met her future husband, Reed Richards, a house guest who was attending college. When she graduated from high school as the award-winning captain of her Girls' Varsity Swim Team, she moved to California to attend college, where she pursued an acting career and encountered Richards again. They began to become romantically involved with each other.
 
 
Reed Richards, working in the field of aerospace engineering, was designing a spacecraft for interstellar travel. Everything was going well until the government stopped the funding of his project. Richards, wanting to see his project through, decided to make an unscheduled test flight. It was only going to be Reed and his best friend, [[Thing|Ben Grimm]], involved, but Susan was instrumental in persuading Reed in letting her brother and herself join them on the dangerous space mission. In space, the quartet was exposed to massive amounts of cosmic radiation. As a result, they had to abort the mission and return to Earth. After the crash landing, they realized that they gained superhuman powers; hers was the ability to become invisible at will. Realizing the potential use of their abilities, the four of them became the Fantastic Four, for the benefit of mankind. Susan adopted the code name Invisible Girl... and, eventually, the Invisible Woman.
 
 
==Characteristics==
 
  
 
==Appearances==
 
==Appearances==
* [[Send Up a Flare!|"Send Up a Flare!"]]
 
 
* [[Both Alike In Dignity...|"Both Alike In Dignity..."]]
 
* [[Both Alike In Dignity...|"Both Alike In Dignity..."]]
  
 
==Production Background==
 
==Production Background==
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Following the success of the Fantastic Four in 1961 and the subsequent revival of American comic books featuring superheroes, Marvel Comics created new superhero characters. [[Stan Lee]] developed the initial concept for Iron Man. He wanted to design a character who should be unpalatable to his generally anti-war readers but to make them like the character anyway. Iron Man was created in the years after a permanent arms industry developed in the United States, and this was incorporated into the character's backstory. The character was introduced as an active player in the Vietnam War. Lee described the national mood toward Vietnam during Iron Man's creation as "a time when most of us genuinely felt that the conflict in that tortured land really was a simple matter of good versus evil".
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Larry Lieber developed Iron Man's origin and wrote the first Iron Man story, while [[Jack Kirby]] and Don Heck were responsible for the initial design. Lee modeled Iron Man after businessman Howard Hughes, invoking his physical appearance, his image as a businessman, and his reputation as an arrogant playboy. Kirby and Heck then incorporated elements of the actor Errol Flynn's physical appearance in the design. When first designing the character, Lee wanted to create a modernized Arthurian knight. The Iron Man character was created at a time when comic book characters were first depicted struggling with real-life problems, and his heart injury was an early example of a superhero with a physical disability.
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Iron Man's first appearance, "Iron Man is Born!", appeared in Tales of Suspense #39, released in December 1962 with a March 1963 cover date.
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Anthony Edward "Tony" Stark was born on Long Island, New York. As a child, he inherited his family's business, Stark Industries, when his parents were killed in a car crash. While conducting a weapons test in a war zone for the U.S. military, Stark triggered a booby trap that left his heart critically injured by shrapnel. Captured by the communist warlord Wong-Chu, Stark was ordered to build a weapon of mass destruction. Instead, he constructed a suit of armor to keep himself alive and used it to escape—thus becoming Iron Man.
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After returning to the United States, Stark maintained the guise that Iron Man was merely his personal bodyguard while secretly operating as a superhero. When called upon to stop the Hulk and discovering that Loki was manipulating events, Iron Man joined forces with the Hulk, Thor, Ant-Man, and Wasp to defeat the god of mischief. Their teamwork led to the creation of the superhero team known as the Avengers. In time, Tony Stark publicly revealed that he and Iron Man were one and the same.
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==Characteristics==
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Iron Man, the alter ego of Tony Stark, was a brilliant businessman and entrepreneur driven by a desire to innovate and advance technology—both for society’s benefit and his own. Though one of many Marvel heroes with a genius-level intellect, Stark stood apart through his focus on practical, societal applications of science. A true futurist, he dedicated himself to anticipating problems before they arose, a philosophy that would later inspire his formation of the Avengers.
  
 
==See Also==
 
==See Also==
*{{wikipedia|Invisible_Woman}}
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*{{wikipedia|Iron_Man}}
  
 
[[Category:Marvel Comics characters]]
 
[[Category:Marvel Comics characters]]
[[Category:Fantastic Four]]
 

Revision as of 05:57, 15 October 2025

This page is part of a series of articles on Fantastic Four/Gargoyles

Information in this article is apocryphal and should not be considered canon.


Iron Man (real name: Anthony Edward "Tony" Stark) is the head of Stark Industries, a superhero, and a founding member of the Avengers.

History

Appearances

Production Background

Following the success of the Fantastic Four in 1961 and the subsequent revival of American comic books featuring superheroes, Marvel Comics created new superhero characters. Stan Lee developed the initial concept for Iron Man. He wanted to design a character who should be unpalatable to his generally anti-war readers but to make them like the character anyway. Iron Man was created in the years after a permanent arms industry developed in the United States, and this was incorporated into the character's backstory. The character was introduced as an active player in the Vietnam War. Lee described the national mood toward Vietnam during Iron Man's creation as "a time when most of us genuinely felt that the conflict in that tortured land really was a simple matter of good versus evil".

Larry Lieber developed Iron Man's origin and wrote the first Iron Man story, while Jack Kirby and Don Heck were responsible for the initial design. Lee modeled Iron Man after businessman Howard Hughes, invoking his physical appearance, his image as a businessman, and his reputation as an arrogant playboy. Kirby and Heck then incorporated elements of the actor Errol Flynn's physical appearance in the design. When first designing the character, Lee wanted to create a modernized Arthurian knight. The Iron Man character was created at a time when comic book characters were first depicted struggling with real-life problems, and his heart injury was an early example of a superhero with a physical disability.

Iron Man's first appearance, "Iron Man is Born!", appeared in Tales of Suspense #39, released in December 1962 with a March 1963 cover date.

Anthony Edward "Tony" Stark was born on Long Island, New York. As a child, he inherited his family's business, Stark Industries, when his parents were killed in a car crash. While conducting a weapons test in a war zone for the U.S. military, Stark triggered a booby trap that left his heart critically injured by shrapnel. Captured by the communist warlord Wong-Chu, Stark was ordered to build a weapon of mass destruction. Instead, he constructed a suit of armor to keep himself alive and used it to escape—thus becoming Iron Man.

After returning to the United States, Stark maintained the guise that Iron Man was merely his personal bodyguard while secretly operating as a superhero. When called upon to stop the Hulk and discovering that Loki was manipulating events, Iron Man joined forces with the Hulk, Thor, Ant-Man, and Wasp to defeat the god of mischief. Their teamwork led to the creation of the superhero team known as the Avengers. In time, Tony Stark publicly revealed that he and Iron Man were one and the same.

Characteristics

Iron Man, the alter ego of Tony Stark, was a brilliant businessman and entrepreneur driven by a desire to innovate and advance technology—both for society’s benefit and his own. Though one of many Marvel heroes with a genius-level intellect, Stark stood apart through his focus on practical, societal applications of science. A true futurist, he dedicated himself to anticipating problems before they arose, a philosophy that would later inspire his formation of the Avengers.

See Also

  • Iron Man at Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia