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November, 1961
| Did you know... |
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· Lee
originally wanted to call the book The Fabulous Four, but
his publisher, Martin Goodman, overrode him.
· The team operated without costumes for the first two
issues, but reader complaints put them in their familiar blue
uniforms.
· Richards's original reason for rushing his untested
craft into space was to beat "the Commies" in the race
to be the first in orbit. That small point was conveniently
forgotten in subsequent updates.
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BY 1961, STAN LEE AND JACK
KIRBY had done more for the comic-book industry than just about anyone
else in the business. Little did anyone know they were just warming up.
Fantastic Four #1 is nothing
less than the comic book that put Marvel on the map. Before Spider-Man,
the Hulk, the X-Men, or anything else emerged from the self-styled
"House of Ideas," there was the Fantastic Four, breaking all
the superhero rules and taking comic-book adventure -- not to mention
comic-book sales -- to a new level.
Legend has it that Marvel
publisher Martin Goodman had seen the phenomenal success that DC was
enjoying with its newly revived heroes, and the Jusitice Leage of
America a team-up book that featured all the heroes fighting together
was one of its biggest bestsellers. He gave Lee and Kirby the task of
creating a new super-team book that could measure up to the
Distinguished Competition's book.
They did it by taking every
superhero cliché and throwing them out the window. Their team had no
secret identities to hide, and they were a family more than a team --
literally, in the case of Sue and Johnny Storm (Sue and Reed would
eventually get married -- another comics first). Reed Richards was a
scientist who more often than not used his brains, not his elastic fist,
to win a battle. Johnny was a teenager who was a hero in his own right,
and not the
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