July 27, 2006
ENTERTAINMENT: It Takes More Than Tights to Make a ‘Superhero’
By Terry Morrow
Scripps Howard News Service
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Comic-book icon Stan Lee. (SHNS photo by Glenn Harris / photorazzi.com)
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Pasadena, CA (SHNS) -- Comic-book icon Stan Lee has found new enlightenment.
Used to be, he would visit comic-book shows, see a grown man or woman in an
"outlandish" homemade costume and think to himself, "'Ah, gee, why are they
doing that?' “
After hosting the reality competition show "Who Wants to Be a Superhero?,"
Lee, 83, says that now he's not so quick to judge.
On the show (9 p.m. EDT/PDT Thursdays, Sci Fi), the man who helped create
Spider-Man, the Fantastic Four, the X-Men and the Hulk is picking the
ultimate such fan.
The "Apprentice"-like series features contestants who dream up alter egos
and put together homemade costumes. They imagined what their powers would be
and give the fictitious characters a backstory. They go by names like Fat
Momma, Cell Phone Girl, Monkey Woman and Major Victory.
Contestants endure physical and mental challenges to determine who best
lives up to the ideals symbolic of a comic-book hero. Contestants are
eliminated, and the last one to stand gets a piece of comic-book
immortality. Lee will publish a comic book using the character he or she
created.
The competitors, it turns out, aren't lonely outcasts. They're perfectly
respectable members of society who hold down jobs like housewives or
firefighters.
"Ty'Veculus is a hero in his own life. He's a fireman. He's saved 20, 30
people's lives. He's delivered babies. He's a hero in his neighborhood,"
says producer Scott Satin.
Going into it, Lee expected contestants to be those eccentric types you see
at comic-book shows.
"These are very serious people, and they take superhero stories very
seriously," says Lee.
But after getting to see them in action, he says he was wrong to prejudge
them.
"They are normal, nice and even admirable people," he says. "That changed
me. It made me think that all those kids I used to think were so nutty
weren't so bad, either.
"Maybe I should have been more tolerant in my evaluation of them."
He says he sees nothing wrong with someone dressing up in costume at the
comic-book shows.
"People do things like that for enjoyment," he says. "It doesn't mean they
are crazy. It just means this is what they do for fun."
Well, there was the one kid on the show, Nitro G, who constantly wanted to
hear Lee's stories of how he created some of Marvel Comics' signature
characters. And even this newly enlightened Lee found Nitro G to be a
little, uh, obsessive.
"He kept talking to me about my career," Lee says with a laugh. "I finally
had to say, 'Enough already!' "
Contact Terry Morrow of The Knoxville News Sentinel in Tennessee at
www.knoxnews.com.
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