Spider-Woman

"Spider Woman" redirects here. For other uses, see Spider Woman (disambiguation).
Spider-Woman

Clockwise from bottom: Jessica Drew, Julia Carpenter, Charlotte Witter, and Mattie Franklin, along with Madame Web. Spider-Woman vol. 3, #1. Cover art by Bart Sears.
Publisher Marvel Comics
First appearance Jessica Drew
Marvel Spotlight #32 (Feb. 1977)
Julia Carpenter
Marvel Super Heroes Secret Wars #6 (Oct. 1984)
Mattie Franklin
The Spectacular Spider-Man #236 (July 1996)
Charlotte Witter
The Amazing Spider-Man vol. 2, #5 (May 1999)
Veranke
New Avengers #1 (Jan. 2005)
Created by Archie Goodwin, Marie Severin[1]
Characters Jessica Drew
Julia Carpenter
Mattie Franklin
Charlotte Witter
Veranke
Spider-Woman
Spider-Woman #1 (April 1978)
Featuring the Jessica Drew version of the character.
Art by Joe Sinnott.
Series publication information
Publisher Marvel Comics
Format (vols. 1, 3 & 5)
Ongoing series
(vols. 2 & 4)
Limited series
Genre
Publication date (vol 1)
April 1978 – June 1983
(vol 2)
November 1993 – February 1994
(vol 3)
July 1999 – December 2000
(vol 4)
November 2009 – May 2010
(vol 5)
January 2015
Number of issues (vol. 1)
50
(vol. 2)
4
(vol. 3)
18
(vol. 4)
7
(vol. 5)
7
Main character(s) (vols. 1, 4, & 5)
Jessica Drew
(vol. 2)
Julia Carpenter
(vol. 3)
Mattie Franklin

Spider-Woman is the code name of several fictional characters in comic books published by Marvel Comics. The first Spider-Woman, Jessica Drew, had her own animated television series, and the second Spider-Woman, Julia Carpenter, was a regular in the 1990s TV series Iron Man, part of The Marvel Action Hour.

Publication history

Marvel Comics' then-publisher Stan Lee said in 1978, shortly after Spider-Woman's debut in Marvel Spotlight #32 (Feb. 1977) and the start of the character's 50-issue self-titled series (cover-dated April 1978 – June 1983), the character originated because,

I suddenly realized that some other company may quickly put out a book like that and claim they have the right to use the name, and I thought we'd better do it real fast to copyright the name. So we just batted one quickly, and that's exactly what happened. I wanted to protect the name, because it's the type of thing [where] someone else might say, 'Hey, why don't we put out a Spider-Woman; they can't stop us.' ... You know, years ago we brought out Wonder Man, and [DC Comics] sued us because they had Wonder Woman, and ... I said okay, I'll discontinue Wonder Man. And all of a sudden they've got Power Girl [after Marvel had introduced Power Man]. Oh, boy. How unfair.[2]

Following that initial Spider-Woman series, more followed. Volume two was a miniseries published from November 1993 through February 1994; volume three was published from July 1999 through December 2000; and volume four, featuring Jessica Drew, the original Spider-Woman, was published from November 2009 through May 2010.

Currently, volume five is being published as of November 2014, featuring Jessica Drew as Spider-Woman. In the March 2015 issue of The Amazing Spider-Man vol. 3 #13, Jessica boasts "I have never needed rescuing. Ever. See my wiki entry."

Spider-Women

Other versions

See also

Other female spider-themed Marvel characters

In other media

Television

Video games

Miscellaneous

References

  1. Johnson, Dan (August 2006). "Marvel's Dark Angel: Back Issue Gets Caught in Spider-Woman's Web", Back Issue Magazine Vol. 1, No. 17, pages 57–63. TwoMorrows Publishing.
  2. "Hello, Culture Lovers: Stan the Map Raps with Marvel Maniacs at James Madison University", The Comics Journal #42, October 1978, p. 55
  3. "Web Woman". Toonopedia. Retrieved 2011-09-29.
  4. Major Victory #1 (Dynamic Publications [1940s] [Chesler], 1944 Series at the Grand Comics Database
  5. "Comics : Spider-Man & His Amazing Friends #1". Spider Fans. Retrieved 2011-09-29.
  6. "I Want Candy: Spidey Super Stories #56". Tastes Like Comics. Retrieved 2011-09-29.
  7. var authorId="" by Jesse Schedeen. "Touring the Marvel: Ultimate Alliance 2 Universe". UK comics. Retrieved 2012-06-11.
  8. "USPS Stamp News: Spider-Man and Nine Other Marvel Super Heroes to Deliver for Postal Service". Usps.com.

External links

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