Steve Ditko Dead At 90

Dominic Brehetto

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Steve Ditko, Spider-Man Co-Creator and Legendary Comics Artist, Dies at 90

Artist Steve Ditko, who co-created Spider-Man and Doctor Strange with Stan Lee, has died at age 90.

The New York Police Department confirmed his death to The Hollywood Reporter. No cause of death was announced. Ditko was found dead in his apartment on June 29 and it is believed he died about two days earlier.

In 1961, Ditko and Lee created Spider-Man. Lee, the editor-in-chief at Marvel Comics, gave Ditko the assignment after he wasn't satisfied with Jack Kirby's take on the idea of a teen superhero with spider powers. The look of Spider-Man — the costume, the web shooters, the red and blue design — all came from Ditko. Spider-Man first appeared in Amazing FantasyNo. 15. The comic was an unexpected hit and the character was spun off into The Amazing Spider-Man. Ditko helped create such classic Spider-Man characters as Doctor Octopus, Sandman, the Lizard, and Green Goblin. Starting with issue No. 25 Ditko received a plot credit in addition to his artist credit. Ditko's run ended with issue No. 38.

In 1963, Ditko created the surreal and psychedelic hero Doctor Strange. The character debuted in Strange Tales No. 110 and Ditko continued on the comic through issue No. 146, cover dated July 1966.

After that Ditko, left Marvel Comics over a fight with Lee, the causes of which have always remained murky. The pair had not been on speaking terms for several years. Ditko never explained his side and Lee claimed not to really know what motivated Ditko's exit. The best explanation suggests Ditko was frustrated at Lee's oversight and his failure to properly share credit for Ditko's contributions to Spider-Man and Doctor Strange. The charismatic Lee was always the face of Marvel Comics but Ditko (and Jack Kirby) thought Lee was more interested in self-promotion than selling the company and in the process implied that he deserved the lion's share of the credit for creating the characters in the Marvel Universe.

Ditko went on to work for Charlton, DC Comics and other small independent publishers. He returned to Marvel in 1979, where he worked on Machine Man and the Micronatus and he continued working for them as a freelancer in the 1990s. Among his last creations was Squirrel Girl in 1992, who has become a cult favorite in recent years.

After his work at Marvel, Ditko is probably best known for creating Mr. A in 1967. The character embodied Ayn Rand's objectivist philosophy, which Ditko was an ardent believer in n from the mid-1960s on. Other Objectivist-inspired characters Ditko created included The Question, Hawk and Dove and the Creeper–all for DC Comics.

The reclusive Ditko was known as the "J.D. Salinger" of comics. From the 1970s on, he rarely spoke on the record, declining almost every interview request. He sat out the publicity booms that accompanied the Spider-Man films and the Doctor Strange movie.

“We didn’t approach him. He’s like J.D. Salinger. He is private and has intentionally stayed out of the spotlight like J.D. Salinger," Doctor Strangedirector Scott Derrickson told THR in 2016. "I hope he goes to see the movie wherever he is, because I think we paid homage to his work."

Ditko maintained a Manhattan studio until his death, where he continued to write and draw, though how much and what unpublished material remain is unknown.

Stephen J. Ditko was born in Johnstown, Pennsylvania on Nov. 2, 1927. His father worked at a steel mill and his mother was a homemaker. He developed an interest in comics from his father (who loved Prince Valiant) and from Batman and the Spirit, which both debuted as he entered his teens.

After graduating high school, Ditko served in the army in post-war Germany, drawing for a military paper. After being discharged, he moved to New York City in 1950 and studied under Batman artist Jerry Robinson at the Cartoonists and Illustrators School (later the school of Visual Arts).

By 1953, Ditko was getting work as a professional comics artist, including at the studio of Captain America creators Joe Simon and Jack Kirby. Ditko came down with tuberculosis in 1954 and spent the next year recovering in Johnststonw. He began drawing for Marvel Comics forerunner Atlas Comics in 1955. He had a successful collaboration with Stan Lee at first, as the pair worked on a number of science fiction stories together.

Ditko has no known survivors. He is believed never to have married.
 

MartyMcFly

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RIP the legend. One of the main issues I have with Stan Lee popping up in all these movies and getting an EP credit is him taking sole credit for shyt. Ditko and Kirby had just as much to do with marvels success as stan if not more so. And Ditko created a lot of Spider-Man myth and lore that a lot of people don’t know or realize. He will be misssed
 
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Dominic Brehetto

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RIP the legend. One of the main issues I have with Stan Lee popping up in all these movies and getting an EP credit is him taking credit sole credit for shyt. Ditko and Kirby had just as much to do with marvels success as stan if not more so. And Ditko created a lot of Spider-Man myth and lore that a lot of people don’t know or realize. He will be misssed
Stan has always come off like an entitled,narcissistic attention whoring scumbag to me but :manny:


Stans career in one pic
ed2.png


Personally I read all these stories coming out now of stan being taken advantage of and his money stolen like, word? :sas2: that’s a real shame.


But maybe I’m off base :hubie:
 

MartyMcFly

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Stan has always come off like an entitled,narcissistic attention whoring scumbag to me but :manny:


Stans career in one pic
ed2.png


Personally I read all these stories coming out now of stan being taken advantage of and his money stolen like, word? :sas2: that’s a real shame.


But maybe I’m off base :hubie:

Nah I feel the same way. shyt is sad but karma is a bytch. Him showing up in Deadpool is still the most ridiculous thing I can think of. That man had jack shyt to do with Deadpool :russ:

Meanwhile Liefeld only shows up at conventions smh
 

MartyMcFly

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Stan Lee is a piece of shyt, glad his handlers robbed his crooked ass. He stole credit and indirectly MILLIONS from Marvel writers and artists. I waited for it and it took years, but he went from saying “We” to “I” talking about Marvel.
Yup. To hear stan tell it, he did everything. He created the X-men by himself and Spider-Man and hulk and FF and iron man. Dude even takes credit for captain America.
 
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