- Electro (comics)
Electro is the name of several
fictional characters that appears incomic books published byMarvel Comics , including two from Marvel's predecessors,Timely Comics and Atlas Comics. The most prominent Electro is Maxwell Dillon, asupervillain and an enemy ofSpider-Man . He was created byStan Lee andSteve Ditko in "The Amazing Spider-Man " #9 (Feb. 1964).Electro (Timely Comics)
The first comics character of this name was the robot hero Electro, a backup-feature star in "
Marvel Mystery Comics ", flagship title of Marvel's Golden Age predecessor,Timely Comics . Created by writer-artistSteve Dahlman , Electro appeared in "Marvel Mystery" #4—19 (Feb. 1940 — May 1941). His origin story described his invention by Professor Philo Zog, one of a group of twelve known as the Secret Operatives. [ [http://www.geocities.com/jjnevins/electro.html Guide To Marvel's Golden Age Characters profile for the Timely Comics character] ,Jess Nevins ] [ [http://www.internationalhero.co.uk/e/electroga.htm International Catalogue of Superheroes profile for the Timely Comics character] ]Marvel Comics announced that Electro would appear in the cast of the comic "The Twelve" by
J. Michael Straczynski andChris Weston , scheduled for publication in 2008. [ [http://www.comicbookresources.com/news/newsitem.cgi?id=11312 Mystery Men's Dozen: Brevoort Talks "The Twelve"] , July 26, 2007,Comic Book Resources ] [ [http://forum.newsarama.com/showthread.php?t=124457 12 Days of the Twelve: Elektro] , August 8, 2007,Newsarama ]Electro appears, part of a cadre of heroes trapped in a secret bunker during the
Battle of Berlin , seemingly for examination bynazist scientists. After the fall of theThird Reich , the eleven heroes are left insuspended animation , with no one knowing of their final fate, and Electro is cut off by the telepatic mindwaves of Philo Zog.When, sixty years later, the Twelve are recovered and brought back to New York, in a safehouse for rehabilitation to modern times, the still unactive Electro is stored in a garage in the same safehouse, its property contended by Elizabeth Zogolowski, niece of Philo Zog, and the U.S. Government, willing to disassemble Electro for the secrets of his telepathic interface. Miss Zogolowski reveals how the telepathic bond between Philo and his creation was so strong that Philo died shortly after the war for an acute
withdrawal syndrome: essentially, his mind "died of solitude".Miss Zogoloswki is able to obtain temporary custody over Electro, but lacks the wealth necessary to reclaim it's possession: the
Blue Blade steps in, offering her all the needed money in exchange for using Electro in hiscabaret -like show.Electro (Atlas Comics)
Marvel's next Electro was a
Communist supervillain created during the unsuccessful attempt by Marvel's 1950s predecessor, Atlas Comics, to revivesuperhero es in that decade. This Electro, a Soviet citizen named Ivan Kronov, appeared on the cover and in the six-page story "His Touch is Death" in "Captain America " #78 (Sept. 1954), penciled and inked byJohn Romita Sr. and almost certainly if unconfirmably written by the more famous Electro's co-creator,Stan Lee . Many years later, this Electro reappeared in "What If?" #9 (June 1978), "What If the Avengers had been Formed During the 1950s?"; and, in flashback, in "Captain America Annual" #13 (1994).Electro (Marvel Comics)
Early in its return to super-hero comics in the 1960s, Marvel inroduced a new Electro as a foe for
Spider-Man in "The Amazing Spider-Man" #9.Footnotes
References
*comicbookdb|type=character|id=7971|title=Electro (Timely Comics)
* [http://www.marvunapp.com/Appendix/electroc.htm Electro (Atlas Comics)] at the Appendix to the Handbook of the Marvel Universe
* [http://www.comics.org The Grand Comic Book Database]
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