‘Best Spider-Man artist’ John Romita Sr dies at 93

‘Best Spider-Man artist’ John Romita Sr dies at 93

The Marvel Comics illustrator spent decades drawing 'The Amazing Spider-Man' for Marvel during its so-called Silver Age from the mid-1950s to 1970.

John Romita Sr’s work on ‘The Amazing Spider-Man’ led him to become a legend among fellow comic book artists. (Marvel Comics pic)
WASHINGTON:
Marvel Comics artist John Romita Sr, primarily known for his work on “The Amazing Spider-Man”, has died, his son said yesterday. He was 93 years of age.

Romita Sr, born in Brooklyn in 1930, spent decades drawing the eponymous superhero of “The Amazing Spider-Man” comic book series for US publisher Marvel, during the medium’s so-called Silver Age from circa the mid-1950s to 1970.

“My father, John Romita passed away peacefully in his sleep this Monday morning,” his son, John Romita Jr, also a comic book artist, wrote on Instagram.

“He is a legend in the art world and it would be my honour to follow in his footsteps… he was the greatest man I ever met.”

British comic artist Sean Phillips – known for Ed Brubaker collaborations such as “The Fade Out” and “Fatale” – wrote on Twitter that Romita was “the best Spider-Man artist”.

Romita Sr worked with late Marvel supremo Stan Lee, co-creator of multiple characters including Spider-Man, who became one of the world’s best-loved fictional heroes.

He also drew for titles starring Daredevil, another Lee creation.

Both Lee and fellow Spider-Man creator Stephen Ditko died in 2018, aged 95 and 90, respectively.

Speaking in 2002, Romita said he meshed well into the creative processes at Marvel. “I don’t consider myself a creator,” Romita said in an interview with “The Comics Reporter”.

John Romita Sr.

“I’ve created a lot of stuff. But I don’t consider myself a real creator in a Jack Kirby sense,” he said, referring to the creator of “Captain America”.

“But I’ve always had the ability to improve on other people’s stories, other people’s characters. And I think that’s what’s made me a living for 50 years.”

Like his father, Romita Jnr, 66, has also worked on “The Amazing Spider-Man” and “Daredevil”.

James Gunn, director of Marvel’s “Guardians of the Galaxy” series, posted a tribute on Twitter. “Sorry to hear about the great comic book artist John Romita Sr passing at the age of 93,” he wrote.

Current Spider-Man writer Dan Slott also paid homage. “I grew up with John Romita’s Spider-Man as my Spider-Man. He was already one of my heroes before I’d ever set foot in Marvel,” he posted.

“When I was an intern (at Marvel) in the ’90s, it was surreal to me that he worked on staff, and I was in awe seeing him walk through the halls.”

Romita Sr also worked for rival superhero behemoth DC, in the early years of his career.

Superheroes first entered the wider public consciousness in 1938 with the arrival of Superman in “Action Comics #1”.

The following year, he was joined by the caped crusader, Batman, before other heroes such as Captain America entered the fray.

The genre lost popularity in the post-war period but rebounded in the late 1950s and early 1960s – notably thanks to Lee, who created “The Fantastic Four” in 1961 for Marvel Comics.

In quick succession, “The Hulk”, “Thor”, “Spider-Man”, the “X-Men” and “Black Panther” followed.

Over the past 15 years many of those characters, along with “Iron Man”, have coalesced into the Marvel Cinematic Universe, a multimedia franchise that has conquered cinema screens globally.

They account for four of the top 10 highest-grossing films of all time, including 2021’s “Spider-Man: No Way Home”.

“Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse”, the newest chapter in Sony’s separate webslinger series, dominated box offices last weekend.

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