Up, up… and away?
In the 1970’s, comics artist Neal Adams did a heroic thing: He personally committed himself to a campaign to cajole and embarrass DC Comics into doing something to help Jerry Siegel and Joe Shuster, the creators of “Superman.” While DC had made untold hundreds of millions of dollars with this character — in publishing, in lunch boxes and Halloween costumes and action figures, on TV and radio and seemingly everywhere else all around the globe — Siegel was eking out a living as a typist at $7,000 a year and Shuster was going blind and unable to work. While the “work for hire” agreement the two had signed in the 1940’s may have been the letter of the law, it sure didn’t feel like Truth, Justice, and the American Way. Adams’ very public campaign culminated shortly before the release of the first Christopher Reeve “Superman” movie, and thus succeeded in embarrassing DC into giving the two creators an annual “salary” of $35,000, and amount that has grown over the years and is now paid to their heirs.
Most of us probably thought that was the end of it.
But now, according to Portfolio magazine, Siegel’s widow (who was the inspiration for Lois Lane) has contracted Hollywood’s most hated lawyer to represent her in a battle to recover all rights to Superman — and evidently he’s had success with similar cases.
October 1st, 2007 at 5:30 pm
Now that’s what I call the American Way!
If only the running of the U.S. Executive Branch
could be recaptured by such a motion. Say, hang on…
no…
That would violate the Too Good To Be True Rule…
October 1st, 2007 at 5:44 pm
Well, it’s comic books. So if she wins, DC can write The Big Red S out of their books and replace him with another guy who is similar, but not too similar. We’re overdue for a change anyway.
Has anyone contacted the family of the late Bob Kane, creator of Batman?
October 1st, 2007 at 10:33 pm
Bob Kane famously RETAINED some rights to Batman and enriched himself. The sorry figure there, who was equally a creator in most or all of the Batman mythos but who retained nothing, was Bill Finger.