Marvel Premiere | |
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Publication information | |
Publisher | Marvel Comics |
Format | Anthology |
Genre | |
Publication date | April 1972–August 1981 |
Number of issues | 61 |
Creative team | |
Writer(s) | Steve Englehart, Ed Hannigan, David Anthony Kraft, Stan Lee, David Michelinie, Jim Salicrup, Roger Stern, Roy Thomas |
Penciller(s) | Jerry Bingham, Frank Brunner, John Byrne, Gil Kane, George Pérez, Barry Windsor-Smith, Tom Sutton |
Inker(s) | Terry Austin, Gene Day, Frank Giacoia, Al Gordon, Bob Layton, Ricardo Villamonte |
Marvel Premiere is an American comic book anthology series published by American company Marvel Comics. It ran for 61 issues from April 1972 to August 1981.
The series introduced new characters and reintroduced characters who no longer had their own titles. Writer Roy Thomas and penciler Gil Kane revamped Him as the allegorical Messiah Adam Warlock in Marvel Premiere #1 (April 1972).Doctor Strange took over the series with issue #3 and writer Steve Englehart and artist Frank Brunner began a run on the character with issue #9. The two killed Dr. Strange's mentor, the Ancient One, and Strange became the new Sorcerer Supreme. Englehart and Brunner created a multi-issue storyline in which a sorcerer named Sise-Neg ("Genesis" spelled backward) goes back through history, collecting all magical energies, until he reaches the beginning of the universe, becomes all-powerful and creates it anew, leaving Strange to wonder whether this was, paradoxically, the original creation. Stan Lee, seeing the issue after publication, ordered Englehart and Brunner to print a retraction saying this was not God but "a" god, so as to avoid offending religious readers. The writer and artist concocted a fake letter from a fictitious minister praising the story, and mailed it to Marvel from Texas; Marvel unwittingly printed the letter, and dropped the retraction order. In 2010, Comics Bulletin ranked Englehart and Brunner's run on the "Doctor Strange" feature ninth on its list of the "Top 10 1970s Marvels".
Iron Fist first appeared in issue #15, written by Roy Thomas and drawn by Gil Kane. Other introductions include the Legion of Monsters, the Liberty Legion,Woodgod, the 3-D Man, and the second Ant-Man (Scott Lang). The series also featured the first comic book appearance of rock musician Alice Cooper. Later in the title's run, Marvel Premiere was used to finish stories of characters who had lost their own series including the Man-Wolf in issues #45–46 and the Black Panther in issues #51–53.