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Marvel Fanfare
Comics anthology series
Comics anthology series
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| image | Marv fanfare 01.jpg |
| caption | Cover for Marvel Fanfare #1 (March 1982). |
| Art by Michael Golden | |
| schedule | (Vol. 1) bimonthly |
| (Vol. 2) monthly | |
| format | Series |
| publisher | Marvel Comics |
| date | (Vol. 1) |
| March 1982–December 1991 | |
| (Vol. 2) | |
| September 1996–February 1997 | |
| issues | (Vol. 1): 60 |
| (Vol. 2): 6 | |
| editors |
Art by Michael Golden (Vol. 2) monthly March 1982–December 1991 (Vol. 2) September 1996–February 1997 (Vol. 2): 6
Marvel Fanfare was an anthology comic book series published by American company Marvel Comics. It was a showcase title featuring a variety of characters from the Marvel universe.
Volume one
Marvel Fanfare featured characters and settings from throughout the Marvel Universe, and it included stories of varying lengths by an array of creators. The title was published every two months and ran for 60 issues, cover dated from March 1982 to December 1991. It was edited throughout its run by Al Milgrom, who also wrote and drew an illustrated column, entitled "Editori-Al", in most issues. Marvel Fanfares original working title was Marvel Universe, which was later appropriated by Marvel editor-in-chief Jim Shooter for the encyclopedia series The Official Handbook of the Marvel Universe.
The series began with a Spider-Man/Angel team-up story by Chris Claremont and Michael Golden. Other Spider-Man appearances in the title included team-ups with the Scarlet Witch in issue #6 (Jan. 1983) and the Hulk in issue #47 (Nov. 1989). Several characters appeared in multiple issues including Doctor Strange, Weirdworld, the Warriors Three, the Black Knight, and Shanna the She-Devil. Writer Roger McKenzie wrote several stories for Marvel Fanfare including a two-part Iron Man vs. Doctor Octopus tale drawn by Ken Steacy. A Captain America backup story in issue #29 (Nov. 1986) featured early work by artist Norm Breyfogle.
Marvel Fanfare was envisioned as a showcase of the comics industry's best talent. Each issue featured 36 pages of material with no advertisements and it was printed on magazine-style slick paper. It was more than twice as expensive as standard comic books ($1.25 in 1982 when most titles were 60 cents and $2.25 in 1991 when most were $1).
Editor Milgrom wrote of his experience with the series:
Examples of inventory stories which saw publication in Marvel Fanfare include a comics adaptation of The Jungle Book in issues #8–11, the Black Widow serial in #10–13, the Hulk story in #29, and the Silver Surfer story by Steve Englehart and John Buscema in #51.
Stories in Volume 1
| Issue # | A Story | B Story | C Story/Pinups |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | X-Men and Spider-Man | Daredevil | No C Story |
| 2 | Fantastic Four | ||
| 3 | Hawkeye | ||
| 4 | Deathlok | Iron Man | |
| 5 | Dr. Strange | Captain America | No C Story |
| 6 | Spider-Man and Scarlet Witch | Dr. Strange | |
| 7 | Hulk, Blob and Unus | Daredevil | |
| 8 | Dr. Strange | The Jungle Book (Adaptation) | |
| "The Bill Sienkiewicz Portfolio" | |||
| 9 | Man-Thing | "The Butch Guice Portfolio" | |
| 10 | Black Widow | No C Story | |
| 11 | |||
| 12 | No B story | ||
| 13 | Warriors Three | ||
| 14 | Vision and Fantastic Four | Quicksilver and the Inhumans | |
| 15 | The Thing | Daredevil | |
| 16 | Sky-Wolves | Sub-Mariner | |
| 17 | Hulk | ||
| 18 | Captain America | "Kevin Nowlan Portfolio" | "The Terry Austin Portfolio" |
| 19 | Cloak & Dagger | Cloak & Dagger | Cloak & Dagger |
| 20 | Thing and Dr. Strange | No B Story | No C Story |
| 21 | |||
| 22 | Iron Man | Pinups | |
| 23 | No C Story | ||
| 24 | Weirdworld | Ms. Marvel/Binary | |
| 25 | Captain Universe | ||
| 26 | Captain America | ||
| 27 | Daredevil | Spider-Man | |
| 28 | Alpha Flight | No B Story | |
| 29 | Hulk | Captain America | |
| 30 | Moon Knight | No B Story | |
| 31 | Captain America | Dr. Strange | Daredevil |
| 32 | Vision and Scarlet Witch | No C Story | |
| 33 | X-Men | No B Story | |
| 34 | Warriors Three | Pinups | |
| 35 | Pinups | ||
| 36 | No C Story | ||
| 37 | Fantastic Four | ||
| 38 | Moon Knight | Rogue and Dazzler (X-Men) | |
| 39 | Hawkeye | Moon Knight | |
| 40 | Angel (X-Factor) | Storm and Mystique (X-Men) | |
| 41 | Dr. Strange | No B Story | |
| 42 | Spider-Man | Captain Marvel (Photon) | |
| 43 | Sub-Mariner | Fantastic Four | |
| 44 | Iron Man | No B Story | |
| 45 | All-Pinup Issue | ||
| 46 | Fantastic Four | Thing | |
| 47 | Spider-Man and Hulk | No B Story | |
| 48 | She-Hulk | She-Hulk | Vision |
| 49 | Dr. Strange, Nick Fury | Two-Gun Kid | No C Story |
| 50 | X-Factor | No B-story | |
| 51 | Silver Surfer | Nightmare | |
| 52 | Black Knight | Dr. Strange | Pinups by Paul Ryan |
| 53 | Iron Man | No C Story | |
| 54 | Wolverine | ||
| 55 | Power Pack and New Mutants | ||
| 56 | Shanna the She-Devil | A Reader | |
| 57 | Captain Marvel (Photon) | ||
| 58 | Vision and Scarlet Witch | Pinups | |
| 59 | Hellcat | No C Story | |
| 60 | Black Panther | Rogue (X-Men) | Daredevil |
Volume two
Marvel Fanfare volume two was published monthly for six issues, dated September 1996 to February 1997. This version of the title was edited by James Felder.
Like the first volume, the title featured different creative teams in each issue and starred different characters from around the Marvel universe. However, the talent were mostly newcomers, the paper was cheap and it cost half the price of most other comics (99 cents when most comics cost $1.95).
The title features the early work of writer Joe Kelly and penciller Scott Kolins.
Stories in Volume 2
| Issue # | A Story |
|---|---|
| 1 | Captain America and Falcon |
| 2 | Wolverine and Hulk |
| 3 | Spider-Man and Ghost Rider |
| 4 | Longshot and Dazzler |
| 5 | |
| 6 | Luke Cage, Iron Fist, X-Factor |
Collected editions
In 2024, Marvel Comics announced it would be collecting the entire series of Marvel Fanfare in three omnibus volumes.
| Volume | Years Collected | Material Collected | Pages | Release date | ISBN |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 1982-1984 | Marvel Fanfare (1982) #1-19 | 736 | May 13, 2025 | |
| 2 | 1985-1988 | Marvel Fanfare (1982) #20-40 | 784 | February 3, 2026 | 978-1302962654 |
| 3 | 1988-1992 | Marvel Fanfare (1982) #41-60 | 792 | August 25, 2026 | 978-1302968465 |
Other Collected Editions
- X-Men: In the Savage Land collects Marvel Fanfare #1–4, 96 pages, June 1988,
- Marvel Fanfare: Strange Tales collects Marvel Fanfare #1–7, 244 pages, April 2008,
- The Jungle Book includes material from Marvel Fanfare #8–11, 64 pages, April 2007
- Black Widow: Web of Intrigue collects Marvel Fanfare #10–13, 176 pages, April 2010,
- Thor: The Warriors Three collects Warriors Three stories from Marvel Fanfare #13 and #34–37, 136 pages, September 2010,
- Doctor Strange & Doctor Doom: Triumph & Torment includes Namor the Sub-Mariner stories from Marvel Fanfare #16 and #43, 160 pages, 2013,
- Cloak & Dagger: Crime and Punishment includes Marvel Fanfare #19, 264 pages, June 2012,
- Weirdworld includes Marvel Fanfare #24–26, 312 pages, April 2015,
- The Incredible Hulk Visionaries — John Byrne includes the Hulk story from Marvel Fanfare #29, 208 pages, June 2008,
- Essential Moon Knight vol. 3 includes Moon Knight stories from Marvel Fanfare #30 and 38–39, 528 pages, November 2009,
- Essential Silver Surfer vol. 2 includes Marvel Fanfare #51, 600 pages, June 2007,
- Women of Marvel: Celebrating Seven Decades includes Hellcat story from Marvel Fanfare #59, 1,160 pages, January 2011,
- Uncanny X-Men Omnibus Volume 2 includes the Savage Land story from Marvel Fanfare #1–4, 912 pages, April 2014,
References
References
- (2008). "Marvel Chronicle A Year by Year History". [[Dorling Kindersley]].
- DeFalco, Tom. "[[Bullpen Bulletins]] Special," Marvel Comics [[cover dated]] March 1984.
- (2012). "Spider-Man Chronicle Celebrating 50 Years of Web-Slinging". [[Dorling Kindersley]].
- Kirk, John. (June 2017). "The Chris Claremont ''Marvel Fanfare'' Interview". [[TwoMorrows Publishing]].
- Manning "1980s" in Gilbert (2012), p. 132: "Behind an impressive cover by artist P. Craig Russell was a single-issue tale by writer Mike W. Barr and co-plotter and penciler Sandy Plunkett. Encountering a vacant-eyed Scarlet Witch on a Manhattan rooftop, Spider-Man was shocked when she attacked him."
- Manning "1980s" in Gilbert (2012), p. 179: "Revered artist Michael Golden let Spider-Man shine when he teamed up with writer Bill Mantlo to pit Spider-Man against the Incredible Hulk once again."
- Martin, Brian. (June 2017). "The Doctor Is/Was In!". TwoMorrows Publishing.
- Greenberger, Robert. (June 2017). "''Weirdworld''". TwoMorrows Publishing.
- Ash, Roger. (June 2017). "The Adventures of the Warriors Three". TwoMorrows Publishing.
- Friedt, Stephan. (June 2017). "When Knights Were Bold: Steven Grant's Black Knight Arc". TwoMorrows Publishing.
- Buxton, Marc. (June 2017). "Shanna the She-Devil in ''Marvel Fanfare''". TwoMorrows Publishing.
- Kelly, Douglas R.. (June 2017). "Kid in a Candy Store: Roger McKenzie Had a Ball With ''Marvel Fanfare''". TwoMorrows Publishing.
- DeAngelo, Daniel. (June 2017). "Ken Steacy: No Assembly Required". TwoMorrows Publishing.
- Eury, Michael. (June 2017). "Norm Breyfogle's Batman/Captain America Makeover". TwoMorrows Publishing.
- "''Marvel Fanfare''".
- Smith, Andy. (June 2017). "''The Jungle Book''". TwoMorrows Publishing.
- Mangels, Andy. (June 2017). "Black Leather Required: The Black Widow Stings". TwoMorrows Publishing.
- Martini, Franck. (June 2017). "''Marvel Fanfare'' #29: A Story That Made Quite a Splash!". TwoMorrows Publishing.
- Englehart, Steve. (n.d.). "Silver Surfer 1-31". SteveEnglehart.com.
- Tandarich, Dan. (June 2017). "''Marvel Fanfare'' #51: The Startling Saga of the (Alternate Reality) Silver Surfer". TwoMorrows Publishing.
- "''Marvel Fanfare'' vol. 2".
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