Stan Lee Spills All: From Secret Superhero Sauce to Origin of 'Excelsior'

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Marcus Errico
·Editor-in-Chief, Yahoo Entertainment
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In his own right, Stan Lee is a superhero, having spent a lifetime saving the universe.

As Marvelโ€™s Midas-like mastermind in the 1960s, he co-created Spider-Man, the Fantastic Four, the Avengers, and the X-Men. These days, in between movie cameos, his company POW! Entertainment, and convention appearances, the surprisingly spry 92-year-old is teaming with YouTube for an original-content channel called โ€œStan Leeโ€™s World of Heroes.โ€

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On the eve of Comic-Con, we cornered Lee and demanded he reveal his secrets.

Youโ€™ve created so many worlds of superheroes in your career, now youโ€™re at it again. Do you have a philosophy of superheroism?

I hate to make it sound un-intellectual, but to me, I think of these superheroes the way young people read fairy tales. When youโ€™re 3, 4, 5 years old, you read about giants and witches and monsters and things like that. And theyโ€™re colorful and bigger than life, and youโ€™re a little kid and youโ€™re impressed with them. [But when] you get a little older, you canโ€™t read fairy tales anymore. Suddenly, along come these superhero stories and to me theyโ€™re like fairy tales for grown-ups because theyโ€™re all bigger than life, theyโ€™re about characters that really have abilities that no human beings possess. โ€ฆ Youโ€™re recapturing the enjoyment you had when you were a kid reading fairy tales. So I donโ€™t think thereโ€™s anything thing very much deeper to it than that.

But you still need to ground your characters, right? Youโ€™re known for making your superheroes seem like real people.

The normal person โ€” the heroโ€™s normal identity โ€” has to be somebody that the reader can relate to and has to be credible. I donโ€™t think a reader would like a superhero if his normal identity were somebody dullโ€ฆ if he had no particular personality, no problems, nothing. I always felt that way about Superman: Clark Kent was just a guy, a reporter. But I didnโ€™t know where Clark Kent lived, what his problems were.

The personal life of a superhero or superheroine is very important. And in some way it should be associated with the superpower.

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So whatโ€™s the secret formula for creating a superhero?

I canโ€™t think of any formula. Itโ€™s like writing a novel of any sort. Or a mystery story or a western story. You just have to think up an interesting character and an interesting problem, which it seems as though that character will never be able to solve, or a hurdle that he or she will never be able to overcome, and then you find a clever way for the hero to overcome it at the end.

Youโ€™ve just gotten, by the way, the whole secret. I expect you to go out and write a bestseller.

Which of your heroes do you most identify with?

Probably Iron Man. Yeah, [Tony] Stark, โ€˜cause heโ€™s good looking, smartโ€ฆ [Laughs.] Iโ€™m only kidding. I identify with all of them in a sense. I think when youโ€™re a writer, any character you write you have to have a feeling for or you wonโ€™t be able to write it well.

โ€˜Excelsior!โ€™ is your trademark sign-off. Tell me its secret origin.

I used to write a column [for Marvel Comics] called โ€œStanโ€™s Soapbox,โ€ and I used to end up by saying, โ€œ'Nuff said.โ€ Then, all of sudden, I see that expression popping up in the DC Comics here and there. And I said, โ€œDammit, if theyโ€™re going to copy my expressions then Iโ€™m going to find one they wonโ€™t be able to copy, because they wonโ€™t know how to spell it, and they wonโ€™t know what it means.โ€ And I came with โ€œExcelsior!โ€ โ€” which is a word on the New York State seal [that] means โ€œupward and onward to greater triumph.โ€œ

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Stanโ€™s Soapbox from February 1976 via Bullyโ€™s Comics

Itโ€™s the perfect word. So Iโ€™ve been using it ever since โ€” and they havenโ€™t stolen it yet.


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