Marvel Two-in-One
Marvel Two-in-One | |
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Marvel Two-In-One Annual #2 (1977). Art by Jim Starlin. | |
Publication information | |
Publisher | Marvel Comics |
Schedule | monthly |
Format | Ongoing |
Publication date | January 1974–June 1983 |
Number of issues | 100 and 7 annuals |
Main character(s) | Thing |
Creative team | |
Writer(s) | |
Penciller(s) | |
Inker(s) |
Marvel Two-In-One is an American comic book series published by Marvel Comics featuring Fantastic Four member, the Thing, in a different team-up each issue.
Publication history
Marvel Two-in-One continued from the team-up stories starring the Thing in the final two issues of Marvel Feature and lasted for 100 issues from January 1974[1] through June 1983. Seven annuals were also published.[2] Artist Ron Wilson began his long association with the title with issue #12 (November 1975) and worked on it throughout its run.[3] With issue #17, the series had a crossover with Marvel Team-Up #47, which featured Spider-Man.[4] The second Marvel Two-in-One Annual was a crossover with Avengers Annual #7 both of which were written and drawn by Jim Starlin.[5] The "Project Pegasus" storyline in Marvel Two-in-One #53-58 saw the introduction of the name "Quasar" for the Wendell Vaughn character[6] and the transformation of Wundarr into the Aquarian.[7]
Many notable comics creators contributed to the series, including Steve Gerber, Frank Miller, Jack Kirby (who did pencils on several covers during its run), John Byrne, John Buscema, George Pérez and Marv Wolfman.[8]
Marvel Two-In-One ended after one hundred issues and was immediately replaced with a Thing solo series.
The issues
Issue | Character(s) | Issue | Character(s) |
---|---|---|---|
#1 | Man-Thing | #51 | Beast, Ms. Marvel, Nick Fury, Wonder Man |
#2 | Sub-Mariner | #52 | Moon Knight |
#3 | Daredevil | #53 | Quasar |
#4 | Captain America | #54 | Deathlok |
#5 | Guardians of the Galaxy | #55 | Giant-Man |
#6 | Doctor Strange | #56 | Thundra |
#7 | Valkyrie | #57 | Wundarr |
#8 | Ghost Rider | #58 | Aquarian |
#9 | Thor | #59 | The Human Torch |
#10 | Black Widow | #60 | Impossible Man |
#11 | Golem | #61 | Starhawk |
#12 | Iron Man | #62 | Moondragon |
#13 | Power Man | #63 | Adam Warlock |
#14 | Son of Satan | #64 | Stingray |
#15 | Morbius, the Living Vampire | #65 | Triton |
#16 | Ka-Zar | #66 | Scarlet Witch |
#17 | Spider-Man | #67 | Hyperion |
#18 | Scarecrow | #68 | Angel |
#19 | Tigra | #69 | Guardians of the Galaxy |
#20 | The Liberty Legion | #70 | Yancy Street Gang |
#21 | Doc Savage | #71 | Mister Fantastic |
#22 | Thor | #72 | The Inhumans |
#23 | Thor | #73 | Quasar |
#24 | Black Goliath | #74 | Puppet Master |
#25 | Iron Fist | #75 | Avengers |
#26 | Nick Fury | #76 | Iceman |
#27 | Deathlok | #77 | Man-Thing |
#28 | Sub-Mariner | #78 | Wonder Man |
#29 | Shang-Chi | #79 | Blue Diamond |
#30 | Spider-Woman | #80 | Ghost Rider |
#31 | Mystery Menace | #81 | Sub-Mariner |
#32 | Invisible Girl | #82 | Captain America |
#33 | Modred the Mystic | #83 | Sasquatch |
#34 | Nighthawk | #84 | Alpha Flight |
#35 | Skull the Slayer | #85 | Spider-Woman |
#36 | Mister Fantastic | #86 | Sandman |
#37 | Matt Murdock | #87 | Ant-Man |
#38 | Daredevil | #88 | She-Hulk |
#39 | Vision | #89 | The Human Torch |
#40 | Black Panther | #90 | Spider-Man |
#41 | Brother Voodoo | #91 | The Sphinx |
#42 | Captain America | #92 | Jocasta |
#43 | Man-Thing | #93 | Machine Man |
#44 | Hercules | #94 | Power Man and Iron Fist |
#45 | Captain Marvel | #95 | The Living Mummy |
#46 | Hulk | #96 | Marvel Super Heroes |
#47 | Yancy Street Gang | #97 | Iron Man |
#48 | Jack of Hearts | #98 | Franklin Richards |
#49 | Doctor Strange | #99 | Rom |
#50 | The Thing (alternate universe) | #100 | Ben Grimm (alternate universe) |
Annuals
Issue | Character(s) |
---|---|
#1 | The Liberty Legion |
#2 | Spider-Man, the Avengers vs. Thanos |
#3 | Nova vs. the Monitors |
#4 | Black Bolt vs. Graviton |
#5 | Hulk vs. the Stranger |
#6 | American Eagle vs. Klaw |
#7 | Hulk, Sub-Mariner, Wonder Man, Sasquatch, Thor, Colossus, Doc Samson vs. The Champion |
Collected editions
- Essential Marvel Two-in-One
- Volume 1 collects issues #1-20, 22-25 and Annual #1, 576 pages, November 2005, ISBN 978-0785117292
- Volume 2 collects issues #26-52 and Annual #2-3, 568 pages, June 2007, ISBN 978-0785126980
- Volume 3 collects issues #53-77 and Annual #4-5, 592 pages, July 2009, ISBN 978-0785130697
- Volume 4 collects issues #78-98 & 100, Annual #6-7, 608 pages, January 2012, ISBN 978-0785162841
- Marvel's Greatest Super Battles trade paperback includes Marvel Two-in-One Annual #7, August 1994, ISBN 978-0785100317
- The Thing: The Project Pegasus Saga collects Marvel Two-in-One #53-58 and 60, 160 pages, December 1988, ISBN 978-0871353504
- Thing: Project Pegasus collects Marvel Two-in-One #42-43 and 53-58, 160 pages, February 2010, ISBN 978-0785138112
- Thing: The Serpent Crown Affair collects Marvel Two-in-One #64-67 and Marvel Team-Up Annual #5, 120 pages, May 2012, ISBN 978-0785157618
- Thunderbolts: Marvel's Most Wanted includes Marvel Two-in-One #54 and 56, 176 pages, March 1998, ISBN 978-0785106555
Essential Marvel Two-In-One Volume 1 omits issue #21 from the collection, as the licensing rights to the character Doc Savage, who was the guest star in that issue, are no longer held by Marvel. Similarly Essential Marvel Two-In-One Volume 4 omits issue #99, which features Rom The Spaceknight, for the same reason.[9]
References
- ↑ Sanderson, Peter; Gilbert, Laura, ed. (2008). "1970s". Marvel Chronicle A Year by Year History. London, United Kingdom: Dorling Kindersley. p. 164. ISBN 978-0756641238.
The Thing got his own comic book with the first issue of Marvel Two-in-One, a series that teamed him up with other super heroes.
- ↑ Marvel Two-in-One Annual at the Grand Comics Database
- ↑ Ron Wilson's run on Marvel Two-in-One at the Grand Comics Database
- ↑ Manning, Matthew K.; Gilbert, Laura, ed. (2012). "1970s". Spider-Man Chronicle Celebrating 50 Years of Web-Slinging. London, United Kingdom: Dorling Kindersley. p. 89. ISBN 978-0756692360.
In this crossover between Marvel's two team-up based titles, each book's star paid a visit to the other's book. The two-part story was written by [Bill] Mantlo and penciled by [Sal] Buscema, with Ron Wilson supplying artwork for the second part in Marvel Team-Up #47.
- ↑ Manning "1970s" in Gilbert (2012), p. 97: "Written and drawn by Jim Starlin...this issue continued the events that had begun in this year's The Avengers Annual #7"
- ↑ Sanderson "1970s" in Gilbert (2008), p. 189: "Marvel Man took the new name Quasar in Marvel Two-in-One #53 by future Quasar series writer Mark Gruenwald and Ralph Macchio."
- ↑ Sanderson "1970s" in Gilbert (2008), p. 191: "In this finale of the 'Project Pegasus' saga, Wundarr became the Aquarian, a prophet of peace and spiritual enlightenment."
- ↑ Ewbank, Jamie (August 2013). "Idol of Millions: The Thing in Marvel Two-in-One". Back Issue!. Raleigh, North Carolina: TwoMorrows Publishing (66): 26–37.
- ↑ Ewbank p. 37
External links
- Marvel Two-in-One at the Unofficial Handbook of Marvel Comics Creators
- Marvel Two-in-One fan site