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   New: Wolverine Files Blog
   000: The True Origin
   001: Wild Child
   002: The Origin
   003: Young Logan
   004: The Amazing Skunk-Bear
   005: Sabretooth and Silver Fox
   006: The Lost Years
   007: The Thirties
   008: Ogun
   009: World War II
   010: Landau, Luckman and Lake
   011: Team X Beginnings

   013: Logan, Creed and North
   014: Secret Agent Man, eh?
   015: Weapon X: The Origin(s)
   016: Weapon X: Adamantium
   017: Memory Implants
   018: The Ultimate Warrior
   019: Weapon X: Escape
   020: The Hudsons
   021: License to Kill
   022: Department H: Weapon X
   023: Department H: The Flight
   024: The Best There Is
   025: The Wolverine
   026: The X-Men
   027: Death in the Family
   028: The Phoenix
   029: Where No X-Men Has Gone
   030: Missing, Presumed Dead

   A01: Alternate Universes

   P01: Publication Order (1974-1979)
   P02: Publication Order (1980-1982)
   P03: Publication Order (1983-1984)
   P04: Publication Order (1985-1986)

   Etc: News, Questions, Comments

Wolverine Files

000 - Presenting... The Badger? (version 2.2)

Original Wolverine sketch

John Romita, Wolverine Battle the Incredible Hulk.

© and ™ by Marvel Characters, Inc.

While subsequent pages of this site are dedicated to the fictional history of the superhero Wolverine, we should first examine the real-world creation of this popular character. The earliest reference to Wolverine comes from late Marvel Comics artist Dave Cockrum who claimed to have created a montage of potential X-Men characters in the early 1970s for then Editor-in-Chief Roy Thomas and writer Mike Friedrich. Included was a vulpine brother of a female vampire called Wolverine.[1]  Though he sported fangs and had no claws, he had the same hairstyle that Wolverine would later be revealed to have and was characterized as animalistic, bestial, feral and "...one nasty son of a bitch."[2] Wolverine Files reader Glen Cadigan points out, however, that the montage was actually a piece Cockrum did while working at DC Comics a year before joining Marvel. Specifically, a montage of villains for the Legion of Super-Heroes called The Devastators (seen here at Legionworld.net) with the Wolverine character bearing a striking resemblance to Fang from X-Men #107.

In any event, time passed and Marvel was making inroads into the Canadian market leading Roy Thomas to suggest that Len Wein introduce a Canadian character into the pages of The Incredible Hulk.[3] As Len Wein remembers it Thomas " ...wanted to see what I could do with a Canadian accent."[4] Because heroes based on animals were quite popular at the time, Thomas narrowed the character's name down to two creatures that lived in both the United States and Canada: Wolverine and Badger. Thomas finally chose Wolverine due to its similarity to 'wolf,' and Wein began the task creating a new superhero.[5] Accordingly, Wein "...went out and read up about wolverines and found out that they're short, nasty creatures who have no qualms about attacking beasts ten times their size to protect their young and to protect their territory."[6] The strong separatist movement in Quebec even led Wein to consider making Wolverine French Canadian, a concept somewhat incongruous with the present character of Wolverine. Fans should perhaps be grateful that this approach was not pursued further for no one would be intimidated upon hearing, "I am ze Wolverine, no?"

Wolverine close-up sketch

John Romita, Wolverine Battle the Incredible Hulk.

© and ™ by Marvel Characters, Inc.

Legendary Marvel Comics artist John Romita, Sr. was then assigned the task of designing the character. At first, he "...thought a wolverine was a female wolf!"[7] He and Len Wein "...discussed Wolverine's look after going straight to the encyclopedia... [and seeing] a shot of a wolverine... That's the way it evolved, eventually including the claw idea and the general claw shapes repeated on the costume."[8] Len Wein then debuted the character in The Incredible Hulk, with Herb Trimpe using Romita's sketches as a guide. It is interesting to note that Romita rejected several intriguing concepts along the way. "Originally, his claws were going to come out of his fingertips like a cat's, but that was too grotesque and they just didn't appear as strong as I wanted them to be."[9] Knowing that Marvel was considering reviving the superhero team of the X-Men with an international flair, Wein intentionally made the Wolverine a mutant.[10] What is not readily apparent is that Wein intended the Wolverine to be a teenage mutant with claws extending from a pair of special gloves. "He was a mutant only in terms of his ferocity and animal senses. He was a hunter and a tracker and incredibly resilient. He was able to get the stuff knocked out of him by the Hulk and still be able to get back on his feet."[11] In fact, Wein would have made Wolverine as super-humanly strong as Spider-Man had he continued writing the X-Men.[12] Dave Cockrum later asserted that originally, he and Len Wein intended Wolverine to be revealed as a mutated wolverine, but Stan Lee nixed the idea.[13]

Wolverine's first appearance
Herb Trimpe and Jack Abel, The Incredible Hulk #180.
© and ™ by Marvel Characters, Inc.

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[1]  Peter Sanderson, " Wolverine: The Evolution of a Character, " The Incredible Hulk and Wolverine #1, 1986.
[2]  "Interview with Dave Cockrum," The X-Men Companion I, 1982.
[3]  "Interview with Roy Thomas," X-Men Companion I, 1982
[4]  Richard Ho, "Who's Your Daddy," Wizard #157, Nov. 2004.
[5]  Craig Shutt, "Secret Origins," Wizard's Wolverine Special, 1999.
[6]  Peter Sanderson, "Wolverine: The Evolution of a Character, " The Incredible Hulk and Wolverine #1, 1986.
[7]  "Dressed to Kill," Wizard Wolverine Masterpiece Edition, Dec. 2004.
[8]  Scott Beatty, "Beastmasters," Wizard Tribute to Wolverine , 1996.
[9]  James Busbee, "Killer Fashion Sense," Wizard's Wolverine Special, 1999.
[10]  Craig Shutt, "Secret Origins," Wizard's Wolverine Special, 1999.
[11]  "Interview with Len Wein," The X-Men Companion, 1982.
[12]  Peter Sanderson, "Wolverine: The Evolution of a Character, " The Incredible Hulk and Wolverine #1, 1986.
[13]  Scott Beatty, "Beastmasters," Wizard Tribute to Wolverine, 1996.

 

Send comments, corrections or offers to write for Marvel Comics to DiG@typingmonkeys.com
Wolverine and other Marvel Comics' characters © and ™  by Marvel Characters, Inc.
Contents of "Wolverine Files" © by Joel "DiG" DiGiacomo