Mark Gruenwald

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Mark Gruenwald
Born June 18, 1953
Died August 12, 1996 (aged 43)
Nationality
American
Area(s) Writer, Penciller, Editor

Mark Gruenwald (June 18, 1953-August 12, 1996) was an American comic book writer and editor. Gruenwald got his start in comics fandom, publishing his own fanzine, Omniverse, which explored the concept of continuity. In 1978 he was hired by Marvel Comics, where he remained for the rest of his career.

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Hired initially as an assistant editor, Gruenwald was promoted to full editorship by Jim Shooter. In the late 1980s he became executive editor, with a particular remit as the keeper of Marvel continuity. Most fans, as well as Gruenwald's colleagues at Marvel, believe that had there not been a restructuring of the entire company by the owners in the early 1990s, he would have become editor-in-chief.

As a writer, Gruenwald is best-known for a ten-year long stint as the writer of Captain America (from 1985 to 1995), and for the Official Handbook of the Marvel Universe. Although it suffered from low sales, his sixty-issue run on Quasar (1989-1994) realized Gruenwald's ambition to write his own kind of superhero. However, his magnum opus is widely regarded to be his mid-1980s 12-issue miniseries Squadron Supreme, which told the story of an alternate universe where a group of well-intentioned superheroes decide that they would be best suited to run the planet. His work is notable for the realistic touch he brought to his characters. For example, in the D.P.7 series he created for Marvel's New Universe, the main characters were all regular people who gained odd abilities, and never put on a single costume.

In 1996, Gruenwald succumbed to a heart attack, the result of an unsuspected congenital heart defect. Per his request, he was cremated, and his ashes were mixed with the ink used to print the first trade paperback compilation of Squadron Supreme.[1]

Gruenwald was famous for a perfect recollection of even the most trivial details. An annual contest where fans tried to stump him with obscure questions was eventually discontinued by Marvel as it became clear he would never lose.

In the years since his death, many projects have been dedicated to his memory, especially those involving complicated continuity that would have delighted him (the JLA/Avengers crossover or the Earth X trilogy to name two). In the DC Universe, a building in Gotham City was named the Von Gruenwald Tower, and in the novel Captain America: Liberty's Torch, the lawyer kidnapped to defend the similarly kidnapped Captain in a mock trial before a militia is named Mark Gruenwald, and is described with the same general physical attributes and personality as the "real" one.

Fellow Marvel writer/artist Walt Simonson created the Time Variance Authority, a cosmic bureaucracy that regulates the Marvel multiverse. Simonson paid homage to Gruenwald by having the TVA's staff all be clones of Gruenwald; no one could keep track of everything but him.

In 2006, he was officially named the "Patron Saint of Marveldom" in the new Bullpen Bulletins pages.

  • The War #1-4 (Marvel Comics, June 1989-March 1990)

Preceded by
Roy Thomas
Thor writer
1980–1981
(with Ralph Macchio)
Succeeded by
Doug Moench
Preceded by
Mike Carlin
Captain America writer
1985–1995
Succeeded by
Mark Waid
Preceded by
John Byrne
Avengers writer
1990
(back-up stories; main stories by Fabian Nicieza)
Succeeded by
Larry Hama
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