Stan Lee portrayed the Black Knight’s alter ego, Sir Percy, in much the same way the alter ego of Zorro, Don Diego, was played by Tyrone Power in the 1940 movie, The Mark of Zorro. Foppish. Effeminate. The attitudes toward Sir Percy by the characters in the story are insulting, even physical. Modred whacks him with a glove (to which Sir Percy later says to Merlin, the one guy who knows he’s role-playing, “I’ll feel the sting of Modred’s glove till the day I avenge that insult.”) To Lady Rosamund Sir Percy is a “churl,” (I looked it up, it means a rude, boorish person, which Sir Percy is not, and I wonder if Stan threw it in because it looked good, no matter its meaning.) Earlier, in the Black Knight’s origin story (available by a link below this story), Lady Rosamund on first meeting Percy, is positively hostile: “How can you stay around here, like an old man or a woman . . .” (Emphasis mine.) I think you get my point. It was another era when it was okay to disrespect someone who was thought gay. Stan Lee may not have been aware that was what he was doing, or if he was he had no way of knowing it would be brought up by a churlish blogger nearly 60 years hence, forsooth (meaning “in truth.”)
Monday we featured an artist, Fred Fredericks, who could draw a variety of styles and genres, and at Atlas in the fifties that described Joe Maneely, a wonderful cartoonist who could draw anything, and was called upon by editor Lee to do so. Westerns to science fiction to humor, medieval knights to horror. All in a day’s work for Joe. One of the greatest tragedies of the golden age of comics is that Maneely died young, in an accident.
From The Black Knight #1 (1955):
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Here’s the other story from the comic, mentioned above. Click on the picture.
Number 1399: Black Knight: hero or spineless lack-a-day?
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