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Fawcett and version
This version was originally published by Crest Book, Fawcett Publications.
A fictionalised version of Fawcett aids Jones in the novel Indiana Jones and the Seven Veils.
The book's stories reflect an amalgamated version of the Captain Midnight character and his supporting cast, and incorporate elements from the various media incarnations of the character, including the radio and television series, the Columbia movie serial and Fawcett comic book.
DC Comics purchased the rights to the characters published by Fawcett, including Golden Arrow, but failed to renew copyright on Whiz # 2, putting that version of the character into public domain.
The more recent 2004 BBC version ( broadcast in America on PBS-Masterpiece Theatre in 2006 ) starred Keeley Fawcett as Carrie, Alun Armstrong as Mr. Evans, Geraldine McEwan as Mrs. Gotobed, Eddie Cooper as Albert Sandwich and Pauline Quirke as Hepzibah.

Fawcett and Mary
* Fawcett wrote the introduction to the 1891 edition of Mary Wollstonecraft's book A Vindication of the Rights of Woman.
* Fawcett, Mary Laughlin.
Mary Marvel is a fictional character, a comic book superheroine, originally published by Fawcett Comics and now owned by DC Comics.
Mary Marvel was introduced into Fawcett Comics ' Marvel Family franchise a year after a young male counterpart, Captain Marvel Jr., made his debut.
After Fawcett canceled their superhero comics line because of a copyright infringement lawsuit with National Comics ( later DC Comics ), Mary Marvel and her teammates went unseen for years.
As a young teenager, Mary enters a regional spelling bee held in Fawcett City and emceed by Billy, who works as an on-air reporter for WHIZ radio.
Mary and Billy are briefly seen during the events of Blackest Night, now living in an apartment in Fawcett City.
* Farrah Fawcett as Mary Gressler, a troubled grandmother and love interest of Burton Fallin.
Fawcett Publications was very much a family affair, as indicated by a list of the company's stockholders: Claire Sue Bagg, James Wesley Bagg, Marion Fawcett Bagg, William Bagg, Gordon W. Fawcett, Helen Aline Fawcett, John Fawcett, John Roger Fawcett, Mary Blair Fawcett, Blair Redding Fawcett, Michael Blair Fawcett, Roger K. Fawcett, Roscoe Kent Fawcett, Marie F. Fawcett, Thomas Knowlton Fawcett, Vivian D. Fawcett, W. H.
* Staci Wilson, Tiffany Roberts, Briana Scurry, Tisha Venturini, Tiffeny Milbrett, Carla Overbeck, Cindy Parlow, Mary Harvey, Kristine Lilly, Shannon MacMillan, Julie Foudy, Carin Gabarra, Mia Hamm, Michelle Akers, Brandi Chastain, and Joy Fawcett — Football ( Soccer ), Women's Team Competition
The series, which began publication in March 1995, reintroduced many of the characters from Fawcett Comics into current DC continuity, including Mary Bromfield / Mary Marvel, Freddy Freeman / Captain Marvel, Jr., Beautia Sivana, Mister Tawky Tawny, Bulletman, Minute-Man, Spy Smasher, Ibis and Taia, and even Hoppy the Marvel Bunny.

Fawcett and Marvel
This extended to DC suing Fawcett Comics over Captain Marvel, at the time comics ' top-selling character.
Years later, Fawcett ironically sold the rights for Captain Marvel to DC — which in 1973 revived Captain Marvel in the new title Shazam!
Dennis the Menace has been published in comic books and comic digests from the 1950s through the 1980s by a variety of publishers, including Standard / Pines ( 1953 – 58 ), Fawcett Comics ( 1958 – 80, during their only return to comics after losing the Captain Marvel lawsuit ), and Marvel Comics ( 1981 – 82 ).
The smaller Dennis the Menace comic digests were published continually by Fawcett and Hallden between 1969 and 1980, and they were briefly resurrected in reprints by Marvel in 1982 for a run of three issues.
Charles Clarence Beck ( June 8, 1910 – November 22, 1989 ) was an American cartoonist and comic book artist, best known for his work on Captain Marvel at Fawcett Comics and DC Comics.
Besides Captain Marvel, Beck also drew other Fawcett series, including the adventures of Spy Smasher and Ibis the Invincible.
The Captain Marvel stories boasted a clean style which facilitated Beck's assistants and other Fawcett artists emulating Beck's style ( one exception was Mac Raboy whose work on Captain Marvel, Jr. was more in the style of Alex Raymond ).
The popularity of Captain Marvel allowed Fawcett to produce a number of spin-off comic books and Beck to open his own New York City comics studio in 1941.
In this he acted as Chief Artist ( akin to an Art Director ), a role Fawcett formally recognized on the contents page of Captain Marvel Adventures.
Done in the style of the Marvel Family books and similarly whimsical ( this Captain had a large T on his shirt instead of a lightning bolt ), the ads appeared in comic books ( published by both Fawcett and its rivals ) and in Sunday comic strip sections of newspapers.
After years of litigation due to a suit lodged by National Publications ( publishers of DC Comics ) against Fawcett for copyright infringement claiming that Captain Marvel was a copy of Superman, Fawcett in the early 1950s ( partly in response to flagging sales ) reached a settlement with DC in which it agreed to discontinue its comic line.
Beck used MacMurray as the initial model for the superhero character who became Fawcett Comics ' Captain Marvel.
Following a trial in which DC Comics sued Fawcett Comics for breach of copyright, claiming Fawcett's Captain Marvel was too similar to Superman, the latter stopped publishing Captain Marvel.
Notable events included meeting the Fawcett Comics heroes, including Captain Marvel, the death of Mr. Terrific and an explanation for why Black Canary hadn't aged much despite debuting in the 1940s.
Although DC and Timely ( which evolved to become Marvel Comics ) characters are more famous today, circulation figures suggest that the best-selling superhero title of the era may have been Fawcett Comics ' Captain Marvel, whose approximately 1. 4 million copies per issue made it " the most widely circulated comic book in America.
For rival Fawcett Comics, he wrote stories for Superman's chief competitor Captain Marvel.
An example of the latter kind of crossover would be DC's acquisition of Fawcett Comics, Quality Comics, and Charlton Comics and the absorption into the DC continuity of the original Captain Marvel, Plastic Man and Captain Atom.
* Uncle Marvel, originally a Fawcett Comics character, currently owned by DC Comics
* American comic book super hero Captain Marvel from Fawcett Comics, after having been cancelled in 1953, was given a story where he ( and most of his friends and his arch foes ) was trapped in suspended animation for 20 years to explain his revival in 1973 by DC Comics.

Fawcett and did
Fawcett, too, did not have to audition.
When the women's list was announced, Fawcett was described as " above the senior wrangler ", but she did not receive the title of senior wrangler, as only men were then ranked, with women being listed separately.
" Fawcett left behind instructions stating that if the expedition did not return, no rescue expedition should be sent lest the rescuers suffer his fate.
Because of his cancer, Roger Fawcett stopped writing his family history at that point, and he did not return to it.
Fawcett Stadium is within 75 miles of numerous television markets in northeast Ohio and western Pennsylvania ( and is part of the Cleveland market ); as such, the NBC affiliates were required to black out the game in the rare event the game did not sell out.
In 1939, National Comics ( then known as Detective Comics, Inc .; it did not use the name National until 1946 ) had filed suit against Fox Feature Syndicate for their Superman-like hero Wonder Man, and filed against Fawcett the following year for their Master Man character.
In the case of Master Man, Fawcett simply did as Fox Features had done: they ceased publication of the character and replaced his feature in their Master Comics periodical with a new strip ( Bulletman ).

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