The Outlaw Kid is a fictional
Western hero appearing in
American comic book
An American comic book is a thin periodical originating in the United States, on average 32 pages, containing comics. While the form originated in 1933, American comic books first gained popularity after the 1938 publication of ''Action Comics'' ...
s published by
Marvel Comics. The character originally appeared in the company's 1950s iteration,
Atlas Comics Atlas Comics may refer to
* Atlas Comics (1950s)
Atlas Comics is the 1950s comic book, comic-book publishing label that evolved into Marvel Comics. Magazine and mass market paperback, paperback novel publisher Martin Goodman (publisher), Martin ...
.
A lesser-known character than the company's
Kid Colt,
Rawhide Kid or
Two-Gun Kid, he also starred in a reprint series in the 1970s and a short-lived revival.
The Outlaw Kid was Lance Temple, an
Old West lawyer and
Civil War veteran living with his blinded father on a ranch. Though promising his father he would never take up a gun, he nonetheless felt the need to right wrongs expediently on the near-lawless frontier, and created a masked identity in order to keep his gunslinging secret.
Publication history
Comic-book artist
Doug Wildey, later a noted animation designer, illustrated three to four stories per issue of the 19-issue series ''The Outlaw Kid'' (
cover date
The cover date of a periodical publication is the date displayed on the cover, which is not necessarily the true date of publication (the on-sale date or release date); later cover dates are common in magazine and comic book publishing. More unusu ...
d Sept. 1954-Sept. 1957).
Joe Maneely provided most of the covers. Backup features were usually "
The Black Rider," drawn by
Syd Shores, or an anthological Western tale. An additional Outlaw Kid story appeared in ''
Wild Western'' #43 (May 1955). Well over a year after the original series ended, two other Outlaw Kid stories by Wildey, presumably from inventory, saw print, in ''
Kid Colt, Outlaw'' #82 (Jan. 1959) and ''Wyatt Earp'' #24 (Aug. 1959).
Comics historian Ken Quattro called the series Wildey's most "noteworthy" Western work:
When Marvel began reprinting the series in ''The Outlaw Kid'' vol. 2, #1–30 (Aug. 1970 – Oct. 1975), it became the best-selling among the company's Western reprints.
[Evanier, Mark]
"Don Segall, Frank Ridgeway, & Doug Wildey,"
POV Online (November 18, 1994). Gil Kane,
John Severin and
Herb Trimpe, among others, provided new cover art. When the 1950s Wildey material ran out, Marvel commissioned new stories, by writer
Mike Friedrich, followed by the unrelated
Gary Friedrich, with art by Marvel Western veteran
Dick Ayers. Yet with these new stories, in issues #10–16 (Oct. 1972 – June 1973), sales dropped, after which the title began re-reprinting Wildey's work.
Wildey reprints also appeared in the 1970s Marvel series ''
Mighty Marvel Western'' (#9) and ''
Western Gunfighters''.
The Outlaw Kid reappeared in the four-issue
limited series Limited series may refer to:
*Limited series, individual storylines within an anthology series
*Limited series, a particular run of collectables, usually individually numbered
* Limited series (comics), a comics series with a predetermined number ...
''
Blaze of Glory: The Last Ride of the Western Heroes'' (2000), by writer
John Ostrander and artist
Leonardo Manco
Leonardo Manco (born 16 December 1971) is an Argentine comic book artist.
Career
Manco is best known for his dark and gritty style on such titles as Marvel Comics’ '' Hellstorm'' (1994), '' Blaze of Glory'' (2000, #1-4), '' Apache Skies'' ...
, which specifically
retconned that the naively clean-cut Marvel Western stories of years past were merely
dime novel fictions of the characters' actual lives. It was revealed here that Temple's father, who did not want him gunslinging, had died from the shock of learning of his son's alter ego, and that a guilt-wracked Temple, blaming himself for his father's death, developed a
split personality and was unaware he was the Outlaw Kid. Indeed, he was actually searching for the Outlaw Kid in the miniseries. He dies in the last issue, helping defend the town of Wonderment. His last act was to use dynamite to kill some opponents, noting his father would have been happy he did not use a gun. As series writer
John Ostrander explained,
Legacy
The mutant
Outlaw
An outlaw, in its original and legal meaning, is a person declared as outside the protection of the law. In pre-modern societies, all legal protection was withdrawn from the criminal, so that anyone was legally empowered to persecute or kill them ...
of
Agency X is a descendant of the Outlaw Kid.
List of Doug Wildey's Outlaw Kid stories
''This list is incomplete.''
* ''The Outlaw Kid'' #1 (Sept. 1954)
:: "The Beginning!"
:: "Jaws of Death!"
:: "A Killer's Trap!"
* ''The Outlaw Kid'' #2 (Nov. 1954)
:: "The Fast Gun!" a.k.a. "The Fast Draw" (rep. Vol. 2, #3)
:: "Redman's Revenge!"
:: "Fury at Echo Pass!"
* ''The Outlaw Kid'' #3 (Jan. 1955)(rep. Vol. 2, #1)
:: "Hostage"
:: "Breakthrough"
:: "Showdown"
* ''The Outlaw Kid'' #4 (Mar. 1955)
::
over:: "Ghost Town"
:: "Death Battle"
:: "Rruummbblle"
* ''The Outlaw Kid'' #5 (May 1955)(rep. Vol. 2, #2)
:: "Two of a Kind"
:: "The Newcomers"
:: "Flames of Violence"
* ''The Outlaw Kid'' #8 (Nov. 1955)
:: "Helping Hand"
:: "Gun Law"
:: "The Outsider"
* ''The Outlaw Kid'' #10 (March 1956)(rep. Vol. 2, #3)
:: "The Fast Draw"
:: "Renegade Rout"
:: "Stand Up and Fight"
:: "The Man Behind the Guns"
* ''The Outlaw Kid'' #11 (May 1956) (rep. Vol. 2, #4)
:: "Losers Take Nothing"
:: "Six-gun Gamble"
:: "Fang and Claw"
:: "The Riddle of Scorpion Creek"
* The Outlaw Kid #12 (July 1956)
:: "Six-Gun Menace"
:: "The Riddle of Fargo Pass"
:: "Badman's Choice"
:: "Range War"
* The Outlaw Kid #13 (Sept. 1956)
:: "Flames Along the Border"
:: "Bully's Bluff" (rep. Vol. 2, #7, Aug. 1971)
:: "Scourge of the Plains"
:: "Appointment With Danger"
* The Outlaw Kid #14 (Nov. 1956)
:: "Whistling Lead"
:: "Gunning for Trouble"
:: "Gun Duel"
:: "The Land Grabbers"
* The Outlaw Kid #15 (Jan. 1957)
:: "Duel in the Desert"
:: "Guns For Hire"
:: "Six-Gun Challenge"
:: "Along The Outlaw Trail"
* The Outlaw Kid #16 (Mar. 1957)
:: "Six-Gun Meeting"
:: "Redmen on the Rampage"
:: "Treachery on the Trail"
:: "Law and Order"
* The Outlaw Kid #17 (May 1957)
:: "Gunning For Trouble"
:: "Empty Holsters"
:: "Fists of Steel"
:: "Showdown at Sunup"
* The Outlaw Kid #18 (July 1957)
:: "Menace on Main Street"
:: "The Ambushers Strike"
:: "Six-Gun PayoFf"
:: "The Kid's Revenge"
* The Outlaw Kid #19 (Sept. 1957)
:: "When the Owlhoots Rode"
:: "Revenge of the Redmen"
:: "Gun Crazy"
:: "Treachery in Caliber City"
* ''Wyatt Earp'' #24 (Aug. 1959)
:: "The Man Behind the Guns" (reprint #10?)
REPRINTS
''Information will go above when sourced.''
* ''The Outlaw Kid'' Vol. 2, #5 (April 1971)
:: "Empty holsters!"
:: "Fists of steel!"
:: "Showdown at Sunup!"
:: "Gunning for Trouble!"
* ''The Outlaw Kid'' Vol. 2, #6 (June 1971; re-reprinted #22, June 1974)
:: "Redmen on the Rampage!"
:: "Six-Gun Meeting!"
:: "Law and Order!"
* ''The Outlaw Kid'' Vol. 2, #9 (Dec. 1971; re-reprinted #25, Dec. 1974)
:: "Gun Law"
:: "The Outsider"
* ''The Outlaw Kid'' Vol. 2, #10 (June 1972)
:: "The Origin of the Outlaw Kid"
References
External links
Guide To Marvel's Pre-FF 1 Heroes: The Outlaw KidAtlas Tales: The Outlaw KidThe Unofficial Handbook of Marvel Comics CreatorsThe Grand Comics Database*
ttp://www.marvunapp.com/Appendix3/outlawax.htm The Unofficial Handbook of the Marvel Universe: Outlaw
{{Marvel Western Characters
1954 comics debuts
1957 comics endings
1970 comics debuts
1975 comics endings
American comics characters
American comics
Comics characters introduced in 1954
Fictional American Civil War veterans
Fictional American lawyers
Marvel Comics male superheroes
Marvel Comics titles
Marvel Comics Western (genre) characters
Vigilante characters in comics
Western (genre) gunfighters
Western (genre) heroes and heroines
Western (genre) outlaws