Spymaster (character)

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Spymaster
Spymaster.png
The Sinclair Abbott incarnation of Spymaster as depicted in Iron Man: The Inevitable #2 (March 2006).
Art by Frazer Irving.
Publication information
Publisher Marvel Comics
First appearance (Original)
Iron Man #33 (January 1971)
(Sharen)
Iron Man #220 (July 1987)
(Lemon)
Iron Man #254 (March 1990)
(Abbott)
Iron Man: Inevitable #1 (February 2006)
Created byAllyn Brodsky
Don Heck
Stan Lee
In-story information
Alter egoUnknown
Mark Sharen
Nathan Lemon
Sinclair Abbott
Species Human
Team affiliationsEspionage Elite
A.I.M.
Maggia
Roxxon
S.H.I.E.L.D.
Zodiac
Partnerships Justin Hammer
Notable aliases(First Spymaster): Cobalt Man, Iron Knight, Hogan Potts, Spare Parts Man, Golden Avenger, Shellhead, Ted Calloway, Jake Jordan, Tony Stark
(Lemon): Number One, Santa Claus, Harmon Taylor
AbilitiesExceptional strategist
Excellent hand to hand combatant
Extraordinary industrial spy and saboteur
Master of disguise
Superb actor
Highly agile and skilled athlete
Greatly skilled in the uses of virtually any kind of gun
Access to cutting-edge technology
Use of electronically amplified nun-chakas
Wears bulletproof battlesuit that grants:
Minimal protection from physical attacks
Various pockets for holding weaponry

Spymaster is the name of several supervillains appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics, primarily as enemies of Iron Man. [1] The first Spymaster debuted in Iron Man #33 (January 1971), and was created by Allyn Brodsky, Don Heck, and Stan Lee. [2]

Contents

Fictional character biography

Original Spymaster

The original Spymaster is a costumed freelance industrial spy, saboteur, and assassin who wields advanced weaponry. He and his team of assistants, the Espionage Elite, are hired by the criminal organization Zodiac to infiltrate Stark Industries and steal Tony Stark's secrets. Spymaster later aids Aquarius, Capricorn, and Sagittarius in an attempt to steal the Zodiac Key from Stark. [3] [4]

Spymaster last appears after coming into conflict with fellow Iron Man enemy Ghost. After Spymaster attempts to assassinate Ghost under orders from Roxxon, Iron Man arrives, causing the two villains to attempt an escape. Ghost offers Spymaster one of his intangibility devices, and Spymaster uses the device to pass through a wall. Ghost removes the device from Spymaster's chest while he was still phasing through a wall, causing him to rematerialize partially inside the wall and die instantly. [5] [6] The series Official Handbook of the Marvel Universe reveals that the Spymaster who died is a separate individual named Mark Sharen. [7]

The original Spymaster returns in the Dark Reign storyline, where it is revealed that he faked his own death and has been living off the radar until he is found by Norman Osborn. Spymaster is hired to steal a treasured photograph of Tony Stark's parents, which Osborn then burns. [8]

Nathan Lemon

The second Spymaster, Nathan Lemon, is an accomplished student of the Taskmaster who assumes the Spymaster mantle after killing all other contenders in a battleground simulator. [9] Lemon has the Espionage Elite spy in Tony Stark's office, which leads to them learning Stark's secret identity as Iron Man. Acting under orders from the Mandarin, the Elite ambush and beat Stark until Black Widow intervenes. [10] In the series Iron Man: Inevitable, Lemon is killed by Sinclair Abbott, who becomes Spymaster. [11]

Sinclair Abbott

Sinclair Abbot, a wealthy industrialist, is the latest person to hold the Spymaster mantle. He achieved this by having Nathan Lemon arrested, severely beaten in jail, and then killed by his wife. [11] Abbot takes no direct actions against Iron Man, choosing to send Ghost against him.

During the storyline Civil War , the Spymaster is hired by World Islamic Peace Coalition chairman Karim Najeeb to kill Iron Man. Spymaster kills Tony Stark's chauffeur and attempts to use Happy Hogan as live bait to draw Iron Man, but Hogan attacks him. The two fall several stories to the ground, with Hogan sustaining severe injuries that he later dies from. [12] [13]

After being defeated and rendered powerless during an attempted assault on Stark Resilient, Spymaster commits "suicide by cop" and is shot by the policemen guarding him. [14] He is later revealed to be alive and battles Iron Man and Ironheart, who uses one of Mandarin's rings to banish him to the Darkforce dimension. [15]

Powers and abilities

Each Spymaster has no superhuman abilities. However, each is an exceptional fighter and strategist. The first Spymaster was an excellent hand-to-hand combatant, with formal training in boxing and various martial arts. The second Spymaster is also an excellent hand-to-hand combatant, having been trained at the Taskmaster's Academy. Each is also an extraordinary industrial spy and saboteur, master of disguise, a superb actor, a highly agile and skilled athlete, and greatly skilled in the uses of virtually any kind of gun. Spymaster has access to cutting-edge technology for a number of espionage-related devices and weapons, both of his own design and those of Justin Hammer's. The original Spymaster used various special devices including, devices in his gloves and mask that projected concussive energy blasts, small and powerful hovering electromagnets, incendiary missiles, "razor-discs" that could pierce Iron Man's armor, devices that enabled him to absorb Iron Man's repulsor energy, stunguns, sleep inducing "somnu-gas", boot jets that allowed flight, and a device in his belt buckle that summoned an advanced model hovercraft that could operate automatically according to pre-programmed instructions. Both the first and second Spymasters have employed electronically amplified nun-chakas that can damage Iron Man's armor. The Spymaster wears bulletproof Kevlar body armor which provides some protection from physical attacks, and contains various pockets for holding weaponry.

In other media

An unidentified Spymaster appears in The Incredible Hulk episode "Prisoner of the Monster".[ citation needed ]

References

  1. Brevoort, Tom; DeFalco, Tom; Manning, Matthew K.; Sanderson, Peter; Wiacek, Win (2017). Marvel Year By Year: A Visual History. DK Publishing. p. 148. ISBN   978-1465455505.
  2. DeFalco, Tom; Sanderson, Peter; Brevoort, Tom; Teitelbaum, Michael; Wallace, Daniel; Darling, Andrew; Forbeck, Matt; Cowsill, Alan; Bray, Adam (2019). The Marvel Encyclopedia. DK Publishing. p. 352. ISBN   978-1-4654-7890-0.
  3. Iron Man #33 - 36 (January - April 1971)
  4. Daredevil #73 (February 1971)
  5. Iron Man #220 (July 1987)
  6. Derman, Matt (May 7, 2015). "1987 And All That: Iron Man #219-221". Comic Book Resources . Archived from the original on December 14, 2019. Retrieved February 22, 2025.
  7. Official Handbook of the Marvel Universe A to Z #11 (December 2009)
  8. Dark Reign: Made Men (2009)
  9. Iron Man #254 (March 1990)
  10. Iron Man (vol. 3) #8 (September 1998)
  11. 1 2 Iron Man: Inevitable #2 (March 2006)
  12. Iron Man (vol. 4) #13 - 14 (December 2006 - January 2007)
  13. O'Sullivan, Mike (April 18, 2017). Marvel Cinematic Universe Guidebook: The Avengers Initiative. Marvel Enterprises. p. 37. ISBN   978-0785196600.
  14. Invincible Iron Man #519 (August 2012)
  15. Iron Man (vol. 6) #24 (December 2022)