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Everyman

 
Wikipedia: Everyman (Marvel Comics)
Everyman
Comic image missing.svg
Publication information
Publisher Marvel Comics
First appearance Captain America #267 (Mar 1982)
Created by J. M. DeMatteis and Mike Zeck
In-story information
Alter ego Larry Ekler
Team affiliations Schutz Heiligruppe
Notable aliases Zeitgeist

Everyman (Larry Ekler) is a fictional character in the Marvel Universe.

Contents

Publication history

The Everyman first appeared in Captain America #267 (Mar 1982) and was created by J. M. DeMatteis and Mike Zeck. He also appears in Marvel Team-Up #131-133 (July-September 1983).

The character subsequently appears as Zeitgeist in Alpha Flight #78 (December 1989), and Captain America #390 (August 1991), #393 (October 1991), and #442 (August 1995), in which he is killed.

Zeitgeist received an entry in the All-New Official Handbook of the Marvel Universe A-Z #12 (2006).

Fictional character biography

The Everyman was a self-styled "defender of the people" out to avenge his father's death on all of society. He is armed with a sword which can emit a lethal electrical shock.

Larry Ekler was the son of Milton Ekler, a hard-working lower-class man who never gave up on the American dream, though he eventually died penniless. Larry decided that the American dream was a sham, and intended to take up the cause of the common man, and start a revolution. To really start things going, he and his followers became determined to assassinate Captain America in public. The Everyman challenged Captain America to a duel to the death at the Statue of Liberty. When he began to lose in the duel, he took one of his own followers hostage, but that did not prevent Captain America from defeating him and taking him into custody.[1]

When Reed Richards, who had been a longtime friend of Milton Ekler, learned of Larry's madness he decided to take responsibility for him. The hospital Larry was incarcerated in was actually run by Doctor Faustus, who manipulated Ekler in a plot to destroy Reed Richards. Faustus sent Ekler with a device to drain Richards' psychic energy, intelligence, and self-confidence. Richards met with Ekler, but was unprepared for the brutal assault and was stunned, the ray leaving him with only a normal intelligence level. Spider-Man was able to help Richards track down Ekler, but Ekler escaped when he realised that his use of a machine designed by Faustus to enhance his strength was draining the people around him. After his departure, Spider-Man was able to help Richards develop a machine that would restore his intellect to what it had been before.[2]

Faustus used his ties within the Secret Empire to furnish Ekler with a new secret identity: Zeitgeist. As Zeitgeist, he took up membership in the German superhero group, Schutz Heiligruppe, and was able to keep his past secret from the other members. He even helped the group battle Faustus' allies, the Red Skull and Arnim Zola. They also fought and defeated the Skeleton Crew.[3]

Despite his new heroic persona, Ekler's mission was to assassinate superhumans, starting in South America. His victims included Captain Forsa, Defensor, La Bandera, the first Machete, El Condor, Ojo Macabra and Zona Rosa. Eventually, Zeitgeist's own team was called in to investigate the various murders. While fellow member of the Schutz Heiligruppe Blitzkrieg was investigating, Zeitgeist killed him using the foil he once used as Everyman.[4]

Zeitgeist attempted to convince Vormund, the leader of the Schutz Heiligruppe, that the Scourge of the Underworld was responsible for the murders. He tried to kill his original foe, Captain America, though Captain America easily defeated him. As Ekler tried to escape, he encountered Vormund. The two fought, and Vormund used his ability to redirect kinetic energy to impale Zeitgeist on his own sword.[5]

Powers and abilities

As the Everyman, Ekler wielded a foil which could fire blasts of energy, a shield, and the Absorbascann. As the Zeitgeist, he wielded a camera which could take pictures of people's deaths before they occurred, and a belt which could allow him to change appearances, and become invisible.

References

  1. ^ Captain America #267
  2. ^ Marvel Team-Up #132
  3. ^ Captain America #387, 388, 390, 393
  4. ^ Alpha Flight #78, Captain America #442
  5. ^ Captain America #442

External links


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Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Everyman (Marvel Comics)" Read more