Jeffrey Mace | |
---|---|
Detail from cover of Marvel Premiere #30 (June 1976). Jeffrey Mace as the Patriot. Art by Jack Kirby & Frank Giacoia | |
Publication information | |
Publisher | Marvel Comics |
First appearance | Human Torch Comics #4 (Spring 1941) |
Created by | Ray Gill (writer) George Mandel (artist) |
In-story information | |
Alter ego | Jeffrey Solomon Mace[1] |
Team affiliations | Daily Bugle Liberty Legion All-Winners Squad |
Partnerships | Miss Patriot |
Notable aliases | Patriot, Captain America |
Abilities | Exceptional athlete Superb hand to hand combatant Licensed pilot As Captain America: Carries a titanium shield |
Jeffrey Solomon "Jeff" Mace, also known as the Patriot and Captain America, is a fictional character, a superhero appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. The character was created during the 1940s, a period fans and historians call the Golden Age of Comic Books. As the Patriot, he first appeared in Human Torch Comics #4 (Spring 1941; misnumbered #3 on cover), published by Marvel's 1940s precursor, Timely Comics.
In 1976, Marvel revealed via retroactive continuity that Mace had become the third Captain America some time after his World War II era adventures. He is also the uncle-by-marriage of Thunderbolt Ross.
The character has been adapted into the Marvel Cinematic Universe on the TV series Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. in the fourth season, played by Jason O'Mara.
Publication history[]
The superhero the Patriot debuted in The Human Torch #4 (cover-dated Spring 1941; mis-numbered #3 on cover),[2] with both a two-page text story by writer Ray Gill, with a spot illustration by artist Bill Everett, and a 10-page comics story by writer Gill and artist George Mandel. The character went on to appear in the first of two Human Torch issues both inadvertently numbered #5, and known to collectors as #5[a] (Summer 1941),[3] in a story by Gill and artist Sid Greene. Concurrently, the Patriot began as regular feature in the superhero anthology Marvel Mystery Comics, appearing in issues #21–44 (July 1941 – June 1943) and #49 -74 (Nov. 1943 – July 1946), making him one of Timely's most popular characters in the second tier beneath stars Captain America, the Human Torch, and the Sub-Mariner. The Patriot story "Death Stalks the Shipyard", from Marvel Mystery Comics #29, was reprinted during the Silver Age of Comic Books in Marvel Super-Heroes #16 (Sept. 1968).
In The Avengers #97 (March 1972), a simulacrum of the Patriot was temporarily created from the mind of Rick Jones, along with those of the Blazing Skull, the Fin, and the Golden Age Angel and Vision, to aid the superhero team the Avengers during the Kree-Skrull War.[4]
The Patriot appeared in a four-part flashback story running through The Invaders #5–6 (March & May 1976) and Marvel Premiere #29–30 (April & June 1976), set during World War II which retconned him as a member of a newly created superhero team, the Liberty Legion. That team later appeared alongside Fantastic Four member the Thing in a two-part time travel story, set during World War II, in Marvel Two-in-One #20 (Oct. 1976) and Marvel Two-in-One Annual (1976).
When Marvel Comics had revived the character Captain America in 1964, the story explained that he had been missing in action and in suspended animation since 1945. This discrepancy with his postwar comic-book appearances was later explained as the result of replacement heroes taking on the mantle. As the third Captain America, Jeffrey Mace would have been behind the mask in Captain America Comics #59–75 (Nov. 1946 – Feb. 1950) and other comics during that period. Mace succeeded the second Captain America, William Naslund (formerly the Spirit of '76), who was shown in What If? vol. 1, #4 (Aug. 1977) as having been killed in 1946.
Mace appeared briefly in a flashback in Captain America #215 (Nov. 1977), then as a guest-star in Captain America Annual #6 (1982) with his death depicted in #285 (Sept. 1983). In a flashback, the Patriot co-starred in a World War II adventure with Captain America in Captain America Annual #13 (1994) and in a post-war adventure with the All Winners Squad in All Winners Squad 70th Anniversary Special (2009).
A retelling of Jeffrey Mace's origin and time as Captain America is told in the 2010 mini-series Captain America: Patriot. This was collected with the All Winners Squad 70th Anniversary Special and What If? #4 in 2011. What If? #4 was also collected that same year in a Captain America Legacy volume collecting the debuts of the Captain America replacements.
Fictional character biography[]
Jeffrey Mace was born in Brooklyn, New York. He was a reporter at the Daily Bugle, who was inspired to become a superhero after seeing Captain America in action.[5] As the Patriot, Mace becomes one of several superheroes who fight Nazi saboteurs and supervillains during World War II, sometimes alongside his sidekick Mary Morgan, a.k.a. Miss Patriot. He helps found the superhero team known as the Liberty Legion, billed as "America's home front heroes" who fight saboteurs, fifth columnists and other wartime threats within the United States.[volume & issue needed]
After the war, the Patriot continues to fight crime on a regular basis, eventually helping the All-Winners Squad prevent the assassination of a young Senator John Fitzgerald Kennedy in 1946. The skirmish costs the life of the second Captain America, William Naslund formerly the Spirit of '76. Mace is recruited to be the third Captain America,[6] retiring in 1949. He marries Betsy Ross who, as the superhero Golden Girl, had briefly been the post-war sidekick of his Captain America, and eventually succumbs to cancer at an old age.[7]
Powers and abilities[]
Jeffrey Mace had no superpowers but he was an exceptional athlete, a superb hand-to-hand combatant and a licensed pilot. As Captain America, he carried a shield, similar to that used by his predecessors, that was made of enhanced titanium.
Reception[]
In American Comic Book Chronicles: 1940-1944, Kurt Mitchell and Roy Thomas call the Patriot "a bargain-basement Captain America with an uncanny knack for stumbling into Axis conspiracies. Though Arthur "Art" Gates and Sidney "Sid" Greene did their best to replicate Jack Kirby's frenetic fight scenes, the feature had none of the charisma of its inspiration."[8]
In other media[]
Television[]
- Jeffrey Mace appears in the Marvel Cinematic Universe television series Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D., portrayed by Jason O'Mara.[9] Debuting in the episode "Meet the New Boss", he is introduced as the new Director of S.H.I.E.L.D.. This incarnation is an ex-journalist who survived Helmut Zemo's attack on the United Nations during the events of Captain America: Civil War.[10] Although believed to be an Inhuman with super-strength and enhanced durability, Mace is actually empowered by a serum derived from Calvin Zabo's formula minus the physically deforming and emotionally unstable side effects as part of "Project Patriot".[11] However, the formula is still flawed and creates a risk of death each time he uses it as it puts significant strain on Mace's physiology. While living in the alternate reality known as 'the Framework', Mace's personal history is rewritten to 'correct' his most potent regret; as a result, his personal history is altered. In this reality, Mace is an Inhuman who underwent a successful terrigenesis, granting him the actual powers of super-strength and enhanced durability that he counterfeited in the real world. Mace joined and then later took command of the remnant S.H.I.E.L.D. forces after the Hydra purge and successfully led the resistance, including recruiting two high-profile Hydra agents as allies (Grant Ward and Daisy Johnson) and planting a trusted agent as a spy (Antoine 'Trip' Triplett). In the episode, "No Regrets", Mace sacrifices himself inside the virtual world of the Framework to save Phil Coulson's team and Inhumans from a HYDRA attack, which also caused the death of his real world body. His sacrifice persuaded Agent May to rejoin S.H.I.E.L.D and set in motion a chain of events allowing her to free Daisy from Hydra captivity and pull Leo Fitz from the framework, saving all three.
- Jason O'Mara reprises his role of Jeffrey Mace in a six-part digital series titled Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D.: Slingshot.[12] This digital series acts as a prologue to Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. season 4.[13]
References[]
- ↑ Middle name per Captain America: Patriot #4 (Feb. 2011)
- ↑ The Human Torch #4 at the Grand Comics Database, with cover blowup here
- ↑ The Human Torch #5[a] at the Grand Comics Database.
- ↑ The Avengers #97 (March 1972) at the Grand Comics Database.
- ↑ Sanderson, Peter (2007). The Marvel Comics Guide to New York City. New York City: Pocket Books. pp. 36–39. ISBN 1-4165-3141-6.
- ↑ Captain America: Patriot #1 (Nov. 2010) at the Grand Comics Database.
- ↑ Captain America #285
- ↑ Mitchell, Kurt; Thomas, Roy (2019). American Comic Book Chronicles: 1940-1944. TwoMorrows Publishing. p. 67. ISBN 978-1605490892.
- ↑ Abrams, Natalie (October 3, 2016). "Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. officially reveals new director's identity". Entertainment Weekly. Archived from the original on October 3, 2016. Retrieved October 3, 2016.
{{cite web}}
: - ↑ Misiano, Vincent (director); Drew Z. Greenberg (writer) (September 27, 2016). "Meet the New Boss". Marvel's Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D.. episode 2. season 4. ABC.
- ↑ Tancharoen, Kevin (director); James C. Oliver and Sharla Oliver (writer) (January 17, 2017). "The Patriot". Marvel's Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D.. episode 10. season 4. ABC.
- ↑ CS (December 6, 2016). "Agents of SHIELD: LMD and a Slingshot Digital Series are Coming". ComingSoon.net. Retrieved December 7, 2016.
{{cite web}}
: - ↑ Han, Angie (December 14, 2016). "Agents of SHIELD Slingshot: Watch the Digital Spinoff". /Film. Retrieved June 17, 2019.
{{cite web}}
:
External links[]
- Jeffrey Mace at Marvel Wiki
- Independent Heroes from the U.S.A.: Patriot
- The Unofficial Handbook of Marvel Comics Creators
Captain America | ||
---|---|---|
Creators | Joe Simon • Jack Kirby | |
Characters | Alter egos | Steve Rogers • Isaiah Bradley • William Nasland • Jeffrey Mace • William Burnside • John Walker • James Buchanan Barnes • Sam Wilson |
Supporting characters | Avengers • Rikki Barnes • Battlestar • Black Widow • Bucky • Peggy Carter • Sharon Carter • Demolition Man (D-Man) • Diamondback • Falcon • Jack Flag • Free Spirit • Golden Girl • Howling Commandos • Hulk • Invaders • Iron Man • Nick Fury • Redwing • Rick Jones • Nomad • Jack Monroe • S.H.I.E.L.D. • Maria Hill • Spider-Man • Thor • Wolverine | |
Antagonists | Core antagonists | Baron Strucker • Baron Zemo (Heinrich Zemo • Helmut Zemo) • Batroc the Leaper • Crossbones • Doctor Faustus • Madame Hydra • MODOK • Red Skull • Serpent Society • Sin • Taskmaster • Arnim Zola |
Group enemies | A.I.M. • Circus of Crime • Death-Throws • Femizons • Femme Fatales • Hydra • Secret Empire • Serpent Squad • Sleeper • Watchdogs | |
Snake-themed adversaries | Anaconda • Asp • Black Mamba • Black Racer • Boomslang • Bushmaster • Coachwhip • Cobra • Constrictor • Copperhead • Cottonmouth • Death Adder • Diamondback • Eel • Fer-de-Lance • Princess Python • Puff Adder • Rattler • Rock Python • Sidewinder • Slither • Viper | |
Other supervillains | Armadillo • Baron Blood • Blackwing • Cutthroat • Doughboy • Dredmund the Druid • Everyman • Flag-Smasher • Hate-Monger • Jack O'Lantern • Kingpin • Aleksander Lukin • Machinesmith • Mister Hyde • MODAM • Mother Night • Nefarius • Nightshade • Nuke • Porcupine • Protocide • Scarecrow • Slug • Superia • Tumbler • Vermin • Whirlwind | |
Anti-hero rivals | Grand Director • Punisher • Scourge of the Underworld • Winter Soldier | |
Media | Publications | Captain America • Captain America (vol. 5) • Captain America: Reborn • Captain America and the Falcon • Fallen Son: The Death of Captain America • Truth: Red, White & Black • Tales of Suspense • Adventures of Captain America • Captain America and Nick Fury: Blood Truce • Captain America and Nick Fury: The Otherworld War |
Storylines | "Captain America: The Captain" • "Civil War" • "The Death of Captain America" | |
In other media | Film | Captain America (1944) • Captain America (1990) • Captain America: The First Avenger (soundtrack) • Captain America: The Winter Soldier (soundtrack) • Captain America: Civil War (soundtrack) |
Television | The Marvel Super Heroes • Captain America (1979) • Captain America II: Death Too Soon • "The Capture of Captain America" | |
Video games | Captain America in: The Doom Tube of Dr. Megalomann • The Amazing Spider-Man and Captain America in Dr. Doom's Revenge! • Captain America and The Avengers • Captain America: Super Soldier | |
Miscellanea | Alternative versions • Ultimate Captain America • Captain America's shield • Avengers • S.H.I.E.L.D. • Iron Patriot |
Golden Age of Comic Books | ||
---|---|---|
All-American Comics |
The Atom (Al Pratt) • Black Canary • Doctor Mid-Nite • Doiby Dickles • The Flash (Jay Garrick) • The Gay Ghost • Green Lantern (Alan Scott) • Hawkgirl • Hawkman • Hop Harrigan • Johnny Thunder and Thunderbolt • Justice Society of America • The King • Mister Terrific (Terry Sloane) • Red Tornado (Ma Hunkel) • Sargon the Sorcerer • Ultra-Man • The Whip • Wildcat • Wonder Woman | |
Archie Comics | The Black Hood • Captain Flag • The Comet • The Firefly • The Fox • The Shield • The Web • The Wizard | |
Centaur Comics | Airman • Amazing-Man • The Arrow • The Clock • The Eye • The Fantom of the Fair • The Masked Marvel • Minimidget | |
National Allied | Air Wave • Aquaman • Batman • Crimson Avenger • Dan the Dyna-Mite • Doctor Fate • Doctor Occult • Genius Jones • Green Arrow • Guardian • Hourman • Johnny Quick (Johnny Chambers) • Liberty Belle • Manhunter • Merry, the Girl of 1000 Gimmicks • Mister America • Robin (Dick Grayson) • Robotman • Sandman • Sandy the Golden Boy • Shining Knight • The Spectre • Speedy (Roy Harper) • Star-Spangled Kid • Starman (Ted Knight) • Stripesy • Superboy (Kal-El) • Superman • Tarantula • TNT • Vigilante • Wing • Zatara • Seven Soldiers of Victory | |
Fawcett Comics | Bulletgirl • Bulletman • Captain Marvel • Captain Marvel Jr. • Captain Midnight • The Golden Arrow • Ibis the Invincible • Lieutenant Marvels • Mary Marvel • Master Man • Minute-Man • Mr. Scarlet • Phantom Eagle • Pinky the Whiz Kid • Spy Smasher | |
Fox Comics | Black Fury • Blue Beetle • The Bouncer • Bronze Man • Dynamo • The Flame • Green Mask • Samson • Spider Queen • Stardust the Super Wizard • U.S. Jones • V-Man • Wonder Man | |
Nedor Comics | American Crusader • American Eagle • Black Terror • Captain Future • Cavalier • Doc Strange • Fighting Yank • The Ghost • Grim Reaper • Judy of the Jungle • Lance Lewis, Space Detective • Liberator • The Magnet • Miss Masque • Princess Pantha • Pyroman • The Scarab • The Woman in Red | |
Quality Comics | #711 • The Black Condor • Blackhawk • Blue Tracer • Bozo the Iron Man • Captain Triumph • The Clock • Doll Girl • Doll Man • Firebrand • The Human Bomb • The Invisible Hood • The Jester • Kid Eternity • Lady Luck • Madame Fatal • Magno • The Manhunter • Merlin the Magician • Midnight • Miss America • Mouthpiece • Neon the Unknown • Phantom Lady • Plastic Man • Quicksilver • The Ray • Red Bee • Red Torpedo • The Spider • Spider Widow • Uncle Sam • Wildfire • Wonder Boy | |
Timely Comics | The Angel • Black Marvel • The Black Widow • The Blazing Skull • The Blonde Phantom • The Blue Diamond • Breeze Barton • Bucky (Bucky Barnes) • Captain America • Citizen V • The Destroyer • Dynamic Man • Father Time • Ferret • Fin • Golden Girl • The Human Torch • Jack Frost • Laughing Mask • Marvel Boy • Miss America • Mercury • Namor • Namora • The Patriot • Red Raven • Sun Girl • Toro • Thin Man • Thunderer • Venus • The Vision • The Whizzer | |
Misc. | Anglo-American Publishing (Commander Steel) • Bell Features (Johnny Canuck • Nelvana of the Northern Lights •The Brain) • Cardal Publishing (Streamline) • Columbia Comics (The Face • Skyman) • Crestwood Publications ([[Atomic-Man] • Black Owl • Green Lama) • David McKay Publications (Vulcan) • Dell Comics (Owl) • Dynamic Publications (Dynamic Man • Yankee Girl) • EC Comics (Moon Girl) • Elliot Publishing Company (Kismet, Man of Fate) • Eastern Color Printing (Hydroman) • Frew Publications (The Phantom • Mandrake the Magician) • Harvey Comics (Black Cat • Captain Freedom • Shock Gibson • Spirit of '76) • Holyoke Publishing (Cat-Man and Kitten • Miss Victory) • Lev Gleason Publications (Captain Battle • Crimebuster • Daredevil • Silver Streak) • Maple Leaf Publishing (Iron Man • Brok Windsor) • Novelty Press (Target Comics (Target and the Targeteers) • Blue Bolt • Dick Cole, The Wonder Boy • Twister) • Rural Home Publications (The Green Turtle) |