Tombstone (comics)

Tombstone (Lonnie Thompson Lincoln) is a fictional supervillain appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. A hulking albino man with filed teeth, Tombstone is a notorious crime boss in New York City. He is primarily an enemy of Spider-Man and Daredevil, and the father of Janice Lincoln.

Tombstone
Cover art of Daredevil #24 (October 2017).
Art by David Lopez.
Publication information
PublisherMarvel Comics
First appearanceWeb of Spider-Man #36 (March 1988)
Created byGerry Conway
Alex Saviuk
In-story information
Alter egoLonnie Thompson Lincoln
Place of originHarlem, New York
Team affiliationsThe Hand
Sinister Twelve
Hardcore's Untouchables[1]
Tombstone's Gang
Notable aliasesLonnie Tombstone
AbilitiesExcellent street fighter
Highly skilled marksman
Superhuman strength, speed, stamina, and reflexes
High-level resistance to injury
Razor-sharp teeth

The character has appeared in various media including two animated series (Spider-Man: The Animated Series and The Spectacular Spider-Man), and the animated film Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse with his voice provided by Marvin "Krondon" Jones III.

Publication history

The character was created by Gerry Conway and Alex Saviuk and first appeared in Web of Spider-Man #36 (March 1988).[2] The character was immediately established to have a history with longtime Spider-Man supporting character Joseph "Robbie" Robertson, and was brought on as a regular in The Spectacular Spider-Man, which was then being written by Conway. Conway explained why he created Tombstone: "My general motivation was a need to work with the characters who weren't central to The Amazing Spider-Man title, since that was the main book. That meant I needed to focus my attention not on Aunt May or Mary Jane, or even J. Jonah Jameson, but on second- or even third-tier supporting characters. Joe Robertson was one of those. The second motive had to do with my desire to bring back the ruthless gangster Hammerhead had been, but not Hammerhead himself. It just came to me as a character type. One thing led to another, and as his backstory expanded, readers responded well to it."[3]

Fictional character biography

Born as Lonnie Thompson Lincoln in Harlem, in New York City, he started out as troubled youth who was bullied by his peers because he was Harlem's only African-American albino. Taller and stronger than the other children, he became a school bully, extorting protection money from his classmates. The school newspaper, edited by Joseph "Robbie" Robertson, was going to run a story on Lonnie's activities, but pulled it when Lonnie used scare tactics to intimidate Robertson. Lonnie allowed his personal demons to direct the course of his life and he turned to a life of serious crime. As a hitman and enforcer, he used his albinism to his advantage. He filed his teeth and nails to points, giving him the appearance of a vampire. This frequently caught his opponents off-guard, making it easier to kill them. He also lifted weights and engaged in many street fights to hone his fighting skills. One night, Robertson, now working for a local paper, went to meet a source only to see the source being killed by Lincoln. He threatened to kill Robertson if the story was brought out. Robertson kept the secret for over twenty years whilst Lincoln became a powerful mob enforcer, killing many others.[4]

Now known as "Tombstone" on the street, he returned to New York City as the Kingpin's hitman.[5][6] Tombstone threw the Hobgoblin out of the Arranger's window.[7] Tombstone captured a mutant known as the Persuader for the Arranger.[8] Lonnie returned to Robertson's neighborhood. Eventually Robertson went to the police which resulted in Tombstone's incarceration, but not before Tombstone confronted and seriously injured Robertson, nearly permanently damaging Robertson's spine.[9] Tombstone then encountered Spider-Man in Atlanta, Georgia; Tombstone was defeated and sent to the Philadelphia State Penitentiary.[10]

Robertson was also incarcerated for suppression of evidence. On learning this, Tombstone obtained a transfer to Lewsiburg State Penitentiary where Robertson was incarcerated. In prison, Tombstone killed Robertson's befriended bodyguard Bruiser. Tombstone eventually broke out of prison but was confronted by Spider-Man; he eluded capture after a harrowing battle in which he nearly beat Spider-Man to death before Robertson stopped him. Tombstone and Robertson were knocked into the Susquehana River. Tombstone brought a badly-injured Robertson to an Amish family so that Robertson could recover enough to give him a decent fight. When Tombstone finally made his move to kill Robertson in retaliation for turning on him during the fight with Spider-Man, Robertson stabbed Tombstone with a pitchfork and then escaped. Tombstone joined a criminal organization, headed by Hammerhead and the Chameleon, and then saved Robertson from Hobgoblin so that he could kill Robertson himself.[11] Robertson was then given a full pardon for helping recapture Tombstone.

Tombstone eventually gained a superhuman physical constitution. Tombstone encountered Robertson at the Osborn Chemical Plant. Robertson shot Tombstone and trapped him in an airtight test chamber which contained an experimental gas. The gas was absorbed into Tombstone's bloodstream and had a mutagenic effect on his body, enhancing his strength and heightening his other physical abilities. Tombstone then called off his vendetta against Robertson in gratitude.[12] Tombstone was later defeated by Daredevil and the Punisher while competing against Taskmaster in a real game of Assassin sponsored by the Hand.[13]

Tombstone was hired by the Green Goblin to be part of the Spider-Man killing group, the Sinister Twelve, but was defeated.[14]

Tombstone was hired by Lily Lucca to pretend he kidnapped Lily and to fight Daredevil, but Tombstone was beaten by Daredevil.[15]

Tombstone joined the Hood's army of criminals.[16] He later returned to pester Deadpool in the miniseries: Deadpool - Suicide Kings.

Tombstone was with the Hood when he presents the Scorpion's costume to whichever low-level crook impresses him until the party is crashed by the Scorpion stealing the costume.[17]

During the "Origin of the Species" storyline, Doctor Octopus invites Tombstone to join a supervillain team in exchange for some items.[18] Later, Tombstone confronts Carlie Cooper.[19] However, the police arrive and Tombstone escapes, but later doubles back to follow Cooper after discovering that Cooper knows who Menace really is.[20] He corners Cooper, Mary Jane Watson and Menace, but Menace manages to knock him out by activating the Goblin glider and sending it crashing into him.[21] The police soon arrive and take Tombstone away.[22]

It is later revealed that Tombstone is the father of the new Beetle (Janice Lincoln). He was contacted by her daughter to help the Sinister Six out against Owl's men.[23]

Tombstone has a battle with Spider-Man.[24] During a police shootout Tombstone critically injured a friend of cop Yuri Watanabe, the fourth Wraith. Tombstone was set free by the judge as Tombstone saved his wife from cancer.[25] However, Mister Negative supplied Watanabe with evidence of Tombstone having a hold on the judge, putting them both in prison. The judge was killed by a prisoner who worked for Tombstone. When Black Cat, an Inner Demon disguised as the Crime Master, and the Enforcers attempted a jail break, the Inner Demon shot Tombstone in the chest.

After surviving the attempt on his life, Tombstone is later approached by Mr. Fish who warns him about Black Cat's gang targeting him and his criminal empire in the upcoming gang war in Harlem.[26] Tombstone and Mr. Fish are later visited by Alex Wilder who talks about his father Geoffrey Wilder's family business as the two of them knew him back when he was still alive. He also tells Tombstone and Mr. Fish that he is starting a new incarnation of the Pride which he will start in Harlem. Afterwards, Alex Wilder beats up Tombstone and uses a magic spell to send Mr. Fish to Hell.[27] After recovering from the attack, Tombstone rescues Mr. Fish from Hell with the help of Black Talon.[28]

During the "Infinity Wars" storyline, Tombstone is among the villains that accompany Turk Barrett to his meeting with the Infinity Watch at Central Park.[29]

During the "Hunted" storyline, Tombstone was seen as a patron at the Pop-Up with No Name.[30]

Powers and abilities

Originally, Lonnie Lincoln had no superhuman powers, but has gained them through artificial means as a result of a mutagenic reaction to an experimental preservative gas absorbed into his bloodstream. He possesses physical strength that has been increased beyond his original limits to superhuman levels. Tombstone's body is highly resistant to physical injury and is capable of withstanding extreme temperatures, great impact forces, high caliber bullets and toxic gases without sustaining injury. His reflexes, speed, and stamina are likewise heightened beyond a range attainable for normal human beings.

Aside from these advantages, he is an excellent hand-to-hand combatant with years of street fighting experience and, even before gaining powers, was easily capable of killing someone with his bare hands. He now combines his street-fighting skills with his superhuman strength to create a unique fighting style. He is also highly proficient with conventional firearms and well connected in the underworld of organized crime.

As an albino, Tombstone is sensitive to sunlight due to a natural deficiency of melanin. He is usually depicted as only being capable of speaking in whispers. However, after the exposure to gas at OsCorp, he has been depicted speaking in tones approaching normal vocal tones.

Tombstone has filed all his teeth into razor-sharp points.

Other versions

MC2

An older version of Tombstone appears in the Spectacular Spider-Girl digital comic series, set in the MC2 universe. He had been paid by Silvermane to carry out a hit on Spider-Girl. Despite his advanced years, Tombstone still proved to be a tough opponent to defeat.[31]

He met Spider-Girl and did battle with her. But when he saw another Spider-Girl saving people from a burning building on TV, Tombstone grew furious and rapidly finished her off.

When Tombstone met the Blue Spider-Girl, he revealed to her that he killed the other Spider-Girl, which caused her to attack him in rage. Tombstone was surprised that she has symbiote powers and was defeated. At first thinking he will be on the streets again soon since he believes heroes cannot kill, the Blue Spider-Girl suffocates and kills him.[32]

Cage

Tombstone (known as "Lonnie the Tombstone") appears in the Marvel MAX Cage mini-series. This version of the character has a less monstrous, more realistic appearance with pink skin, blond hair and normal teeth. He becomes embroiled in a brutal gang war with Sonny "The Hammer" Caputo and Clifford "Clifto" Townsend.[33]

Marvel Noir

Tombstone appears in Luke Cage Noir, as an albino Harlem crime lord.[34]

Marvel Adventures

In the Marvel Adventures reality, Tombstone is a hired muscle of the Torino crime family. After his fellow mobsters were arrested, Tombstone secretly stole Captain George Stacy's cellphone and lured Gwen Stacy to the subway where he sent the pictures he took of them to George. Spider-Man arrived telling him to get away from Gwen. Tombstone stated that he didn't abduct or harm Gwen and backed away without a fight. When Captain Stacy arrived to arrest Tombstone and his fellow mobsters, Spider-Man and Captain America arrived. It took the combination tactics of Spider-Man, Captain America, and Captain Stacy to defeat Tombstone.[35]

Secret Wars

During the 2015 "Secret Wars" storyline, a version of Tombstone lives in the Battleworld domain of Arachnia. He and Carnage were stalked by Spider-Man Noir and was defeated by the Warriors of the Great Web.[36]

In other media

Television

  • Tombstone appeared in Spider-Man: The Animated Series, voiced by Dorian Harewood.[37] This version was disfigured in the same laboratory accident responsible for his superpowers, blaming Robbie Robertson for the accident. Tombstone's revenge attempts on his former childhood friend puts him in regular conflict with Spider-Man while under the employ of various crime figures such as Silvermane and Richard Fisk.
  • Tombstone appears in The Spectacular Spider-Man animated series, voiced initially by Keith David (in the pilot episode) and subsequently by Kevin Michael Richardson.[37] This version is a calculating and intelligent crime lord known as the "Big Man" of crime, with Hammerhead as a henchman and the public image of a benevolent wealthy philanthropist. He hires the Enforcers to take out Spider-Man, first in the pilot through Hammerhead, and later personally as the New Enforcers thanks to the Tinkerer. Tombstone also enlists Norman Osborn to engineer super-villains (such as Sandman and Rhino) to distract attention from his men committing crimes, and at one point even allows Venom to eliminate Spider-Man. A gang war later breaks out between Tombstone, Doctor Octopus and Silvermane over control of New York's underworld, culminating in a summit where his own enforcer pits the three crime lords against each other. After a lengthy battle with Spider-Man, Tombstone is finally defeated and exposed as the Big Man, leading to his arrest. Although he is later let out of prison on bail, Tombstone discovers that his Big Man position has been taken over by the Green Goblin, who had manipulated Hammerhead to get Tombstone arrested so that his criminal empire could be taken over.

Film

Tombstone appears in Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse, voiced by Marvin "Krondon" Jones III.[38] This version of the character is under the Kingpin's employ and acts as a personal bodyguard; he usually wields two pistols, but is shown to also be a skilled hand-to-hand combatant. Tombstone is present when Kingpin unmasks and kills Spider-Man, before ordering Tombstone to dispose of the body. Later, Tombstone accompanies Kingpin and his other henchmen – Doctor Octopus, Scorpion, and Prowler – to attack the spider-people at May Parker's house, in order to retrieve the USB drive that can be used to stop the Alchemax Super Collider, which Kingpin plans to use to access different dimensions and reunite with an alternate version of his family, after they died in a car crash. In the final battle at the Collider, Tombstone is defeated by Spider-Man Noir, and is later seen being arrested by the police alongside Kingpin and those involved.

Video games

  • Tombstone appears as a boss in Marvel Heroes, voiced by Nolan North.[37]
  • Tombstone appears in Marvel's Spider-Man, voiced by Corey Jones.[39] While a notorious crime boss with enhanced strength and somewhat whiter skin like his comics counterpart, this version of the character is also the leader of a biker gang, is bald, and gained his powers after being exposed to a chemical in his youth, which hardened his skin, making him nearly impervious to any form of physical harm. As one of the oldest adversaries of Spider-Man, Tombstone fought him on numerous occasions over the course of the hero's past eight years career; in his character biography, Spider-Man states that Tombstone is one of the toughest foes he ever faced, due to his extreme pain resistance and him constantly breaking out of prison with his men's help, as well as that, even in the rare circumstances he loses, Tombstone just sees every loss as "another great challenge on the horizon". Tombstone makes a brief appearance in the game's main storyline, where Mary Jane Watson infiltrates his garage during her investigation on the Inner Demons gang led by Martin Li, and discovers that Tombstone's crew were hired to build an armored vehicle for them (which is later used by Li to steal the Devil's Breath virus); Mary Jane then escapes from the garage, avoiding detection, though not before witnessing Tombstone shooting himself in the head to intimidate one of his henchmen. Later, in a side mission, Spider-Man uses information provided by Mary Jane to find Tombstone's garage himself, where he engages the villain and his goons in a fight. Halfway through the fight, Spider-Man is able to deploy a drug meant to fix Tombstone's condition, which makes him vulnerable enough to bleed and feel pain. Spider-Man ultimately triumphs over Tombstone and, as he leaves him for the police, the crime lord realizes that being "mortal" makes his life of crime more exciting, while stating that he can't wait for a rematch with Spider-Man.

References

  1. Cage #3. Marvel Comics.
  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. 383. ISBN 978-1-4654-7890-0.
  3. Williams, Scott E. (October 2010). "Gerry Conway: Everything but the Gwen Stacy Sink". Back Issue!. TwoMorrows Publishing (44): 17.
  4. Spectacular Spider-Man #137. Marvel Comics.
  5. Web of Spider-Man #36. Marvel Comics.
  6. Cowsill, Alan; Manning, Matthew K. (2012). Spider-Man Chronicle: Celebrating 50 Years of Web-Slinging. DK Publishing. p. 169. ISBN 978-0756692360.
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  8. Spectacular Spider-Man #138. Marvel Comics.
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  11. Spectacular Spider-Man #150, 153, 155, 157, 161. Marvel Comics.
  12. Web of Spider-Man #66-68. Marvel Comics.
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  15. Daredevil vol. 2 #90-91. Marvel Comics.
  16. Punisher (2009) #4. Marvel Comics.
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  26. Power Man and Iron Fist Vol. 3 #10. Marvel Comics.
  27. Power Man and Iron Fist Vol. 3 #11. Marvel Comics.
  28. David F. Walker (w), Sanford Greene (p), Sanford Greene (i), Lee Loughridge (col), VC's Clayton Cowles (let), Jake Thomas (ed). Power Man and Iron Fist v3, #14 (8 March 2017), United States: Marvel Comics
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  33. Luke Cage Noir # 1. Marvel Comics.
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  36. "Tombstone Voice – Spider-Man franchise". Behind The Voice Actors.
  37. Zachary, Brandon (December 1, 2018). "Black Lightning Star Is a Marvel Crime Boss in Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse". Comic Book Resources. Archived from the original on December 3, 2018. Retrieved December 3, 2018.
  38. Radulovic, Petrana (September 7, 2018). "A guide to the Spider-Man PS4 villains". Polygon.
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