Entertainment

Hero worship: Stan Lee honoured at Hollywood memorial

On a night that had more cheers than tears, hundreds of Marvel fans gathered in Hollywood to pay tribute to Stan Lee alongside his colleagues, co-creators and friends.

Lee 'spent his life dreaming of writing the great American novel, and he didn't realize he was doing it'

Kevin Smith arrives at Excelsior! A Celebration of the Amazing, Fantastic, Incredible & Uncanny Life of Stan Lee at the TCL Chinese Theatre in Los Angeles on Wednesday. (Richard Shotwell/Invision/Associated Press)

An Army bugler played a mournful Taps at a Hollywood memorial for Stan Lee, and military bagpipers sent a solemn Amazing Grace into the air.

Standing respectfully around them was another group in its own impeccable uniforms: Lee fans dressed as Black Panther, Wolverine and other members of the X-Men and Avengers.

It might have been a ridiculous scene at the TCL Chinese Theatre Wednesday night had it not been a perfect encapsulation of the life of Lee, Second World War veteran who wanted to become a serious writer and instead grudgingly took a job in comic books, becoming the mastermind behind Marvel Comics and co-creator of many of the best known and most lucrative characters of the last century.

"This was a guy who spent his life dreaming of writing the great American novel, and he didn't realize he was doing it, over and over and over again," said the night's host, filmmaker Kevin Smith, a friend and super-fan of Lee.

"The world didn't need another In Cold Blood. It needed Spider-Man."

His soul lives on in every one of us, in every single comic and movie he's put his life into.- Stan Lee fan Isaac Suarez, 14

On a night that had more cheers than tears, hundreds of Marvel fans stood and paid tribute along with Lee's colleagues, co-creators and friends outside the Hollywood Boulevard theatre where he had put his hand and footprints in cement in a similar ceremony 18 months earlier. Lee died in December at age 95.

"Sometimes when I'm feeling sad or I'm upset I would think of Stan Lee and this wonderful universe he's created," said Lee fan Isaac Suarez, who was celebrating his 14th birthday.

"His soul lives on in every one of us, in every single comic and movie he's put his life into."

Stan Lee, seen in Hollywood in 2016, died in December at age 95. (Frazer Harrison/Getty Images)

Tom DeSanto, who as producer of X-Men was among the first to find big-screen success with Lee's characters, said he was astonished by Lee's global reach.

"I've seen kids dressed up as Spider-Man in Beijing, Boston and Barcelona," DeSanto said.

Across the street was a billboard announcing that a movie whose characters started with Lee, Black Panther, had been nominated for six Academy Awards.

"That's a triumph," Smith said. "It's a cherry on the top of an amazing, productive life."

'A compulsive creator'

Smith called Lee "one of the best humans to ever walk the earth," setting the tone for a night when no one would hold back in their superhero-worship. Speakers and panelists would compare Lee to the pope, Jesus, and the shining light of the sun.

Mark Hamill, a friend of Lee who often worked alongside him doing voices on Marvel animation projects, was among the few to admit Lee had flaws.

"He wasn't always nice," Hammill said in a panel discussion. "He'd give you shots. He could be acerbic."

Kevin Smith, from left, led a panel discussion that included Mark Hamill, Laurence Fishburne, Clark Gregg, Felicia Day and Tom Desanto. (Gabriel Olsen/Getty Images)

Chris Miller and Phil Lord, producers of Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse, which is also nominated for an Oscar, talked about meeting Lee when he was very old yet still bursting with energy and ideas.

"There were thousands of them," Lord said. "He was a compulsive creator."

Actor Laurence Fishburne, who appeared in Marvel's Ant-Man and the Wasp last year, described the thrill of spending 12 cents to buy a Lee comic book when he was a child in Brooklyn, New York.

"It opened my eyes to the possibility that you could be more than your surroundings say you can be," Fishburne said.

Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti, seen left at podium, is seen speaking to the audience at the Lee tribute. (Gabriel Olsen/Getty Images)

The night also featured frequent digs at comedian Bill Maher, who on his talk show last week took shots at Lee worshippers who still read comic books as adults. A big-screen graphic at one point thanked him for bringing comics fans together.

Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti gave Lee a posthumous key to the city, with Lee' catchphrase "Excelsior!" engraved on it.

The night included much praise for the artists Lee worked with who often go uncredited, including Steve Ditko and Jack Kirby, and just as much praise for Lee's wife and partner in everything Joan, who died in 2017.

JC Lee made a rare public appearance at the event to thank fans and friends of her late father. (Richard Shotwell/Invision/Associated Press)

Lee's only child and heir, daughter J.C. Lee, made a rare public appearance, walking quickly along the red carpet and shouting thanks to fans and reporters.

The night lacked the star power of any of the actors who play members of the Avengers, but made up for it in the number of prominent executives, actors and artists Lee had worked with.

On the screen inside the theatre where Lee's Marvel movie cameos played between speakers, video tributes came from Dwayne Johnson, William Shatner, and Luke Cage star Mike Colter.

Nearly everyone who spoke did their best impression of Lee's gravelly voice and northeastern accent. Hamill may have been the best at it when he repeated what Lee said when asked how he stayed so youthful in old age.

"Well Mark," Hamill-as-Lee said, "I like to get up in the morning and worry very, very hard all day long."