thatcrazycajun: Image of Matt with a rainbow facemask on (Default)
[personal profile] thatcrazycajun
He has inspired storytelling, critical analysis and even scholarly research in a dozen different media and a hundred languages worldwide — comic books, songs and symphonies, novels, short stories, movies, television series, animated cartoons, radio, even a Broadway musical. He's been portrayed on screens both large and small by more actors, more times than any other comic-book character, bar none. He has inspired writers, artists and other creative types to produce works of soaring quality...and attorneys, doctors, firefighters and many others to enter into professions where saving lives and helping others is part of the job description. He is one with all the other great champions of myth in human history: Gilgamesh, Samson and Hercules (the two who inspired his creators, Jerome Siegel and Joseph Shuster), John Henry, Paul Bunyan, Doc Savage, John Carter, Luke Skywalker, Indiana Jones and beyond. He is the embodiment of an archetype, as they were, and he is not the first nor the last—but he may well be the greatest of them all. He is the most admired fictional character this side of Santa Claus...and many feel he is just as real (in a "yes, Virginia" sense) as old Saint Nick.

He can leap tall buildings in a single bound. He can run faster than a speeding bullet...or stand in a hail of them and smile as they bounce off him. He can change the course of mighty rivers and bend steel in his bare hands. Yet his greatest "superpower" may well be none of these, but something far less visible yet no less potent: the love, loyalty and faith he inspires in the bystanders he saves, other DC Universe super-heroes and his readers by the billions; the wish he fulfills that we all have to be something nobler, stronger, better than we are; and the belief he embodies in what Abraham Lincoln called "the better angels of our nature." He truly believes, as one of his most illustrious chroniclers, Elliot S! Maggin, put it, that "there is a right and a wrong in the Universe, and the distinction between the two is not that difficult to make." He makes us believe a man can fly, that there is such a thing as hope even when all seems irretrievably lost...and that maybe, just maybe, humankind might be worth all the time and effort he expends (and the colossal risks he takes) in saving it from harm on a daily basis.

As you have no doubt deduced by now, I'm talking about the Metropolis Marvel, the Action Ace, the Man of Tomorrow, the first and most beloved of the unique breed of character today known as "super-heroes." Yes, The Last Son of Krypton, the Man of Steel—the one and only Kal-El, son of Jor-El, better known as Clark Joseph Kent— and even better still as Superman. He is my absolute favorite comic-book character of all time, and I don't give a good goddamn who knows it.

Yet no one, it seems—not even at DC Comics Inc., the company that has published the chronicles of his exploits since June of 1938; not Wikipedia, its character-focused cousin Supermanica, or any other source I can find—can answer one key question about him: On what day and date was he born? We know his middle name (see above); his Metropolis home addresses, both before and after his epochal marriage to longtime sweetheart/colleague/competitor Lois Lane (344 Clinton St., Apt. 3-B before, 1938 Sullivan Place after—wonder what Metropolis' ZIP code is?); his favorite food (beef bourgignon with ketchup); and a whole host of other minutiae about him...but not when to break out the birthday cake and candles for him.

How do you even figure Superman's birthday? Do you count it from the day Action Comics #1 appeared on newsstands, all those decades ago (assuming you can even find the exact day of that month)? Do you peg that as the then-present day, count back two or three decades from there to the actual day of his birth on Krypton, then convert it to the Earth Gregorian calendar? (And how do you account for the necessarily faster-than-light Krypton-to-Earth transit time?) Do you even count it from that day at all, or is it better to start from the day his spacecraft crashed near the Smallville, KS farm of Jonathan and Martha Kent? What time of year was it — spring, summer, fall, winter? (Most depictions of the event fail to show snow on the ground or the Kents wearing winter coats when they find the boy, so this may be a partial clue.) And do we give him one birthday party for both (all three?) of his identities, or a separate one for each?

Thoughts? Anyone? (C'mon, [personal profile] filkertom, I know you must have one or two at least.)

Date: 2007-03-16 03:58 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] redaxe.livejournal.com
How do you even figure Superman's birthday?

That's a good question. I wonder if it's ever been mentioned in canon -- which would be the ideal method for determining it. (Second best: pub date, Action #1)

Beats me whether or if they've ever mentioned it. (And if they have, whether they kept it consistent.)

Date: 2007-03-16 04:03 pm (UTC)
ext_18496: Me at work circa 2007 (Default)
From: [identity profile] thatcrazycajun.livejournal.com
Okay, now we're getting somewhere...I finally found a page with what appears to be a canonical reference:
http://www.supermanhomepage.com/comics/comics.php?topic=comics-superman
This profile page gives it as February 29. (The poor bastich only gets a birthday party once every four years? Geeze.)

Date: 2007-03-16 04:08 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] redaxe.livejournal.com
Or else he gets to choose between Feb 28 and March 1. Then again, he might choose not to celebrate because, yanno, cleaning the cake off the walls (and the ceiling, and the neighbors' walls and ceilings) is a RPITA :-)

Date: 2007-03-16 05:03 pm (UTC)
ext_18496: Me at work circa 2007 (Default)
From: [identity profile] thatcrazycajun.livejournal.com
You mean from blowing out the candles? I hadn't thought of that... Maybe the Kents had to cover the family room in plastic when they served him his cake? :-)

Date: 2007-03-16 04:24 pm (UTC)
wolfette: me with camera (Default)
From: [personal profile] wolfette
Hmmm, as he was born on a different planet, it's unlikely that Ma and Pa Kent could have worked out what his birthday was. Maybe they picked a day at random, maybe they celebrated the anniversary of the day they found him - or maybe, not knowing when his birthday was, they didn't celebrate at all (though they must have put something down on his school and college forms)

Date: 2007-03-16 05:02 pm (UTC)
ext_18496: Me at work circa 2007 (Default)
From: [identity profile] thatcrazycajun.livejournal.com
Good points all, though I have trouble believing the Kents wouldn't want their boy to have some sort of birthday celebration each year. Tradition and compassion are in their blood. I was thinking they might have picked a day for him, then he would have tried to calculate it on his own later on when he got older and was educated enough to do so.

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