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The man behind the most popular female comic book hero of all time, Wonder Woman, had a secret past: Creator William Moulton Marston had a wife — and a mistress. He fathered children with both ...
William Moulton Marston, who originated the most popular female comic character of all time, was something of a character in his own right—and his reasons for creating arguably the first ...
A look inside the complicated life of the man who created Wonder Woman This weekend, Wonder Woman is back in the spotlight thanks to Professor Marston and the Wonder Women, a new film that traces ...
If Wertham was the Lex Luthor of comics, hell-bent on their total annihilation, then William Moulton Marston was their Man of Steel, dedicated to championing their cause. Marston was a Harvard ...
In this first legend of an all-"William Moulton Marston's time on Wonder Woman" installment of Comic Book Legends Revealed, we learn about whether Marston even really knew how to WRITE a comic ...
Angela Robinson's film tells the love story of William Moulton Marston and the two women who inspired him, using scholarship that found the three were in a polyamorous relationship. By Angela ...
William Moulton Marston's granddaughter disputes the love triangle portrayed the film about the feminist professor and his two muses. By Christie Marston Christie Marston is the granddaughter of ...
Psychology professor William Moulton Marston (played by Luke Evans in the film) did create the comic book character Wonder Woman, and he did live in a polyamorous relationship with his wife ...
The Incredible Shrinking Formula': William Moulton Marston, and a Wonder Woman comic from the 1970s While treating shell-shock victims in upstate New York after the Armistice, Marston met Marjorie ...
Comic book stores are pulling out the stops for next weekend, offering any number of events and special issues to coincide with the premier of the new Wonder Woman feature film. The things we do ...
Dr. William Moulton Marston is typically credited as the creator of Wonder Woman. But like last year's Hidden Figures, Professor Marston gives the lie to the assumption that creative brilliance is ...