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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 ...
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 ...
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 ...
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 ...
It is a gap that a new biopic, "Professor Marston & The Wonder Women," hopes to fill. In the simplest terms, the man who helped will Wonder Woman into existence, William Moulton Marston (pen ...
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 movie follows William Marston, a Harvard psychologist and inventor. — -- When Luke Evans read the script for “Professor Marston and the Wonder Women,” he was in disbelief about the ...
But in the original 1940s comics, written by William Marston and drawn with elegant stiffness by Harry G. Peter, kangas were one of the most visually distinctive — not to mention gloriously ...
Luke Evans stars as Dr. William Moulton Marston, a psychology professor exalting feminism decades before the women's liberation movement. His theory that all human behavior is caused by dominance ...
William “Bill” Marston, from Wenona, IL, passed on to his heavenly Father, Jan. 6, 2008, at St. Mary’s Hospital, in Streator. Visitation will be from 5 to 7 p.m ...
The lasso in her hands wraps around the male shadow’s torso. Text reads: Featuring the amazing adventures of William Marston and the sensational history behind the most famous female comic book ...
William Marston falsely claimed to have invented the lie detector test. The truth about his life was a whole lot wilder than that—and led to the invention of the most famous female comic book ...
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