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Encyclopedia > Tombstone (comics)
Tombstone


Cover to Spectacular Spider-Man #139. Art by Sal Buscema. Image File history File links Download high resolution version (493x762, 513 KB) Summary Cover to Spectacular Spider-Man #139. ... Cover for Peter Parker, The Spectacular Spider-Man #132 (1987). ... Cover to Avengers Annual #17. ...

Publisher Marvel Comics
First appearance Web of Spider-Man #36
Created by Gerry Conway
Alex Saviuk
Character information
Real name Lonnie Thompson Lincoln
Status active
Previous affiliations The Kingpin, Arranger, Chameleon, Hammerhead, The Hand, Bengal, Bullet, Big Ben, Sinister Twelve
Notable relatives unrevealed
Notable powers enhanced strength and endurance

Tombstone is the nickname of a fictional character in Marvel Comics comic books. He is an enemy of Spider-Man and first appeared in Web of Spider-Man #36. Marvel Comics is an American comic book line published by Marvel Entertainment, Inc. ... In comic books, first appearance refers to the date or issue of a characters first appearance. ... Cover to Web of Spider-Man #118. ... Gerard F. Gerry Conway (September 10, 1952 - ) is an American writer of comic books and television shows. ... The Kingpin (Wilson Fisk) is a supervillain in Marvel Comics universe who is an enemy of Spider-Man, Daredevil, and the Punisher. ... The Chameleon is a fictional supervillain in Marvel Comics universe, in which he is an enemy of Spider-Man. ... Hammerhead is a supervillain in the Spider-Man comics published by Marvel Comics. ... The Hand is a group of fictional supervillains in the Marvel Comics universe. ... The Sinister Twelve was a fictional group of supervillains from the Marvel comics universe, some of the greatest foes of Spider-Man. ... Marvel Comics is an American comic book line published by Marvel Entertainment, Inc. ... A comic book is a magazine or book containing the art form of comics. ... Spider-Man swinging around his hometown, New York City. ... Cover to Web of Spider-Man #118. ...


Character biography

Tombstone, real name Lonnie Thompson Lincoln, is a superhuman hit man and mob enforcer. He is frequently hired by the Kingpin and has close ties to organized crime and considerable influence within the prison system. The Kingpin (Wilson Fisk) is a supervillain in Marvel Comics universe who is an enemy of Spider-Man, Daredevil, and the Punisher. ...


Lonnie started out as troubled youth who was bullied by his peers because he was Harlem's only African American albino. He became a school bully, taking protection money. The school newspaper was edited by Joseph "Robbie" Robertson, who was going to run a story on Lonnie's activities but pulled it when Lonnie intimidated him. Unfortunately, Lonnie allowed his personal demons to direct the course of his life and he turned to a life of serious crime. Harlem is a neighborhood of Manhattan in New York City, long known as a major African American cultural and business center. ... An African American (also Afro-American, Black American, or simply black), is a member of an ethnic group in the United States whose ancestors, usually in predominant part, were indigenous to Africa. ... Albinism is a genetic condition resulting in a lack of pigmentation in the eyes, skin and hair. ... Joseph Robbie Robertson is a supporting character in Marvel Comicss Spider-Man series. ...


As a hitman and enforcer, Lonnie 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. As an adult he stood over six and a half feet tall.


As an adult Robertson would regret ever having known Lonnie (who was now known as Tombstone on the street). One night Robertson, now working for a local paper, went to meet a source only to see him being killed by Tombstone. The latter threatened to kill Robertson if he ever confessed the story. Robertson kept the secret for over twenty years whilst Tombstone became a powerful mob enforcer, killing many others. The situation exacerbated when Lonnie returned to Robertson's neighborhood. Eventually Robertson went to the police which resulted in Tombstone's incarceration, but not before Tombstone seriously injured Robertson nearly permanently damaging his spine.


Robertson however was also incarcerated by a judge on the Kingpin's payroll for suppression of evidence. In prison, Tombstone made Robbie's life a living hell and eventually broke out of and forced Robertson to come with him. Tombstone was confronted by Spider-Man but eluded capture after a harrowing battle in which Lonnie and Robertson (fighting on the side of Spider-Man) were knocked into a river. Both men survived and a temporary truce was agreed. Robertson was then given a full pardon for helping recapture Tombstone.


Lonnie eventually gained a superhuman physical constitution. Under a strange set of circumstances, Tombstone was locked in an airtight chamber with experimental gas at the Osborn Chemical Plant. The gas was absorbed into Lonnie's bloodstream and had a mutagenic effect on his body. This resulted in the manifestation of enhanced strength other heightened physical abilities.


Recently, Tombstone was hired by the Green Goblin to be part of his Spider-Man killing group the Sinister Twelve, but was defeated. The Green Goblin is a Marvel Comics supervillain, considered one of Spider-Man’s greatest foes. ... The Sinister Twelve was a fictional group of supervillains from the Marvel comics universe, some of the greatest foes of Spider-Man. ...


Powers and abilities

Originally Tombstone had no superhuman powers, but has gained them through artificial means. Most notably he has enhanced physical strength, entailing that he can lift in the range between 900 pounds to two tons. His durability has been heightened incredibly; in their first encounter after his power-up, Spider-Man broke his hand punching him. His reflexes, speed, and stamina are likewise heightened beyond a range attainable for normal human beings.


Aside from these advantages, Lonnie is an excellent hand-to-hand combatant with years of street fighting experience. He is also highly proficient with conventional firearms and well connected in the underworld of organized crime.


Lonnie has managed to hide the fact that he is nearly functionally illiterate, which was probably a large factor in his decision to become a criminal. As an albino, he is sensitive to sunlight due to a natural deficiency of melanin. Literacy is the ability to use text to communicate across space and time. ... Broadly, melanin is any of the polyacetylene, polyaniline, and polypyrrole blacks or their mixed copolymers. ...


He is only capable of speaking in whispers.


Other media

In Spider-Man: The Animated Series, Tombstone (voiced by Dorian Harewood) was not originally an albino, he was turned into one by the same laboratory accident that gave him his superpowers. He was hired by Silvermane to steal the Tablet of Time. During an altercation with Spider-Man in Dr. Conner's lab poison gas was released choking Spider-Man. Tombstone was unaffected because he claimed he did not need to breathe anymore, nor was he "alive". In fact, it is heavily implied that he is a walking corpse, an undead. Dorian Harewood (born August 6, 1950 in Dayton, Ohio) is an African-American actor. ... Silvermane is a fictional Marvel Comics character. ... Undead is the collective name for all types of supernatural entities that are deceased yet behave as if alive. ...


Later on in the series, Tombstone appeared again and became the leader of a gang that had Robbie Robertson's son, Randy, as another one of the members to kill the story of Alicia Silvermaine being a gansgter in the Daily Bugle. Tombstone promised to set Randy free to Robbie if he kills the Silvermaine story. Robbie refuses and Spider-Man captures Tombstone, having him sent to jail while Robbie and Randy confess to the police in which they are set free from.


Again in the series, it was revealed that the prison Tombstone went to was Rooker's Island with Richard Fisk (who was incarcerated two episodes before Tombstone). Fisk and Tombstone agreed to team up and bring Robbie Robertson in the same prison as them. They eventually kidnap Robbie, slipped a gun in his hand while he was unconscious and made him look like the leader of a gang in frozen crime. Apparently, Robbie's prison assignment would be New York State Penetentary instead of Rooker's Island. But luckily, with Richard's father's, the Kingpin's, help, he reassigned Robbie's assignment to Rooker's. There, Robbie was sent there for the next fifteen years. And he also met Richard and Tombstone there again and revealed their entire plot to him. Apparently, Spider-Man found out about this whole plan and rescued Robbie just when Richard and Tombstone would escape with their cellmate, also putting them back to jail.


  Results from FactBites:
 
Kangaroo (comics) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (1587 words)
Still in the Cage, the Kangaroo then encountered Tombstone, who was suffering from heart aliments at the time.
When the Kangaroo attempted to exert his influence upon Tombstone, the two ended up brawling; the fight was cut short by Tombstone suffering a heart attack.
Later, Tombstone allied himself with several minor villains and attacked Kangaroo, nearly injuring him with a pair of scissors, until guards broke up the altercation and sent Tombstone to solitary confinement.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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