


Some members of the public were less enthused.Ĭaptain America as he appears in the movies, portrayed by Chris Evans. He particularly liked the front cover, through which the two Jewish creators lived out their fantasies in a far-from-subtle way. Martin Goodman, the publisher of Timely Comics (which would later become Marvel), was also Jewish and loved the story of a scrawny Brooklyn kid named Steve Rogers who was transformed into the ultimate soldier by government-created serum. "So we decided to create the perfect hero who would be foil."

"We both read the newspapers - we knew what was going on over in Europe," Simon said in an interview with NJ.com just prior to his death in 2011. ( Supplied: Marvel Comics)Īmerica was yet to enter World War II, and prominent Americans such as hero pilot Charles Lindbergh and industrial innovator Henry Ford were pushing for that to remain the case.īut comic book writers Joe Simon and Jack Kirby - both Jewish - were less isolationist in their views. The first issue of Captain America famously featured Cap punching Hitler in the face.
