By Betsy Towner | AARP Bulletin

The Flash, Batman, Superman and Aquaman, sitting on a park bench. A geek art depicting seasoned superheroes at retirement. The piece is called We Were Heroes.

The Flash, Batman, Superman and Aquaman, sitting on a park bench. A geek art depicting seasoned superheroes at retirement. The piece is called We Were Heroes.

Happy 50th, Superheroes!

1963 was a banner year for American crusaders. “The Amazing Spider-Man” comic book first hit newsstands in the spring, and the X-Men and the Avengers debuted that autumn. Here, we remember classic heroes who qualify for their very own AARP memberships.

Illustration by Donald Soffritti

Illustration by Donald Soffritti

Spider-Man

Debut: Created a year earlier, Marvel’s Amazing Spider-Man earned his own comic book in 1963. Spider-Man, aka bookworm teen Peter Parker, got his unique ability when a radioactive arachnid bit him. First featured in “Amazing Fantasy” No. 15, Spidey was a huge hit with readers, and he’s been a Marvel A-lister ever since.

Boomers

The Avengers

Debut: “The Avengers” No. 1, 1963

Hulk, Ant-Man, Wasp, Thor and Iron Man formed the original band of diverse superheroes, who convene at the cry “Avengers assemble!” to stamp out threats not even the mightiest warrior can conquer alone.

The X-Men

Debut: “The X-Men” No. 1, 1963

Marvel’s band of mutant crime fighters has evolved and grown from six in 1963 (Marvel Girl, Angel, Professor Xavier, Beast, Cyclops, Iceman) to legions today. Last year, openly gay X-Man Northstar married his longtime beau—not only the first same-sex marriage in comics, but also the first mutant-human one.

Veterans

Other heroes are well beyond 50 (Superman, 75!) and prime for encore careers.

Illustration by Donald SoffrittiSuperman (1938): Return to mild-mannered reporting, using your powers to save newspapers everywhere.

 

 

 

Illustration by Donald SoffrittiBatman (1939): Trade mask and tripped-out bat gear for a low-key life designing man caves.

 

 

Illustration by Donald SoffrittiWonder Woman (1941): Enter airline industry and sell invisible jets. Use slogan “We love to fly and it doesn’t show.”

 

 

Illustration by Donald SoffrittiCaptain America (1941): Head up an Avengers All-Star USO Tour. Fire up troops with your inexhaustible patriotism.

 

What encore careers should out heroic boomers pursue? Read what we think at aarp.org/comicheroes.