(Go: >> BACK << -|- >> HOME <<)

Jump to content

Maria Stark: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
Minor detail edits.
Tag: Reverted
Minor detail edits.
Tag: Reverted
Line 39: Line 39:
* Maria Stark appeared in the ''[[Iron Man (TV series)|Iron Man]]'' episode "The Origin of Iron Man", voiced by [[Dimitra Arliss]].
* Maria Stark appeared in the ''[[Iron Man (TV series)|Iron Man]]'' episode "The Origin of Iron Man", voiced by [[Dimitra Arliss]].
* Maria Stark is alluded in the ''[[Iron Man: Armored Adventures]]'' episode "Iron Monger Lives". Her image is used by [[Madame Masque]]'s mask.
* Maria Stark is alluded in the ''[[Iron Man: Armored Adventures]]'' episode "Iron Monger Lives". Her image is used by [[Madame Masque]]'s mask.
* Maria Stark is mentioned in the ''[[Avengers Assemble (TV series)|Avengers Assemble]]'' episode "New Year's Revolution".


===Film===
===Film===

Revision as of 19:28, 20 November 2022

Maria Stark
Publication information
PublisherMarvel Comics
First appearanceIron Man #104 (November 1977)
Created byBill Mantlo (writer)
George Tuska (artist)
In-story information
Alter egoMaria Collins Carbonell
SpeciesHuman
Place of originUnited States

Maria Collins Stark (nee Carbonell) is a fictional character appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. She is Howard Stark's wife and Tony Stark's mother.

Fictional character biography

Maria Stark was born Maria Collins Carbonell into a wealthy family in Southampton, New York. In her adulthood, she became a socialite and philanthropist. She dated Obadiah Stane. While staying in Monaco during a flight scale, Maria escaped from her bodyguards at a casino, where she deliberately lost large sums of money at baccarat and was escorted from the premises. Howard Stark (who owned the casino) noticed her being forcefully escorted by her bodyguards and followed her back to their hotel room. Maria was charmed by Howard's sudden appearance, and together they overpowered the guards and drove off.

Maria married Howard sometime later, and together they adopted their son Anthony Edward "Tony" Stark. Maria was unsuccessful in preventing Tony from seeing Howard's alcoholism, something Tony would later face. Howard secretly programmed the Mistress AI that controlled the Arsenal robots with Maria's brain patterns.[1]

On the Ides of March, Maria and Howard were killed in a car accident arranged by the Roxxon Oil Company.[2][3] Afterwards, Tony ran his father's company, started a charity in his mother's name (which donated funds to finance various charities and renovation projects as well as the Avengers).

Duplicate of Maria Stark

Iron Man confronted Motherboard and Arsenal on the escape when Arno Stark (Tony's previously unknown brother) went into the escape, discovering that Tony's opponents have the digital engrams of their parents. When the escape shut down, these digital engrams were salvaged by Arno.[4] Arno became acquainted with the digital engrams of Howard and Maria and was able to give the two a holographic form. With Jocasta's help, bio-restructuring pods Arno created gave physical bodies to the digital engrams.[5]

During the "Iron Man 2020" story line, Arno has breakfast with the duplicates of Howard and Maria following a nightmare about the Extinction Entity.[6] After knocking out Mark One (the artificial simulation of Tony Stark) and the two are at a living quarters, Tony learned what Arno had done to create duplicates of their parents. Tony mentioned how Motherboard killed F.R.I.D.A.Y. where Maria stated that she did it out of love for her son.[7] At Port Authority, Iron Man catches up to the duplicates of Howard and Maria who are instructed to not leave the safety of Brain Tower. Their condition gets worse because they left Brain Tower and Arno had to use his DNA to fill out the missing pieces when creating them. They suddenly stop moving as Arno plans to fix them and Tony. Arno works on reviving his parents by recreating the Arsenal and Mistress bodies from the escape.[8] Arno heads to the Stark Space Station with Arsenal and Mistress who now possess the memories of Howard and Maria. The two tell Arno that they are proud. When Tony uses the Thirteenth Floor to reach the Stark Space Station and confront Arno, Arsenal and Motherboard fight his allies until the arrival of the Extinction Entity.[9] As everyone engages the Extinction Entity, Tony, Arno, Rescue, Machine Man, Jocasta, Motherboard, and Arsenal push the Extinction Entity close to Earth's orbit as the Avengers, Force Works, and the A.I. Army attack its tentacles. It then turns out that the Extinction Entity was just a simulation and was the result of the disease that Arno thought cured of, revealing that the holographic armor made from the escape is now part of Arno's life support and allows Motherboard and Arsenal to download themselves to shape Arno's virtual world.[10]

Other versions

Ultimate Marvel

The Ultimate Marvel version of the character is renamed Maria Cerrera, the second wife of Howard Stark. Maria was a brilliant scientist who suffered a genetic accident while she was pregnant with her and Howard's child. After Maria died during childbirth, Howard uses a newly invented biological armor to save the life of their son named after Antonio Cerrera (Maria's brother) who died at a young age. Years later, Howard's first wife Loni tells Tony twice that she wishes she could have been Tony's mother under different circumstances, but Tony still prefers his own mother.[11] While what has been depicted is retconned as an in-universe fictional TV show about Iron Man's life, the actual Ultimate version of her character is briefly mentioned by her other son Gregory Stark when he jokingly says how he "came out of [Maria] before [Tony]".[12]

In other media

Television

Film

References

  1. ^ Avengers Annual #9 (1979). Marvel Comics.
  2. ^ "Iron Man (Anthony Stark)". marvel.com. Retrieved October 13, 2013.
  3. ^ Iron Man - The Iron Age #2 (1998). Marvel Comics.
  4. ^ Tony Stark: Iron Man #10-11. Marvel Comics.
  5. ^ Tony Stark: Iron Man #15-18. Marvel Comics.
  6. ^ Iron Man 2020 Vol. 2 #1. Marvel Comics.
  7. ^ Iron Man 2020 Vol. 2 #3. Marvel Comics.
  8. ^ Iron Man 2020 Vol. 2 #4. Marvel Comics.
  9. ^ Iron Man 2020 Vol. 2 #5. Marvel Comics.
  10. ^ Iron Man 2020 Vol. 2 #6. Marvel Comics.
  11. ^ Ultimate Iron Man #0-5. Marvel Comics.
  12. ^ Ultimate Comics: Avengers 3 #3. Marvel Comics.
  13. ^ Breznican, Anthony (May 8, 2016). "Iron Man's mom: Let's talk about her for Mother's Day". Entertainment Weekly. Archived from the original on May 12, 2016. Retrieved May 9, 2016.