Another chapter in the ongoing series of MC2 Family Trees
today, this time covering the family of the most iconic red head of the Spidey
mythos, Mary
Jane Watson. This is the Watson Family Tree.
For the purposes of these family trees, I accept that MC2 characters
share their published history (up to a point) with their 616/Main
Marvel Universe counterparts. I make exceptions for any retcons
implemented after the point the MC2 diverges from the 616 and
in cases where it's explicitly or implicitly different (Aunt May really
died) or when a writer later introduces a previously unheard of relative
(the Lang
family and likely the Pym
family) who is never mentioned, seen or heard of in the MC2.
With the last exception, I would add them to the family tree in later updates
should they be mentioned in MC2 material at any point. To be
clear, today we will only looking at Mary Jane’s extended family, saving
the Parker’s and the Reilly’s for future Family Tree
entries and, eventually, a combined and complete unified Family Tree
post.
The first member of the Watson Family to appear in
the pages of Marvel Comics was Anna Watson in Amazing
Spider-Man #15, which was also the first mention of Anna’s niece Mary
Jane Watson. In Amazing Spider-Man #18, Anna is called ‘Mrs.
Watkins’ multiple times and not just by the sickly Aunt May,
but by Peter
himself. I guess Anna is just too polite to correct him.
In the same issue, May also refers to ‘Mrs.
Watkins’ husband, though he’s never seen and is never mentioned again
so I think we can chalk this one up to May being unwell and confused.
Especially considering May and Anna move in
together for a long period of time, both at Anna’s House and in an apartment building!
But speaking of husbands, we learn many years later in the
pages of Spectacular Spider-Man #257 that as nineteen-year-old Anna
Watson moved to California, hoping to become an actress. Anna
met, fell in love with and married a radio writer named Jacob Hilliard.
Before long, the pair fell out of love and Anna had an affair with
another man, Johnny Dipalma, until her guilt led to her coming clean to
her husband and ending things. Ashamed, Anna returned to Forest Hills
alone and never told anyone what had happened. The Official Handbook of the
Marvel Universe A to Z Vol. 11 clarifies Anna is divorced.
Mary Jane Watson is first seen, albeit face
unseen in Amazing Spider-Man #25 after being mentioned in Amazing
Spider-Man #15. She makes her first full-faced appearance in Amazing
Spider-Man #42 with her classic line ‘Face it, Tiger, you just hit the
jackpot!’
As such a significant character in comics, I’ll only try to
hit some of the most relevant moments from Mary Jane’s long and storied
published history. Mary Jane has her first date with Peter Parker
in Amazing Spider-Man #43. The two soon begin seeing other people and
the two remain as friends until after the death of Gwen Stacy. When Peter
lashes out at her in his grief, Mary Jane shows us for the first time
her more vulnerable and caring true self, choosing to stay and comfort Peter
rather than run away (Amazing Spider-Man #122).
After some time, Peter and Mary Jane dated, sharing
their first kiss in Amazing Spider-Man #143 and the two eventually share
even more in Amazing Spider-Man #149-150. Peter proposes to Mary
Jane in Amazing Spider-Man #182 and Mary Jane returns the ring and
turns him down in Amazing Spider-Man #183, saying she’s not ready to be
tied down to one man. While she plays this off casually, it’s clear in Peter Parker, the Spectacular
Spider-Man #21 that Mary Jane is more conflicted than she let on.
Mary Jane continues to grow and develop as a
character through the years until she reveals in Amazing Spider-Man #257
that she’s known Peter Parker is Spider-Man for years. Soon
after, Mary Jane reveals her own secrets to Peter, opening up
about her family past in Amazing Spider-Man #259…
But first we have to go back and review some references to Mary
Jane’s family in earlier issues. A grief stricken Peter lashed out at Mary Jane
after the death of Gwen Stacy, saying she ‘wouldn’t be sorry if [her]
own mother died’ in Amazing Spider-Man #122. Ouch. After
turning down Peter’s marriage proposal, Mary Jane reflects on the
reasons for her decisions, thinking ‘I don’t think I can go through the tragedy
of marrying, only to break up—like Betty
and Ned…or like mom and dad so many years ago..’ (Amazing Spider-Man #192). In Amazing
Spider-Man #246, Mary Jane has a daydream where she is very
successful actress, but her dream turns sour when her sister appears holding
two sons, reminding her she too dreamt of being an actress and asks MJ if
there’s a part in the story for her. Finally in Amazing Spider-Man #247,
Aunt May mentions how Mary Jane and Peter have a lot in
common, having both lost so much…
With all that covered, let’s look at Mary Jane’s
secret origin in Amazing Spider-Man #259. Mary Jane tells Peter
about her parents, Philip and Madeline who met in college and
fell in love. Philip majored in Modern American Literature and Madeline
was a drama student. After they graduated and married, Philip convinced Madeline
to forget her ambition of pursuing acting in New York City and instead
they moved to small college town where he’d been offered a teaching position.
The couple had their first child, Gayle eighteen months into their
marriage and four years later Mary Jane was born. Years later, Philip
had become a full Professor who was popular with his students and respected by
the college administration. While Madeline devoted herself to her
children, Philip was unsatisfied with his life, wanting to become a
writer and prove himself to the world. Philip would become angry and
blame his poor attempts at writing on his wife and children.
Philip began moving the family from place to place,
changing jobs frequently. Madeline endured the constant moving but
neither her nor the children liked it, with the disruptions making it harder
for the girls to make friends. In an attempt to be noticed, Mary Jane
became a class clown while Gayle studied dance to deal with her
loneliness. Their home life continued to deteriorate until Philip
physically assaulted Gayle. Distraught at what had happened, Mary
Jane ran away but was soon reflexively hiding her pain behind her cheery
persona.
Madeline had had enough, taken the girls and leaving Philip
while he was away from the house. Following a messy divorce which saw Philip
sue Madeline for desertion, the girls and their mother were forced to
turn to family for help. Mary Jane attempted to make the most of things
as they shuffled from one relative to another, but really only enjoyed visiting
her father’s sister, Anna Watson.
Mary Jane tells Peter that her father moved to
Oregon without saying goodbye and never answered her letters. Maybe
we’ll with him further in a separate post. Meanwhile, Madeline found
them a permanent residence with her cousin Frank Brown. Frank’s
wife had died a year prior and he wanted Madeline to keep the house and
look after his three children. With a stable place to live, Gayle had
begun dating a boy named Timmy Byrnes, captain of the school football
team and a top student. While Mary Jane enjoyed performing in her drama
department, Gayle announced she and Timmy would be getting
married after they graduated. Despite Madeline’s objections, the couple
were soon married and had left town, with Timmy planning to pursue
pre-law in college with Gayle taking a job to support them. But things
didn’t go according to plan…
Gayle announced they were having their first child
happily, while Timmy was less excited at the prospect of parenthood at
the age of nineteen. By his second year of undergraduate study his grades were
slipping and he began to blame it on Gayle and the baby. With their
marriage failing, Gayle turned to her now unwell mother for help,
eventually disclosing she was pregnant with a second child, which led to Timmy
packing his bags and leaving his family.
Mary Jane secretly empathized with Timmy,
feeling a desire to run away herself. Madeline declared that they
wouldn’t desert Gayle, but in the coming months her own health
deteriorated, and they learned she was dying. Mary Jane quit her
extracurricular activities and worked after-school jobs to help pay the bills.
Despite her determination to live long enough to see her second grandchild, Madeline
didn’t make it. Afterwards, Gayle tried to convince her sister they
could work things out together, but a distraught Mary Jane declared she
wasn’t going to waste her life trying to make someone else happy and she wanted
more from life. Mary Jane ran away from her sister and had been running
ever since (Amazing Spider-Man #259).
With no secrets between them, Peter and Mary
Jane’s relationship grows stronger than ever before and soon Peter
pops the question a second time in Amazing Spider-Man #290. After some soul searching and reflection
during a visit to Pittsburgh where she meet her nephews Tommy and
Kevin, helps her sister Gayle get freed from jail after being
manipulated by their father and battles the Spider-Slayer
of Alistaire Smythe (Amazing
Spider-Man #291), Mary Jane agrees to marry Peter in Amazing
Spider-Man #292.
Soon afterwards, the couple would face the reality of their
decision, both arriving at the realisation they truly want to marry one another
in the end. The wedding is conducted by Mary Jane’s Uncle Spencer aka Judge
Spencer Watson (who was first mentioned in Amazing Spider-Man #291)
in the pages of Amazing Spider-Man Annual #21 and the couple honeymoon
in Paris in Spectacular Spider-Man Annual #7.
While the couple collectively face many, many trials and
tests as newlyweds, including Peter being buried
alive and Mary Jane facing off with cigarettes, stalkers and symbiotes
perhaps their greatest challenge came in Spectacular Spider-Man #220 and
Amazing Spider-Man #398 when Mary Jane tells Peter she is
pregnant.
This was at the commencement of the now legendary (and
infamous) Clone Saga and indeed, Mary Jane is
pregnant throughout the entirety of the Saga. These same
events play out in the MC2's past also, as seen
in Spider-Girl #48-#49. Mary Jane apparently goes
into a particularly painful and unusual labor after her food is spiked by Alison
Mongrain (Sensational Spider-Man #11).
Mary Jane is taken to hospital where she learns
from a Doctor Folsome that her regular doctor is not
available. In the birthing suite, Mary Jane asks if her baby is
breathing and is told by Folsome ‘everything is going exactly as
planned’ as an unseen Norman
Osborn watches on. Following an agonising delivery, Mary
Jane again asks Folsome ‘why isn’t she crying’ before
breaking down in tears. The doctor offers his condolences, while Mongrain (disguised
as a nurse) wheels an unidentified ‘package’ to her car. Alison meets
up with her employer at the docks where she is told she is going to Europe with
a sizable bonus as she boards a yacht. Mongrain’s employer
tells her she can call him by his real name: Norman Osborn (Amazing
Spider-Man #418, Spider-Girl #48). Unbeknownst to both of
them, Kaine will
track down Mongrain, recover baby May and return
her to her parents…
Backtracking a bit now to before all that, so that I can
talk briefly about a few other family members who have gone as yet unmentioned.
Kristine ‘Kristy’ Watson is Mary Jane’s 13 year old cousin who
first appeared in Spectacular Spider-Man #145 and is deserving of her
own post some day. Kristy’s parents are the rather unlikeable Lou
Watson who is uncaring and abusive (much like his brother Philip)
and Sybil Watson who acts oblivious to the events occurring around her (Web
of Spider-Man #58).
Mary Jane does an amusing impression of an ‘Aunt
Martha’ in Amazing Spider-Man #259. This may or may not be the same Aunt
Martha mentioned by Kristy in Web of Spider-Man #69. Given
she’s mentioned twice by two characters who are cousins, I think the common
link is the most likely answer: this Aunt Martha is presumably another
sibling to Anna, Spencer, Philip and Lou Watson.
Finally, apparently related on Madeline’s side of the
family, we have Mary Jane’s late Scottish aunt Mary Macleod
who I’ve already dedicated an entire post to so go and check it out here.
While she doesn’t physically appear, having died prior to the events of the
graphic novel Spider-Man: Spirits of the Earth, Mrs Macleod does
provide some fantastic flavour and history to the Watson Family Tree.
Some questions do arise when taking all these facts into
account which don’t have definitive answers so I’m going to do some deductive reasoning
to account for the known facts, combined with some educated guesses so that we
aren’t removing anyone from the family tree: For Frank Brown to be Madeline’s
cousin, one each of Frank and Madeline’s parents must be
siblings. It’s most likely that Frank’s surname came from his father, so
either his father is Madeline’s uncle which means her maiden name was likewise
Brown which rules out the Macleod family surname OR Frank’s
mother is Madeline’s aunt which means the name Brown was acquired
through marriage.
Mary MacLeod cannot be Madeline’s sibling if Brown
was their family name, as Mary doesn’t appear to have married. So,
either MacLeod is Madeline and Mary’s maiden name and Frank’s
mother married into the Brown family or we must find another workable
solution. I propose that it’s more feasible an older woman like Mary Macleod
is actually Madeline’s aunt (and Mary Jane’s great-aunt)
meaning we can make this work without omitting anyone! This does mean that Frank’s
mother would have to be a Macleod and his father a Brown but leaves
the possibility of either Madeline’s father or mother being a Macleod…so
we still don’t know her maiden name for certain, but we can fit everyone into
the Watson Family Tree.
I have omitted a few characters from this MC2 Family Tree
for reasons I’ll elaborate on separately. Here they are for the sake of
completeness:
- There are various unidentified relatives,
presumably mostly or entirely from Madeline’s side of the family,
glimpsed during flashbacks in Amazing Spider-Man #259
- Regarding the above mentioned relatives, either
both Madeline and Philip’s family have an ‘Aunt Martha’ or
at some point Madeline took the girls to stay with a relative from Philip’s
family as was the case with Anna Watson. For now, I’ve placed Martha
as a sibling of Philip for now, but I’m certainly open to differing
opinions on this! She could just as easily be the sister of Sybil or
there may be two Martha’s. Don’t come at me DC, fans.
This was certainly an eye-opening and time-consuming project!
A huge shout out to Ron Frenz, Big Al over at the Hellz
yeah, Spider-Man: The Web Wielding Avenger blog and arias-98105
for always being fountains of knowledge and fantastic resources on all things Spidey.
Until they start pruning these family trees, I remain
frogoat