Glory Grant

Glory Grant
Publication information
Publisher Marvel Comics
First appearance The Amazing Spider-Man #140
(January 1975)
Created by Gerry Conway
Ross Andru
In-story information
Full name Gloria Glory Grant
Team affiliations Daily Bugle
Supporting character of Spider-Man

Gloria Grant, more commonly known as Glory Grant, is a Marvel Comics supporting character of Spider-Man. She is introduced in The Amazing Spider-Man #140 (January 1975) as a neighbor of Peter Parker. Peter then helps her secure a position as J. Jonah Jameson's secretary at the Daily Bugle, replacing Betty Brant.

Fictional character biography

When first introduced, Glory Grant is pursuing a modeling career and meets Daily Bugle photographer Peter Parker who has just moved in to her Lower West Side apartment building. They then become fast friends.[1] When Glory is looking for work, Peter brought her to the Daily Bugle where the publisher J. Jonah Jameson has been going through secretaries since the departure of his long-time secretary Betty Brant . She works for Jameson and later Robbie Robertson who becomes editor-in-chief.[2]

Grant falls in love with a gang boss named Eduardo Lobo. He and his brother Carlos wage a gang war against the Kingpin, and he uses Glory to access the Daily Bugle's research files on the Kingpin. However, he falls in love with her, and Glory is conflicted over the romance. Peter suggests she follow her heart. When Eduardo ends up battling Spider -Man, Glory shoots and kills Eduardo. Spider-Man thanks her but she reveals that she was aiming at Spider-Man, having followed her heart as Peter suggested.[3]

Despite Glory harboring a deep resentment for Spider-Man he helps her and government agent Shotgun against the late voodoo witch Calypso, who spiritually possesses Grant long enough to engineer a scheme that brings Calypso fully back from the dead.[4]

When Jameson becomes Mayor, Grant becomes one of his aides, appearing with him at the Raft on the day of Alistair Smythe's execution.[5] However, she later quit his administration when she saw that Jameson would never end his personal vendetta against Spider-Man.[6]

Other versions

In other media

Television

References

  1. Amazing Spider-Man #163
  2. Spectacular Spider-Man #2
  3. Spectacular Spider-Man #146 & 149-154/Web of Spider-Man #47-48, 51 & 55, 1989
  4. Spider-Man Annual '97, 1997
  5. The Superior Spider-Man #11
  6. The Superior Spider-Man #29
  7. Spider-Man Noir: Eyes Without a Mask Issues #2, #4
  8. Spider-Gwen #2

External links

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