NEW YORK, NY.- George Pérez, a celebrated comic book artist and writer who gave new life to Wonder Woman in the 1980s and helped create series for DC Comics and Marvel Comics that brought together some of the biggest heroes of the comics world, including The New Teen Titans, died Friday at his home in Sanford, Florida. He was 67.
The cause was complications of pancreatic cancer, said Constance Katsafanas-Eza, a family friend.
Pérez, whose career spanned more than four decades, was known for his richly detailed drawings and his enthusiasm for stories filled with superheroes the more capes and cowls, the better.
He drew the Avengers, a group that unites many of Marvels flagship characters, in the 1970s and again in the 1990s.
At DC, he and writer Marv Wolfman created The New Teen Titans in 1980, revitalizing a group of junior heroes, to critical acclaim. It became a bestseller.
Pérez was also at the helm of the 1986 reboot of Wonder Woman, which presented the character, who had originally appeared in 1941, as a new superheroine. His version was younger, and he leaned into the Greek mythology rooted in her origin story. Wonder Woman had to rise or fall based on me, Pérez said in December. It was a great success that gave me an incredible sense of fulfillment.
One of Pérezs crowning achievements came in 2003 with the debut of a four-part story uniting the Justice League and the Avengers, the marquee heroes from DC and Marvel, traditionally fierce rivals in the comic book marketplace.
When Pérez announced in a Facebook post in December 2021 that he had a life expectancy of six-12 months after a diagnosis of pancreatic cancer, the testimonials came quickly. They included articles like How George Pérez Changed Comics Forever, which noted his enjoyment of comics that teamed up superheroes, his depiction of female characters with a diversity of body types, his positive interactions with his fans and his charitable initiatives.
George Pérez was born June 9, 1954, in New York City to Jorge Guzman Pérez, who worked in the meatpacking industry, and Luz Maria Izquierdo, a homemaker. Both were from Puerto Rico and had met in New Jersey. They survive him, along with his wife, Carol Flynn, and brother, David.
This article originally appeared in
The New York Times.