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Lex Luthor

Lex Luthor is a DC Comics supervillain and archenemy of Superman. Created by Jerry Siegel and Joe Shuster, he first appeared in Action Comics #23 (1940).

The bald-headed Luthor has been Superman's main foe for most of the superhero's existence and has unveiled countless plots to destroy him and take over the world. Originally Luthor was a mad scientist but has since been rewritten as a Machiavellian industrialist and white-collar criminal. For a brief period in the early 2000s, he was president of the United States.

Luthor has been featured in most adaptations of Superman outside comic books. In the film series of the late 1970s and 1980s, Gene Hackman took a comical approach to the character. In Smallville, a retelling of Superman's early years, a young adult Lex is played by Michael Rosenbaum.

Origin of the character

Luthor first appeared in Action Comics #23 (April, 1940) by Jerry Siegel and Joe Shuster. His history has been retconned many times since then, with his current canonical origin being reinvented in 2003 and 2004 in the Birthright maxi-series by Mark Waid. He is one of several Superman characters with the initials "LL," including Lois Lane, Lana Lang, and Lori Lemaris the Mermaid. His father, Lionel Luthor, first appeared in the TV series Smallville.

The original Luthor of the 1940s (who didn't have a first name) was one of many pulps-inspired mad scientists who plotted to take over the world, or destroy it, through the use of various diabolical schemes. He donned disguises a few times, but generally he preferred to make himself known to the world as his master plans came to fruition... until he was foiled, time and time again, by the Man of Steel. He soon became Superman's greatest foe, the antithesis of everything Superman stood for; and even though his plans for world domination were repeatedly dashed, he always managed to get away (or escape from prison) to threaten the world time and time again.

Luthor's stated goals are to kill Superman and to take over the world as a stepping stone to dominating the universe. Over the years, Luthor came up with every conceivable plan to destroy Superman; he has synthesized Kryptonite, travelled back in time, summoned beings from the Fourth Dimension, created robots, clones, and genetic monstrosities, allied himself with the alien super-computer Brainiac, animated Kryptonite rocks, detonated H-Bombs, and has masqueraded and taken on a number of aliases. During the 1980s Luthor adopted a powersuit that allowed him to battle Superman physically. Although none of his schemes worked permanently (though one classic "imaginary story" from the 1960s called The Death of Superman has Luthor finally killing Superman with Kryptonite after lulling him by pretending to go straight) Luthor's persistence has made him Superman's most troublesome foe.

Though originally portrayed with a full head of red hair, from 1941 onwards Luthor came to be portrayed as completely bald due to the mistake made by an artist who worked on the Superman daily comic strip. Shuster preferred drawing bald villains anyway, so the more striking bald appearance — a Luthor trademark — was thereby adopted. (When the DC 'multiverse' began to take hold, the red-haired Luthor was said to be his Earth-Two counterpart, Alexei Luthor.) Several years later a back-story finally filled in how Luthor lost his hair, and that Luthor's hatred of Superman stemmed from a childhood incident where a teenaged Superboy used his superbreath to extinguish a fire that had broken out in Luthor's lab. Unfortunately for him, during this rescue attempt chemicals were spilled, causing Luthor to go prematurely bald and destroying Luthor's successful attempt to create new life through chemistry which might have also cured Superboy of his susceptibility to kryptonite. Luthor attributed Superboy's acts to jealousy on the Kryptonian's part and vowed revenge. First he tried to show Superboy up with a series of grandiose technological projects, only to have them all go dangerously out of control and requiring Superboy's intervention. Unwilling to accept personal responsibility for these accidents, Lex rationalized that Superboy was out to humiliate him and tried to murder the superhero.

Though he was a noted villain and an evil mastermind on Earth, Luthor was revered as a hero on the alien world of Lexor, where he used his scientific genius to rediscover the planet's technology and rebuilt society for the inhabitants. Unfortunately, Luthor used the planet as a base for his operations to strike against Superman. The last such attempt on Lexor resulted in the destruction of the planet and every native inhabitant. Aggrieved, Lex refused to accept that he was responsible and blamed Superman.

Superman himself has acknowledged that Luthor is a man of his word who would honor promises he made. Luthor had a younger blond-haired sister, Lena Thorul (her last name an anagram of "Luthor"), an empath who grew up unaware of her familial connection with the noted villain. Protective of his sister, Luthor had strived to hide his connection and had been assisted towards this end by both Supergirl and Superman.

The 1985 revision of Luthor's history

In 1985, John Byrne's famous "re-boot" of Superman re-wrote the character of Lex Luthor from scratch, bringing him to the modern world and making him a villain that the 1980s would recognize: a corporate white-collar criminal. (The idea was originally suggested by Marv Wolfman.)

Born in the Suicide Slum district of Metropolis, Alexander Joseph Luthor put a large insurance policy on his parents and had them killed by a car accident. Using this money and his natural genius he designed and built an experimental airplane, which eventually led to the formation of a multi-national corporation. He became the CEO of LexCorp International, based out of Metropolis. He was the most powerful man in Metropolis until Superman arrived. When terrorists attacked a society gala aboard his yacht shortly after his arrival, Luthor observed Superman in action and then tried to hire him as a bodyguard. But when Luthor admitted that he'd anticipated the attack but allowed it to occur in order to witness Superman first hand, Mayor Berkowitz deputized Superman to arrest Luthor for reckless endangerment. Luthor vowed to destroy Superman for this humiliation, and he has since devoted much time and energy to that goal; he is a man driven to be the best, having fought his way up from lowly beginnings by his own effort, and is resentful of how Superman was given his powers by random fate of birth. Superman survived every attempt but has never been able to prove Luthor's role in the attacks.

Luthor acquired the only sample of Kryptonite on Earth from the Kryptonite-powered cyborg Metallo, whom Lexcorp abducted just before Metallo succeeded in killing Superman. Fashioning a ring from the alien ore deadly to Superman, Luthor began wearing it constantly to ward off his enemy. Unfortunately, Luthor suffered from a severe cancer in the 1990s, caused by the long-term radiation from his Kryptonite ring. Kryptonite exposure had not previously been thought to be harmful to non-Kryptonian life forms.

Luthor's hand had to be amputated to prevent the cancer's spread, but unfortunately by then it had already metastatized; it was eventually determined that the disease was terminal. Luthor faked his own death shortly afterward by taking his personally designed jet, the Lexwing, on a proposed trip around the world and crashing it in some mountains, using this as cover for the transplant of his brain into a healthy clone of himself which he then passed off as his hitherto unknown, illegitimate Australian son and heir. Later, when his new body also grew terminally ill due to the instability of the cloning process that was used, he had his brain again transplanted into a new cloned body that resumed the identity of the original Luthor.

Lex Luthor has cultivated a popular image as a great philanthropist. He has been instrumental in reverse-engineering alien technology for use in general consumer goods, upgrading Metropolis into a true "city of tomorrow." When Gotham City was destroyed by an earthquake and then abandoned by the American government, it was LexCorp that took up the massive task of rebuilding. Luthor also played an instrumental role in assisting the Justice League in recharging the sun during "The Final Night" crisis.

Lex became the 43rd president of the United States in 2000, winning the election on a platform of promoting technological progress (his first action as president was to take a proposed moratorium on fossil-based fuels to U.S. Congress in hopes of putting "a flying car in every garage"). He was assisted by the extreme unpopularity of the previous administration due to its mishandling of the Gotham City earthquake crisis; even given Luthor's tendency towards covert supervillainy, he could well prove to be a better choice for the office.

An early triumph of his poltical career was the Our Worlds At War crisis, in which he coordinated the US Army, Earth's superheroes and a number of untrustworthy alien forces to battle Imperiex.

In 2004, Luthor overplayed his hand. In an attempt to blame Superman for a Kryptonite meteor approaching the Earth, he instead raised questions about himself. In desperation, he used a variant of the "super-steroid" Venom, and an Apokaliptian battle-suit to battle Superman directly. Unfortunately, the madness that is a side effect of Venom took hold, and he revealed his true colors during the battle. The final straw was the revelation that Talia Head (see Ra's al Ghul), the CEO of LexCorp, had sold all the company assets to the Wayne Foundation. He has since gone underground, leaving the presidency to his Vice President, Pete Ross.

Some of this history, most notably Luthor's youth in Metropolis and his first encounter with Superman, were retconned in "Birthright" and now include some elements from the Silver Age, such as Luthor's scientific genius and a failed friendship with a younger Clark Kent. Most of Lex's life story, so far, remains intact. A Lex Luthor minseries is planned for 2005.

Luthor is currently believed widowed, having apparently killed the mother of his infant daughter, Lena.

Full Name?

His full first name has over the years been variously spelled as Alexis, Alexei, and Alexander (currently his official first name), but originally "Lex" was not intended to be short for anything.

In Smallville, his full name is Alexander, after Alexander the Great, the historical general whom Lionel Luthor most admires and encourages his son to pattern himself after.