Tuesday, 23 December 2025

The 1975 Marvel UK annuals for 1976.

Thanks to Charlie Horse 47 and Killdumpster for their sponsorship of this post, via the magic of Patreon
***

Mariah Carey is a complete and total fool.

Every year, she foolishly declares that all she wants for Christmas is me.

While I understand the inevitability of such a sentiment, does she not know that, if she plays her cards right, she might also be able to land herself something almost as precious?

And that's annuals. Those hardback treasure troves of comic strip goodness that only Santa Claus knows how to lay his hands on.

But, first, let us discover just what was on television in the United Britain of Kingdom on Christmas Day, 1975.

BBC One was giving us such treasures as The Happy Prince, Rod Hull and Emu, Laurel and Hardy, Holiday on Ice, Top of the Pops, The Queen, Billy Smart's Christmas Circus, The Wizard of Oz, The Generation Game, Some Mothers Do 'Ave 'Em and The Morecambe and Wise Show, as well as Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid, The Good Old Days and Parkinson Meets Bob Hope.

I'm sure you'll wish to know the Christmas Day edition of Top of the Pops featured performances by such magical guests as Pilot, Ralph McTell, Mud, 10cc, David Essex, Johnny Nash, Guys & Dolls, the Tymes, Tammy Wynette, the Bay City Rollers, Telly Savalas, Art Garfunkel, the Stylistics and CCS.

BBC Two, meanwhile, was presenting us with the likes of Christmas Day Play Away, Prince Charles: Pilot Royal, Swan Lake, Great Big Groovy Horse, The Evacuees and Guys and Dolls.

Great Big Groovy Horse was, I'm sure all culture vultures know, a rock musical about the Trojan Wars. Yes, you can tell it was the 1970s.

And what of the nation's commercial ITV network?

It delivered such treats as Chipperfield's Christmas Circus, Doctor in Trouble, Captain Noah and His Floating Zoo, The Bay City Rollers Show (with Gilbert O'Sullivan), Christmas Celebrity Squares, Get Some In!, Love Thy Neighbour and The Taming of the Shrew.

I, of course, remember watching none of the above shows, even though I'm sure we must have had the TV on, non-stop, all day long.

It is interesting to see ITV broadcasting The Taming of the Shrew. I'm not sure I could imagine modern-day ITV doing that but perhaps I unfairly malign it.

That done with, it'annual time!

Despite Marvel UK publishing seven weekly titles in December 1975, there were only three annuals that year.

And you know what?

I didn't have a single one of them. What a nightmare Christmas it must have been.

Avengers Annual 1976

The book dedicated to the world's mightiest super-team reprints three consecutive issues of The Avengers.

In the first, the vivacious Valkyrie makes her dynamic debut when she shows up at the Avengers Mansion and tries to get the Wasp, Medusa, Scarlet Witch and Black Widow to join her team of Lady Liberators.

But is it all a trap set by the Enchantress?

And who's going to stop the New Masters of Evil while all this is going on?

And is the Vision going to get dissolved in tarmac?

Speaking of the Enchantress, our second tale sees that villainess work her charms on Arkon, as the gang once more come into conflict with the inter-dimensional barbarian king.

And, then, our heroes travel to another world in which they encounter Brain-Child and must recruit the help of the Squadron Supreme, in their bid to stop him.

Marvel Annual 1976

There, is, of course, a Marvel Annual, this year.

And, in it, the Chameleon tricks the Hulk into breaking his friend out of jail. An act that I suspect will attract the attention of a certain friendly neighbourhood arachno-sapien.

Then, the Sub-Mariner, Silver Surfer and Hulk help the citizens of a Central American country overthrow the tyrannical rule of El General.

Next, that trio once more band together. This time, to prevent military weather-control equipment from being utilised. This leads them into conflict with the Avengers.

And, of course, on top of that, we encounter multiple single-page pin-ups of the type we'd never be foolish enough to rip out of the book and actually use.

Spider-Man Annual 1976

We kick off this year's Spidey book with the most disappointing crossover of all time, as Peter Parker's alter-ego and Dracula find themselves on the same cruise ship but never actually meet.

Rather more importantly, Spidey needs to find a specific doctor on that ship, in order to acquire medicine for Aunt May who's had another of her turns.

Next, we get a Lee/Kirby/Ditko yarn in which the wall-crawler gatecrashes Dorrie Evans' birthday party, immediately bringing him into conflict with her boyfriend the Human Torch!

And, finally, Stegron inflicts a bunch of dinosaurs upon New York!

And only Spider-Man and the Black Panther can hope to stop him!

25 comments:

Matthew McKinnon said...

I watched The Wizard Of Oz that Christmas. Probably for the first time. And according to this page, it was the UK TV premiere!

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1975_in_British_television

It must have become a mainstay, because I remember being excited about seeing it one Christmas in the 70s and a cynical relative responded ‘oh, they put that on every year’.

Also noting how much other good stuff was on that December.

Anonymous said...

Are those annuals hard-back like DC THOMSON’s e.g., a BEANO?

Steve W. said...

Anon, they are indeed all hardbacks.

dangermash said...

I had both the Spider-Man and Avengers annuals.

With me only getting Spider-Man's comic every week, I wasn't up to speed on the Avengers and was confused about seeing both Goliath and Yellowjacket in a poster inside the annual. Somehow I knew Yellowjacket was Pym but didn't know Hawkeye was moonlighting as Goliath.

And that was quite a bizarre choice to reprint Avengers #83-85 in that annual rather than #84-86, leaving is with a huge cliffhanger at the end of #85 with four Avengers stuck in a parallel inverse and preparing to team up with Squadron Sinister against Brainchild.

And needless to say, Happy Christmas to you Steve and to all my fellow crew members.

Anonymous said...

Why, at Premiete League.com, do the standings list Tottenham as Spurs and not Tottenham??? All other19 teams are listed by their city???

Charlie is perplexed!

Colin Jones said...

On Christmas Eve 1975 BBC One showed the first PORRIDGE Christmas special - the one in which Fletcher pretends he's got a dodgy knee so he can spend Christmas in the prison infirmary and genial 'Arry Grout is planning an escape tunnel. I watched this classic episode on BBC iPlayer only recently.

I didn't have any of the Marvel annuals but I did get the 1976 Star Trek and Space:1999 annuals.

Anonymous said...

There may only have been three Marvel Annuals for 1976 but there was also a Planet of the Apes one, which was published by Brown Watson. I'm not sure exactly how that worked, but I expect they had a licence for the TV series - which their three POTA annuals from '74 - '76 were obviously based on - while Marvel held rights to the films via the US parent company.

Anyway, the POTA annual is notable for illustrations and a comic strip drawn by a young John Bolton - which is how he came to the attention of a guy who worked on Tarzan and British reprints of Mad for Williams Publishing (based in the same building as Brown Watson), one Dez Skinn - and a second strip by Oliver Frey, who some may know for his work on the Trigan Empire, Dan Dare, and gay porn.

www.pota.goatley.com/books/pota-uk-annual-1976/

www.bearalley.blogspot.com/2008/01/brown-watson-annuals.html

-sean

Steve W. said...

Sean, thanks for the POTA links.

Colin, I also had that Space:1999 annual.

Charlie, I can only assume someone has decided it's easier to type "Spurs" than it is to type "Tottenham."

Dangermash, happy Christmas to you too. And to everyone who reads this message.

Matthew, it's weird because I remember watching it on BBC One, one Saturday afternoon in the early 1970s, even though that's literally impossible.

Anonymous said...

It’s 10pm here and we’ve just finished Die Hard. Merry Christmas Steve and everyone else. Cheers

DW

Colin Jones said...

Sean, I received the POTA annual with Urko on the cover for my 10th birthday in Feb 1976 but until a few years ago I was completely unaware that any other POTA annuals existed!

Today is exactly 40 years since MERRY CHRISTMAS EVERYONE by Shakin' Stevens reached No.1 in the UK!

Merry Christmas, Steve, and to all the SDC readers!

Redartz said...

Nice trio of Annuals there; the Marvel Annual sounds like a tribute edition to the Hulk!
My Christmas of 1975 included none of said annuals, of course. But if memory serves, it did bring the Fireside book "Bring on the Bad Guys" , and the Marvel Calender for 1976 ( with Cap, Hulk and Spidey all decked out for the US Bicentennial).
To you, Steve, and to all who also do Comics at this fine forum, a very merry Christmas; and best wishes for the coming year!

Anonymous said...

Charlie too received the Marvel BICENTENNIAL Calendar for xmas in 1975. It was pretty cool even for a 14 year old. Held onto it for decades.

Charlie is super happy he and the missus
got to hear JUDY GARLAND “HAVE YOURSELF A MERRY LITTLE CHRISTMAS” from 1944 whilst eating lunch at “5 Guys” a few days ago.

Alas Charlie is going to miss COLIN’s xmas tunes listing updates! By the weekend all will be no longer on the charts?

This is a great place to hang out . Steve thanks for all your hard work keeping us humming along.

Merry Xmas all!

Colin Jones said...

Charlie, the next UK chart will be released on December 26th and it'll still be chock-a-block with Christmas songs!

By the way, you recently mentioned Gene Autrey and I can tell you that his song HERE COMES SANTA CLAUS is at #20 in the US Billboard Hot 100.

dangermash said...

Charlie wants Christmas music? Charlie gets Christmas music!

https://youtu.be/oyuxPjnFqyA?si=-BZfdUMDQNTk-w67

Matthew McKinnon said...

It’s Christmas (nearly)!
Happy holidays all, and thanks Steve for hosting such a nice place to chat. And making me laugh as well.

Anonymous said...

Yes - Charlie has indeed had a few gobsmackings and guffaws here! So worth it!

DANGERMASH - Love that Wombles video!!! The dude with the Mohawk…. It took me back to 40 years ago when I visited my brother in London!!! (I confess I have no idea who theWomnles are though LOL! But classic nonetheless!)

COLIN - thanks be to the almighty that (very very old) GENE AUTRY IS RIDING HIGH! And I have a prayer in that (very very old) JUDY GARLAND tip toes in on ruby slippers into the charts as well!!!

And now the whirlwind commences with a lot of family coming over in a few hours and missus charlie wondering who Charlie could possibly be texting when bathrooms need to be cleaned, food to be cooked, stacks of comics to be put away!!! Yowza!

Anonymous said...

Some of those Annuals are in my garage (somewhere! ) Not bought at the time, but 20 (?) years ago, at a Leeds mart.

I've hand-delivered my last X-mas card, this afternoon.

It's almost time for the Snowman.

SDC's momentum is still going strong.

Merry Christmas everybody!

Phillip

McSCOTTY said...

Although I bought Mighty World of Marvel , Spider-Man Comics Weekly and The Avengers from #1 onwards I never bought a single Marvel UK annual. Anyhoo, Merry Christmas to all SDC followers and all the best for 2026 ( jeez where did the time go?!).

dangermash said...

Ok, as you all insist, one more Christmas song for Charlie

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=afa_blHj8C4

Anonymous said...

Happy Crimble, y’all!
b.t.

Colin Jones said...

I forgot to mention earlier that it's the 100th anniversary of Winnie The Pooh as the first ever Pooh story was published on Christmas Eve 1925.

Anonymous said...

DANGERMASH- that 2nd clip was pretty funny! Though… i thought Goerge Michael was Frank Zappa! And Bono looked and sounded like Bono!

Colin Jones said...

Although I didn't buy any of those Marvel annuals I do remember them being advertised at the time and all three have smashing covers!

Colin Jones said...

Charlie, will you be listening to the King's Christmas message or have you lost interest?

Anonymous said...

Charlie liked it better when we heard the queen. Not sure why…? Thanks for the reminder COLIN!!! You da man cause, i confess, i forgot!