Harold Joseph "Happy" Hogan is a fictional character appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. He is usually depicted as a supporting character in stories featuring Iron Man / Tony Stark, for whom he works as a chauffeur, bodyguard, and personal assistant. Happy is close friends with his employer, and is among the first people in the Marvel Universe to discover his identity as the armored superhero. He is also the father of the Teen Abomination, was married to Pepper Potts, and has occasionally been mutated into the giant, savage, nearly mindless, superhumanly strong humanoid known as the Freak. Hogan earned the ironic nickname "Happy" during his boxing days from his reluctance to smile.
Happy Hogan | |
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Publication information | |
Publisher | Marvel Comics |
First appearance | Tales of Suspense #45 (Sept. 1963) |
Created by | |
In-story information | |
Full name | Harold Joseph Hogan |
Species | Human (currently) Human mutate (formerly) |
Team affiliations | Stark Industries Iron Legion |
Supporting character of | Iron Man |
Notable aliases | The Freak |
Abilities | As Happy:
As The Freak:
|
Director Jon Favreau portrays Happy Hogan in the Marvel Cinematic Universe films Iron Man (2008), Iron Man 2 (2010), Iron Man 3 (2013), Spider-Man: Homecoming (2017), Avengers: Endgame, Spider-Man: Far From Home (both 2019), Spider-Man: No Way Home (2021) and Deadpool & Wolverine (2024). Favreau also voices alternate reality versions of the character in the Disney+ animated series What If...? (2021 and 2023).
Publication history
editCreated by writers Stan Lee and Robert Bernstein and artist Don Heck, Happy Hogan first appeared in Tales of Suspense #45 (Sept. 1963).[1]
Fictional character biography
editA former boxer with a history of losing fights, Hogan is hired by Tony Stark as his chauffeur and personal assistant after Happy saves Tony's life. While hospitalized after being beaten up by a supervillain called the Unicorn, he had an allergic reaction to flowers.[2] Happy learns that Tony is Iron Man.[3]
Then, a desperately ill Happy is mutated into a giant, savage, nearly mindless, superhumanly strong humanoid known as the Freak when doctors try to cure him using a cobalt ray machine powered by Stark's experimental "Enervator" device. The Freak breaks loose and goes on a rampage, escaping before Iron Man can arrive to stop him.[4]
Iron Man leads the Freak back to his laboratory, but runs out of power and collapses. The Freak encounters Pepper Potts, who faints at the sight of him, and he carries her away. The police fire on him, causing him to drop Pepper. Iron Man saves Pepper, and leads the Freak to his lab again. He is restored to his normal self in Tales of Suspense #76 (April 1966) when Iron Man exposes him to the Enervator once again, though he is afflicted with temporary amnesia that lasts until Tales of Suspense #83 (November 1966).[5]
Later, while helping Iron Man rebuild his armor, Happy is again exposed to cobalt rays and is again transformed into the Freak. The Freak smashes Iron Man through a wall, and takes Pepper with him. Iron Man is able to again return Happy to normal.[6]
The Collector later kidnaps Happy and Pepper, hoping to add the Freak to his collection. This draws Iron Man's attention, who intervenes and rescues his friends.[7]
Later, after Happy is injured while wearing the Iron Man armor,[8] Stark uses the Enervator to save him, thinking that he has corrected the problems with the device. But again it transforms Happy into the Freak, who goes on another rampage. He exposes himself to cobalt radiation, causing him to glow with cobalt energy that will eventually reach critical mass and cause him to explode. The two battle, until Stark is able to use the Enervator to again revert Happy to normal, apparently for the last time.[9]
He marries Pepper Potts in Tales of Suspense #91 (July 1967), but they later divorce.[volume & issue needed]
Happy has worked for almost all of Stark's companies, including Stark Industries, Stark Enterprises and Stark Solutions. However, when Tony/Iron Man disappears during the Onslaught saga, Hogan refuses to be employed by Stark-Fujikawa, but is re-employed when Stark returns. He also remarries Pepper Potts.[volume & issue needed]
With the events of the 2006 "Civil War" storyline causing Tony Stark considerable moral, political and emotional problems, Happy Hogan continues to give Tony much needed advice. In an important moment of crisis, he says to Tony: "You, my friend, are the only cape in the bunch [of superheroes] that's both one of us [that is, human] and one of them. Who else can see both sides the way you do?" On the night of his anniversary with Pepper, Hogan is attacked by the Spymaster, who is seeking to use Hogan as bait to draw out Iron Man. The Spymaster threatens to kill Hogan first, then Pepper. Angered, Hogan grabs him by the neck and they fall several stories,[10] leaving Hogan in a vegetative coma.[11]
While he is in the coma, Pepper tells Tony of Cobra McCoyle, a former boxing friend who took too many hits to the head. Cobra is unable to even feed himself and must be taken care of. Pepper tells Tony that Hogan has declared he never wants to end up like McCoyle. At the end of Iron Man vol. 4 #14, Hogan apparently dies. The issue leaves it ambiguous whether Hogan dies naturally or whether it is because Tony Stark digitally interfaced with and shut down Hogan's life support.[11]
Following this, Tony experiences occasional hallucinations of Happy, which Doc Samson attributes to the Extremis process; as a result of Tony's mind being accelerated by the Extremis process to allow him to interface with his armor directly; his subconscious mind often processes information that he was not consciously aware of, with this information being 'filtered' by the part of Tony's mind that stored his guilt to stop him facing it, resulting in illusions of Happy or Steve Rogers appearing to prompt Tony to acknowledge key information that he had not registered himself.[12]
Later, when Tony (slowly losing his mind to prevent Norman Osborn from getting the Superhero Registration Act information) and Pepper are in hiding, Pepper reminds him of all his friends and allies, with Happy being one of them. Tony then replies, "Who's Happy?"
After experiencing a moral inversion, Tony is confronted by a new, teenage version of Abomination when he relocates to San Francisco. While talking with Teen Abomination, Tony learns that he is Jamie Carlson, the son of former Stark Industries employee Katrina Carlson who was exposed to gamma radiation during an accident at the company when Tony was busy fighting a wizard from another dimension during an earlier time. Initially planning to analyze and use Teen Abomination's powers for himself, Tony changes his mind when the analysis of the boy's DNA reveals that Happy Hogan was his father, leaving Tony resolving to heal the boy as Happy was one of the few people he ever respected.[13]
During the "Iron Man 2020" event, Pepper is introduced to an off the grid navigation incorporated in the Rescue armor that Tony previously developed before Y2K called H.A.P.P.Y. (short for Host Analogue Program Pre-Y2K) where its personality is modeled after Happy Hogan. While having been programmed to not fall under the control of the A.I. Army, H.A.P.P.Y. helped Pepper in "rebuilding" Tony who was operating as Mark 1.[14]
Powers and abilities
editHappy Hogan has skills in unarmed combat, especially boxing.
As the Freak, Happy possesses unnatural strength, surpassing this by a hundred. His skin is so tough that almost nothing can hurt him.[15] Freak has the ability to absorb cobalt energy and increase his power. In this form, he could discharge it from his hands into blasts. He can also release lethal radioactive levels to create nuclear explosions.[16]
Other versions
editAmalgam Comics
editIn the Amalgam Universe, DC Comics's Green Lantern and Marvel's Iron Man are combined to create Iron Lantern. Iron Lantern is secretly Hal Stark, owner of Stark Aircraft, a developer of experimental aircraft. Stark's chief mechanic is Happy Kalmaku (an amalgamation of Marvel's Happy Hogan and DC's Thomas Kalmaku). Happy is in love with test pilot Pepper Ferris (an amalgamation of Marvel's Pepper Potts and DC's Carol Ferris). Unfortunately for Happy, Pepper is not only in love with Stark, she is also secretly the supervillainess Madame Sapphire (a combination of Marvel's Madame Masque and DC's Star Sapphire). Happy Kalmaku first appeared in Iron Lantern #1 (April 1997), published jointly by Marvel and DC. He was created by Kurt Busiek (script) and Paul Smith (art).[17]
Heroes Reborn
editIn the 1996-97 Heroes Reborn series, Happy Hogan is Stark's public relations chief. He has a brief romantic relationship with Pepper. He is also attacked by the villain Rebel and is seen later in a hospital bed.[18]
Marvel Zombies Return
editIn the Marvel Zombies universe, Happy appears in Marvel Zombies Return. He is working for Stark International; at this point Tony Stark is a useless drunk and S.I. headquarters is literally falling apart. Happy goes off to investigate a disturbance in the basement and falls prey to the zombie Giant Man who had teleported in from another dimension. The former hero bites and turns Hogan into a zombie. Happy then leads a zombie outbreak among the staff. James Rhodes kills him by destroying his head.[19]
Ultimate Marvel
editIn the Ultimate Marvel universe, Hogan appears alongside Iron Man in the Ultimates series, which is part of the Ultimate Marvel line of Ultimates comics. He is seen many times, sometimes with Pepper Potts, in the Iron Man armor control room.[20]
In the spin-off novel Tomorrow Men by Michael Jan Friedman, it is revealed that he has a supervisory position at the Triskelion; the Ultimates' headquarters. Furthermore, although Hogan has worked with Stark for a long time, he never officially achieved his MIT degree.
In Ultimate Human, although he is never seen on page, Tony Stark is seen talking to him on a cell phone, and then continuing the conversation after he is in an Iron Man suit.[21]
In other media
editTelevision
edit- Happy Hogan appears in the "Iron Man" segment of The Marvel Super Heroes, voiced by Tom Harvey.[22]
- A teenage Happy Hogan appears in Iron Man: Armored Adventures, voiced by Alistair Abell.[23] This version is a jock, high school student, and friend of Tony Stark. In his most notable appearance in the episode "Don't Worry, Be Happy", Happy temporarily wields Stark's Iron Man armor after James "Rhodey" Rhodes accidentally crashes and abandons it while testing it.
Marvel Cinematic Universe
editHappy Hogan appears in media set in the Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU), portrayed by Jon Favreau, who also served as the director of Iron Man and Iron Man 2. This version is Tony Stark's bodyguard, chauffeur, and later head of security, as well as a close friend of his and occasional ally of Peter Parker. Hogan appears in the live-action films Iron Man, Iron Man 2, Iron Man 3, Spider-Man: Homecoming,[24] Avengers: Infinity War via a deleted scene, Avengers: Endgame, Spider-Man: Far From Home,[25] Spider-Man: No Way Home,[26] and Deadpool & Wolverine.[27] Additionally, Favreau voices several alternate timeline variants of Hogan in the Disney+ animated series What If...?, such as one who was accidentally injected with a sample of Bruce Banner's blood, which causes him to mutate into the Freak while retaining his intelligence, and Sir Harold "The Happy" Hogan of a Renaissance-themed universe who can also transform into the Freak.
Video games
editHappy Hogan, based on the MCU incarnation, appears as an unlockable playable character in Lego Marvel's Avengers, voiced by Chris Cox.
References
edit- ^ Wells, John (2015). American Comic Book Chronicles: 1960-64. TwoMorrows Publishing. p. 135. ISBN 978-1605490458.
- ^ Tales of Suspense Vol. 1 #56 (August 1964)
- ^ Tales of Suspense #70. Marvel Comics.
- ^ Tales of Suspense #74. Marvel Comics.
- ^ Tales of Suspense #76-83. Marvel Comics.
- ^ Iron Man #3. Marvel Comics.
- ^ Iron Man #26. Marvel Comics.
- ^ Iron Man #81. Marvel Comics.
- ^ Iron Man #84-85. Marvel Comics.
- ^ Iron Man vol. 4 #13. Marvel Comics.
- ^ a b Iron Man vol. 4 #14. Marvel Comics.
- ^ Iron Man (vol. 4) #25. Marvel Comics.
- ^ Superior Iron Man #5. Marvel Comics.
- ^ Rescue 2020 #1-2. Marvel Comics.
- ^ Tales of Suspense Vol. #75 (March 1966). Marvel Comics.
- ^ Iron Man Vol. 1 #84 (March 1976). Marvel Comics.
- ^ Iron Lantern #1 (June 1997). Amalgam Comics.
- ^ Heroes Reborn #1-12 (1996-1997). Marvel Comics.
- ^ Marvel Zombies Return #2 (2009). Marvel Comics.
- ^ Millar, Mark (w), Hitch, Bryan (a). The Ultimates 2 #1-13. Marvel Comics
- ^ Ultimate Human #2. Marvel Comics.
- ^ The Marvel Super Heroes on TV! Book One: Iron Man (2017) - by J. Ballmann, ISBN 9 781545 345658
- ^ "COMIC-CON INTERNATIONAL: IRON MAN: AMRORED ADVENTURES". Archived from the original on 2021-01-25. Retrieved 2008-07-27.
- ^ Kroll, Justin (September 1, 2016). "Jon Favreau to Reprise 'Iron Man' Role in 'Spider-Man: Homecoming' (EXCLUSIVE)". Variety. Archived from the original on September 2, 2016. Retrieved September 1, 2016.
- ^ Archived at Ghostarchive and the Wayback Machine: "Spider-Man: Far From Home | Teaser Trailer". YouTube. 15 January 2019.
- ^ Donnelly, Matt (2021-08-24). "'Spider-Man: No Way Home' Trailer Officially Drops, Multiverse Villains Descend on Tom Holland". Variety. Retrieved 2021-08-24.
- ^ Purslow, Matt (July 12, 2024). "Deadpool & Wolverine: 30 Spoiler-Filled Details From the First 35 Minutes". IGN. Archived from the original on July 12, 2024. Retrieved July 12, 2024.
External links
edit- Happy Hogan at Marvel.com