The Rev. Laurie Sue Brockway and Christopher Reeve
In the hey day of my life as a reporter, I believed in Superman. And after the great crisis faced by the people of Haiti, I want so much to believe in him again. If only he could fly around the planet and repair the damage and bring the people back to life, as he did for his beloved Lois Lane in the movies.
The Christopher and Dana Reeve Foundation is reaching out to help the disabled in Haiti so I wanted to share this very personal essay about me, Superman and how he inspired during a time in my life when I needed him. Below, please find links and information on how you can help make a difference in Haiti.
My “relationship” with Superman began at age seven, when he swooped into my living room in the person of George Reeves. It was reignited at 19, when Christopher Reeve stepped into those bright red boots in Superman, The Movie.
The movie filled me with a pang of longing. I wanted to be part of the energy, excitement and adventure I saw on the screen. By then, I was working at my first newspaper job and on my way to a life of Lois Lane assignments. I could relate to the romance of the newsroom.
The anticipation and affection between Superman and Lois in the movie were another draw. I liked the idea of having an important career and an important superhero kind of guy who could be there at the drop of a hat – or helicopter, as it were. As a romantic fantasy, the Supes had one thing most mythic men can’t beat -- a day job at a major metropolitan newspaper. To an aggressive cub reporter, there was nothing as exciting as a man with a press card.
I went about the business of building my career, secretly harboring the desire to someday find my own Superman – or at least a Clark Kent to share a juicy journalistic life with – and to develop my own strengths and powers as a reporter.
My first great “real life” love was a newspaper publisher. We shared a deep passion and a crazy lifestyle of immersing ourselves in our stories and work. But in the long run our life goals did not match up. When that relationship came to an end, on the heels of the death of a loved one, it was devastating. Three months after having my heart broken, I got married to someone else, the guy who was there for me when my world was falling apart. Alas, he was no son of Jor-El, either. I fell off the path of my star reporter dreams in 1986 and 1987 until, in the darkest days of that marriage, it became clear that I had to leave and find myself again.
It was in 1988 that my Super Obsession really took flight. That was the year Superman turned 50 and I got divorced. Supes was getting a lot of media attention and I was looking for a fantasy to hang my hat on, while searching to recover my own power and confidence. Women’s News, a newspaper I worked for, sent met to cover Superman’s 50th Birthday party, hosted by D.C. Comics at the famous Puck Building in New York. The moment they allowed the press to walk through a Fortress of solitude-like tunnel, where the theme song from Superman blasted, I felt as if I’d come home.
I had my picture taken with huge comic book blow-ups of Supes, Lois Lane and Jimmy Olsen; I watched Superman clips on video. I interviewed women about whether they were still waiting for Superman to come and swoop them up and found that the fantasy was very much alive. The excitement and yearning I’d felt when I first saw Superman, The Movie was reigniting me. I was so high and happy from the experience at this fun celebration, I wanted more.
I went home and decided to ‘superize’ my life. I bought a nearly life size Superman poster and had him mounted so he could stand. I bought videos of Superman movies and started collecting Superman memorabilia. I used the red, blue and yellow colors to bring brightness into my life. When I was lonely, I’d pop a Superman movie into a VCR. When I was scared, I imagined myself surrounded by a shield with a huge S on it. And when I felt powerless and lost, I’d strike the pose of the poster, imitating the fierce look and determined chin, the powerful upright stance and clenched fists.
Changing my physiology to model Superman’s and redirecting my mind from distress to super powers truly assisted me in changing and redirecting my entire life. There was more to it than mere fantasy. I knew in my heart that sometimes we must pretend something is true before it actually is in order to get to where we are going in life: Fake it till you make it. To me, Superman represented a man who could not hurt me and a strength that dwelled within me. I was determined not only to utilize my affinity with the Man of Steel to get through my first year of divorce; I decided to become a Supermanologist of sorts, and have lots of fun while doing it!
By the summer of 1988, my search for Superman started in earnest, and built in leaps and bounds. I discovered Superman was so much a part of our culture that he does exist in very tangible ways. Sometimes, in the least likely places, like Metropolis, Illinois.
When I discovered Superman had a hometown, I got on the next flight and traveled to the southern tip of the state to meet with Clyde Wills, editor and publisher of the Metropolis Planet and with Mike Boyd, the super volunteer Superman who since has turned in his tights. I fell in love with the place and wrote several stories about going to Superman’s hometown and meeting the great people of Metropolis.
When I returned home, I happened into a Manhattan store and discovered a gorgeous denim jacket painted and studded with Austrian crystal that depicted Superman flying out of Metropolis on the back and had a huge sparkling S on the front. It was so extravagant and expensive that it was decadent. I bought it. That was on October 18 – the one year anniversary of the break-up of my marriage.
The jacket became my trademark outfit and I wore it like Superman wears his cape – it never came off. I wore it right into the D.C. Comics exclusive Christmas party that year (I sort of crashed, having been given an extra invitation by a Batman fan friend of mine) and Julius Schwartz, Superman’s long-time, then semi-retired editor came up to me and showed my coat off to the D.C. folks. It was like being a kid in a candy store, there I was at the source of Superman. I met Superman’s editor, the amazing Mike Carlin; and Superman’s artists, inkers, writers. Later, artist Frank McLaughlin was nice enough to give me as a gift three panels of original, signed Superman comic book art. (That jacket turned out to have an amazing story to it, but I will save that for another time).
1988 melted into 1989 and a new super possibility loomed on my horizon. Although I could not quite keep up with his comic book life, I continued getting up close and personal with the people who had in various ways been behind the legend. By now, the need for a fantasy had turned into a real passion for the past and current history of the Man of Steel. I found so much joy in my explorations that I began to write about them. I made an agreement with myself to include a reference to Superman in every article I wrote for a year (did) and started doing a column for Women’s News, in which Superman was always a topic.

The big breakthrough came when I launched Star Reporter News Service by syndicating my first article – Superman’s hometown, Metropolis, Illinois. The news service took flight as the piece ran in: The Chicago Sun-Times, NY Daily News, The Denver Post, The Boston Globe, San Antonio Express-News, The Miami Herald, Philadelphia Inquirer, Grit and even the Australian magazine called Pics
By then, I’d become a seasoned Supermanologist. My collection of Supes memorabilia was growing because people kept giving me gifts; I boned up on the comic book legend and continued my search for Superman. My friend, Edie Hand, a cousin of Elvis Presley, put me in touch with Noel Neill, an original Lois Lane from the TV series. When the late Kirk Allyn, who played Superman in the serial that served as a pilot for the TV show, was in town for an event I interviewed him. I covered a celebrity baseball game that Margot Kidder, of Lois Lane fame, played in.
My Superman antics became a charming little joke among friends, and a point of intrigue among professional contacts; even the editor of Playgirl asked me to share my personal adventures with Superman in her magazine in 1989 – who knew I would later end up on the staff of the same magazine that printed my romantic tribute to The Man of Steel?
My ultimate fantasy was to live out my favorite scene in the first Superman movie – where Lois Lane interviews Superman for the first and time and gets to fall all over him, be a sexy babe, and get her scoop. It was a part on the film I nearly wore out on my VCR from rewinding it so much. (remember VCR’s?)
On December 7, 1989 my friend Hank Dolmatch got tickets to an event at the 92nd Street Y in New York where Christopher Reeve was speaking about his career after a screening of his movie Street Smart, in which he plays a sleazy reporter.
I must admit my heart sank to discover that Reeve was not the biggest Superman fan on the planet at that point. He seemed to think that the movies that made him also tainted his career because, as we all know, people tend to think Christopher Reeve is Superman, yours truly among them.
“Part of the Superman legacy in my life is that people think, maybe we can prevail upon this guy; maybe this guy can really do something to bail us out,” Reeve said. “After the first movie, it was quite overwhelming. People were making requests for me to show up in costume. People thought I was really Superman.”
Uh-oh, I thought, this may not be a match made on Krypton. I almost got depressed but instead, wanted to meet him. I wanted to look my fantasy right in the eye – and ask him a Lois Lane question. So donned in my Superman jacket, I snuck through a stage door and made my way through a number of people who were waiting for him to come out! When he did, I stood momentarily frozen and propelled myself on with all the Lois Lane courage I could muster.
I made my way up to him, the bright “S” on the front of my jacket glittering with every step. If he thought I was a crazed Superman fan, he didn’t let on. He was nice, I could see how he developed the Super character from his own personality; and patient, as I monopolized him, showing him the back of the jacket, giving him a photo of a wall menu that had a sandwich named after him on it, trying not to get too excited. I asked him a question that I do not recall and barely took a note on when he answered because I was looking him directly in those very appealing blue eyes.
I walked away on a cloud – thank you Christopher Reeve! - and felt I had achieved the ultimate – an interview with Superman and a distinction between fact and fiction, real people and actors. My Lois Lane fantasy had been accomplished.
It was a healing experience that brought closure to the fantasy part of my Super quest. And it helped me to see that while there was always a part of me that wanted to be with a Superman, what became more prevalent was the part of me that wanted to be like him. After all, Superman has given us a role model with qualities that we mortals can emulate without having to bend steel with our bare hands – fortitude, integrity, honesty, humanity. I think there is a super being that dwells within us all.
I still had a fondness for the legend. I revisited Metropolis in 1990 to partake in the Superman Celebration. The editor of the Metropolis Planet, Clyde Wills, has remained my friend for years..
When Jack Larson and Phyllis Coates (Jimmy Olsen and Lois Lane of the Superman TV show) were in New York to do Regis Philbin’s show in September 1991 to promote Nickelodeon’s purchase of the series rights, I went to meet them when I was eight months pregnant. A month later, when labor began, I watched Superman movies to relax.
My son came flying into the world at 10:13 a.m. one October morning in 1991 and we named him Alexander Kent. One of the first gifts received by our little boy of steel came from his Aunt Rikki – a tiny Superman panama suit with cape. We noted early on that when his dad lifted him in the air for a little flight, he seems right at home, and though, well maybe…..
A few years later, when I became Editor-in-Chief of Playgirl Magazine, I brought my favorite mounted Superman poster in on my first day and stationed him at the door to my office. Although I pretty much had a selection of real live he-men hanging around, I still felt safest with the Supes.
When the news came that Christopher Reeve had been injured in a riding accident, I was sitting at my desk and people started calling me with condolences. I said over and over … “Now he really will get to be a Superman. I know that he will triumph and teach us all a little something about the power of the human spirit.”
As it turned out, he certainly did teach us all a lot.
Over time, I put my Superman collectables away and moved on to other stages in life, but I always thought Christopher and my son Alexander should meet. Alexander was born with one leg and an amazing spirit. I knew they’d click. I sent him an article I had written about my son. Never heard a response and I never followed up. I let it go. Sure enough, one day at Yankee Stadium, Alexander met Christopher and his family and had his photo taken. I wasn’t there, but I didn’t have to be. I knew it was a significant moment that punctuated our Super journey.
In 1997 when I left journalism to become an interfaith minister, I began to research the world’s religions and especially the divine feminine. I came to understand that my Superman Journey paved my path to my relationship with the Divine. Superman helped me discover the special spirit that gives us all a divine sparkle and the special powers to do good in the world; and he helped me tap into the spirit within.
I realized that Superman, all along, represented an ancient archetype that helps we mortals have hope and faith in the greater good; and helps us believe in a super power that works with us to make the world a better place.
It’s been many years since I first leaned on Superman to help me through a divorce and to empower me to find my own balance, confidence and place in the world. And I gave the mounted Superman poster to my son when we moved into a new home. Yet I never gave up my admiration and appreciation of Supes, and of Christopher Reeve, who made him come alive for me and so many.
Today, I am blessed to have –finally– found my own real life super guy, my beloved hubby, who also loved the Man of Steel when he was younger. We married in late September 2004. Two weeks later he woke me up one morning to gently tell me “There is sad news today. Christopher Reeve died.”
I cried. And cried. And cried some more. My mind flashed to times when he was young, and standing tall, and swooping Lois Land into his arms while flying up the side of the Daily News Building in NY. I remembered his kindness with a pang of sadness that it would be gone from the world. Then I realized the gift I had been given: Christopher Reeve had deeply touched my life, since I was 19 years old. When he was flying … when he was graciously standing before me … when he was sitting in his wheelchair … when he was speaking out on the issues he stood for … when he was posing for a photo with my son … and when he was leaving this earth for another home. And that was only my little perspective on it all! There were millions of people who had been moved by him. He had, in fact, become as well known as Superman. And in our eyes – whether he asked for it or not – had become a true hero for our times, an inspiration in times when there were so few to truly inspire us and remind us of our strength and abilities.
© Copyright 2002-2010 Reverend Laurie Sue Brockway All Rights Reserved.