On Monday, February 21st, a hole appeared in the universe.
Where that hole exists, a man should be–a man known as the Maestro to his fans and Dwayne McDuffie to the rest of the world.
Born   in 1962, McDuffie was a prominent writer in the comic book and   animation industries. As a young man, McDuffie got his start working at   Marvel Comics, creating the original series “Damage Control.” Marvel is also where McDuffie famously wrote the“Teenage Negro Ninja Thrashers” pitch, satirizing the company’s use of two-dimensional black characters.
In   1993 he left to co-create the African-American owned and run Milestone   Media, along with Michael Davis, Denys Cowan, and Derek T. Dingle.  From  there he moved into television, writing and producing Warner  Brothers  Animation and DC Entertainment’s “Justice League,” “Ben 10:  Ultimate  Alien,” and “Static Shock,” the last of which was based off  McDuffie’s  Milestone character. He is also the screenwriter for the recently released “All Star Superman” animated DVD.
On Wednesday night, Golden Apple Comics held a tribute to   the late comic book visionary. CBR News spoke directly with several of   McDuffie’s collaborators who, choking back tears, spoke passionately  of a  man who was as kind as he was intelligent.
“I   have a Ph.D. and [Dwayne McDuffie] is literally the smartest guy I  ever  met,” Michael Davis, a Milestone co-founder, told CBR.
“He   is literally the best writer I have ever worked with. What Dwayne and I   did together was unique and special and wasn’t equaled by anyone  else,”  said Denys Cowan, another of the Milestone co-founders. “I  always joked  it was Lennon and McCartney, because it really was.”
Over   and over, friends and co-creators in attendance described McDuffie as a   giant in his field, both figuratively and literally.
“He   was 6 foot 7, built like a house, and a lot of times mistaken for an   ex-football player–but his demeanor was just the opposite, he was a   very gentle person,” said family friend and “Clone Wars” writer Kevin   Rubio.
“My   first impression of Dwayne was that he was an imposing presence, both   physically and intellectually,” writer Adam Beechen told CBR. Hired by   McDuffie as a freelance writer for “Ben 10,” Beechen regarded the late   writer/producer’s work with utmost respect. “You could plug him onto  any  book and he would find a take that was fresh, exciting, [and] would   keep you coming back issue after issue,” said Beechen.
“Dwayne’s motto was ‘good stories well-told,’” said Davis.
Dwayne McDuffie broke boundaries. He championed creator-owned work with Milestone.   He co-created African-American superheroes such as Static Shock, Icon,   and Hardware–heroes who still make up a significant percentage of DC   Comic’s minority characters. Along with co-writer Alan Burnett he won   the 2003 Humanitas Award for an episode of “Static Shock” dealing with   gun violence in schools. He was a black man working in two   white-dominated industries, and refused to compromise his principles to   fit in.
             
“Dwayne   spoke up, at a cost to his career, but that’s what men of courage do.   That’s what men of integrity do. And that’s what Dwayne was,” said film   director and comic book writer Reggie Hudlin.
Even as late as 2003, McDuffie continued to push the envelope with his work on “Justice League.”
“[John   Stewart and Hawkgirl] had the first interracial kiss in animation. It   was groundbreaking, it was on par with Gene Rodenberry when Uhura and   Kirk kissed,” said “Warehouse 13” writer Deric Hughes. He smiled as he   recalled how he first stumbled onto McDuffie’s comics.
“I   was just getting out of the military when Milestone came on the   scene–and it blew me away because I was seeing black superheroes   talking the way that I talked. It was an awe-inspiring thing,” Hughes   told CBR.
“There   are a lot of people who are conscious of race in the comic book   industry, and Dwayne definitely was. He and I talked about it–like, why   does a black character have to have [the word] Black in their name?”   said actor Phil LaMarr. The voice talent for Static Shock and “Justice   League’s” African-American Green Lantern John Stewart, LaMarr was deeply   impressed by McDuffie’s scope and talent.
“The   main theme I see as a through line in Dwayne’s work is heart and mind.   He was able to universalize the personal,” said LaMarr.
“[McDuffie]   was right up there with Alan Moore and Frank Miller and all the rest  of  these guys, but because he was black he saw the double standard,”  said  Davis. Davis added that McDuffie’s work helped tear down barriers  and  opened the door for writers like himself.
Amid   the tears and pride there was also a sense of frustration. At 49,   McDuffie, was “just hitting his stride,” said Davis. McDuffie’s last   project, adapting Grant Morrison’s “All Star Superman” for DVD, met with   rave reviews from all corners of the industry, including Morrison   himself. And though the “Static Shock” TV show proved successful, there   is still a glaring lack of non-white superhero titles.
             
“The   fact that there’s no comics I can give to my six-year-old daughter or   three-year-old son is a problem,” said Hudlin. He pointed to “Static’s”   steady number-one timeslot share as proof that mainstream audiences  are  ready for multicultural heroes,   and called on the industry to broaden its horizons. “Given how tiny  and  ever-shrinking the comic book business is, clearly Dwayne was on to   something right,” said Hudlin.
Many also believed the resurgent popularity of Green Lantern and the upcoming live action movie were a direct result of McDuffie’s popularizing Green Lantern John Stewart on “Justice League.”
“I   personally think there’s a Green Lantern movie coming out this year   because of [‘Justice League’]. It set a template for that character,   made that character relevant in a way it never had been, not for me. I   think after that, the writing in the comic books got a lot better, and   it led to the character being embraced on a big level,” said LaMarr.
When   asked what would be McDuffie’s lasting legacy, all agreed that his   greatest gift was to the kids who grew up reading Milestone, watching   “Static Shock” and “Justice League,” and believing in a world where   anyone, black or white, could be a superhero.
“All   the young kids who grow up reading his stuff and watching it and are   shown through Dwayne’s work the possibilities of their humanity–that’s   the legacy,” said Cowan.
On   February 21st, the industry lost much more than a writer and creator.   As so many aptly put it, where there was once a giant, now there was a   hole.
“He’s not just gone, there’s a freaking hole in the planet because he’s gone,” said Davis.
“There’s   just a hole, and no one’s fixing that hole. No one’s filling that  hole.  There’s no one who might one day be that guy–it’s gone and  that’s it,”  said Hudlin.
Perhaps   the person who can best sum up the life and impact of Dwayne McDuffie   is the man himself. In “Icon” issue three, penned by the late writer,   Icon addresses a crowd thusly:
"As   many of you have already witnessed, I am gifted with certain special   abilities. I have possessed these gifts for many years but for the most   part have refrained from using them.
“No more.
“Today   I set a challenge for myself, a challenge to be of service to  humanity.  I will do this by being a living example of what’s possible. I  intend  to hold myself to a very high standard. I ask no less of you. I   challenge you to challenge yourselves. You are all gifted with special   abilities. Strive to live up to your potential, as I will strive to  live  up to mine. I can fly — so can you!"
Dwayne McDuffie is survived by his wife, Charlotte, his mother, Edna McDuffie-Gardner, and all his loving, grateful fans.