I’ve wondered about this: if they were never alive when the story started, could they be considered “killed off?”
Would you consider the Penguin’s psychotic mother who always made him carry an umbrella who then died of natural causes "killed off"if she only appears in flashbacks after the Penguin is an adult?
Magneto’s parents were killed in a Nazi concentration camp and appear only during flashbacks. Killed off?
Nice. I read his wikipedia entry. In the original X-men, Xavier’s death was retconned to be Mimic…an example of the infamous Double-Dirty-Body-Double-Non-Death.
Even these have problems with the OP’s criteria, as no alternative form is allowed. Gwen is still alive Spectacular Spider-Man and the movies. And Ben is alive in one of the alternate universes. I suspect the others will run into this problem, too.
The fact that there was an (seriously ill-advised IMO) alternative reality Uncle Ben counts as being brought back for me.
Just like Gwen Stacy’s clones, identical cousin Jill or identical secret daughter counts as bringing back Gwen do. Even Captain Stacy had an identical brother who was pretty much the same but with a goatee.
I think Johnny Alpha from 2000AD stayed dead after sacrificing his life force to open a portal for his fellow mutants out of a hell dimension. There have been a number of stories set before his death though.
Also his sidekick Wulf Sternhammer.
Blue Beetle I and II. Each had his own series, each published by at least two companies. There is a Blue Beetle III.
Meatball of the Little Wise Guys (kid sidekicks to the 1940s Daredevil) died in Daredevil#15 (Dec. 1942) and was replaced by another kid, Curly. If this sounds a little obscure, the 1940s Daredevil regularly sold over a million copies a month; Marvel’s character of the same name seldom sold more than 150,000 copies, even when Frank Miller was drawing it. And the Little Wise Guys gradually pushed Daredevil out of the series, relegating him to a narrator around 1946 and ousting him completely from the book named for him in 1950. They continued in print until 1956, unlike virtually every superhero except for Superman, Batman, Wonder Woman and Blackhawk; 1956 is when the Silver-Age Flash was introduced, for sake of perspective.
Gary Concorde, the Ultra-Man, debuted in All-American Comics#8 and died in the same story. His son, Gary Jr., picked up the baton in issue 9. His last Golden Age appearance was in issue 19 the following year; he turned up twice since Crisis on Infinite Earths, once in a Superman story and once in a Legion of Superheroes story. Gary Sr. never reappeared.
The Toprpedo, a 70s Marvel character who briefly headlined Marvel Premiere, died in an issue of Rom: Spaceknight. He has not reappeared, although his costume popped up a couple times in New Warriors.
Lots of long term supporting characters in *Judge Dredd *have been killed off, and never come back. Examples include: Chief Judges Goodman, Griffin, McGruder, Silver and Volt, and some other characters such as Maria and Otto Sump.
Hell, Cerebus the Aardvark. It could be argued that the entire 300 issue run was designed to get to the point where he died. Then the series ended and he’s never coming back.
Astonishingly, there was a canonical Superboy story that revealed Jor-El and Lara were already doomed to die excruciatingly painful deaths from radiation poisoning contracted during the research that convinced him Krypton was about to blow up. So despite humoring a persistent life-support expert who put 'em in suspended animation, they left a message patiently explaining that anyone who found 'em should please not resuscitate their bodies – since, again, only an excruciatingly painful death awaits. Superboy found their bodies and honored their wishes.
That sounds truly awful. At least this much later effort in what is arguably the last pre-Crisis issue of Action Comics took a somewhat less stupid approach.
The Crimson Avenger was terminally ill when he took over the helm of a burning tanker full of explosives and guided it out of the city. He was presumably still there when it blew and hasn’t been seen since.
The closest I can come up with is “The Death of Captain Marvel”. Jim Steranko did a brilliant job of showing a hero facing … cancer.
And losing.
Long, protracted, painful death with a crowd of heroes around his hospital bed.
Anyone else die of Natural Causes? I guess that would include Darkseid suddenly having a heart attack (“Hey, fellow minions… anyone know CPR?” “Uh, do any of us want to save him?”). Can you imagine a writer giving Batman a stroke?
Hmm… would it include Speedball or The Whizzer* or Elongated Man OD’ing? Naah, probably not. I’ll keep my question to “Natural Non-Drug Causes”.
*early Golden-Age Flash-type who got his powers from drinking mongoose blood. Eeew.
Hey, did Abin Sur die naturally? I’m imagining him having a heart attack and flying to earth to find a test pilot with no (or a less than adequate amount of) fear…
Although that whole Crash Landing A Space Ship can’t be good for your health.
Maybe I* “should ask my doctor if not Crash Landing A Space Ship is right for me”*…