I don't mean to be irreverent here or to cause any embarassment to Flatlander... but as I read the papers today with the passing of Christopher Reeve I couldn't help notice two things. The repeated line of "He escaped the cape"... and how nearly every paper and internet article and even here (due respect to Flatlander now)... they kept saying "Superman" or "Super human' strength to the fight of..." and so forth.
Escaped the cape? Even in death references to his most known character which he, better than George, tried to break away from with by doing as many diversified character roles as possible, as illustrated here (a list from IMDB.com)
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Replica (2004) .... Archive Footage
Toughest Break: Martin's Story, The (1998) (TV) .... Narrator
Rear Window (1998) (TV) .... Jason Kemp
Nine (1996) (VG) (voice) .... Thurston Last
Without Pity: A Film About Abilities (1996) (TV) .... Narrator
Step Toward Tomorrow, A (1996) .... Denny Gabrial
Black Fox: Good Men and Bad (1995) (TV) .... Alan Johnson
Black Fox: The Price of Peace (1995) (TV) .... Alan Johnson
Black Fox (1995) (TV) .... Alan Johnson
Above Suspicion (1995) .... Dempsey Cain
Village of the Damned (1995) .... Dr. Alan Chaffee
Speechless (1994) .... Bob 'Bagdad' Freed
Morning Glory (1993) (TV) .... Will Parker
Remains of the Day, The (1993) .... Lewis
Sea Wolf, The (1993) (TV) .... Humphrey Van Weyden
Nightmare in the Daylight (1992) (TV) .... Sean
Mortal Sins (1992) (TV) .... Father Thomas Cusack
Noises Off... (1992) .... Frederick Dallas/Philip Brent
Death Dreams (1991) (TV) .... George Westfield
Bump in the Night (1991) (TV) .... Lawrence Muller
Earthday Birthday (1990) .... It Zwibble
Rose and the Jackal, The (1990) (TV) .... Allan Pinkerton
Great Escape II: The Untold Story, The (1988) (TV) .... Maj. John Dodge
Switching Channels (1988) .... Blaine Bingham
Superman IV: The Quest for Peace (1987) .... Superman/Clark Kent
Street Smart (1987) .... Jonathan Fisher
Anna Karenina (1985) (TV) .... Count Vronsky
Aviator, The (1985) .... Edgar Anscombe
Bostonians, The (1984) .... Basil Ransome
Superman III (1983) .... Superman/Clark Kent
Monsignor (1982) .... Flaherty
I Love Liberty (1982) (TV)
Deathtrap (1982) .... Clifford Anderson
Somewhere in Time (1980) .... Richard Collier
Superman II (1980) .... Superman/Clark Kent
Muppets Go Hollywood, The (1979) (TV)
Superman (1978) .... Superman/Clark Kent/Kal-El
Gray Lady Down (1978) .... Phillips
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Yes, I realize that he donned the cape four times but most likely because he had fun with the character and liked the script(s). But from his filmography it would be fair to say that he saw himself as more diversified than Kal-El.
Hmm, the point... what exactly am I trying to say here... probably nothing except an observation on how the media manipulates us to go the way they want us to think.
Kudos to Reeves who held on and fought the good fight.
Compare to George Reeves with this biography (also from IMDB.com)
Raised in Pasadena California, educated at Pasadena Junior College. Skilled amateur boxer and musician. Intern at Pasadena Community Playhouse. Discovered there and cast as Stuart Tarleton in Gone With the Wind. Contracted to Warners, Fox, and Paramount Studios over next 10 years. Achieved near-stardom with male lead in So Proudly We Hail!, but war service interrupted career which never regained same level. In Army Air Corps, appeared on Broadway in Winged Victory, then made training films. Career difficulties after war led to move to New York for live television. Cast as television's first Superman and became world-famous. Some film roles remained, but was mostly typecast as Superman and other acting jobs dried up. Considering an attempt at exhibition wrestling when he committed suicide by shooting himself. Much controversy over his death, due to circumstances and his longtime affair with Toni Mannix, wife of MGM exec Eddie Mannix, but no credible evidence has arisen to refute the basic fact of his suicide. Theories abound, however.
As I understand it not even he could "escape the cape" (because of the Superman role) in death either. Papers at the time, read that he was killed by a
kryponite bullet so that kids the world over won't be disillusioned of the superhuman abilities of their hero. (still trying to find original newspaper articles which stated that, but I recall reading about it a while ago...

).
Oh also here is Christopher Reeve's (immediate) family tree... many are saying that George (original Superman) is Christopher's father... not.
Father: Franklin Reeve, professor; divorced from Reeve's mother 1956
Mother: Barbara Johnson, journalist; remarried
Brother: Benjamin Reeve, lawyer; born 1953
Half-brother: Jeff Johnson
Half-brother: Kevin Johnson
Son: Matthew Reeve, born 1979; mother, Gae Exton
Daughter: Alexandra Reeve, born 1983; mother, Gae Exton
Son: Will Reeve, born 1992; mother, Dana Morosini