Table of Contents

Henry "Hank" Pym (Yellowjacket)

Part 1: The Dossier: An At-a-Glance Summary

Part 2: Origin and Evolution

Publication History and Creation

Dr. Henry Pym first appeared as a civilian scientist in Tales to Astonish #27 (January 1962), in a standalone science-fiction story titled “The Man in the Ant Hill.” This initial story, created by writer-editor Stan Lee, scripter Larry Lieber, and penciler Jack Kirby, was not originally intended to introduce a superhero. However, with the burgeoning success of the Marvel superhero line, Pym was brought back and reinvented as the hero Ant-Man in Tales to Astonish #35 (September 1962). The Yellowjacket persona, however, would not debut until the Bronze Age of Comics. This more aggressive and confident alter ego was introduced in The Avengers #59 (December 1968), created by writer Roy Thomas and artist John Buscema. The creation of Yellowjacket reflected a larger trend in comics of the era to explore heroes with significant personal flaws and psychological depth. Thomas conceived of the identity change as a way to explore Pym's established feelings of inadequacy next to powerhouses like Thor and Iron Man. This storyline, where Pym suffers a complete mental breakdown and adopts a new, swaggering personality, was a dramatic departure from the more straightforward heroism of the Silver Age and set the stage for decades of stories centered on Pym's mental and emotional instability.

In-Universe Origin Story

The origin of the Yellowjacket identity is a tale of psychological trauma and scientific accident, but it unfolds in drastically different ways across the two primary Marvel continuities.

Earth-616 (Prime Comic Universe)

In the primary Marvel comics timeline, the birth of Yellowjacket was the direct result of a mental breakdown. For years, Dr. Hank Pym had struggled with an intense inferiority complex. Despite being a founding Avenger and a scientific genius, he constantly felt overshadowed by his more famous and physically powerful teammates. This pressure was compounded by the immense guilt he carried over his many scientific misadventures, most notably the creation of the genocidal robot, Ultron. The breaking point occurred in The Avengers #59. While working alone in his lab, Pym accidentally dropped a container of various chemicals, releasing a gas that he inhaled. The unknown concoction triggered an acute schizophrenic episode, fracturing his already fragile psyche. This break caused the suppression of his inhibitions and insecurities, allowing a new, more aggressive and arrogant personality to surface. This new persona designed a striking yellow-and-black costume, dubbed himself “Yellowjacket,” and burst into Avengers Mansion claiming to have killed Hank Pym. He was brash, overconfident, and dangerously impulsive. In a shocking move, he abducted his longtime partner, Janet van Dyne (The Wasp), and demanded she marry him. Janet, recognizing fragments of Hank in the crazed man's behavior and believing it was the only way to reach him, surprisingly agreed to the proposal. The wedding took place in The Avengers #60, but was interrupted by an attack from the Circus of Crime. During the battle, the shock of seeing Janet in danger was enough to snap Pym out of his schizophrenic state, restoring his original personality. He was horrified to learn he was now married, but he and Janet decided to make the marriage work, marking the beginning of one of the most turbulent relationships in comics. The Yellowjacket identity, born from trauma, would remain a part of Pym's life, an ever-present symbol of his inner demons.

Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU)

The Marvel Cinematic Universe presents a complete reimagining of the Yellowjacket concept. In this continuity, Hank Pym (portrayed by Michael Douglas) was never Yellowjacket. He was the original Ant-Man, a S.H.I.E.L.D. agent during the Cold War who retired after his wife, Janet van Dyne, was lost to the Quantum Realm. The Yellowjacket identity belongs entirely to Darren Cross (portrayed by Corey Stoll), the main antagonist of the 2015 film Ant-Man. Cross was once Hank Pym's brilliant and ambitious protégé at Pym Technologies. Pym, protective of his dangerous Pym Particle technology, refused to share its secrets, leading to a bitter falling out. Cross forced Pym out of his own company and spent years obsessively trying to replicate the Pym Particle formula. Cross eventually succeeded, but his version of the particle was unstable. Prolonged exposure to the imperfect particles began to warp his mind, eroding his sanity and amplifying his paranoia and aggression. Driven by a deep-seated resentment of his former mentor and a lust for military power, Cross developed a sophisticated combat suit based on Pym's designs. He named this weaponized suit the “Yellowjacket.” Unlike Pym's suits, which were designed for espionage and rescue, Cross's Yellowjacket was a pure instrument of death, equipped with armor plating, articulated mechanical stingers, and powerful plasma cannons. His goal was to mass-produce the suit and sell it to the highest bidder, including organizations like HYDRA. The climax of the film sees Scott Lang, as the new Ant-Man, battling Darren Cross's Yellowjacket, a conflict representing the battle for Hank Pym's legacy. Cross was ultimately defeated when Lang sabotaged his suit, causing it to shrink uncontrollably and implode into the Quantum Realm.

Part 3: Abilities, Equipment & Personality

The attributes associated with the Yellowjacket identity diverge significantly between the comics' Hank Pym and the MCU's Darren Cross, reflecting their different origins and purposes.

Earth-616 (Prime Comic Universe)

As Yellowjacket, Hank Pym retains all of his baseline abilities and augments them with specific equipment.

Powers and Abilities

Equipment

Personality

The Yellowjacket persona is a manifestation of Pym's psychological issues. Where Hank Pym is often wracked with guilt, self-doubt, and scientific caution, Yellowjacket is the polar opposite. He is:

This persona represents Hank's desperate desire to be the hero he feels he should be—decisive, confident, and powerful—but it is filtered through a lens of mental instability, making it a dangerous and unpredictable identity.

Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU)

Darren Cross's Yellowjacket is a product of technology and mental decay, with no natural superhuman abilities.

Powers and Abilities

Equipment

Personality

Darren Cross as Yellowjacket is a reflection of corporate greed and rejected ambition.

Part 4: Key Relationships & Network

Core Allies

Arch-Enemies

Affiliations

Part 5: Iconic Events & Storylines

The Coming of Yellowjacket! (The Avengers #59-60)

This 1968 storyline introduced the Yellowjacket persona. Following a lab accident, a new, aggressive personality emerges from Hank Pym's fractured psyche. This “Yellowjacket” claims to have murdered Pym, kidnaps Janet van Dyne, and demands her hand in marriage. The other Avengers are baffled and unsure how to react. In a move of incredible intuition, Janet agrees, sensing that Hank is still inside the manic persona. The story climaxes at their wedding, where an attack by the Circus of Crime shocks Pym back to his senses. The event permanently altered Pym's character, introducing the theme of severe mental illness and establishing the unpredictable Yellowjacket as a core part of his identity.

The Trial of Yellowjacket (The Avengers #212-213, #217)

This is arguably the most infamous and controversial storyline in Hank Pym's history. Suffering from another severe mental breakdown due to years of stress and feelings of failure, Pym becomes paranoid and erratic. In a moment of anger and frustration during an argument, he strikes Janet. Horrified by his own actions but too deep in his breakdown to stop, he concocts a desperate plan to redeem himself. He builds a powerful robot programmed with a secret weakness only he knows and sets it upon the Avengers during his court-martial, planning to “save” them and prove his worth. The plan backfires spectacularly. Janet discovers his plan and defeats the robot herself. The Avengers are forced to expel him in disgrace. This storyline cemented Pym's reputation as a “wife-beater” among fans and has cast a long shadow over the character, despite creators later stating the slap itself was an artistic misinterpretation of the script's intent.2)

Ultron Unlimited (The Avengers Vol. 3 #19-22)

Written by Kurt Busiek with art by George Pérez, this is considered a definitive Ultron story and a crucial moment of catharsis for Hank Pym. Ultron returns, more powerful than ever, and slaughters the entire population of the nation of Slorenia, turning them into cyborg drones. He then sends an army of his prior incarnations to attack the Avengers. The story forces Hank to directly confront the scale of his failure. In a powerful climax, Pym realizes that Ultron's programming is based on his own mind, and thus, its desire to create life (albeit twisted) comes from him. Using this insight and a vial of Vibranium “cancer,” Pym defeats his creation. This event doesn't erase his guilt, but it forces him to accept his responsibility and marks a significant step in his long road to self-forgiveness.

Part 6: Variants and Alternative Versions

See Also

Notes and Trivia

3) 4) 5) 6) 7)

1)
This detail has varied over the years, sometimes depicted as part of the suit, other times as a temporary biological alteration.
2)
Writer Jim Shooter intended for the scene to depict an accidental strike as Pym wildly gesticulated, but artist Bob Hall drew it as a deliberate backhand. The art became canon, defining the moment for decades to come.
3)
Hank Pym holds the record for the most different superhero identities of any major Marvel character, having been Ant-Man, Giant-Man, Goliath, Yellowjacket, the Wasp (in honor of Janet after her apparent death), and even an AI construct called Pymtron.
4)
In the MCU, the Yellowjacket technology makes a brief return in the animated series What If…? in the episode “What If… the World Lost Its Mightiest Heroes?” where a vengeful Hank Pym uses the suit to assassinate the Avengers candidates.
5)
The infamous “slap” in Avengers #213 was, according to writer Jim Shooter, a misunderstanding with the artist. His script called for Pym to be distraught and accidentally strike Janet while throwing his hands up in despair, not to deliberately hit her. The artwork, however, depicted a clear backhand, and this interpretation became the canonical version of the event.
6)
The first appearance of Yellowjacket in The Avengers #59 is notable for its cliffhanger ending, where Janet van Dyne screams, “Oh, no! You– You've killed him! You've KILLED my Hank!”, leading readers to believe Pym was truly dead.
7)
In the comics, another character named Rita DeMara later stole one of Pym's old Yellowjacket costumes and operated as a supervillain, and later a reluctant hero, under the same name, even joining the Guardians of the Galaxy for a time.