Marvel is perhaps most famous for its superheroes—gods, mutants, geniuses with technology, and ordinary people stepping up to face the impossible—but there’s another type of hero who’s been instrumental in building this universe: women. From the comic book pages to the billion-dollar films, women creators have redefined what it means to be a hero, pushed the limits, and helped Marvel become the cultural phenomenon it is today.
Back when Marvel started life as Timely Comics in 1939, the business was very much a man’s world. Nevertheless, women managed to make their way in and have an impact on the direction the company was headed. One of the first to break through was Marie Severin, who started working at Marvel during the 1950s. As one of the very few females in mainstream superhero comics at that point, her skill as an artist and determination paved the way for later generations.
In the 1970s, things started to change. More women started moving into writing and editing positions, not only contributing to how stories were told, but also who got to be at the center of them. Even though author Chris Claremont is not a woman, he wrote many of Marvel’s best-known female characters—Storm, Jean Grey, and Kitty Pryde—characters which became central to the X-Men franchise and provided young readers with female role models. By the ’80s, Louise Simonson and Ann Nocenti were household names at Marvel, central to the creative forces behind the company. Simonson’s storytelling across the X-Men universe and Nocenti’s gritty work on Daredevil brought depth and new perspectives to characters and narratives. These weren’t just comic books—they were explorations of emotion, power, and identity that added richness to the Marvel mythos.
Fast forward to the 2000s, and women were no longer just carving out space—they were leading the charge. G. Willow Wilson introduced readers to Kamala Khan, a Muslim Pakistani-American teenager who became Ms. Marvel and soon became one of the most popular new Marvel heroes. Kelly Sue DeConnick tackled Captain Marvel, turning Carol Danvers into a force to be reckoned with as a feminist icon. Meanwhile, artists such as Sara Pichelli were establishing a new visual direction for the Marvel universe, demonstrating that women’s work wasn’t merely valuable—it was vital.
As the comics were gradually growing more diverse, the Marvel Cinematic Universe debuted in 2008 with a notable absence of women behind the scenes as writers. But things began to shift with Guardians of the Galaxy in 2014, which was co-written by Nicole Perlman—the first woman to ever have a writing credit for a Marvel Studios film. Her script set the tone for the film’s blend of humor, heart, and science fiction adventure, and it established a new path for the franchise.
That momentum persisted. Anna Boden made Marvel Studios’ first female director on Captain Marvel, co-written with Geneva Robertson-Dworet and Jac Schaeffer. The film’s huge success sent one unmistakable message: fans were ready—and hungry—for female superhero tales. Oscar winner Chloé Zhao infused Eternals with her singular voice, a film that found room for cosmic scale as well as lived-in emotional resonance. Directors such as Kate Herron (Loki) and Cate Shortland (Black Widow) brought levels of introspection and depth to Marvel characters, focusing long-overdue attention on female leads.
Marvel’s drive towards inclusivity became even more evident in its latest phases. Jac Schaeffer’s contributions to WandaVision turned a quirky genre exercise into a forceful examination of loss and resilience. Megan McDonnell assisted in bringing that emotional trajectory over to The Marvels, where Monica Rambeau took another step into the spotlight. Bisha K. Ali, meanwhile, introduced Kamala Khan into the MCU in Ms. Marvel, a celebration of Muslim and South Asian identity on a big stage. Jessica Gao’s She-Hulk: Attorney at Law made legal comedy a site for self-aware feminist narrative, and Nia DaCosta broke history as the first Black woman to direct an MCU movie.
Behind it all, however, are producers such as Victoria Alonso who made it feasible. Her work at Marvel Studios has played a crucial role in ensuring that more women are seated at the table—and given creative freedom to effect lasting change.
The effect of these women isn’t only about representation—it’s about change. They’ve enabled Marvel to craft stories that are more diverse, more emotionally complex, and more representative of the actual world. Because of them, the Marvel Universe keeps expanding into something richer, more complex, and more human. The superhero universe can still be populated with flying costumes and extraterrestrial attacks, but beneath all of it are the women who dared to redefine what a hero was—and changed the world with stories.