Ad
related to: teen titans original members
Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Founding member. Left the team between Teen Titans (vol. 6) #19 and Teen Titans (vol. 6) Special #1. Former member of the original Teen Titans. Currently active in the Titans. Beast Boy: Garfield Logan: Founding member. Left the team in #17. Former member of the original Teen Titans. Currently active in the Titans. Kid Flash: Wally West II ...
Wonder Girl, the sidekick of Wonder Woman and a founding member of the Teen Titans in the comics, was denied inclusion to the main cast of the series due to licensing issues. [22] [23] [24] As a result, she only makes cameo appearances in the series. Wonder Girl appears in Teen Titans Go!, where she is identified as Donna Troy, the first Wonder ...
Teen Titans #44 (Nov. 1976), relaunching the original series, art by Ernie Chan and Vince Colletta. The series resumed with issue #44 (November 1976). [25] The stories included the introductions of African American superheroine Bumblebee and former supervillainess-turned-superheroine Harlequin in issue #48 [26] and the introduction of the "Teen Titans West" team in issues #50–52 consisting ...
The Teen Titans from left to right: Cyborg, Robin, Beast Boy, Starfire, and Raven. Teen Titans is based primarily on stories by Marv Wolfman and George Pérez from the 1980s, featuring characters, storylines, and concepts introduced during the run, and incorporating a similar group of members.
Dawn was also a member of the original Titans. Although in a relationship with Hank at the start of the series, she was previously dating Dick Grayson on the original Titans team, creating lingering tensions between the three. In the first season, Dawn is sought by Dick to look after Rachel Roth while she and Hank are planning to retire.
Mal Duncan made his first appearance in Teen Titans #26, and was created by Robert Kanigher and Nick Cardy. [2]In that issue, the African-American Mal kissed the Caucasian Lilith Clay goodbye, in a scene considered to be the first interracial kiss in comic book history. [3]
Like the original Teen Titans, Young Justice was centered on three previously established teen heroes: Superboy, Robin, and Impulse, but grew to encompass most teenaged heroes in the DC Universe. [1] In the 2003 mini-series Titans/Young Justice: Graduation Day, both groups disbanded and members of each formed two new teams of Teen Titans and ...
The original Hawk and Dove made sporadic appearances in different DC titles throughout the 1970s and 1980s, primarily within the Teen Titans and New Teen Titans, joining the original incarnation briefly from Teen Titans #25–30 (January–October 1970), under the guidance of writers Dick Giordano and Robert Kanigher and artist Nick Cardy ...
Ad
related to: teen titans original members