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DC Archives: The New Teen Titans Vol. 1: DC Comics Presents #26 The New Teen Titans #1–8 230 1-5638-9485-8: DC Archives: The New Teen Titans Vol. 2: The New Teen Titans #9–16 The Best of DC Blue Ribbon Digest #18 240 1-5638-9951-5: DC Archives: The New Teen Titans Vol. 3: The New Teen Titans #17–20 Tales of the New Teen Titans #1–4 228 ...
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 ...
When comics and animation work petered out in the late 1980s, Haney turned to other forms of writing, including a book on carpentry. He wrote a few additional comics scripts for DC including Elseworlds 80-Page Giant #1 (August 1999); Silver Age: The Brave and the Bold #1 (July 2000); [6] and the posthumously published Teen Titans Lost Annual #1 (March 2008). [34]
In 2002, according to Murakami in an interview in 2012, Sam Register, Senior Vice President of development at Cartoon Network at the time, wanted a show that was based on the comics, Teen Titans, and brought Murakami, who already had a history with Batman Beyond and Superman: The Animated Series to create the new series based on the comics, the Teen Titans. [1] "
J.T. Krul's first comic book work was at Marvel Comics, writing X-Men Unlimited and later, Spider-Man Unlimited. [3] He subsequently went to work for Michael Turner's company, Aspen MLT, writing their flagship titles Fathom and Soulfire. He then launched a creator-owned comic book there called Mindfield, which debuted in 2010. [2]
Romeo Tanghal was born and raised in the Philippines.A self–taught artist, he started doing comics illustrations after graduating high school. He briefly worked with various local publications before emigrating to the United States in 1976. [2]
Several comic book and comic strip writers, artists, and others have appeared within the fictional world of comics, both their own and others'.Some appear as simple characters in the story, some appear as characters who break the fourth wall and address the reader directly, and some make cameo appearances in framing sequences to introduce a story and sometimes to have a last word.
First appeared in Teen Titans #37. [117] Rendered comatose and taken to Cadmus for care in Teen Titans #87. [118] Incorporated into the New 52. [101] Amy Allen: Bombshell: Team member during one-year gap. First appeared in Teen Titans #39. [119] Died in Teen Titans #43. [120] Resurrected in Teen Titans #63. [121] Disappeared during the New 52 ...