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Bluebird (Harper Row) is a fictional character appearing in American comic books published by DC Comics, primarily in association with Batman. Harper Row was created by writer Scott Snyder and artist Greg Capullo , [ 1 ] first appearing in Batman (vol. 2) #7 (March 2012), before debuting as Bluebird in Batman #28 (February 2014). [ 2 ]
Cullen Row is a fictional character appearing in American comic books published by DC Comics. He debuted during "The New 52" reboot. Cullen Row is the gay brother of Harper Row. When his bullies attacked him and Harper managed to tase one of them, Cullen was saved by Batman. [70]
They also name themselves Violet Harper, seeing themselves as a new individual; enter a relationship with Brion Markov; and befriend Harper Row. However, they are kidnapped by Granny Goodness , who harnesses their access to the Source to access the Anti-Life Equation before Victor Stone rescues them.
Instead of taking on the mantle of Robin, which is traditionally that of Batman's sidekick, Harper Row instead adopts an entirely new superhero identity, Bluebird. Her appearance marks the arrival of the first new "Bat-family" character in Batman comics since DC relaunched its entire line in 2011 as part of its The New 52 publishing event.
Although she is used by Mother to kill Miranda Row, mother of Batman's new ally Harper Row, at the conclusion of the storyline, Harper forgives Cassandra for her role in her mother's death, while Cassandra's own father David sacrifices himself to kill Mother by trapping her in her disintegrating fortress, refusing to allow her to torture others ...
A month later, Bruce Wayne comes back to talk to Harper Row about her mother's death, and Harper Row tells Batman she wants to quit being a hero in order to help people on her own terms. Batman allows Cassandra Cain to join him, and he reconciles with Nightwing over the recent events before heading off with Tim Drake, Damian Wayne, and Jason ...
Punchline is a supervillain who appears in American comic books published by DC Comics, commonly in association with the supervillain The Joker.Created by writer James Tynion IV and artist Jorge Jiménez, she first appears in Batman (Vol. 3) #89 (April 2020), during the "Joker War" story arc.
Instead, there exists a group of young female vigilantes known as "the Batgirls", whose ranks consist of a Batwoman fan named Harper Row, an African American mechanic named Kathy Duquesne, a young Caucasian girl named Nell Little, and a Singaporean-American dancer named Alysia Yeoh. [83]