The Brave and the Bold

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The Brave and the Bold
Question, and the Butcher
(Flash and Green Lantern:...)
Flash, Green Lantern
(vol. 3)
Rotating characters from the DCU
Creative team
Written by
Penciller(s)
Inker(s)

The Brave and the Bold is a comic book series published by DC Comics as an ongoing series from 1955 to 1983. It was followed by a reprint miniseries in 1988, two original miniseries in 1991 and 1999, and was revived as an ongoing anthology title in 2007 and 2023. The focus of the series has varied over time, but it most commonly features team-ups of characters from across the DC Universe.

Publication history

Volume 1

The first volume of the series ran for 200 issues from August/September 1955 to July 1983.[1] Originally, The Brave and the Bold was an anthology series featuring adventure tales from past ages with characters such as the Silent Knight, the Viking Prince, the Golden Gladiator, and Robin Hood.[2] With issue #25, the series was reinvented as a try-out title for new characters and concepts, starting with the Suicide Squad created by writer Robert Kanigher and artist Ross Andru.[3] Gardner Fox and Joe Kubert created a new version of Hawkman in issue #34 (February–March 1961) with the character receiving his own title three years later.[4][5]

Editor Julius Schwartz hired Gardner Fox and artist Mike Sekowsky to create the Justice League of America. The team debuted in The Brave and the Bold #28 (February–March 1960), and after two further appearances in the title received its own series.[6]

Issues #45 through #49 (Dec. 1962/Jan. 1963 through Aug./Sept. 1963) were devoted to "Strange Sports Stories", combining sport and science-fiction in tales such as "Challenge of the Headless Baseball Team" and "The Man Who Drove Through Time".[7] Ten years later, in 1973, Strange Sports Stories was resurrected as a DC Comics title in its own right, but it lasted only six issues.[8]

The series was changed yet again with issue #50 as a team-up title between established characters.[9] Starting with issue #59 The Brave and the Bold became, more specifically, a Batman team-up book with the Caped Crusader as the book's main focus.[10] This was due to the popularity of the Batman television series.[11] After issue #74, The Brave and the Bold was exclusively a Batman team-up title until it ended with issue #200.

The teaming of Robin, Kid Flash, and Aqualad in issue #54 (June - July 1964) by writer Bob Haney and artist Bruno Premiani led to the creation of the Teen Titans.[12] The three heroes subsequently appeared under the name "Teen Titans" in issue #60 (June–July 1965) by Haney and artist Nick Cardy and were joined by Wonder Woman's younger sister Wonder Girl in her first appearance.[13]

The Metamorpho character was created by Haney and artist Ramona Fradon in The Brave and the Bold #57 (December 1964–January 1965).[14]

The title was the first to feature Neal Adams' version of Batman,[15] generating fan interest that led to Adams' style defining the modern Batman image to this day.[16] In addition, Adams updated Green Arrow's visual appearance by designing a new costume for the character in issue #85 (August–September 1969).[17] The primary artist for the second half of the run was Jim Aparo, starting with #98 (October - November 1971). Haney frequently disregarded continuity by scripting stories which contradicted DC's canon or by writing major heroes in an out-of-character fashion.[18] Issue #100 (Feb.-March 1972) featured Batman and "4 Famous Co-Stars" (Green Lantern, Green Arrow, Black Canary, and Robin) in a story by Haney and Aparo.[19] Issues #112 (April - May 1974) to #117 (Feb.-March 1975) of the series were in the 100 Page Super Spectacular format.[20]

The character Nemesis, also known as Thomas Tresser, debuted in an eight-page backup story in issue #166 (September 1980) written by Cary Burkett and drawn by Dan Spiegle.[21] The Tresser character was created by Burkett in 1979, and named for an actor with whom Burkett was rooming in New Hampshire.[22]

The title's final issue featured a team-up of the Batmen of

Batman and the Outsiders, the title that replaced The Brave and the Bold on DC's schedule and became Aparo's next regular assignment.[27]

Full list of issues

Issue # Character Notes
1–24 Golden Gladiator, Viking Prince, Silent Knight, and Robin Hood Steady rotation of two or three of these characters per issue.
25–27 Suicide Squad First appearance of the Suicide Squad.
28–30
Justice League of America
First appearance of the Justice League of America.
31–33 Cave Carson First appearance of Cave Carson.
34–36 Hawkman & Hawkgirl First Silver Age appearance of Hawkman and Hawkgirl.
37–39 Suicide Squad
40–41 Cave Carson
42–44 Hawkman and Hawkgirl
45–49 Strange Sports Stories
50 Green Arrow and Martian Manhunter team-up First team-up issue of the series.
51 Aquaman and Hawkman team-up
52
Johnny Cloud, and Haunted Tank
team-up
53 The Atom and The Flash team-up
54 Kid Flash, Aqualad, and Robin team-up First appearance of the then-unnamed Teen Titans.
55 The Metal Men and The Atom team-up
56 The Flash and Martian Manhunter team-up
57–58 Metamorpho First appearance of Metamorpho the Element Man.
59 Batman and Green Lantern team-up
60 Teen Titans First appearance of Wonder Girl.
61–62 Starman and Black Canary team-up
63 Supergirl and Wonder Woman team-up
64 Batman and Eclipso team-up Billed as "Batman Versus Eclipso" due to the hero/villain status of the Eclipso character at this time.
65 The Flash and the Doom Patrol team-up
66 Metamorpho and the Metal Men team-up
67 Batman and The Flash team-up
68 Batman and Metamorpho team-up Batman becomes a Bat-Hulk for a time in this issue.
69 Batman and Green Lantern team-up
70 Batman and Hawkman team-up
71 Batman and Green Arrow team-up
72 The Spectre and The Flash team-up
73 Aquaman and The Atom team-up First appearance of
Vulko
.
74 The Metal Men team-up First issue with Batman as the headlining regular character.
75 The Spectre team-up
76 Plastic Man team-up First Silver Age appearance of Plastic Man.
77 The Atom team-up
78 Batman, Wonder Woman, and Batgirl team-up First appearance of Copperhead.
79
Deadman
team-up
First issue drawn by Neal Adams.
80
The Creeper
team-up
First appearance of Hellgrammite.
81 The Flash team-up
82 Aquaman team-up
83 Teen Titans team-up
84 Sgt. Rock team-up
85 Green Arrow team-up First appearance of Green Arrow in his redesigned look.
86 Deadman team-up
87 Wonder Woman team-up
88 Wildcat team-up First Silver/Bronze Age appearance of Wildcat.
89 The Phantom Stranger team-up
90 Adam Strange team-up
91 Black Canary team-up
92 The Bat-Squad team-up First (and to date, only) appearance of the Bat-Squad.
93 The House of Mystery team-up
94 Teen Titans team-up
95 Plastic Man team-up Cover advertises team-up as a surprise.
96 Sgt. Rock team-up
97 Wildcat team-up
98 The Phantom Stranger team-up First drawn by Jim Aparo, who would become main artist.
99 The Flash team-up
100 Batman, Robin, Green Arrow, Green Lantern, and Black Canary team-up
101 Metamorpho team-up
102 Teen Titans team-up
103 The Metal Men team-up
104 Deadman team-up
105 Wonder Woman team-up
106 Green Arrow team-up
107 Black Canary team-up
108 Sgt. Rock team-up
109 The Demon
Etrigan
team-up
110 Wildcat team-up
111 The Joker team-up Much like the earlier Eclipso "team-up", it became adversarial.
112 Mister Miracle team-up First of a series of DC 100 Page Super Spectacular issues (mostly reprints with one new lead story).
113 The Metal Men team-up
114 Aquaman team-up
115 The Atom team-up
116 The Spectre team-up
117 Sgt. Rock team-up Last of the Super Spectacular reprint issues.
118 Wildcat team-up Cover states "Co-Starring The Joker".
119 Man-Bat team-up
120 Kamandi team-up
121 The Metal Men team-up
122 Swamp Thing team-up
123 Batman, Plastic Man, and Metamorpho team-up
124 Sgt. Rock team-up
125 The Flash team-up
126 Aquaman team-up
127 Wildcat team-up
128 Mister Miracle team-up
129–130 Green Arrow team-up "Co-Starring The Atom, The Joker, & Two-Face". Two-Face had previously encountered Green Arrow in #106.
131 Wonder Woman team-up "vs. Catwoman".
132 Richard Dragon team-up First issue of the series with the classic "bullet" DC logo.
133 Deadman team-up
134 Green Lantern team-up
135 The Metal Men team-up
136 Batman and Green Arrow team-Up with The Metal Men Follow-up to the previous issue.
137 The Demon
Etrigan
team-up
138 Mister Miracle team-up
139 Hawkman team-up
140 Wonder Woman team-up
141 Black Canary team-up Also featuring The Joker.
142 Aquaman team-up
143 The Creeper team-up Two-issue Human Target backup feature begins.
144 Green Arrow team-up
145 The Phantom Stranger team-up
146 The Unknown Soldier team-up
147 Supergirl team-up
148 Plastic Man team-up
149 Teen Titans team-up
150 Superman team-up Cover advertises team-up as a surprise.
151 The Flash team-up
152 The Atom team-up
153 Red Tornado team-up
154 Metamorpho team-up
155 Green Lantern team-up
156 Doctor Fate team-up
157 Kamandi team-up
158 Wonder Woman team-up
159 Ra's al Ghul team-up
160 Supergirl team-up
161 Adam Strange team-up
162 Sgt. Rock team-up
163 Black Lightning team-up
164 Hawkman team-up
165 Man-Bat team-up
166 Black Canary team-up First appearance of Nemesis in the backup feature that began in this issue and continued in every issue after unless otherwise noted.
167 Blackhawk team-up
168 Green Arrow team-up
169 Zatanna team-up
170 Nemesis team-up No backup feature this issue as Batman and Nemesis meet face-to-face.
171 Scalphunter team-up
172
Firestorm
team-up
173 Guardians of the Universe team-up
174 Green Lantern team-up Follow-up to the previous issue.
175 Lois Lane team-up
176 Swamp Thing team-up
177 Elongated Man team-up
178 The Creeper team-up
179 Legion of Super-Heroes team-up No Nemesis backup this issue.
180 The Spectre team-up
181 Hawk and Dove team-up
182 Robin (Earth-Two) team-up Also featuring Starman.
183 The Riddler team-up
184 Huntress team-up
185 Green Arrow team-up
186 Hawkman team-up
187 The Metal Men team-up Final appearance (death) of Nameless.
188–189 Rose and Thorn team-up
190 Adam Strange team-up
191 The Joker team-up Also featuring The Penguin
192 Superboy team-up Final issue featuring the Nemesis backup feature.
193 Nemesis team-up Final appearance of Nemesis within the series.
194 The Flash team-up
195 I…Vampire team-up
196
Ragman
team-up
197 Catwoman team-up Both the Batman and Catwoman in this issue are the Earth-Two versions.
198
Karate Kid
team-up
199 The Spectre team-up
200 Batman (Earth-Two) team-up Final issue. Ended to make way for
Katana, and the Outsiders
.

Volume 2

In December 1991 - June 1992, The Brave and the Bold returned as a six-issue

Question, and the Butcher.[28] The miniseries was written by Mike Grell and Mike Baron
.

Flash and Green Lantern: The Brave and the Bold

A six-issue miniseries was published from October 1999 - March 2000 starring the

).

The title was used again in 2001 for The Brave and the Bold Annual #1 (1969),[30] a one-shot special that reprinted selected Silver Age team-ups. The book was designed in the 1960s-style "80-Page Giant" format as if it were an actual annual issue of the original run of the title, which did not have an annual in 1969.

Volume 3

DC resurrected the Brave and the Bold title as another ongoing series in April 2007.

Legion of Super Heroes, Adam Strange, and the Challengers of the Unknown
. The second arc picked up threads from the first, but mainly focused on self-contained stories.

After Waid's departure,

and Scott Hampton.

In September 2009, the title was taken over by

Etrigan; and Barbara Gordon, Wonder Woman, and Zatanna, which served as a companion piece to Alan Moore's Batman: The Killing Joke
graphic novel.

Batman: The Brave and the Bold Volume 1

DC published a 22 issue comic book adaptation of the animated series Batman: The Brave and the Bold from 2009[32]-2010.[33] In 2010 it was followed by a 16 issue series titled All New Batman: The Brave and the Bold[34].

Batman and Wonder Woman

In 2018, DC released a limited series starring Batman and Wonder Woman.

The Doomed and the Damned

In October 2020, DC released an 80-Page Giant called The Doomed and the Damned.

Batman: The Brave and the Bold Volume 2

In May 2023, DC Comics released a fourth volume of the anthology series in entitled Batman: The Brave and the Bold, as a part of the "Dawn of DC" initiative. The series includes stories centered around Batman and other Gotham City-based characters, in addition other DC Universe superheroes. The first issue is 64-pages and features four stories by creators including Tom King, Mitch Gerads, Guillem March, Gabriel Hardman, Dan Mora, and Rob Williams.[35]

Collected editions

Awards

The series won

In other media

The Superman/Aquaman Hour of Adventure

An episode of The Superman/Aquaman Hour of Adventure was titled "The Brain, the Brave and the Bold", in which Aquaman battles a supervillain named the "Brain".

Justice League

The Brave and the Bold was used as the title for a two-part episode of the first season of

Green Lantern (John Stewart) characters in connection to the second mini-series featuring Barry Allen and Hal Jordan
in the roles.

Batman: The Brave and the Bold

An animated series based on the Brave and the Bold concept aired from November 14, 2008, to November 18, 2011. The series features Batman teaming with various characters of the DC Universe, much like the first volume of the ongoing series.[74] The tone of the series is markedly lighter than the previous Batman: The Animated Series and The Batman.

Major characters who appeared in the series include:

Heroes

.

Villains

.

Arrowverse

  • The eighth episode of Arrow's third season is titled "The Brave and the Bold". The episode is a crossover with The Flash and features a team-up of the title characters of both series.
  • In the crossover Crisis on Infinite Earths, Lex Luthor calls the team up with him and Marv Novu/The Monitor as "The Brave and The Bold".

References

  1. ^ The Brave and the Bold at the Grand Comics Database
  2. .
  3. . In "The Three Waves of Doom", a story that filled The Brave and the Bold #25, writer Robert Kanigher and artist Ross Andru introduced the Suicide Squad, a band of World War II-era military misfits.
  4. ^ McAvennie, Michael "1960s" in Dolan, p. 102: "DC's...renaissance soared to new heights with the return of Hawkman and Hawkgirl. Writer Gardner Fox and artist Joe Kubert...ushered in a pair of Winged Wonders that, costumes aside, were radically different from their Golden Age predecessors".
  5. . Hawkman took a little longer to get off the ground. He showed up initially in The Brave and the Bold #34 (February/March 1961), but had to wait three years for Hawkman #1 (April–May 1964).
  6. ^ McAvennie "1960s" in Dolan, p. 99: "Editor Julius Schwartz had repopulated the [superhero] subculture by revitalizing Golden Age icons like Green Lantern and the Flash..He recruited writer Gardner Fox and artist Mike Sekowsky, and together they came up with the Justice League of America, a modern version of the legendary Justice Society of America from the 1940s".
  7. .
  8. ^ Strange Sports Stories at the Grand Comics Database
  9. .
  10. ^ McAvennie "1960s" in Dolan, p. 115: "By issue #50, The Brave and the Bold developed into the ultimate team-up book. The Brave and the Bold #59 added one final element to the team-up theme, when writer Bob Haney and artist Ramona Fradon partnered Batman with Green Lantern".
  11. .
  12. ^ McAvennie "1960s" in Dolan, p. 111: "They were never given a team name when scribe Bob Haney and artist Bruno Premiani spun them against Mister Twister. However, this first team-up of Robin, Kid Flash, and Aqualad came to be classically regarded as the inaugural story of the Teen Titans".
  13. ^ McAvennie "1960s" in Dolan, p. 115: "Writer Bob Haney and artist Nick Cardy added another member to the ranks of the newly formed Teen Titans: Wonder Girl".
  14. ^ McAvennie "1960s" in Dolan, p. 114: "Scribe Bob Haney and artist Ramona Fradon were truly in their element...Haney and Fradon's collaborative chemistry resulted in [Rex] Mason becoming Metamorpho".
  15. ^ Haney, Bob (w), Adams, Neal (p), Adams, Neal (i). "The Track of the Hook" The Brave and the Bold, no. 79 (August–September 1968).
  16. . Artist Neal Adams started a long association with Batman, applying his modern style to the tales.
  17. ^ McAvennie "1960s" in Dolan, p. 134: "Artist Neal Adams targeted the Emerald Archer for a radical redesign that ultimately evolved past the surface level...the most significant aspect of this issue was Adams' depiction of Oliver Queen's alter ego. He had rendered a modern-day Robin Hood, complete with goatee and mustache, plus threads that were more befitting an ace archer".
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  27. ^ Manning, Matthew K. "1980s" in Dolan, p. 202: "Despite being the final issue of this particular series, the book wasn't closed on Batman's team-ups. Although Batman was through working with partners, it was time to think bigger, and in a special sixteen-page preview insert written by Barr and with art by Jim Aparo, the Outsiders debuted. A super-hero team of Batman's own creation, the Outsiders would soon star alongside Batman in the new monthly series Batman and the Outsiders".
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External links