Thursday, January 1, 2015

Famous Firsts: "The Joker's Double Jeopardy!" by O'Neil, Novkick, and Giordano

Happy New Year, Groove-ophiles! 2015 is here, and here's wishing you and yours the greatest year ever! We're kicking off the new year with a brand-new header, created by John Gandour, designer of The Drawings of Jim Steranko website! Thanks a ka-zillion, John! Far-out, ain't it, Groove-ophiles?

1975 was a pretty big year for first issues. Everything from Justice, Inc. and Beowulf to the Invaders and the All-New, All-Different X-Men came alive in '75! Today we're gonna rap about a Famous First that was a looooooong time in coming--the first issue of  DC's The Joker!

When the Clown Prince of Crime made his debut in the first issue of Batman way back in 1940, everyone knew that he was something special! So special that they "un-killed" him and brought him back asap. Of all the super-villains in comicdom, with the possible exception of Lex Luthor, The Joker is the comicbook villain who has become best known to the world at large. From Cesar Romero's turn on the Batman TV show (which Ol' Groove is digging daily--thanks, Santa!) to Jack Nicholson in the 1989 flick to Mark Hamill's spot-on cartoon characterization to the late Heath Ledger's evil Jerry Lewis in The Dark Knight, everyone knows the Joker. Back in 1975, comics didn't dominate the pop culture as they seem to do now, but there was still a strong interest in Jerry Robinson's villainous brain-child (thanks in no small part to Batman #251's "Joker's Five-Way Revenge"--perhaps the greatest single Joker story ever!)--and so in February, 1975, the Grinning Gangster finally got his own mag by the semi-regular Batman creative team of Denny O'Neil, Irv Novick, and Dick Giordano. Check out..."The Joker's Double Jeopardy!" (Guest-starring my personal fave Bat-villain, Two-Face!)
Cover art by Dick Giordano




















The Joker's mag lasted a total of nine issues, with other creators like Elliot S! Maggin, Ernie Chan, and Jose Luis Garcia-Lopez adding to the ka-razee mix. So his mag didn't last as long as the lesser-known Marvel super-villain Doctor Doom's Super-Villain Team-Up (which made it's Giant-Size debut a couple months earlier), he's been treated much better by Hollywood. At least that's something, innit?

7 comments:

  1. Didja know... that whenever you use the word "ka-razee" in a post, it shows up as a match for "Ka-Zar" in your search tool? Try it!

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  2. I still have all of the issues of this series in my comic book drawers. It was one of my favorites as a kid.

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  3. Speaking of Famous Firsts, I was taken by surprise by your new header, spotlighting some of my favorite artists, though it's also surprising, given what I've read here, that Starlin's Groovy Age Warlock isn't represented, Cool choices, though. I like it!

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  4. Happy New Year,Mr Groove!
    Cheers!
    /Mr Anonymous

    ReplyDelete
  5. ty agent

    this was very funny: the false hair gag is brilliant

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  6. Happy New Year.....!!! great post... (my issue is signed (by Swartz and Geridino...) ... we scanned and posted it a while back... always enjoy the Joker...!!!

    ReplyDelete

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Special thanks to Mike's Amazing World of Comics and Grand Comics Database for being such fantastic resources for covers, dates, creator info, etc. Thou art treasures true!


Note to "The Man": All images are presumed copyright by the respective copyright holders and are presented here as fair use under applicable laws, man! If you hold the copyright to a work I've posted and would like me to remove it, just drop me an e-mail and it's gone, baby, gone.


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