Donna Troy

Justice League of America (vol. 2) #58

Issue Credits

Writer
James Robinson
Penciller
Daniel Sampere and Miguel Sepulveda
Inker
Wayne Faucher and Miguel Sepulveda
Colourist
Andrew Dalhouse
Letterer
Rob Leigh
Editor
Rex Ogle and Eddie Berganza
Cover Colourist
Andrew Dalhouse
Cover Penciller
Brett Booth
Cover Inker
Norm Rapmund
Variant Cover Artist
Aaron Lopresti
Variant Cover Colourist
Hi-Fi

Quotes

Atom: Big green-blue light says “follow me,” I follow.

Synopsis "Eclipso Rising Part Five: The Destined and the Dying"

Eclipso, the former spirit of vengeance, seeks to kill god by destroying the planet Earth. He has eclipsed a group of heroes and villains, each of whom has some power over shadows, and has led them in a successful assault on the Emerald City of the Starheart. Using the captured Starheart energy Eclipso summoned and apparently killed the Spectre. Then with power stolen in turn from the Spectre Eclipso cleaved the moon in two.
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Donna Troy by Heni Lopez

Continuing this short series of JLA fan art beings us to Donna Troy. Now there is a lot of Donna art out there, a lot of it cheesecake, but I think this piece (above) by Heni Lopez captures something else. I love the way he’s taken the universe motif from her costume and carried it into the shadows in her hair.

Justice League of America (vol. 2) #53

Issue Credits

Writer
James Robinson
Penciller
Mark Bagley
Inker
Rob Hunter, Norm Rapmund, and Don Ho
Colourist
Hi-Fi
Letterer
Rob Leigh
Associate Editor
Rex Ogle
Editor
Adam Schlagman and Eddie Berganza
Cover Penciller
Mark Bagley
Cover Inker
Rob Hunter
Cover Colourist
Hi-Fi
Variant Cover Artist
David Mack

Quotes

Ultraman: Amazons. They only understand three things. Fight, fight and fight.

Donna Troy: Get the hell off my world, hag!

Synopsis "JLA: Omega - Part 4: Finale"

Previously: The Anti-Matter Earth has been scorched by “dark energy” unleashed from the Multiverse by a doomsday device left behind by Alexander Luthor. The Crime Syndicate came to Earth-Zero looking to resurrect Luthor so that he could stop his weapon, but the resurrection attempt was hijacked by Doctor Impossible who unwittingly caused the energy destroying the Anti-Matter Earth to be incarnated as a figure calling itself the Omega Man. Jade managed to seal the Omega Man inside of Washington DC, but her energy dome also sealed the Syndicate and League inside with him. The Omega Man transformed Supergirl into her Dark Supergirl doppelgänger and allied himself with Ultraman. The rest of the League and Syndicate joined forced to fight the Omega Man, but he gave them an ultimatum to let him leave or he would kill them all. An ultimatum that it appears Batman has just agreed to…

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Justice League of America (vol. 2) #49

Credits

Writer
James Robinson
Penciller
Pow Rodrix and Robson Rocha
Inker
Christian Alamy, John Dell, Julio Ferreira, Sandra Hope, Keith Champagne, Rodney Ramos, Don Ho, Tom Nguyen, and Derek Fridolfs
Colourist
Rod Reis
Letterer
Rob Leigh
Assistant Editor
Rex Ogle
Associate Editor
Adam Schlagman
Editor
Eddie Berganza
Cover Penciller
Mark Bagley
Cover Inker
Rob Hunter
Cover Colourist
Ulises
Variant Cover Artist
Francis Manapul
Variant Cover Colourist
Brian Buccellato

Quotes

Donna Troy [on the Bogeyman's hateful apparitions]: I guess you could have thrown in Hyperion or Brainiac 8 killing me. Maybe Dark Angel. You could have. Wouldn’t have mattered. In reality I saw Roy lying there maimed. I saw my husband and baby come back as murderous undead Black Lanterns. Hell, I broke my own son’s neck! Not a dream, not an imaginary story. It was real and I saw it! I did it!

Batman: Now let’s go fight some crime.

Synopsis "The Bogeyman"

The JLA relaxes after their recent team-up with the Justice Society. Supergirl and Batman get something to eat after arriving back at the Bat Bunker with a giant trophy saxophone they took from a villain called the Murder Maestro. Later they return to Gotham City as Batman suspects that the Maestro may have been part of a larger scheme. Elsewhere Congo Bill swings through New York’s Central Park, Jesse Quick reconnects with her husband, and Mikal drowns his sorrows at a bar in Opal.

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Justice League of America (vol. 2) #41

Issue Credits

Writer
James Robinson
Penciller
Mark Bagley
Inker
Rob Hunter, Marlo Alquiza, and Walden Wong
Colourist
Pete Pantazis
Letterer
John J. Hill
Associate Editor
Adam Schlagman
Editor
Eddie Berganza
Cover Penciller
Mark Bagley
Cover Inker
Rob Hunter
Cover Colourist
Pete Pantazis

Synopsis "Team History (Part 1)"

Previously: The Justice League had suffered a run of narrow victories that had left them depleted and battered. The super villain Prometheus engineered a massive scheme to teleport entire cities to random places in space and time. He injured many Leaguers and ripped Red Arrow’s arm off before he was captured. He then blackmailed the Justice League, forcing them to vote to release him in exchange for the cities’ safety (Justice League: Cry For Justice #1-7). Shortly afterwards, the remaining members of the League (Vixen, Red Tornado, Doctor Light, and  Plastic Man) with Gypsy and Zatanna found themselves assaulted by Black Lanterns, corpses animated as cruel undead parodies of their original personalities. The Justice League barely survived the attack. The Black Lanterns were defeated, but the psychological and physical wounds they caused run deep (Justice League of America vol. 2 #35-37, Blackest Night #1-8).

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The Graduates – Part II: Donna Troy

In this series of posts I running discussing the Graduate Leaguers, those characters who have upgraded from the Titans to the Justice League as of JLA #41. First I covered the current status of the Titans as a group, but this time we’ll take a more detailed look at recent goings on around Donna Troy, the original Wonder Girl.

Donna Troy

Donna was originally introduced into the Teen Titans as Wonder Girl, Wonder Woman’s sidekick, in Brave and the Bold #60 (June-July 1960). However, Wonder Woman never had a sidekick in her own comic so Donna was a whole invention by the Teen Titans creators Bob Haney and Nick Cardy. Later creators have tried to reconcile Donna’s origin with the Wonder Woman mythology to varying degrees of success.

Donna was the first of the Titans to marry in Tales of the Teen Titans #50 (February 1985) and to have a child in the 1992 “Total Chaos” crossover. She was already estranged from her husband when he and their son were killed in a car crash in Wonder Woman vol 2. #121 (May 1997). Donna had became too old to be called Wonder Girl and had had a couple of different identities. First as Troia (as an avatar of the mythical Titans) and then as a Darkstar (a group set up by the Controllers in order to compete with the Guardian’s Green Lantern Corps). She has since defaulted back to using her own name and does not use a codename.

Donna’s recent history begins with her dead at the hands of a malfunctioning Superman Robot in 2003′s Graduation Day mini-series. This was the series that was the catalyst which saw Young Justice and the Titans reorganise into the Geoff Johns’ Teen Titans and Judd Winick’s Outsiders. It was explained in 2005′s The Return of Donna Troy mini-series that Donna had actually been reborn as one of the Titans of Myth, a group of immortals connected to the Olympian Gods, who were planning on escaping the impending chaos of the Infinite Crisis. The Teen Titans/Outsiders restored Donna’s memory and freed her from the Titans of Myth’s plans. It was explained that Donna had a unique link to the Multiverse because Dark Angel, an evil duplicate of herself from the first Multiverse, had repeatedly interfered in her past. This explains why Donna’s back story so often seems in flux.

Donna played a significant role during the Infinite Crisis when she used the resources of the Titans of Myth to transport a team of heroes to the centre of the Universe and into the heart of the Rann-Thanagar War. This set-up Starfire, Animal Man, and Adam Strange’s journey home in 52 and the discovery of the 52 Multiverse by the Red Tornado. Donna also became the custodian of the Orb of the Monitor with which she bore witness to the “History of the DC Universe” during the backups in 52. Later on, during the year shown in 52, she briefly succeeded her sister as Wonder Woman. The Monitors of the New Multiverse saw her as an anomaly as the believed that she was meant to have died during the Infinite Crisis (a wrinkle in reality mean that Jade died instead). She went on the run from them in Countdown to Final Crisis with Kyle Rayner (Green Lantern and her ex-boyfriend) and Jason Todd (the formerly dead Robin). She eventually met a another corrupted version of herself:

Once she’d returned from space and the Multiverse Donna rejoined the Titans, but she never felt settled. She described the feeling as,

Sometimes I feel like I was never young. I was saving the world before I could drive. We all grew up so fast. Well, most of us, but from the start , I was always  the adult. The big sister. The den mother. Always looking after everybody else. Always there for them. So why do I feel so alone.

Donna Troy, Titans #20 (Feb 2010) by Mike Johnson

When the monster Genocide (a Frankenstein-like aberration created by the Secret Society) attacked Wonder Woman Donna stood by her side. Psychic feedback from Genocide played on Donna’s fears and she began blaming Diana for her family’s deaths. She fought Diana on the shores of Paradise Island until wakened from her hallucinations. Unfortunately that imbroiled them in a complex powerstruggle between the Gods, the Amazons, and the newly created Olympians (Zeus’s male Amazons). She stood by Hippolyta and Diana’s side when they faced Zeus and forced him to confess his failures (Wonder Woman #36-39, Nov 09-Feb 10).

Donna had been trying to restart her private life by accepting new photography commissions (she was a photographer back when she was married), but her first job turned out to be a trap set by the Fearsome Five. Nevertheless, she rented a new apartment in Miami and began dating again (Titans #20). Donna was present at Animal Man’s house in Cry For Justice #5 when Congorilla and Starman recruited his help. And it was Donna who captured Prometheus in Cry For Justice #6.

Her live was unturned again when the corpses of her dead son Robert and ex-husband Terry were reanimated as Black Lanterns. She was bitten by one of them and began to sense Nekron’s power even before he turned her into a living Black Lantern (Blackest Night: Titans #1-3, Blackest Night #5). And for the record, that undead baby was the creepiest, sickest thing in the entire run of Blackest Night – not even undead Black Lantern Doctor Light came close. Donna was at the Hospital to retrieve Robert’s corpse for reburial when we first see her in JLA #41.

Why does Donna deserve to be in the Justice League? In one way or another she has been a principal in almost every major plot line from her return through Blackest Night. Right now she’s A-list DCU. Donna is obviously standing in for Wonder Woman, but there is a prescient for this. When Hippolyta was punished by being made Wonder Woman (following Diana’s death) she took her daughter’s place in the Justice League. Also, when Artimes took over the Wonder Woman mantle she tried to replace Diana in Justice League America. In the modern comics Donna is Diana’s twin sister, not her younger sister. She is as fast, as strong, and as tough as Diana and she may even be a more rounded person. So she’s a natural and deserving JLA candidate if and when her sister isn’t available.

The Graduates – Part I

The Justice League has just received an infusion of new blood from a band of former teen heroes called the Titans. This is a short series of posts where I’ll go over those character’s recent histories and the developments that have led to them being considered ready for the Justice League. However, first a few quick notes about them as a group.

The Titans

The original Teen Titans team dates from the early 1960s, but it’s really Marv Wolfman and George Perez’s team from The New Teen Titans #1 (November 1980) that most people know of as the Titans (minus the Teen prefix).

This group was composed of the three founding members of the Teen Titans – Dick Grayson (Robin/Nightwing), Donna Troy (Wonder Girl/Troia), Wally West (Kid Flash/Flash) – plus one Doom Patrol graduate – Garfield Logan (Changeling/Beast Boy) – and three new characters Victor Stone (Cyborg), Princess Koriand’r of Tamaran (Starfire), and Raven. The two other founding members of the original Teen Titans were Roy Harper (Speedy/Arsenal) and Garth (Aqualad/Tempest). This is the broadly the same group that has run in the Titans ongoing series.

Of late, the Titans have begun to grow apart. Raven and Beast Boy are the closest in age to the current Teen Titans and have moved to their team to give them more experience. Garth was killed in Blackest Night #1. Roy Harper is still a driving presence in storylines coming out of Cry For Justice, but for the moment he is still laid up in hospital. Wally West was meant to have had a co-feature in the new Flash ongoing series, but that was shelved in order to have a cleaner reintroduction of Barry Allen’s character. So over half of the team have found niches elsewhere. The remaining Titans (Donna Troy, Cyborg, Starfire, Dick Grayson) are among those who are either the most powerful or those that have had the most exposure over the last few years.

I would note that this is not the first time that there has been “graduation” from the Titans into the Justice League. Wally West was the first to graduate to the Justice League in Justice League Europe #1. Roy Harper graduated to become Red Arrow at the start of this current Justice League of America series, but lost his arm to Prometheus in Cry For Justice #5 and remains inactive. Kyle Rayner (Green Lantern/Ion) and Conner Hawke (Green Arrow) are contemporaries (in terms of age) of the original Titans and they were both members of the Justice League. In Kyle’s case he was Green Lantern for all of Grant Morrison and Mark Waid’s runs on JLA.

In many ways they are a generation of lost heroes. The Titans are really a bit to too old to be considered inexperienced or sidekicks any more, but the perpetual DC timeline means that their mentors haven’t retired yet. That has slightly changed during this last year as the big three have been taken off the map by adventures within their own books. That has allowed Donna Troy and Dick Grayson to step forward into Wonder Woman and Batman’s positions with the Justice League.

Dick Grayson has been in the League before,  he was the leader of the Batman’s replacement Justice League in Joe Kelly’s “Obsidian Age” storyline. When Superman, Batman, and Wonder Woman were building a list of potential members in “The Tornado Path” they even  considered Grayson as a member. Superman and Wonder Woman were in favour, but Batman noted that he’d already asked Nightwing and that he declined at that time. Cyborg’s name was also put forward by the Trinity and he was universally agreed upon – Batman noted that Dick Grayson had told him Cyborg was ready to join the League and he would definitely say yes if asked. As fate would have it Superman, Batman, and Wonder Woman didn’t get to decide the roster of that League so Cyborg wasn’t asked.

My argument is that the appearance of these four Titans in the League isn’t some random chance. These characters have been built up over the five years or so to have larger presences in the DC Universe and that has naturally culminated with them joining the Justice League. They are great characters and I look forward to their adventures with the League.

JLA roster revealed in BN #3 advert

bn3-jla-advert

A full page advert (above) in this week’s Blackest Night #3 revealed the JLA roster that had previously been blanked out on preview images. The advert proclaims “October 2009. James Robinson. Mark Bagley. Justice League of America. Issue 38. A new era begins.” It also features a copy of the preview artwork with the full cast revealed (shown below).

bn3-jla-advert2

There are three distinct groups of overlapping characters in that picture. The first group is Green Lantern (Hal), Green Arrow (Ollie) and the Atom were members of the original League and are the feature characters in Robinson’s current JLA: Cry For Justice mini-series. Congorilla is also featured in Cry, but this is his debut as a proper Justice Leaguer.

The second group is what I’d called the “Conway members”, those members of the League added to the rollcall because the writer happens to also be writing their solo title, i.e., in the way that Gerry Conway brought his Firestorm into the satellite era League or Grant Morrison brought Aztek into the Big 7 run. In this case Robinson is currently writing Superman featuring Mon-El. The Guardian is a major supporting character in Superman and he’s been flirting with his neighbour, Doctor Light. Mon-El, Guardian, and Light are all in the above image. She’s also important as she’s the only member shown who survives from the end of Dwayne McDuffie’s League.

The third group, and in some ways the most surprising, is the Titans. Donna Troy is appearing for Wonder Woman and Dick Grayson is there as he’s currently Batman. I suspect there is a major event building for Wonder Woman in Blackest Night – she’s in the final wave of BN DC Direct figures, but nobody knows why. We knew Dick and Donna already, but they’re now joined by Starfire and Cyborg.  She had recently refused Doctor Light’s offer of League membership. Where this leaves the currently meandering Titans title is unknown, but we had been warned the two teams would be coming closer together.

When Brad Meltzer relaunched this title he included Arsenal as the Titan who steps up to take his mentor’s place as Red Arrow. Former Titan Wally West eventually rejoined the group as the Flash, but he’s been a JLA member since his time with Justice League Europe. And while I’m on this divergence – notice that there is no Flash in the image, neither Barry Allen or Wally West appear, but that stop  any Flash Rebirth spoilers.

It’s an interesting roster and at eleven members one of the larger we’ve seen recently. I wouldn’t be too surprised if that image changed slightly when the issue actually ships (its something they did with the last comparable image). I certainly expect that Mon-El, Dick, and maybe Donna will make way for the real Superman, Batman, and Wonder Woman once their individual plot-lines are tied up. That wouldn’t make the line-up look so radical – you’d then have six original members and only two former Titans.

Justice League/Titans to become closer

Justice League will be crossing over a little more closely with Titans according to Dan Didio at the 2009 Tornoto Fan Expo.

Besides some feedback on the new Batman and Robin, it was noted that with some of the changes in store for the Titans, that Dick Grayson might not fit on that team anymore.

In addition “What we’re going to see in 2010 is how the Titans and Justice League books crossover a little more than they have in the past and probably in a way they never have before” explained DiDio.

Speaking of Titans, with James Robinson bringing Donna Troy onto his upcoming Justice League, will she be getting a codename?

“She’s one of those people a nickname doesn’t stick to, like Jean Grey,” reasoned DiDio. “Troia was tough. She’s not going to be Wonder Girl anymore. Do you want to call her Darkstar? Not really. For us, Donna Troy stands for something, means something, and the name is recognizable so we’re just leaving it as is.”

There is a certain logic to this as Dick Grayson (as Batman) and Donna Troy, both current members of the Titans, are going to be moving over to the Justice League with James Robinson’s post-Blackest Night issues. How with will play out with replacement Trinity (Mon-El, Bat-Grayson, and Donna) versus the, assumed, eventual return of the actual Trinity remains to be seen. Maybe they’ll make an event of it.