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Showcase #22 (Oct. 1959), the first appearance of Hal Jordan, as the modern Green Lantern. Cover art by Kane. In the late 1950s, freelancing for DC Comics precursor National Comics, Kane illustrated works in what fans and historians call the Silver Age of Comic Books, creating character designs for the modern-day version of the 1940s superhero Green Lantern, [11] for which he pencilled most of ...
John Stewart debuted in Green Lantern vol. 2 #87 (December 1971/January 1972) when artist Neal Adams came up with the idea of a substitute Green Lantern. [3] The decision to make the character African American-descent resulted from a conversation between Adams and editor Julius Schwartz, in which Adams recounts saying that given the racial makeup of the world's population, "we ought to have a ...
Ch'p makes non-speaking appearances in Green Lantern: The Animated Series. [8] This version is a student of Kilowog who later becomes a squadron leader. Ch'p appears in the Mad segment "Does Someone Have to GOa?", voiced by Kevin Shinick. As part of a reality show, the Green Lantern Corps fire him before he is run over by a car.
Ivan Reis - artist who worked with Geoff Johns for most of the fourth volume of Green Lantern, for which he was nominated for a Wizard Fan Award: Breakout Talent, [9] most notably on the Sinestro Corps War. Joe Staton - created Kilowog and the current Guy Gardner with writer Steve Englehart, and started the first volume of Green Lantern Corps.
G'nort (pronunciation: "nort" [1]) Esplanade G'neesmacher is a character appearing in DC Comics.He is a member of the Green Lantern Corps and later a Darkstar and a member of the Justice League Antarctica.
His final two published pieces of Green Lantern art were the 9 page Chapter four featuring Golden Age Alan Scott Green Lantern in the 50th-anniversary issue Green Lantern vol. 3, #19 (Dec. 1991) [12] and a one-page illustration of the Alan Scott Green Lantern and Superman in the one-shot Superman: The Man of Steel Gallery #1 (Dec. 1995). [13]
The Green Lantern title returned with issue #90 (Aug.–Sept. 1976) [24] [25] and continued the Green Lantern/Green Arrow team format. O'Neil continued to write the stories, which were drawn by artists such as Mike Grell and Alex Saviuk, while muting the social and political themes that had characterized the stories that had been drawn by Neal ...