View Poll Results: Who was the first Starman from DC you ever read about?

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  • Golden Age Starman (Ted Knight- Adventure Comics #61, April 1941)

    56 37.84%
  • "Starman" of 1950's (Bruce Wayne in 1957; later changed to Charles McNider)

    2 1.35%
  • Mikaal (Michael) Thomas (1st Issue Special #12, March 1976)

    0 0%
  • Prince Gavyn (Adventure Comics #467, January 1980)

    5 3.38%
  • Will Payton (Starman #1, October 1988)

    35 23.65%
  • David Knight (older son of Ted Knight; Starman #26, September 1990)

    0 0%
  • Jack Knight (younger son of Ted / brother of David; Zero Hour: Crisis in Time #1, September 1994)

    34 22.97%
  • Thom Kallor/Danny Blaine (Star Boy from LSH / also connected with the character in Kingdom Come)

    14 9.46%
  • Farris Knight (Starman of the 853rd century; JLA #23, October 1998)

    1 0.68%
  • Other (please specify in a separate post)

    1 0.68%
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  1. #1
    Uncanny Member MajorHoy's Avatar
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    Default Who was the first Starman from DC you ever read about?

    Who was the first Starman from DC you ever read about?

    This should the majority of them (along with first appearances):
    * Golden Age Starman (Ted Knight - Adventure Comics #61, April 1941)
    * "Starman" of the 1950's (originally Bruce Wayne in Detective Comics #247, September 1957; later retconned into Dr. Charles McNider)
    * Mikaal (Michael) Thomas (1st Issue Special #12, March 1976)
    * Prince Gavyn (Adventure Comics #467, January 1980)
    * Will Payton (Starman #1, October 1988)
    * David Knight (older son of Ted Knight; Starman #26, September 1990)
    * Jack Knight (younger son of Ted / brother of David; Zero Hour: Crisis in Time #1, September 1994)
    * Thom Kallor/Danny Blaine (originally Star Boy from the Legion of Super-Heroes; first appeared in Adventure Comics #282, March 1961; also connected with the Starman character from Kingdom Come)
    * Farris Knight (Starman of the 853rd century; JLA #23, October 1998)
    Or was it a different version?

  2. #2
    Incredible Member Adset's Avatar
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    250px-JSofA1.jpg

    been a long time since i read this gem of a (short-lived) series, but this was my introduction to virtually everybody in the JSA, starman included.

  3. #3
    Astonishing Member Ra-El's Avatar
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    Jack Knight, just finished the first arc this week.

  4. #4
    Astonishing Member Jekyll's Avatar
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    200px-Starman_modernage.jpg

    Summer is when I catch up on a lot of comic reading. This summer I have been reading the JSA run in the late 90s and because of that picked up James Robinson's run on Starman. WOW I am so glad I did! I have not been able to put it down, I am around issue 40, and it is one of the most action packed, heart felt, well written series I have read in some time.

  5. #5
    Extraordinary Member Zero Hunter's Avatar
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    I had seen the original in a few things, but the first one I ever read and followed was Will Payton. I had been following the Legion for year by that point though but Thom Kallor was still just Starboy then so I don't count that.


  6. #6
    BANNED Flyattractor's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Zero Hunter View Post
    I had seen the original in a few things, but the first one I ever read and followed was Will Payton. I had been following the Legion for year by that point though but Thom Kallor was still just Starboy then so I don't count that.

    Yeah first one I knew about was the Space Hippy one.

  7. #7
    insulin4all CaptCleghorn's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by FlashFreak View Post
    200px-Starman_modernage.jpg

    Summer is when I catch up on a lot of comic reading. This summer I have been reading the JSA run in the late 90s and because of that picked up James Robinson's run on Starman. WOW I am so glad I did! I have not been able to put it down, I am around issue 40, and it is one of the most action packed, heart felt, well written series I have read in some time.
    This is where the fanboy love of Robinson comes from. Starman is an incredible package. A character fitting in with a universe, growing and reaching an actual conclusion. And the art is great, as well.

  8. #8
    DC/Collected Editions Mod The Darknight Detective's Avatar
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    "Ted Baxter" for me, but I can't recall the first time I saw him. Wait, I do remember: 100-Page Super Spectacular #13.
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  9. #9
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    This is a bit of a trick question, since Star Boy didn't become Starman until many decades later, but I guess Thom Kallor was techincally my first "Starman," when I read "Lana Lang and the Legion of Super-Heroes" reprinted in ADVENTURE COMICS No. 356 (May '67)--on sale March 30th, 1967. That was the story that first introduced Star Boy (coming out originally in 1961) and it was a rehash of a Mars Boy story, as well as Thom's origin story; however, he has completely different powers in that story (equivalent to Superboy's), so it forever left me confused.

    In terms of original Starman (Ted Knight), there was a comic book I read when I was over at a friend's house. This must have been in 1969 or 1970 and I had gone cold on super-hero comics at the time, but he had an issue of what I think was JUSTICE LEAGUE OF AMERICA No. 73 (August '69). And I remember seeing Starman in that. This had to be the first appearance of the Justice Society I ever saw--although it didn't register in my mind that's what they were.

    The first comic book I bought with Starman in it was JUSTICE LEAGUE OF AMERICA No. 94 (November '71) which reprinted the first appearance and origin of Starman in ADVENTURE COMICS No. 61 (April '41).

    And I also want to mention ALL IN COLOR FOR A DIME (Ace Books, 1970) which I took out of the public library circa 1971. This is one of my favourite books (fact or fiction, regardless of genre) and I read the whole thing cover to cover, intensely interested in the stories it told. We didn't have the internet back then, so this was really my first introduction to comics history and the "Golden Age." I loved this book so much, that I hand copied the order form at the back of the book and sent actual money in the mail ($1.65 in paper and coin) to the publishers at Ace to get my own copy of the paperback.

    Regarding the Justice Society in particular, Jim Harmon's chapter "A Swell Bunch of Guys," was a helpful introduction.

  10. #10
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    Ted Knight via All-Star Squadron I guess or maybe some JLA/JSA crossover not sure which came first.

  11. #11
    DC/Collected Editions Mod The Darknight Detective's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Jim Kelly View Post
    This is a bit of a trick question, since Star Boy didn't become Starman until many decades later, but I guess Thom Kallor was techincally my first "Starman," when I read "Lana Lang and the Legion of Super-Heroes" reprinted in ADVENTURE COMICS No. 356 (May '67)--on sale March 30th, 1967. That was the story that first introduced Star Boy (coming out originally in 1961) and it was a rehash of a Mars Boy story, as well as Thom's origin story; however, he has completely different powers in that story (equivalent to Superboy's), so it forever left me confused.

    In terms of original Starman (Ted Knight), there was a comic book I read when I was over at a friend's house. This must have been in 1969 or 1970 and I had gone cold on super-hero comics at the time, but he had an issue of what I think was JUSTICE LEAGUE OF AMERICA No. 73 (August '69). And I remember seeing Starman in that. This had to be the first appearance of the Justice Society I ever saw--although it didn't register in my mind that's what they were.

    The first comic book I bought with Starman in it was JUSTICE LEAGUE OF AMERICA No. 94 (November '71) which reprinted the first appearance and origin of Starman in ADVENTURE COMICS No. 61 (April '41).

    And I also want to mention ALL IN COLOR FOR A DIME (Ace Books, 1970) which I took out of the public library circa 1971. This is one of my favourite books (fact or fiction, regardless of genre) and I read the whole thing cover to cover, intensely interested in the stories it told. We didn't have the internet back then, so this was really my first introduction to comics history and the "Golden Age." I loved this book so much, that I hand copied the order form at the back of the book and sent actual money in the mail ($1.65 in paper and coin) to the publishers at Ace to get my own copy of the paperback.

    Regarding the Justice Society in particular, Jim Harmon's chapter "A Swell Bunch of Guys," was a helpful introduction.
    I also saw Thom Kallor before Ted Knight, Jim (back in the Spring of '73).
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  12. #12
    Uncanny Member MajorHoy's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Jim Kelly View Post
    . . . I also want to mention ALL IN COLOR FOR A DIME (Ace Books, 1970) which I took out of the public library circa 1971. This is one of my favourite books (fact or fiction, regardless of genre) and I read the whole thing cover to cover, intensely interested in the stories it told. We didn't have the internet back then, so this was really my first introduction to comics history and the "Golden Age." I loved this book so much, that I hand copied the order form at the back of the book and sent actual money in the mail ($1.65 in paper and coin) to the publishers at Ace to get my own copy of the paperback.
    I bought that book as a kid, too, and loved to go through it.
    That and

    were books I couldn't get enough of!

  13. #13
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    Quote Originally Posted by Jim Kelly View Post
    This is a bit of a trick question, since Star Boy didn't become Starman until many decades later, but I guess Thom Kallor was techincally my first "Starman,"
    Yeah, I voted for Ted Knight, since the JSA Starman was the first 'Starman' I'd read about, even if I'd probably read about the Legion and Thom Kallor as Star Boy (back when he had all the powers of Superboy and lightning-vision) even before then.

    Man, they've had some crazy outfits, these Starmen. My favorite would have to be Star Boy's starfield, 'though!

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