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The Huntress is a name used by several characters in DC Comics. The Golden Age Huntress is a supervillainess, while the Bronze Age and Modern Age Huntresses are superheroines. ==Paula Brooks== :(詳細はGolden Age Huntress was a supervillain with the real name of Paula Brooks who battled the superhero Wildcat, first appearing in ''Sensation Comics'' #68. She joined the second Injustice Society of America and stole the Plymouth Rock. She married fellow supervillain Sportsmaster. She was later retroactively renamed the Tigress in the pages of ''Young All-Stars''. These stories took place prior to her villainous career. At this point, the young Paula Brooks was a super-heroine, and fought both Nazis and criminals as a Young All-Stars member. ==Helena Wayne== :(詳細はBronze Age Huntress was Helena Wayne, the daughter of the Batman and Catwoman of Earth-Two, an alternate universe established in the early 1960s as the world where the Golden Age stories took place. Earth-Two was also the home of the Golden Age versions of various DC characters. Created by Paul Levitz, Joe Staton, and Bob Layton, her first appearance was in ''All Star Comics'' #69 (December 1977) and ''DC Super Stars'' #17, which came out the same day〔(''DC Super Stars'' #17 (November-December 1977) ) at the Grand Comics Database "Origin and first appearance of the Helena Wayne Huntress, who simultaneously first appears in this issue and ''All-Star Comics'' (DC, 1976 series) #69, both released August 24, 1977."〕 and revealed her origin. She appeared in ''Batman Family'' #17-20 when it expanded into the Dollar Comics format for its last few issues.〔(Huntress (Helena Wayne) appearances ) at the Grand Comics Database〕 The bulk of her solo stories appeared as backup features in issues of ''Wonder Woman'' beginning with issue #271 (September 1980).〔〔Manning, Matthew K. "1980s" in Dolan, p. 187 "The daughter of Batman and Catwoman from Earth-2 found a new home away from home in the pages of Wonder Woman's monthly title...a regular gig as the back-up feature to the Amazing Amazon's lead story. Handled by writer Paul Levitz and artist Joe Staton, the Huntress faced the villainy of the swamp creature Solomon Grundy."〕 Helena was trained by her parents to become a superb athlete. After finishing school, she joined the law firm of Cranston and Grayson, one of whose partners was Dick Grayson, alias Robin. Helena began her super-hero career when a criminal blackmailed her mother into resuming action once again as Catwoman—an act which eventually led to her death. Helena, deciding to bring the criminal responsible to justice, created a costume for herself, fashioned some weapons from her parents' equipment (including her eventual trademark, a crossbow), and set out to bring in the criminal. After accomplishing this, Helena decided to continue to fight crime, under the code name, the "Huntress." In ''All Star Comics'' #72, Helena formally joined the Justice Society of America where she struck up a friendship with fellow new superheroine Power Girl. As a JSA member, she participated in several of the annual JLA/JSA meetings, most of which took place on Earth-One. Helena was also briefly associated with the superhero group Infinity, Inc.. During the 1985 miniseries ''Crisis on Infinite Earths'', Helena was killed while attempting to save the lives of several children. After ''Crisis'' ended, Helena Wayne's existence, like that of her parents and Earth-Two's Dick Grayson, was retroactively erased from the remaining Earth and the world no longer remembered her. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Huntress (comics)」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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