The Joker
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WF No. 276, Feb 1982: "Double X Means Double Death" | WF No. 276, Feb 1982: "Double X Means Double Death" | ||
DCCP No. 72, Aug 1984: "Madness in a Dark Dimension" | DCCP No. 72, Aug 1984: "Madness in a Dark Dimension" | ||
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+ | ==External Link== | ||
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+ | [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joker_%28comics%29 Wikipedia entry on the Joker] | ||
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+ | [[Category:Entries|Joker, The]] | ||
+ | [[Category:People|Joker, The]] | ||
+ | [[Category:Villains|Joker, The]] | ||
+ | [[Category:Silver Age (1956-1970)|Joker, The]] | ||
+ | [[Category:Bronze Age (1971-1986)|Joker, The]] |
Revision as of 15:04, 20 August 2005
The maniacal harlequin who has been an implacable foe of Batman and Robin since 1940. Batman No. 4/1 calls him "the cleverest and the most dangerous criminal in the annals of crime..." (Win 1941: "The Case of the Joker's Crime Circus!"), and Batman No. 8/4 describes him as "a grim jester, arch-criminal, [and] master fiend" (Dec/Jan 1941-1942: "The Cross-Country Crimes!"). By his own account, he is "the greatest criminal on Earth" (Detective Comics No. 388, Jun 1969: " Public Luna-tic Number One!") and "the world's greatest clown" (Batman No. 53/1, Jun/Jul 1949: "A Hairpin, a Hoe, a Hacksaw, a Hole in the Ground!"), as well as "The greatest comedian of all--the caliph of crime clowns, the grand mogul of mountebanks, the king of jesters...the one and only Joker! Ha, ha, ha!" (Batman No. 57/3, Feb/Mar 1950: "The Funny Man Crimes!").
The Joker has occasionally allied with Lex Luthor against Batman, Robin and Superman.
Joker appearances in the Superman Chronicles
WF No. 88, May/Jun 1957: "Superman's and Batman's Greatest Foes!" WF No. 129, Nov 1962: "Joker-Luthor, Incorporated!" WF No. 156, Mar 1966: "The Federation of Bizarro Idiots" WF No. 159, Aug 1966: "The Cape and Cowl Crooks" WF No. 177, Aug 1968: "Duel of the Crime Kings" SPJO No. 125, Dec 1969: "Superman's Saddest Day" DCCP No. 41, Jan 1982: "The Terrible Tinseltown Treasure-Trap Treachery" WF No. 276, Feb 1982: "Double X Means Double Death" DCCP No. 72, Aug 1984: "Madness in a Dark Dimension"