Information about Wonder Girl
This article is about the superhero Wonder Girl. For the Korean band, see The Wonder Girls.
| Wonder Girl | ||
|---|---|---|
Three of the Wonder Girls: Donna Troy, Wonder Woman, Cassandra Sandsmark, from the cover to Wonder Woman Vol. 2 #186, by Adam Hughes. | ||
| First appearance | Wonder Woman #105 (1958) | |
| Characters | ||
| See also | ||
Three fictional characters named Wonder Girl have appeared as superheroines in DC Comics. The original was a younger version of Wonder Woman. The second and third are protégés of Wonder Woman, and members of different incarnations of the Teen Titans.
Characters
Diana
Wonder 'Girl' first appeared in Wonder Woman v1 April #105, 1958 "The Secret Origin Of Wonder Woman". In this revised 'Silver Age' origin it is assumed Diana was not created from clay and was born before the Amazons settled on Paradise Island as this story reveals, written by Robert Kanigher. Following this issue were several Wonder Girl adventures and years later an additional character, Wonder Tot, (Wonder Woman as a toddler), was also featured. Kanigher restored her original origin in 1966 as part of the 'Golden-Age Revision experiment'. Kanigher also created the Wonder Tot and later, The Wonder Family of characters during the 1950s and early to mid '60s.
From Wonder Woman #124 (August 1961) onwards, all three versions frequently appeared together in stories that were labelled "impossible tales," presented as films made by her mother, Queen Hippolyta, who had the power to splice together films of herself and Diana at different ages. However, by the time the Teen Titans made their first appearance, the characters of Wonder Girl and Wonder Woman had begun to diverge; Haney began writing Wonder Girl stories that took place in the same time period as those of Wonder Woman.
Bob Haney was developing a new junior team: The Teen Titans and used the Wonder Girl character that was depicted in the impossible tales, not realising it was in fact Diana at a different age. In 1968 the Amazons left this plane to another dimension to refresh their powers and magical abilities. Wonder Woman chose to remain behind and renounced her Amazon powers and heritage and became the mortal, Diana Prince. Readers questioned as to how Diana as a teenager could appear in the Teen Titans fully powered as well as appearing at a younger age. Finally in Teen Titans #22 it was revealed that it was not Diana, but Donna Troy (see below).
Donna Troy
Donna Troy. Art by Phil Jimenez and George Perez.
There is some disagreement among fandom as to whether this should be considered the first appearance of the character Wonder Girl as a distinct "little sister" rather than merely Diana's younger self. As mentioned in the previous section, the characters of Wonder Woman & Wonder Girl had already begun to diverge in the Wonder Woman title.
The relationship between this Wonder Girl and the younger version of Wonder Woman was not fully explained at the time. In fact, Wonder Girl was referred to by the other Titans as "Wonder Girl" or "Wonder Chick" rather than by any other, more "personal" name, until Teen Titans #22. In that issue, the mystery of Wonder Girl's background was finally addressed in a story by Marv Wolfman and Gil Kane, in which it was explained that Wonder Girl was actually a non-Amazon orphan, rescued by Wonder Woman from an apartment building fire. Unable to find any parents or family for her, Wonder Woman brought her to Paradise Island, where she was eventually given Amazon powers by Paula's Purple Ray. The origin story ended with Wonder Girl making a new costume for herself, one unrelated to Wonder Woman's, & taking the civilian name "Donna Troy."
This origin was expanded and modified in later issues of The Teen Titans. From the late 1960s to the mid-1980s, Donna rarely appeared or was mentioned in the pages of Wonder Woman, & came to be thought of as part of the Teen Titans family of characters.
In the 1980s, due to the relaunch of Wonder Woman as a new character in a new series, & under the theory that Donna was more a Titans character than a Wonder Woman character, Donna was retconned into a character with no direct ties to the Amazons. In the story-line "Who Is Wonder Girl?", the Titans of Myth enlist Donna's aid, & tell her that they raised her after the Titan Rhea rescued her from a fire. Following victory in a cosmic battle, Donna gained new powers, growing into her role as a "Titan Seed." Since by this time she was a married woman, Donna changed her nom de guerre from Wonder Girl to Troia.
In the 1990s, Donna was reattached to the Wonder Woman mythos. In the new version of her origin, Magala (an Amazon sorceress) animated a mirror image of young Princess Diana, creating a mystic identical twin for Diana to play with. A few months after, the mystic twin was kidnapped by Dark Angel (who thought she had taken Diana). Dark Angel dispersed the girl's spirit across the multiverse, condemning her to live multiple lives, each one cut short by the Dark Angel at a moment of tragedy.
In at least one of these variant lives, Donna would become a superhero & encounter her grown sister, now Wonder Woman, & their mother Queen Hippolyta, without realizing who she really was or how she was related to them.
After that timeline ended with the death of her son, Diana & Hippolyta intervened to find what happened to their friend Donna. Donna finally deafeated Dark Angel, destroying the evil entity and regaining her original Amazon powers, then returned to reality to continue her life from that point.
The 2005 mini-series The Return of Donna Troy revealed that Donna is actually an amalgam of every Donna Troy, who remembers all of her other incarnations. But this did not make help make her origin story linear or accessible.
After the events of Infinite Crisis, Diana passed the mantle of Wonder Woman to Donna Troy. However, Diana continued to be the star of the book, & reclaimed the title of Wonder Woman in the first story arc of Wonder Woman vol. III.
As of the recent WONDER WOMAN ANNUAL(VOL.3)# 1, Donna Troy finally had an Origin story that worked and made sense. It combined the essential elements of her 3 variant origins into workable whole. As it was shown in Wonder Woman Annual# 1:
Donna was born as PRINCESS DIANA's mystic twin through the help of Amazon sorceress Magala. Months later, an old enemy of Queen Hippolyte called DARK ANGEL kidnapped Donna thinking she was Diana. Donna was placed in suspended animation by Dark Angel for years and was eventually left to die in a burning building. But fate intervened and the now gron-up Diana came onto the scene as WONDER WOMAN and rescued Donna. She was brought back to Paradise Island where she received training from BOTH the Amazons & The Titans of Myth and years after followed DIANA into the outside world as WONDER GIRL and helped form the TEEN TITANS.
Cassandra Sandsmark
From the cover to Teen Titans #35 (2006). Art by Tony Daniel.
When the Greek gods left the mortal plane during Infinite Crisis, Zeus stripped Cassie of her powers. However, she was granted powers by Ares in exchange for becoming his champion.
After Superboy's death she quit the Titans for a time to be an independent vigilante. She was mourning the loss of her lover Superboy and bitter from the abandonment from Robin and Wonder Woman over the following year. She later rejoined the group after a battle with the Brotherhood of Evil and return of Cyborg. She is close friends with fellow hero Supergirl.
Wonder Girl in other media
Wonder Woman
In 1976 a version of Wonder Girl appeared in the Wonder Woman TV series, played by Debra Winger in one of her first roles.Debra Winger as Wonder Girl.
Although the pilot episode revealed that Wonder Woman's alter-ego, Princess Diana of Paradise Island, was Queen Hippolyte's only child, later episodes featured Diana's younger sibling, Drusilla.This may have been a cloaked referenced existing in the comics that Diana was Hippolyta's only biological child since Donna Troy/Wonder girl was adopted and raised on Paradise Island.
Drusilla first appeared in the two-part episode titled "The Feminum Mystique". In that episode, Queen Hippolyte (Carolyn Jones) sends Drusilla to America in order to bring her sister home to Paradise Island. (It should be noted that Queen Hippolyte is never referred to by name in any of the televised specials in which she appeared.)
Drusilla gets tangled up in a Nazi plot to discover the secret of Wonder Woman's magical bracelets, and in the process masters the spinning transformation used by her older sister. Although Drusilla creates the persona of Wonder Girl, the distinction is lost on the Nazis, who believe her to be Wonder Woman and abduct her.
Drusilla appeared again in the final episode of the first season, "Wonder Woman in Hollywood". A Wonder Girl series was in development when actress Debra Winger backed out of her contract and left the series. The Drusilla/Wonder Girl character was rumored to be written back into the series in several later episodes, this time played by actress Eileen Chesis previously seen in the Secrets of Isis episode Scuba Duba as Nancy.
A figure resembling Winger's Drusilla made a cameo appearance in Infinite Crisis #6, as the Wonder Girl of Earth-462. In the comics, Cassandra Sandsmark would later adapt the alias of Drusilla to protect her identity in homage to the television character.
Late Night with David Letterman
In 1993, Debra Winger promoted her new movie Wilder Napalm on The Late Show with David Letterman. David enjoyed engaging Winger in a discussion of her first major role as Wonder Girl after showing the audience a clip of her on the Wonder Woman series. Winger, obviously prepared for this, then burst out of her "civilian" clothes and sported the Wonder Girl outfit that she hadn't worn in 17 years, running out of the studio in costume saying she was late for something she had to do.Teen Titans
Wonder Girl's first animated appearance was in the Teen Titans segments on The Superman/Aquaman Hour of Adventure in 1967.Wonder Girl once worked with the Boy Wonder and Batman, but was fired for not following Batman's directions.
Wonder Girl had long been rumored to appear on the Teen Titans animated series. In Homecoming (part two) and Calling All Titans a character resembling Donna Troy appeared in several brief scenes, though she was not named.
Teen Titans Go
Wonder Girl appeared in "Troy," issue #36 of the series, acting as if she has been on the team for some time. Below is a link to an interview with artist J. Torres, giving an advance look at the story. [1]Parodies and References
In first episode of the Animated Short series, Robot Chicken, there is one sketch scene where Marvel and DC superheroes parody MTV's The Real World and in one scene, Batman refers to Wonder Woman as "Wonder Girl", Which Wonder Woman gets upset and thinks that men are afraid of women.External links
Wonder Girls (Korean: 원더걸스) is a South Korean girl group.[1][2] They are produced by singer-songwriter Park Jin-Young and are signed to his talent agency, JYP Entertainment.
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Adam Hughes
Adam Hughes
Born May 5 1967
Riverside, New Jersey
Nationality American
Area(s) Penciller, Inker, Writer
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Adam Hughes
Born May 5 1967
Riverside, New Jersey
Nationality American
Area(s) Penciller, Inker, Writer
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DC Comics
Subsidiary of Warner Bros. Entertainment, Inc.
Founded 1934, by Malcolm Wheeler-Nicholson (as National Allied Publications)
Headquarters 1700 Broadway, New York City, New York
Key people Paul Levitz (President and Publisher)
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Subsidiary of Warner Bros. Entertainment, Inc.
Founded 1934, by Malcolm Wheeler-Nicholson (as National Allied Publications)
Headquarters 1700 Broadway, New York City, New York
Key people Paul Levitz (President and Publisher)
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In comic books, first appearance refers to the first comic book to feature a fictional character.
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Monetary value of first appearance issues
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19th century - 20th century - 21st century
1920s 1930s 1940s - 1950s - 1960s 1970s 1980s
1955 1956 1957 - 1958 - 1959 1960 1961
Year 1958 (MCMLVIII
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1920s 1930s 1940s - 1950s - 1960s 1970s 1980s
1955 1956 1957 - 1958 - 1959 1960 1961
Year 1958 (MCMLVIII
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Robert Kanigher
Born May 18 1915
Died May 6 2002 (aged 88)
Nationality American
Area(s) Writer
Robert Kanigher
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Born May 18 1915
Died May 6 2002 (aged 88)
Nationality American
Area(s) Writer
Robert Kanigher
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Donna Troy is a fictional character, a superheroine in the DC Universe. As Wonder Girl, she was one of the founding members of the Teen Titans. Over the years, her origin story has been changed several times, and she has battled evil under various different
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Cassandra "Cassie" Sandsmark, aka Wonder Girl, is a DC Comics superheroine. She is the half-human daughter of Zeus, and a former member of Young Justice and current member of the Teen Titans.
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DC Comics
Subsidiary of Warner Bros. Entertainment, Inc.
Founded 1934, by Malcolm Wheeler-Nicholson (as National Allied Publications)
Headquarters 1700 Broadway, New York City, New York
Key people Paul Levitz (President and Publisher)
..... Click the link for more information.
Subsidiary of Warner Bros. Entertainment, Inc.
Founded 1934, by Malcolm Wheeler-Nicholson (as National Allied Publications)
Headquarters 1700 Broadway, New York City, New York
Key people Paul Levitz (President and Publisher)
..... Click the link for more information.
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Donna Troy is a fictional character, a superheroine in the DC Universe. As Wonder Girl, she was one of the founding members of the Teen Titans. Over the years, her origin story has been changed several times, and she has battled evil under various different
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Cassandra "Cassie" Sandsmark, aka Wonder Girl, is a DC Comics superheroine. She is the half-human daughter of Zeus, and a former member of Young Justice and current member of the Teen Titans.
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Mentorship refers to a developmental relationship between a more experienced mentor and a less experienced partner referred to as a mentee or protégé -- a person guided and protected by a more prominent person.
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Schedule Monthly
Format Ongoing
Publication dates (vol. 1): 1966 - 1976
(vol. 2): 1996 - 1998
(vol. 3): 2003 -
Number of issues (vol. 1): 53
(vol. 2): 24
(vol.
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Format Ongoing
Publication dates (vol. 1): 1966 - 1976
(vol. 2): 1996 - 1998
(vol. 3): 2003 -
Number of issues (vol. 1): 53
(vol. 2): 24
(vol.
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All Star Comics is a 1940s comic book series from All-American Publications, one of the early companies that merged with National Periodical Publications to form the modern-day DC Comics.
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William Moulton Marston
Born May 9 1893
Cliftondale, Massachusetts
Died May 2 1947 (aged 55)
Rye, New York
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Born May 9 1893
Cliftondale, Massachusetts
Died May 2 1947 (aged 55)
Rye, New York
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Robert Kanigher
Born May 18 1915
Died May 6 2002 (aged 88)
Nationality American
Area(s) Writer
Robert Kanigher
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Born May 18 1915
Died May 6 2002 (aged 88)
Nationality American
Area(s) Writer
Robert Kanigher
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Toddler is a common term for a young child who is learning to walk or "toddle",[1] generally considered to be the second stage of development after infancy and occurring predominantly during the ages of 12 to 36 months old.
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Schedule Monthly
Format Ongoing
Publication dates (vol. 1): 1966 - 1976
(vol. 2): 1996 - 1998
(vol. 3): 2003 -
Number of issues (vol. 1): 53
(vol. 2): 24
(vol.
..... Click the link for more information.
Format Ongoing
Publication dates (vol. 1): 1966 - 1976
(vol. 2): 1996 - 1998
(vol. 3): 2003 -
Number of issues (vol. 1): 53
(vol. 2): 24
(vol.
..... Click the link for more information.
Donna Troy is a fictional character, a superheroine in the DC Universe. As Wonder Girl, she was one of the founding members of the Teen Titans. Over the years, her origin story has been changed several times, and she has battled evil under various different
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The Brave and the Bold is a DC Comics comic book, published from 1955 to 1983 and revived in 2007. The focus of the comic has varied over time but most commonly (and currently) features team-ups of characters from across the DC Universe.
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Justice League, sometimes called the Justice League of America or JLA for short, is a fictional DC Universe superhero team.
First appearing in The Brave and the Bold
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First appearing in The Brave and the Bold
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Wally West is a fictional character, a superhero in the DC Comics Universe, the first Kid Flash and the third Flash.
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Garth is a fictional character in publications from DC Comics. As a teen sidekick, Garth was known by the name Aqualad. As an adult superhero, Garth is commonly known referred to by the moniker Tempest.
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Schedule Monthly
Format Ongoing
Publication dates (vol. 1): 1966 - 1976
(vol. 2): 1996 - 1998
(vol. 3): 2003 -
Number of issues (vol. 1): 53
(vol. 2): 24
(vol.
..... Click the link for more information.
Format Ongoing
Publication dates (vol. 1): 1966 - 1976
(vol. 2): 1996 - 1998
(vol. 3): 2003 -
Number of issues (vol. 1): 53
(vol. 2): 24
(vol.
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