Tuesday, October 16, 2018
A Tale of Times Past
Poet and playwright Oscar Wilde was born on this (October 16th) date. One of his greatest works is The Picture of Dorian Gray. I've never read the story, or seen the film adaptation. Maybe I should do something about that.
I am one of many that are more familiar with the works of comic book writer James Robinson. I've read stories he's worked on with "rock star" penciller Jim Lee in Lee's WildC.A.T.s. I've read great things of his Leave It To Chance.
My favorite work by Robinson is Starman. Working with Tony Harris and Wade Von Grawbadger, Robinson carved out a niche in a corner of the DC Universe. Opal City became much like Metropolis and Gotham, a bustling hub of activity. Robinson pulled together minor, lesser known characters and told amazing stories with them. Characters like The Black Pirate, Black Condor, The Red Bee and Solomon Grundy. He connected all of the characters that used the name Starman.
Jack Knight, created by Robinson and Harris, was the son of Golden-Age Starman Ted Knight - not to be confused with the legendary actor from Caddyshack, Too Close For Comfort, The Mary Tyler Moore Show, and the narrator of the '70's Super Friends cartoon. Jack was a collector. Antiques. He never wanted to be a superhero. Yet, when Ted's arch-enemy, The Mist, returned to Opal for revenge, Jack stepped up. The Mist's son, Kyle, murdered Jack's brother David, who had taken their father's mantle as Starman. The Mist's Daughter, Nash, took up her father's mantle as well.
All this unfolded in the amazing debut Sins of the Father storyline, in Starman 0 - 4. Issue five was quite interesting. It was the first Talking With David issue. David Knight was somehow able to reconnect with Jack, and he shared with Jack important pieces of the puzzle.
Starman 6 was even more interesting. Another of Ted Knight's adversaries, The Shade, had more or less retired from crime, and made Opal his home. He'd spent a good deal of his free time journaling. He shared his journals with Jack. Starman 6 is the first issue From The Pages of The Shade's Journals, a Tale of Times Past. It features The Shade, known as Mr. Black, hanging out in 1882 with Oscar Wilde. This was before he had written his famous work about Dorian Gray. Wilde was on his American tour, stopping in Opal before heading to Chicago. While chatting about Dickens and Hans Christian Anderson, The Shade is interested in someone else Wilde knows. Someone with similar powers to The Shade's. That's set aside as a young man seeks The Shade's help in rescuing his sister from a mesmerist running a circus performing in Opal. What follows is a simple confrontation; as The Shade does indeed liberate the young man's sister. His price is a bit of Opal land, and ten percent of the inheritance received from the brother and sister's late parents. Far less than what the mesmerist was interested in from the sister.
The story ends with a torn page from The Shade's journal. An important page.
Robinson didn't waste anything in Starman. Everything that happened built toward a grand finale.
Oscar Wilde was part of that. Wilde followed The Picture of Dorian Gray with The Importance of Being Earnest. He was in prison for two years, from 1895 to 1897. He died poor at age 48 in 1900 in Paris. Alan Moore incorporated Dorian Gray into his League of Extraordinary Gentlemen. The screenplay for the film adaptation was written by (wait for it) James Robinson.
Legend has it that Robinson and Harris modeled The Shade on actor Jonathan Pryce. You've seen him in the James Bond film Tomorrow Never Dies and the Pirates of the Caribbean films. Maybe he modeled The Shade on Dorian Gray as well. And in doing so, inspired Wilde.
I'm thinking it might be time to read The Picture of Dorian Gray.
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