1st Issue Special explained

Schedule:Monthly
Ongoing:y
Publisher:DC Comics
Date:April 1975 – April 1976
Issues:13
Subcat:DC Comics
Sort:1st Issue Special

1st Issue Special is a comics anthology series from DC Comics, done in a similar style to their Showcase series. It was published from April 1975 to April 1976. The goal was to showcase a new possible first issue of an ongoing series each month, with some issues debuting new characters and others reviving dormant series from DC's past. No series were actually launched from 1st Issue Special but the Warlord made his first appearance in the title and the character's ongoing series was already slated to debut a few months later.

Publication history

Writer Gerry Conway explained the series' origin: "1st Issue Special was a peculiar book concept based on [publisher] Carmine Infantino's observation that first issues of titles often sold better than subsequent issues. Carmine's brainstorm: a monthly series of nothing but first issues. It sounds like a joke, but he was dead serious".[1]

Conway has also denied that 1st Issue Special was a tryout series, pointing out that tryout series run each feature for several issues so that the publisher has enough time to get sales figures before deciding whether to give the feature its own series; since each feature in 1st Issue Special ran only one issue, DC would have had to either launch the new series before sales figures came in for the tryout (thus making the feature's appearance in 1st Issue Special pointless) or launch the new series six months or more after the tryout issue (by which time reader interest in the feature would have faded). Conway added: "We used to sit at editorial meetings and [Carmine Infantino] would say, 'Who has an idea for 1st Issue Special next month?' How do you develop a project that has a potential to be a real series within 20 days? You can't". Only two of the 1st Issue Special features received an ongoing series: Mike Grell's The Warlord, which first appeared in issue #8 (November 1975),[2] and Gerry Conway and Mike Vosburg's Return of the New Gods, which appeared in issue #13.[1]

Issues #1 (featuring Atlas) featured art and story by Jack Kirby.[3] A number of issues featured existing DC characters: issue #3, Metamorpho, issue #5, Manhunter,[4] issue #7, the Creeper, issue #9, the Golden Age character Doctor Fate, and issue #13, the New Gods.[5] The Metamorpho feature reunited the character's creators, writer Bob Haney and artist Ramona Fradon. Haney and Fradon had met at the 1974 San Diego Comic-Con, and while reminiscing, it emerged that both of them regarded Metamorpho as one of the features they had most enjoyed working on, leading them to ask DC if they could do one more Metamorpho story together.[5] 1st Issue Special staff have not been able to answer why the Creeper story was illustrated but not written by the character's creator, Steve Ditko.[5]

Issue #12 featured a new Starman character which would later be used in James Robinson's 1990s series focused on the character Jack Knight. The character was a supporting player in in 2010.

Some stories which had been intended for publication in 1st Issue Special appeared in other titles instead. A Batgirl and Robin team-up was published in Batman Family #1 (September - October 1975) and a Green Arrow and Black Canary story was kept in inventory until it was published as a backup feature in Green Lantern #100 (January 1978).

1st Issue Special never printed a letters column, opting instead to accompany each feature with a "Story Behind the Story" text page.[5]

DC published a hard cover collection of the series in 2020.[6]

Characters from 1st Issue Special star in the 12-issue 2022-2023 DC Black Label series Danger Street by Tom King and Jorge Fornes.[7] Instead of devoting separate issues to each character or group, as in the original series, Danger Street incorporates all the different characters into overlapping narratives.[8]

List of stories and credits

Issue #DateFeatured character and story titleWriterArtists
1April 1975AtlasJack KirbyJack Kirby and D. Bruce Berry
2May 1975The Green Team: Boy MillionairesJerry Grandenetti
3June 1975Metamorpho, The Element Man:
"The Freak and the Billion-Dollar Phantom".
Bob HaneyRamona Fradon
4July 1975Lady Cop


"Poisoned Love"

John Rosenberger and Vince Colletta
5August 1975ManhunterJack Kirby Jack Kirby and D. Bruce Berry
6September 1975Dingbats of Danger StreetJack Kirby Jack Kirby and Mike Royer
7October 1975The Creeper


"Menace of The Human Fire-Fly".

Michael FleisherSteve Ditko and Mike Royer
8November 1975The Warlord


"Land of Fear"

9December 1975Doctor Fate


"The Mummy That Time Forgot"

Martin PaskoWalt Simonson
10January 1976The Outsiders:
"Us...The Outsiders".
Joe Simon Jerry Grandenetti and Creig Flessel
11February 1976The Redondo Studio and Al Milgrom
12March 1976StarmanGerry ConwayMike Vosburg and Mike Royer
13April 1976Return of the New Gods


"Lest Night Fall Forever".

Gerry Conway and Denny O'NeilMike Vosburg

Collected editions

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Harvey. Allan . Apokolips Then: Or, Suppose they Finished a War and Nobody Came. Back Issue!. 38. 54–58. TwoMorrows Publishing. February 2010. Raleigh, North Carolina.
  2. Book: McAvennie, Michael. Dolan. Hannah. 1970s. DC Comics Year By Year A Visual Chronicle. Dorling Kindersley. 2010. London, United Kingdom. 978-0-7566-6742-9 . 165 . Writer/artist Mike Grell elevated the sword-and-sorcery genre to new heights with the Warlord..
  3. McAvennie "1970s" in Dolan, p. 162: "Debuting with Atlas the Great, writer and artist Jack Kirby didn't shrug at the chance to put his spin on the well-known hero".
  4. McAvennie "1970s" in Dolan, p. 164: "Though 1st Issue Special was primarily DC's forum to introduce new characters and storylines, editor Jack Kirby used the series as an opportunity to revamp the Manhunter, whom he and writer Joe Simon had made famous in the 1940s".
  5. Abramowitz. Jack. 1st Issue Special: It Was No Showcase (But It Was Never Meant To Be). Back Issue!. 71. 40–47. TwoMorrows Publishing. April 2014. Raleigh, North Carolina.
  6. Web site: DC FIRST ISSUE SPECIAL HC (JAN200647) . 2023-12-19 . www.previewsworld.com . en.
  7. Web site: Grunenwald . Joe . 2022-11-10 . INTERVIEW: Tom King talks DANGER STREET: "This is a hard one." . 2023-12-19 . The Beat . en-US.
  8. Web site: Danger Street #1 Review: 13 Tales Collide in a Special First Issue . 2023-12-19 . Comics . en.