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Birds of Prey is a comic book series published by DC Comics that features the adventures of the superheroine Oracle and her group of superheroines. The group is initially based in Gotham City and later operates in Metropolis and then relocates once more to "Platinum Flats", California, a new locale introduced in Birds of Prey in 2008. The series was conceived by Jordan B. Gorfinkel and originally written by Chuck Dixon. Gail Simone scripted the comic from issue #56 to #108. Sean McKeever was originally to replace Simone [1][2], but McKeever has since decided to leave the project, and will only write issues #113-117; Tony Bedard, who wrote issues #109-112, will become the title's regular writer starting with issue #118.[3]. Artists have included Butch Guice, Greg Land, Ed Benes, and Joe Bennett; Nicola Scott began a stint as artist with issue #100. Despite the title of the series being Birds of Prey, the phrase is not mentioned in the book until issue #86, when one of the group's members, Zinda Blake, suggests that it might be a fitting name for the team. However, the other characters get sidetracked and do not respond to her suggestion. Oracle, the team's leader, refers to the group by that name in a conversation with the new Blue Beetle, Jaime Reyes,[4] and later within the series.[5] The team's greatest strength comes from Barbara's connections to other heroes across the DC Universe from her tenure as Batgirl, ranging from Batman, Superman, and Wonder Woman to specialized rosters adapted to best suit her present mission. After Black Canary's departure, Huntress remains as the staple member and field leader, alongside new "core members." Despite the all-female central roster, male allies of Barbara such as Nightwing, Wildcat, Savant, and Creote frequently assist missions.
[edit] Publication history[edit] Chuck Dixon eraThe title series began with Chuck Dixon's one shot Black Canary/Oracle: Birds of Prey (1996). Initially, the two heroines featured were Barbara Gordon ("Oracle" and formerly "Batgirl") and Dinah Lance ("Black Canary"). From the beginning, Canary was written as passionate and idealistic, and Oracle as more level-headed and pragmatic. In an interview with Comics Bulletin, Dixon described this choice as a fertile clash of values: "Oracle ... is very "means to an end" oriented. She sees that sometimes you have to kill to save lives. She's not comfortable with that but accepts it... That pragmatic aspect of Babs' character, contrasted with Dinah's more idealistic approach, is at the heart of this book."[6] [edit] Gail Simone eraWhen Gail Simone took over the series in 2003, she added The Huntress to the BoP lineup. In her first arc entitled Of Like Minds, Simone let Black Canary walk into a trap set by Brian Durlin, known as Savant and his assistant Creote. With Black Canary now critically injured and chained, Savant begins listing demands, the most significant of which is the true identity of Batman.[7] In the end, Huntress, Canary, and Oracle defeat their enemies, and form a trio. Author Simone commented on the new lineup, saying that each character provided a foil for the two others: "Babs and Dinah respect each other tremendously, and each is capable of great things the other is not. Dinah's not just Oracle's legs, sometimes, she's her conscience, or her muse, or just her best friend. And Oracle is far more to Dinah than just the mission controller. They trust each other, and out of that, there's a friendship that they believe in. Huntress... I see Helena as someone who is not a loner completely by choice. Dinah is so accepting, and so open, that Helena sees an opportunity to be part of something without having to force her way in. There's friction, because once Helena puts the mask on, she's really not very good fitting in. But she likes that they're giving her a chance. Whether she blows it or not, you'll have to keep reading."[8] Simone was appreciative of her work, saying BoP editor Lysa Hawkins "was looking for a slightly tougher Birds of Prey and asked me to submit a proposal. I have a huge fondness for Babs and Dinah both, so it's a bit of a dream come true. I'm really excited by the art, which is very sleek and sexy, with a nice dark tone, by Supergirl star Ed Benes.[9] The Huntress later meets Oracle in person for the first time while rescuing her from a potentially life threatening situation during the Sensei & Student storyline.[10] The US government had become aware of the existence of Oracle and formatted a list of suspects to interrogate, one of whom was Barbara. Without any form of due process, two federal agents imply they believe she is the Oracle and that if any evidence is brought to light she will be tried for treason against the United States of America.[11] Once again, Oracle relies on the Huntress when no other allies are available. While Oracle and Huntress share a long history of animosity with one another, Black Canary eventually inspires Oracle to employ her as a full-time agent. The budding friendship is cut short during the Hero Hunters arc. In the final issue of the storyline, the Huntress realizes Oracle has been manipulating her psychologically in order to make her "behave" properly, in the same way a teacher attempts to reform a troubled child.[12] Despite Oracle's remorse for her actions, Huntress temporarily departs from the group. She later rejoins the team, once again as a full-time agent along with newcomer Lady Blackhawk. Although the personnel on Oracle's team grows and changes, Huntress and Lady Blackhawk remain core agents. When BoP approached the century mark, Simone used the issues #99 and #100 to shake up the lineup. She let Black Canary leave the team with her ward, a little girl called "Sin", and used a prison break arc to introduce superhumanly strong Big Barda, pacifist Judomaster, and rascally Misfit into the new squad, and with the new Spy Smasher as an ambiguous Jack Bauer-like anti-heroine and Lois Lane cornering Oracle into almost giving away her secret identity. Again, the characters were chosen to provide a foil for each other, and affirmed her love for her characters: "The team is a group of individuals, quite unlike the friendship between Dinah, Helena, and Babs. And any team with Barda on it automatically has a certain bull in a China shop tremble, and I love that... The characters don't apologize for being asskickers, nor for being smart, nor for being sexy, nor for being sexual, for that matter. There are always going to be some people who find that not to their taste, but at the same time, BoP regularly brings in people who don't otherwise read mainstream comics, a whole audience that may not pick up any other superhero titles, and I love that niche, that little area between good taste and utter shamelessness."[13] Finally, Simone stated her agony of leaving the book; "I miss the characters in all the books I've worked on. Writing the last issue of Birds of Prey I'm doing was actually physically painful."[14] [edit] McKeever/Bedard eraAfter Simone's departure to sister title Wonder Woman, Sean McKeever wrote BoP from issues 113 to 117. McKeever used his short stint to pit a new incarnation of "Blackhawk" villain Killer Shark against ex-Blackhawk Zinda Blake and to introduce the location of Platinum Flats, called by IGN "the Silicon Valley of the DC universe and a hotbed of white-collar crime commotted by mysterious villain "The Visionary". IGN called his short stint "enjoyable" and creative.[15] His writing deeds were taken over by Tony Bedard, who stated in a Comic Book Resources interview that he liked the concept of Platinum Flats. Bedard wants to mix the concept of 21st-century white-collar crime with 1930s mob families and has stated that Oracle is his favorite BoP character.[16] DC announced that series will be cancelled in February 2009, with the "Oracle: The Cure" mini-series beginning publication the following month.[17] [edit] Membership[edit] Main characters
[edit] Recurring characters
[edit] Bibliography
[edit] Collected editions
The series has been collected into a number of trade paperbacks:
[edit] Other media[edit] TV seriesMain article: Birds of Prey (TV series) The comic was loosely adapted to a television series, Birds of Prey. Set in an alternate future of the DC Universe, the show starred Dina Meyer as Oracle and Ashley Scott as Huntress, established partners in New Gotham. Meyer's Oracle was the paralyzed former Batgirl; Scott's Huntress was the daughter of Batman and a metahuman Catwoman, and as such exhibited feline powers. Joined in the pilot episode by a young psychic runaway named Dinah (played by Rachel Skarsten), the team spent 13 episodes stopping various metahuman threats such as Huntress' old high school friend Shiva and a thinly-veiled Nightwing knockoff[citation needed], the dangerous "Darkstrike" (previously known as "Nightstrike" until the similarity to Nightwing prompted the change[citation needed]). Other main cast members included Shemar Moore as Huntress' love interest Detective Jesse Reese, and Mia Sara as the villainous Dr. Harleen Quinzel (Harley Quinn). Lori Loughlin was a notable guest star, playing Dinah's metahuman mother: the Black Canary. The theme song was "Revolution" by Aimee Allen, and the show was developed by Laeta Kalogridis. [edit] Justice League UnlimitedGail Simone scripted the Justice League Unlimited episode "Double Date." She originally intended the episode to feature a temporarily house-bound Batgirl (Barbara Gordon) contacting Huntress and Black Canary to complete a case for her, but a character rights issue necessitated removing Barbara from the story and taking it in a different direction (teaming Huntress with The Question and Black Canary with Green Arrow).[18] [edit] References
[edit] External links
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