The heroes triumphantly defeat Per Degaton on Earth-2 in 1942 (reverting
him to a lowly lab assistant to Prof. Zee in 1947, remembering the
events he caused as only another dream), as well as the Crime Syndicate
(returning them to their limbo prison in the Earth-3 universe),
returning things to normal on both Earth-2 in 1982 and Earth-Prime circa
1962 (with all forgetting this adventure ever happened).
George Perez will be at O-17 at C2E2From Vu, thanks to Jim B
C2E2 2019 (22-24 Mar 2019)
Chicago, Illinois
Attention C2E2 attendees, "George Prez" will be located at O-17.
While you're at C2E2, be sure to attend Marv Wolfman and George Perez: In Conversation on Sunday, March 24 at 2:45pm at S401.
Posted by Vu Sleeper
JUSTICE LEAGUE OF AMERICA #209
(Dec 1982)
DC Comics
Tony Lorenz's cover to Sherman Burnett's Quasar was inspired by the George Perez's JLA 80s covers.
More Perez Homages posted Dec 21, 2010 7:33 PM by vu sleeper [ updated 5 minutes agoDec 21, 2010 8:09 PM ]
From Kevin M
In the past I know that you've posted some of the homages that I've
commissioned based on George's work. I've gotten a few news ones over
the last few months.
The first is based on an old Wizard cover that George did but with different versions of Iron Man, Thor and Captain America:
WIZARD: THE COMICS MAGAZINE #81
(May 1998)
AVENGERS TRINITY (art by Mitch Ballard)
(2010)
I also got this one which comes from an issue of Brave and the Bold George did:
If there’s one truism that runs through
both the original Crisis on Infinite Earths and its thematic descendant
Infinite Crisis, it’s that unexpected characters suddenly get a chance
to shine. Granted, Power Girl’s not exactly a wallflower. She’d had
significant roles in series ranging from All-Star Comics to Justice
League Europe to Birds of Prey and JSA. She recently headlined the
much-discussed debut arc of JSA: Classified. And of course, she graces
the both variant covers for this week’s Infinite Crisis #2. Still,
despite the fact that she’s a perennially minor character, Power Girl
has a strident fanbase and certainly plays a crucial role in DC’s
biggest project of the decade thus far. Where then did Power Girl
originate, and what were some of the highlights on her circuitous path
to crossover glory? (Writer’s Note: Notice that I said some of the
highlights; this does not pretend to be a complete list of appearances)
(excerpt)
Justice League of America #195-197; JLA #207-209 (and All-Star Squadron #14-15) and JLA #219-220
(early ‘80s): While these appearances aren’t mind-bogglingly
significant in the life of the character, they do represent several
occasions upon which Kara interacted with the heroes of Earth-1 during
the annual JLA/JSA crossovers. Most interesting is her cross-world
flirtation with the JLA’s young hero, Firestorm. Writer Conway slowly
built this attraction over a few years. It has enough meaning for the
heroine that she goes ballistic in the early pages of #220 after
Firestorm has been injured in an ambush. These are all fun stories, and
it’s amusing in retrospect that, in keeping with tradition for such
team-ups, most of them incorporated the word “Crisis” into their
respective titles.
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