- Slam Bradley
Superherobox|
caption=Cover to "Solo" #5. Art byDarwyn Cooke .
comic_color=background:#8080ff
character_name=Slam Bradley
real_name=Samuel Emerson Bradley
publisher=DC Comics
debut="Detective Comics " #1 (March, 1937)
creators=Jerry Siegel andJoe Shuster
alliance_color=background:#ffc0c0
alliances=Gotham City Police Department
aliases=
powers=Extremely good bar-fighter known to take down several opponents at once. |Samuel Emerson "Slam" Bradley is a
fictional character that has appeared in variouscomic book series published byDC Comics . He is aprivate detective who exists in DC's mainshared universe , known as theDC Universe . Created byJerry Siegel andJoe Shuster (who also createdSuperman ), the character is a hard bitten, tough private eye who loves beautiful dames, stiff drinks and the odd fistfight now and then. Slam was one of the first stars of "Detective Comics ", debuting in #1 (March, 1937) a year before Superman first appeared and long beforeBatman would make the title his home.Citation | last = Wallace | first = Dan | author-link = | contribution = Slam Bradley | editor-last = Dougall | editor-first = Alastair | title = The DC Comics Encyclopedia | pages = 59 | publisher =Dorling Kindersley | place = London | year = 2008 | ISBN = 0-7566-4119-5]Fictional character biography
Originally operating out of
Cleveland , then later inNew York City , Slam and his sidekick "Shorty" Morgan often had humorous, fight filled adventures, often going undercover in various professions to catch their man."Detective" was originally an
anthology comic; Bradley's adventures continued despite Batman's debut in #27, throughWorld War II and beyond, finally ending in "Detective Comics" #152 (October, 1949). The feature was replaced by "Roy Raymond, TV Detective".Bradley would not make another significant appearance for over 32 years and his sidekick Morgan disappeared completely.
Slam Bradley's first appearance after his run in Detective Comics ended in 1949 was in Detective Comics 500,cover-dated March 1981. It was the 500th issue. Bradley(with graying sideburns)assisted in "The Too Many Crooks...Caper!" About a fellow retiring detective's murder;the story featured other D.C.detectives,such as Jason Bard,Pow-Wow-Smith,Roy Raymond T.V.detective,the Human Target and Mysto the Magician detective.
Slam returned in "Detective Comics" #572 (the 50th anniversary issue), teaming up with Batman, Robin, Elongated Man, and someone resembling Sherlock Holmes.
He later appeared in the Superman titles in the 1990s, working for the Metropolis Police Department. However, this incarnation of the character was short lived.
Slam's brother Biff appeared in
Tim Truman 's 1998 "The Guns of the Dragon "miniseries , which was set in the 1920s. In that story, Bradley teamed up with older versions ofBat Lash andEnemy Ace for an adventure onDinosaur Island . Originally, Slam was slated to appear, but another editor had plans for Slam. Hence, his heretofore unknown brother Biff was substituted. At the end of the series, Biff sacrifices his life to stop the villainousVandal Savage , although Savage would return many times later.In 2001, Bradley returned to "Detective Comics" when writer
Ed Brubaker and artistDarwyn Cooke revived the character in the four-part serial "Trail of theCatwoman " which ran in "Detective Comics" #759-762. Bradley investigates the death ofSelina Kyle and in the process runs afoul of the Batman. The current incarnation of the character is a formerpolice officer in his late 50s who has always worked inGotham City , (contradicting the previous Cleveland, New York and Metropolis settings).After "Detective Comics" #762, Bradley became a supporting cast member in the "Catwoman" ongoing series. He has had a brief romantic relationship with Kyle, and reveals that he has a son, Sam Bradley Jr., on the
Gotham City Police Department . Sam and Selina Kyle engaged in a romantic relationship that produced Helena Kyle, Selina's daughter, thus making "Slam" Bradley the grandfather of Catwoman's daughter.The character appears in Cooke's 2003/2004 "" as a private investigator working alongside Detective John Jones.
Slam appears in Darwyn Cooke's "Solo" #5.
Slam made his most recent appearance in a flashback in the story arc "The Hearts of Hush", where was the primary detective in the murder of
Thomas Elliot 's father.In other media
Bradley appears in the direct-to-video animated film "", based on Cooke's "New Frontier".
References
Other sources
* [http://www.comics.org/ The Grand Comic-Book Database]
* [http://www.toonopedia.com/slambrad.htm Don Markstein's Toonepedia article on Slam Bradley]
* [http://www.thrillingdetective.com/slam.html Article on Slam, along with some information on Biff Bradley]External links
* [http://home.aol.com/MG4273/bradley.htm Classic Comic Books: Slam Bradley]
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