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Dove (Don Hall) and Hawk (Hank Hall) from their first appearance in Showcase #75. Art by Steve Ditko.Group publication information#75 (June 1968)In-story informationMember(s)& Don (Donald) HallHank Hall & Dawn GrangerSasha Martens & Wiley WolvermanDawn Granger & Holly GrangerHawk and DoveSeries publication informationPublication date(Volume 1)September – June/July(Volume 2)October – December(Volume 3)June – October(Volume 4)November – March(Volume 5)September – MarchNumber of issues6 (vol. 2)28 plus 2 annuals (vol. 5)Creator(s)Hawk and DoveHawk and Dove are a fictional team that appear in.
Created by, and, 'The Hawk and the Dove' debuted in No. 75 (June 1968) during the. The duo has existed in multiple incarnations over the years across several eponymous and, and has also appeared in a number of recurring roles and guest-appearances in titles such as,. The duo originated as teenage brothers as Hawk and Don Hall as Dove, but the majority of published Hawk and Dove appearances have featured Hank Hall and Dawn Granger, an unrelated young woman who assumes the role of Dove in Hawk and Dove (vol. 1 (October 1988) following Don's death in 1985's. The pairing of Hank and Dawn serve as the current incarnation of the team.The central concept, originally playing on the emerging political divides of the 1960s (see and ), traditionally revolves around two young heroes with contrasting personalities and diametrically opposed ideologies who, by speaking their super-heroic aliases, are transformed and granted power sets of heightened strength, speed, and agility. With Dove embodying reason and nonviolence and Hawk embodying force and aggression, the two heroes complement one another to effectively fight evil.
With the introduction of Dawn Granger, it was revealed that Hawk and Dove receive their powers from the, respectively, and that their powers are mystic in origin.A third Hawk and Dove appeared in a 1997 miniseries, with military cadet Sasha Martens and rock musician Wiley Wolverman becoming Hawk II and Dove III respectively, though these versions bore no connection to their predecessors. The mantle of Hawk was briefly assumed by Dawn's sister Holly Granger until her death in 2009's crossover.Though the duo's ongoing titles have all been relatively short-lived and their guest-appearances in other titles sporadic, the heroes have experienced a storied and sometimes tragic history.
Multiple characters have worn the respective titles of Hawk and Dove at one time or another, and the legacy has experienced death, resurrection, and even Hank's own descent into madness and subsequent transformation into the mass-murdering villain Monarch and later Extant.Outside of comics, the Hank and Don Hall incarnation of Hawk and Dove appeared in the series, with Hawk voiced by and Dove voiced. Hank Hall, Dawn Granger, and Don Hall make their live-action debuts in the series, played by, and, respectively.
Contents.Publication history Silver and Bronze Age Spinning off from their Showcase debut, Don and Hank Hall received their own series titled The Hawk and the Dove. Created by Steve Ditko and Steve Skeates, Ditko plotted only the first issue and left after the second. In a 1999 interview, Skeates expressed dismay with changes that would be made to his script by Ditko and editorial, citing a tendency to neutralize Dove's abilities as a crimefighter in favor of Hawk's:It was strange.
A lot of changes would happen after I turned in a script. Quite often, my idea of what to do with the Dove was have him do brave stuff – and then it would be changed by either or Steve into the Hawk doing that stuff. They'd say it was out of character for the Dove. They seemed to be equating Dove with wimp, wuss, coward or whatever.
And I don't really think it was because they were more hawkish. I just don't think that they knew what a dove was.Although Skeates attempted to change the direction of the series after Ditko left and artist joined the creative team, Skeates himself left after the fourth issue, leaving Kane to take on both writing and art responsibilities until the book's cancellation due to low sales after only the sixth issue.The original Hawk and Dove made sporadic appearances in different DC titles throughout the 1970s and 1980s, primarily within the Teen Titans and New Teen Titans, joining the original incarnation briefly from Teen Titans (vol. 1) #25–30 (Jan–Oct 1970), under the guidance of writers, and artist. Skeates also provided scripts for some of these issues they appeared in.
The brothers also teamed up with Batman in (vol. 1) #181 (Dec 1981) in an out-of-continuity tale written by and drawn by.The original Hawk and Dove's last appearance together was in Crisis on Infinite Earths No. Hank and Don Hall in The Hawk and the Dove No.
1 (September 1968). Cover art by.Hank and Don Hall were the sons of Judge Irwin Hall.
They eventually found out that their father had many enemies when he was nearly assassinated. Hank and Don eventually follow the criminal back to the hideout where they accidentally locked themselves in the closet of some criminals plotting to dispose of him. Just as Hank and Don who found for the first time they could agree that they wanted to save their father, mysterious voices echoed throughout the room offering the boys a chance to save their father. All they had to do was call upon the powers of the Hawk and the Dove. The voices belonged to a Lord of Chaos named T'Charr and a Lord of Order named Terataya (even though the were eternal enemies, these two Lords had fallen in love ). The Hall brothers invoked their new powers and became Hawk and Dove.
The conservative Hawk (Hank) was hot-headed and reactionary, whereas the liberal Dove (Don) was more thoughtful and reasoned, but was prone to indecisiveness. Judge Irwin Hall displayed a more balanced political beliefs, and firmly disapproved of, not knowing his sons were costumed adventurers and the fact that Hawk and Dove had saved him from his would-be assailants.After their series ended, Hawk and Dove became semi-regulars in the, eventually joining Titans West. Writer Alan Brennert attempted to end their saga in a 1982 issue of where 12 years later Hank and Don Hall, then adults, are trying to cope with their 1960s values in the 1980s. After Hawk and Dove teamed up with, the mysterious voice revoked Hank and Don's powers, deeming them still immature. This was later intentionally disregarded with a joke (where Don notes everyone says they look older) in New Teen Titans No.
50, when it was realized the aging of Hank and Don would affect the age of the Teen Titans as well.Dove died in 1985's while saving a young boy who was being attacked by the 's shadow demons. The creature that killed Dove came from behind while he was saving a kid from a falling building and Hawk was too far away to intervene. A statue of Don is part of the at in San Francisco.
Hawk continued on his own, but without Dove to restrain him, he became violent to the point where many superheroes considered him nearly as much trouble as the supervillains.Modern Age. Hawk and Dove: Hank Hall and Dawn Granger.
Artwork by.In 1988, a new Hawk and Dove mini-series written by and reintroduced the duo. This series placed a woman named Dawn Granger as the Dove, replacing Don, who had died in the original series.
The new Dove mysteriously received her powers while attempting to save her mother from terrorists. At the end of the mini-series, it was revealed that Dawn received her powers the moment Don had been stripped of them.This Dove, while considerably more aggressive and self-confident than Don, also has greater-than-average strength and dexterity, faster-than-human speed, and expanded mental capabilities.
Dove fights mostly defensively, preferring to out-think and remain in control of her opponent. She also heals quickly and cannot revert to Dawn if her wounds or some other condition would be fatal to Dawn.
They managed to hold their own against the Lords of Chaos' creation called Kestrel.Set in Washington, D.C. (where the duo attended ), the series introduced several supporting characters, including Hank's girlfriend, Ren Takamori, and friends Kyle Spenser and Donna Cabot. They also worked with police Captain Brian 'Sal' Arsala, who would develop a mutual admiration with Dawn. It also introduced Kestrel, an evil spell created by M'Shulla and Barter, owner of Barter Trading: Exotic Goods and Services. Hank Hall's and Dawn Granger's true forms as Hawk and DoveHawk and Dove are lured to the mystical land of Druspa Tau – the home of the Lords of Chaos and Order – by Kestrel. It is all an effort of M'Shulla to seek out that world's Lords of Order. They are eventually discovered – Terataya, Lord of Order, and T'Charr, Lord of Chaos – in the form of a combined being called Unity.
After M'Shulla and Kestrel are defeated (Hawk absorbs Kestrel and effectively destroys him), T'Charr and Terataya reveal they created Hawk and Dove to prove to the other Lords of Chaos and Order that the two forces could work together (and also because they were in love) and then convince Hawk and Dove to absorb the essence of their respective creators. This merging enhances their powers: Dove could now fly and was stronger and bulletproof; and Hawk now had super strength and was nearly invulnerable. Hawk's Fall and Redemption: Armageddon 2001, Zero Hour, and JSA In 1991, in an editorial snafu concerning the mini-series, word leaked out that the central time-travelling villain of the piece (known as ) was actually. Monarch had originally been conceived as a future identity of Captain Atom (post-psychotic break). Had even 'checked' Hawk's future in Hawk and Dove Annual No. 2, which had them fighting Monarch, eliminating them as possible candidates. In a last-ditch effort to provide a 'surprise twist', DC changed the storyline.Sales of Hawk and Dove had dipped and the series was slotted for cancellation, so Monarch's identity was revealed as the future Hank Hall.
Monarch attacked Hawk and Dove and managed to murder Dawn in front of Hank, causing him to suffer the psychotic break, kill Monarch, and assume his villainous identity. He briefly became a recurring foe for Captain Atom before absorbing Waverider's time-travel powers, subsequently changing his form and name to Extant in.As Extant, Hawk murdered several members of the; during a rematch however, used the 's Mobius Chair to transfer Hall onto a doomed plane in place of the Atom Smasher's mother; the plane exploded due to the terrorist actions of Kobra. Despite his crimes and the lives taken by him, a statue of him is present in the Titans Tower memorial in San Francisco.Sasha Martens and Wiley Wolverman. Hawk and Dove: Sasha Martens and Wiley WolvermanAnother version of Hawk (Sasha Martens) and Dove (Wiley Wolverman) appeared in a 5-issue mini-series in 1997, written. In this version, completely unrelated to the concept of the Lords of Chaos and Order, the duo's conflicting personalities manifested as ' and 'slacker dude' respectively.
They gained large bird wings and a telepathic link by receiving experimental medical treatments as children. Following the mini-series, the new Hawk and Dove made a handful of cameo appearances in Titans-related books, once protecting the town of Woodstock, New York, during a worldwide crisis. Hawk and Dove: Holly Granger and Dawn Granger.
Art by Mike McKone.In 2003, JSA #45–50 told of a mysterious woman in a coma who was taken into the care of the Justice Society. Initially thought to be the comatose body of 's missing wife, the woman was revealed to be none other than the presumed-dead Dawn Granger. Dawn's 'death' was revealed to be a hoax orchestrated by the villain Mordru who was also revealed to have caused Hank's insanity that set him down the path to becoming Monarch (and later Extant).Dawn later gained a new partner when her estranged and aggressive British sister Holly Granger was granted the mystical powers of Chaos as the third Hawk.
Holly's first appearance was in Teen Titans vol. 3, #22–23, joining her sister and many other former Titans against. The duo later re-teamed with the Titans to rescue 's 'soul self' from their old nemesis Kestrel.In the Day of Vengeance, the attacks and apparently destroys T'Charr and Terataya (who apparently were temporarily no longer dead), leaving Hawk and Dove supposedly powerless. Despite this, however, Hawk and Dove were shown during a worldwide prison break, being contacted telepathically. Both were in costume, and Dove was carrying Hawk while flying, possibly implying that T'Charr and Terataya were somehow restored to life after Earth entered the Tenth Age of Magic.Hawk and Dove also appeared in, in which Dawn Granger is one of a number of heroes possessed.
In Teen Titans vol. 34 (post- ), Holly and Dawn are shown in Titans Tower sometime during the, with dialogue from Hawk implying that they were at the time members of the Teen Titans.
Their association with the team was temporary, though they resurfaced in the Special as part of a new team organized. The sisters were both shot by energy beams from and were left for dead. Later events showed they were badly injured but had survived the experience. Blackest Night. Main article:In Blackest Night No. 2, multiple attempt to reanimate the body of Don Hall, only to be prevented from disturbing his grave by an invisible barrier.
As they collide with the barrier, the rings' typical command ('rise') is interrupted; the rings instead respond 'Don Hall of Earth at peace'. This is the first depiction of the black power rings failing to recruit a member for the. Though Don rejects the black rings, his brother Hank's corpse accepts his with humor: 'Same old, same old, huh, bro? Hawk's got to do all the dirty work himself.' In Blackest Night: Titans #1, Hank lures Holly and Dawn to a library with a trail of dead hawks and doves. A ruse by Black Lantern Hank Hall, he kills Holly Granger by ripping out her heart. A black ring then claims Holly's body and the two Black Lantern Hawks assault and torment Dawn.
Eventually Dove goes to Titans Tower for help, only to find it under attack by more Black Lantern Titans. Holly and Hank catch up to her and resume their attack. When Holly attempts to rip out Dawn's heart, a blast of white energy radiates from her body, severing the connection between Holly and the ring. Dawn then turns the light on the other Black Lanterns, destroying all but, and Hank. The effort causes Dawn to pass out. While unconscious, she has a vision of Don, who tells her that she can save Hank, and should not give up on him.Dawn and the Titans join the in battling the Black Lanterns at. She is able to destroy Black Lanterns with her very presence.
The witnesses Dawn's fight with the undead army and realizes that she possesses the 'white light of creation' as mentioned by Indigo-1 (a member from the ), a power believed to be created by the combined seven powers of the emotional spectrum. During the battle, Dove's white energies are pulled into the Black Lanterns' central power battery, under the control of the being trapped inside: the being is eventually revealed to be the villainous. Dove aids the seven Corps members to defeat the cosmic entity before resuming their battle with the Black Lantern Corps. In the aftermath of the final battle, Hank is brought back to life by the power of the white light.
A memorial statue is created for Holly at Titans Tower. Brightest Day. Main article:Hank and Dawn encounter shortly after the events of Blackest Night. They have him, in their own particular ways, try to resurrect Don and Holly, but to no avail; the voice guiding Deadman simply indicates death no longer holds the same meaning. The three are transported to, where they find the White Lantern power battery in a crater. When Deadman asks the white battery why they were all brought back to life, the tells them that it is dying and requires a successor. The Entity also tells Hawk to save Dawn from (although the fact that it also told Boomerang to attack Dawn in the first place suggests a larger plan at play).
When asking why Dove needs to be protected, the Entity said they all need protection.Dove and Deadman travel together for a time, first to and then, in a search for a candidate to replace the Entity. They believe and to be possible candidates, and Deadman tries to give the ring to Batman, but the ring rejects him and returns to Deadman, who is suddenly shot to death. But the ring brings him back to life, and upon doing so both he and Dawn realize they are in love (she is the reason he embraces life and accepts the ring's offer). Deadman has since moved into Dove's apartment.Later as the 'dark avatar' made his presence known, Hawk and Dove are transported to the Star City forest by the Entity, where it tells them that they must protect the forest and withstand the ultimate savior,. Within the forest, Captain Boomerang finds Dawn and throws a boomerang at her. Hawk fails to catch it, but Deadman succeeds, dying in the process. Hawk is left to knock Captain Boomerang unconscious.
After the Dark Avatar is defeated, the Entity reveals to them that the boomerang was a part a plan to free Hawk from his role as an avatar of war from the Lords of Chaos: his act of saving Dawn would have broken their power over Hawk and allow him to be true to himself. Dawn is heartbroken. She and Boston Brand share an emotional farewell as Brand resumes his duties as 'Deadman'.Around this same time period, Dawn and Hank are recruited into the by while in Gotham to stop some teenaged supervillains. Immediately after their meeting with Zinda, the two are called in by to rescue and the from a villainess calling herself White Canary. Dove also appears as part of 's all-female superteam in Wonder Woman #600. The New 52 DC relaunched this title as part of their company-wide of their 52 major titles. It was released on 7 September 2011, written by and art by.In this new series, Hawk and Dove are Hank Hall and Dawn Granger, who resume their superhero activities in Washington, DC, with assistance from Deadman.
They encounter Condor and Swan, a new pair of supervillains who possess superpowers similar to theirs. Hawk and Dove fight Condor and Swan after they try to kill President and Hank's father.
Swan escapes, but Hawk and Dove manage to defeat Condor, who is revealed to be an old unnamed man.During the first issue, the origins of Hawk and Dove are recounted – Don and Hank were Dove and Hawk for at least two years, until three years before the start of the series, when Don perished during the 'worst crisis the world has ever seen' (referencing Don's death in the original canon in the Crisis) and Dawn became the next avatar almost immediately. This is later in the Titans Hunt mini-series, where it is revealed that Hank and Don were members of the original Teen Titans, and that Don was killed during a battle between the team and.It is also said that Dawn had a connection to Don, known only to herself and Deadman, but unknown to Hank. The Hawk and Dove series was canceled after issue 8 (released 4 April 2012).In the new continuity, Dawn Granger has a tenuous romantic relationship with Deadman, and has appeared in the team comic, however their attempt fails miserably as while Deadman insists to carry on their relationship using borrowed bodies, Dove shows disdain and repulsion to the idea.In the ' sequel ',' Hawk and Dove are shown on TV being arrested by the for interfering with the Russian police. Powers and abilities Dove Dove possesses an ability known as danger sense transformation. When in the presence of danger, whether to herself or others, Dawn Granger can call out the word 'Dove' and transform into Dove. She does not need to be aware of danger, meaning she transforms if she says the word while unknowingly being in danger. However, the transformation requires actual danger, so if Dawn says 'Dove' without danger being present, she would not transform.The transformation wears off a short time after any danger has passed, unless Dove is seriously injured.
She will remain as Dove until the injuries are sufficiently healed. Hank once searched the to find a criminal hideout, having to say 'Hawk' before entering each warehouse.
On high magic worlds, Dawn can remain as Dove for extended periods regardless of whether danger is present.The transformation changes Granger into a minor force of Order and she gains avian characteristics, which are hidden under her costume. If the costume receives sufficient damage, it can reveal part of her true form, which shines with the golden glowing light of Order. Within realms of higher magic, Dove can easily remove the costume and show her true form.Dove is also hypervigilant; her natural aptitudes are enhanced, such as her ability to judge people which allows her to 'read' people and objects, and know how they will behave. In addition to flight, she also has enhanced agility, can withstand physical punishment, heal quickly and her perceptions are heightened to their fullest extent.Due to her connection with Terataya, on high magic worlds her powers are enhanced. She can concentrate her radiance into a blinding beam of light. She also possesses the White Light of Creation. It is unknown whether this power is an extension of her radiance ability, but during the Blackest Night crisis, Dove was able to channel this particular force and destroy Black Lanterns along with blocking a Black Lantern's aura-reading power.
How and why Dawn was chosen for this power, or whether it has anything to do with her link to Terataya, remains unknown.As seen in the pages of Blackest Night, Don Hall is impervious to black power rings. In an interview with, provides an explanation behind Dove's immunity to the black power rings: 'You'll learn more about this as we go forward. But really it speaks to the nature of Don Hall.
He can't be desecrated by the likes of these things. He's untouchable in death and at total peace more than any other being in the universe.' Reflecting on the limitations of the rings, Johns goes on to state that, even though magic is a 'joke' to the black power rings, Don is quite the opposite. Hawk Hawk possesses a 'danger sense transformation' which allows him to change into a super-human with the powers of super strength, unlimited stamina, enhanced speed, enhanced agility, enhanced durability, enhanced body density and healing factor.His partner Dove suppresses his violent nature, and without her presence Hawk's rage becomes boundless.While he was a member of the Black Lantern Corps, Hawk wielded a black power ring which allowed him to generate black energy constructs. He was also able to perceive emotional auras.Enemies Outside of the enemies they fought with the Teen Titans, each of the Hawk and Dove incarnations had their own enemies. Condor – The evil counterpart of Hawk.
Condor's identity is an unnamed elderly man. D'Khan – A priest that is secretly the ancient Dragon of D'Yak. Hunter – A supervillain that worked for the 'D'Yak' and had hunted Hawk and Dove. Kestrel – A supervillain created by M'Shulla and Gorrum of the Lords of Chaos to either subvert Hawk to the forces of evil or kill him.
Necromancer – A powerful sorceress who tried unlocking unlimited magical power with the circle of totems. Shellshock – A mysterious woman who can blow up anything by saying its name. Sudden Death – A beach bum-themed metahuman. Swan – The evil counterpart of Dove. Swan's identity is Rachel Felps. Unity – Dr. Arsala is the daughter of Hank and Dawn from an alternate future who used the Gem of Order to become Unity.Collected editions.
Hawk and Dove (collects Hawk and Dove vol. 2, #1–5), November 1993,. Hawk and Dove: Ghosts & Demons (new edition collects Hawk and Dove vol. 2, #1–5), March 2012,. DC Comics Presents: Brightest Day #3 (collects Teen Titans vol. 3, #27–28; Legends of the DC Universe #26–27), February 2011 – Features Hawk (Holly) and Dove (Dawn), alongside the Teen Titans, fighting Kestrel.
Hawk and Dove: First Strikes (collects Hawk and Dove vol. 5 #1–8), August 2012,.
Teen Titans: The Silver Age Omnibus (collects Showcase #75, Hawk and Dove vol. 1 #1–6, Teen Titans vol. 1, #21), November 2016,Other versions The Dark Knight Strikes Again Hank Hall and Don Hall appear in. The Hall brothers try to take up the tights again in their old age, but do not return to action, due to their constant arguments.In other media Television.
The original version of Hawk and Dove as depicted in. Hawk (Hank Hall) and Dove (Don Hall) are featured in, voiced by and (Kevin Arnold and Wayne Arnold in respectively). This version of the duo depicts a stronger relationship between the brothers.
Don is more self-confident unlike Hank, and their philosophical bickering is more like a brotherly teasing. Ironically, there is a role reversal: Savage (nerdy Kevin) voices the violent Hawk while Hervey (bully Wayne) voices the pacifist Dove. They were originally to have voiced their more obvious roles, but tried switching during rehearsals to the director's approval. In their self-titled episode, their fighting styles were thoroughly contrasted.
Hawk employs brute-force, aggressive tactics, at times resembling a player. Dove on the other hand uses a blend of techniques reminiscent of or perhaps judo, using his attacker's movements to fling them aside. After defeating some thugs in a bar, Hawk and Dove are enlisted by to help stop from causing war in. They're successful due to Dove's peaceful resistance against the rage-powered Annihilator.
This episode is another example of how close the two are as Hawk struggles against Wonder Woman in an attempt to protect his brother. Hawk screaming for Dove as he feared for his brother's life closely resembles when Dove was killed in Crisis on Infinite Earths.
In the episode 'The Greatest Story Ever Told', Hawk and Dove are among the heroes that fight the forces of. In the episode 'The Doomsday Sanction', Hawk and Dove assist in San Baquero's evacuation before the island's volcano erupts. Hawk and Dove are last seen in the series finale 'Destroyer' where they fight off alongside several other League members. They later appear in the final scene running down the steps of the Metro Tower with the rest of the League.
Fittingly enough, both in that fight scene and as they exit in the finale, they appear along with Steve Ditko's fellow creations: the, the and. Hawk and Dove appear in, voiced by (Hawk) and by (Dove). In the teaser for 'When OMAC Attacks', they help stop an intergalactic war between the and the Warlords of Okaara.
While Hawk and Dove take out the ground forces, Dove claims that it is better to settle things diplomatically while Hawk says that they have to hurt them or they will never stop. Regardless, Batman gets the two sides' leaders to sign the peace treaty and end the war. Hawk and Dove do manage to embarrass themselves, their bickering causing them to fight in front of the leaders. Batman invites the leaders to have a drink in his ship to draw their attention from the bickering brothers. Hawk and Dove also briefly appear in the two-part episode 'The Siege of Starro' Pt. 1 amongst the heroes who were taken over.
After Starro's defeat, Hawk and Dove are back to normal. As Hawk (left) and as Dove (right) in the 2018 television series.
The live-action series features appearances from as Hank Hall, as Don Hall, and as Dawn Granger; with Tait Blum and Jayden Marine as younger versions of Hank Hall and Don Hall respectively. All three are depicted as not having superpowers, instead relying on their physical prowess - Hank as a football player, Don as a martial artist, and Dawn as a ballerina - to fight crime. In the series, Hank and Don are half-brothers who are the original Hawk and Dove team that hunt down sexual predators, motivated by abuse that Hank's football coach inflicted on him as a child, while Dawn and her mother Marie are revealed to have been physically abused by her father.
Holly Granger is also referenced. After Don and Marie are killed in the same accident, Hank and Dawn gradually enter into a relationship, with Dawn subsequently being the next Dove. The new duo goes on to meet and team up with, although tensions occur when Dick and Dawn have an affair.
While planning on retiring, Hank and Dawn cross paths with Dick again when Dick requests their help in protecting. This leads to Hank, Dawn, and Dick being attacked by the, who were hired to retrieve Rachel, and the injuries that Dawn sustains in the ensuing fight cause her to fall into a coma.
Dawn eventually awakens from her coma when she receives a vision from Rachel telling her and Hank to find.Web series. Hawk (Hank Hall) and Dove (Dawn Granger) appears in. They appear as background students of Super Hero High.References. ^ Brightest Day #4 (August 2010). Markstein, Don. Don Markstein's Toonopedia. Retrieved 2 April 2020.
McAvennie, Michael; Dolan, Hannah, ed. DC Comics Year By Year A Visual Chronicle. Brothers Hank and Don Hall were complete opposites, yet writer/artist Steve Ditko with scripter Steve Skeates made sure the siblings shared a desire to battle injustice as Hawk and Dove.
CS1 maint: extra text: authors list. Skeates, Steve. Interview from Comic Book Artist Magazine No. 5, 1999. Kesel, Karl. Introduction to Hawk and Dove: Ghost & Demons TPB. Kesel, Barbara.
From intro to Hawk and Dove: Ghosts & Demons TPB. Secret Origins # 43 (August 1989). Manning, Matthew K. '1980s' in Dolan, p. 234: 'Written by Barbara and Karl Kesel and drawn by future superstar Rob Liefeld, this five-issue miniseries reestablished the famous pair for a new generation.' . Hawk & Dove Vol.
2 #14–17. Titans vol. 1 (June 2008). ^ Blackest Night No. 2 (October 2009). Blackest Night: Titans #1 (October 2009).
Blackest Night: Titans #3 (December 2009). Blackest Night No. 3 (November 2009). Blackest Night #7 (February 2010).
Green Lantern Corps vol. 46 (March 2010). Blackest Night No.
8 (March 2010). Titans vol. 23 (March 2010).
Brightest Day No. 5 (July 2010).
Brightest Day No. 6 (July 2010). Brightest Day No. 7 (August 2010).
Brightest Day No. 9 (September 2010). Brightest Day No. 12 (October 2010).
Brightest Day No. 13 (November 2010).
Brightest Day No. 14 (November 2010). Brightest Day No. 17 (January 2011). Brightest Day No. 23 (April 2011).
Brightest Day #24 (April 2011). Birds of Prey vol. 2 #1–2 (July–August 2010). DC Comics.com. Titans Hunt #8.
Kushins, Josh (12 January 2012). Archived from on 15 January 2012. Retrieved 14 January 2012.
Doomsday Clock #5 (May 2018). DC Comics.
14 August 2009. Andreeva, Nellie (7 September 2017). Deadline Hollywood. Retrieved 7 September 2017. Andreeva, Nellie (7 September 2017). Deadline Hollywood.
Retrieved 7 September 2017. Melendez, Marcos (14 August 2018). Retrieved 14 August 2018.External links.
at. From the original on December 8, 2015. at Comic Vine. at Comic Vine. at Comic Vine.
at Comic Vine. at Comic Vine.
and at the.