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Captain Marvel DC Comics - Supporting cast |  | Captain Marvel DC Comics - Supporting cast: Encyclopedia II - Captain Marvel DC Comics - Supporting cast |  |
Captain Marvel DC Comics - Marvel Family.
Captain Marvel often fights evil as a member of a superhero team known as the Marvel Family, made up of himself and several other heroes:
The Wizard Shazam. Although he is killed, as prophesied, after giving Billy the power to become Captain Marvel, Shazam's spirit remains as the vigilant caretaker of the Rock of Eternity. In current continuity, Shazam does not die after granting Billy his powers, and was a much more active character than he was during ...
See also:Captain Marvel DC Comics, Captain Marvel DC Comics - Full history, Captain Marvel DC Comics - Development and inspirations, Captain Marvel DC Comics - Whiz Comics no. 2: origin story, Captain Marvel DC Comics - Fawcett years: the Marvel Family allies and enemies, Captain Marvel DC Comics - Captain Marvel vs. Superman, Captain Marvel DC Comics - The Shazam! revival, Captain Marvel DC Comics - Shazam! The New Beginning, Captain Marvel DC Comics - The Power of Shazam!, Captain Marvel DC Comics - Captain Marvel in the 2000s, Captain Marvel DC Comics - Supporting cast, Captain Marvel DC Comics - Marvel Family, Captain Marvel DC Comics - Rogues gallery, Captain Marvel DC Comics - Other characters, Captain Marvel DC Comics - Cultural influences, Captain Marvel DC Comics - Appearances in film and television, Captain Marvel DC Comics - Notes |  | | Captain Marvel DC Comics, Captain Marvel DC Comics - Shazam! The New Beginning, Captain Marvel DC Comics - The Power of Shazam!, Captain Marvel DC Comics - Whiz Comics no. 2: origin story, Captain Marvel DC Comics - Appearances in film and television, Captain Marvel DC Comics - Captain Marvel in the 2000s, Captain Marvel DC Comics - Captain Marvel vs. Superman, Captain Marvel DC Comics - Cultural influences, Captain Marvel DC Comics - Development and inspirations, Captain Marvel DC Comics - Fawcett years: the Marvel Family allies and enemies, Captain Marvel DC Comics - Full history, Captain Marvel DC Comics - Marvel Family, Captain Marvel DC Comics - Notes, Captain Marvel DC Comics - Other characters, Captain Marvel DC Comics - Rogues gallery, Captain Marvel DC Comics - Supporting cast, Captain Marvel DC Comics - The Shazam! revival, Kingdom Come |  | |
|  |  | Captain Marvel DC Comics: Encyclopedia II - Captain Marvel DC Comics - Supporting cast
Captain Marvel DC Comics - Supporting cast
Captain Marvel DC Comics - Marvel Family
Captain Marvel often fights evil as a member of a superhero team known as the Marvel Family, made up of himself and several other heroes:
- The Wizard Shazam. Although he is killed, as prophesied, after giving Billy the power to become Captain Marvel, Shazam's spirit remains as the vigilant caretaker of the Rock of Eternity. In current continuity, Shazam does not die after granting Billy his powers, and was a much more active character than he was during the classic Marvel Family adventures. He attained godhood after the 1998 Genesis crossover, and was ultimately defeated and murdered by the Spectre in the 2005 Day of Vengeance miniseries.
- Mary Marvel. Billy's once-lost twin sister Mary Batson (adopted as Mary Bromfield), who found she could say the magic word "SHAZAM!" and become a female Marvel. The classic-era Mary Marvel remained a teenager after saying her magic word, with a yellow on red short sleeve and skirt costume, while the modern version is transformed into an adult like her brother, with a yellow on white costume. During the run of the series The Power of Shazam!, Mary shared the title of "Captain Marvel" with Billy. In the Formerly Known as the Justice League miniseries, Mary became part of the "Super Buddies," a group consisting largely of former Justice League members, after Captain Marvel turned down his invitation.
- Captain Marvel, Jr. Attacked and left for dead by Captain Nazi, Freddy Freeman was given the power to become a Marvel to save his life. Whenever he speaks Captain Marvel's name, Freddy becomes a teenage version of Captain Marvel with a sharply contrasting yellow on blue costume. This created the odd problem that he could not identify himself without changing back to his regular form. The modern-day Junior at one time went by the alias CM3 (short for "Captain Marvel Three", "CM1" being Billy and "CM2" being Mary) so that he could identify himself without transforming. He was a member of the Teen Titans during the late-1990s. Junior has recently joined the current incarnation of the Outsiders, after teaming up with them once on an early mission to stop Sabbac.
- Uncle Dudley/Uncle Marvel. During the classic era, an old man named Dudley claimed that he was not only a relative of the Marvels but also a Marvel himself (although neither was true). The Marvels took a liking to him and decided to humor him, and "Uncle" Dudley became Uncle Marvel, the Marvel Family's manager. In modern continuity, Dudley is simply a janitor at Billy's school who finds himself involved in Marvel Family adventures. His niece Freckles Marvel was an irregular companion of Mary Marvel's in her classic-era solo adventures.
- The Lieutenant Marvels. Three other boys named "Billy Batson" (nicknamed "Tall Billy", "Fat Billy", and "Hill Billy"—the latter because he was from Appalachia) who learned that, because they also were named Billy Batson, they could draw on the power of Shazam. They vowed only to use their power if asked by Captain Marvel, and only if all three were to say the magic word, "SHAZAM!", in unison. They have not appeared in Marvel Family stories since the early 1980s, having been retconned out of existence during the Crisis on Infinite Earths.
- Hoppy the Marvel Bunny. A spin-off character generally confined to his own series, the pink funny animal rabbit version of Captain Marvel periodically assisted the human Marvels in their adventures.
Captain Marvel DC Comics - Rogues gallery
Through his adventures, Captain Marvel gained a host of enemies, including the following:
- Dr. Sivana (and the Sivana Family). Captain Marvel's very first and primary foe. Sivana, a bald, diminutive mad scientist, often attempts to take over the world or destroy the Marvels using his inventions. In classic-era continuity, Sivana's teenage children Georgia and Sivana, Jr. often joined their father in his evil schemes; the three of them were collectively known as the Sivana Family. In current DC Universe continuity, Sivana heads the Fearsome Five team of supervillians, which have fought both the Teen Titans and the Outsiders, who include Captain Marvel, Jr.
- Black Adam. An older Egyptian renegade protégé of the wizard Shazam, who was the first to be granted superpowers by the wizard. He eventually grew to abuse his power, and became a tyrant. Shazam returned to punish him with either exile (classic version) or death (modern version). He returns to Earth (or life) after Shazam appoints Captain Marvel his new successor, and was soon established as Captain Marvel's most powerful foe. In current DCU continuity, Black Adam, claiming that he and his murderous host Theo Adam are separate personalities, joined the Justice Society of America, claiming to be a hero as he had once been in Egypt. Adam eventually turned on the JSA, wanting to be a hero on his own terms. He later forcefully overthrew the tyrannous government of his old homeland of Khandaq, appointing himself ruler.
- Captain Nazi. Adolf Hitler's champion, created through science as the "perfect specimen" of a soldier. Obviously inspired by the events of World War II, Nazi continued to appear in classic-era Marvel Family stories into the 1980s. In the Power of Shazam! series, Nazi was brought back into action after having been in suspended animation for fifty years, and quickly became an enemy of the Marvel Family.
- Ibac. A frail thug named "Stinky" Printwhistle who was empowered by Lucifer himself with the powers of four of the most evil men to walk the face of the earth. When he says the name "IBAC", he becomes a large, muscular brute with super-strength. Saying his name again transforms him back into Printwhistle (therefore, like Captain Marvel, Jr., Ibac also cannot say his own name).
- Mister Mind. Arguably the most notorious classic-era Captain Marvel villain, the at-first unseen Mister Mind started and headed a supervillain team known as the Monster Society of Evil. After two years of masterminding tyranny with a team of hundreds of villains and criminals (including several previous Marvel Family adversaries like Captain Nazi and Ibac), Mister Mind was revealed to be a two-inch, myopic, mind-controlling worm from another planet. The evil worm was placed on trial, convicted of killing 186,744 people, and placed in the electric chair. Mind survived his execution and escaped; he would go on to battle Marvel Family many other times until the Crisis on Infinite Earths. In the Power of Shazam! series, Mind was reimagined as the leader of a race of millions of mind-controlling Venusian worms, who irregularly appear across the DC Universe attempting to control potential human hosts.
- Mister Atom. An artificially intelligent nuclear-powered robot created by Dr. Charles Langley. In the Power of Shazam! series, Mister Atom, under the control of Mister Mind, destroys Fairfield, a town near Fawcett City where Mary Bromfield lived with her adoptive parents, with a nuclear explosion.
- Blaze and Satanus. Only present in the modern-day Marvel Family stories, the demoness Blaze and her brother Lord Satanus, originally appearing in the Superman books, are the illegitimate children of the Wizard Shazam, who was bewitched by their mother during his superhero days in Biblical Canaan. Blaze has attempted to spread her evil influence throughout Fawcett City since the 1940s, requiring Shazam and his allies to work together to stop her.
- Oggar. The self styled "World's Mightiest Immortal", he was a major recurring enemy of the Marvels in the Pre-Crisis DC stories. His magic enabled him to do nearly anything, but it cannot be directly cast against a female target. Thus Mary Marvel was usually called upon to deal with him.
- Sabbac. Like Ibac, Sabbac is another magical being powered by the forces of demons. Sabbac gets his powers from six demons (Satan, Any, Belial, Beelzebub, Asmodeus and Craeteis), who give him powers proportional to those of the Marvels. The original Sabbac, the alter ego of Freddy Freeman's foster brother Timothy Barnes, first appeared in 1943 as a humanoid figure. In the early 2000s The Outsiders comic book, Barnes was murdered and his Sabbac powers stolen by a Russian mobster named Ishamel Gregor. When Gregor becomes Sabbac, he transforms into a hulking demon with red skin, horns, fire breath, and a scent of brimstone.
Captain Marvel DC Comics - Other characters
- Beautia and Magnificus Sivana. Dr. Sivana's beautiful adult daughter Beautia shared her father's passion for world domination until meeting, and falling for, Captain Marvel. She has an unrequited crush on the shy Captain, not realizing that he is actually only a young boy. Her brother Magnificus is also generally depicted as a Marvel Family ally, although in his only Golden Age appearance, Magnificus had super powers and fought Captain Marvel hand-to-hand.
- Mister "Tawky" Tawny. A humanoid sapient tiger who, in classic-era continuity, wishes to live among the humans in civilization instead of in the wild or the zoo. As such, he is typically dressed in a tweed business suit and usually carries himself in a formal dignified manner. The modern-day Tawky Tawny was a stuffed tiger doll who was animated by Lord Satanus to assist the Marvel Family in their battle against Satanus's sister Blaze. He only appeared as an animate being to Billy, Mary, and later Dudley at first (a la Hobbes in Calvin and Hobbes), but later was made permanently real by the power of Ibis the Invincible.
- Mr. Sterling Morris. The president of WHIZ radio and Billy's employer.
- Miss Wormwood. In modern-era comics, Billy's schoolteacher (and later principal), presented as the typical "mean teacher" stereotype. Her name is another reference to the comic strip Calvin and Hobbes, where Calvin's schoolteacher was also named Miss Wormwood.
- Cissie Sommerly. Billy's girlfriend in classic-era continuity.
- Nick and Nora Bromfield. In modern continuity, Mary Batson's adoptive parents, who adopted her through illegal means after their maid, Sarah Primm, brought the child to them (Primm saved Mary from her kidnapper, Primm's brother Theo Adam). Nora Bromfield was a cousin of Billy and Mary's mother, but chose not to tell Mary about her real family. The Bromfields would eventually gain the rights to legally adopt both Mary and Billy, giving the children a traditional family structure again. The couple was named after Nick and Nora Charles of the Thin Man film series.
Other related archives11 June, 17 June, 18 June, 19 June, 1941, 1985, 2 April, 2003, 2005, 22 June, 31 May, Adolf Hitler, Adventure Comics, Alex Ross, All-Star Squadron, American, American Dad!, Appalachia, Aquaman, Arion, Asmodeus, Atom, Batman, Beelzebub, Belial, Biblical, Bill Parker, Black Adam, Blaze and Satanus, Bone, British, British nobility, Bucky, Bulletman and Bulletgirl, C.C. Beck, CBS, Calvin and Hobbes, Canaan, Canada, Captain America, Captain Billy's Whiz Bang, Captain Marvel, Captain Marvel Jr., Captain Marvel, Jr., Captain Nazi, Cartoon Network, Cary Grant, Crisis on Infinite Earths, DC Comics, DC Universe, Dan Dare, Darkhawk, Day of Vengeance, Dennis O'Neil, Doctor Sivana, Don Newton, Dr. Sivana, Eclipso, Elvis Presley, Fawcett Comics, Fawcett Publications, Fearsome Five, Filmation, Flash, Formerly Known as the Justice League, Fox Network, Freakazoid, Fred MacMurray, Golden Arrow, Golden age of comic books, Gomer Pyle, Gotham City, Guy Gardner, Hanna-Barbera, He-Man, Hoppy the Marvel Bunny, Ibac, Ibis the Invincible, Infinite Crisis, J. M. DeMatteis, Jack Kirby, Jay Garrick, Jean Loring, Jeff Smith, Jerry O'Connell, Jerry Ordway, Joe Simon, Josh Middleton, Judd Winick, Justice League, Justice League Unlimited, Justice Society of America, Keith Giffen, Kid Superpower Hour with Shazam!, Kingdom Come, Kurt Shaffenberger, Lance O'Casey, Learned Hand, Legends, Lex Luthor, Lieutenant Marvels, Lucifer, MAD Magazine, Mac Raboy, Malibu Comics, Marc Swayze, Mark Waid, Martian Manhunter, Marvel Comics, Marvel Family, Mary Marvel, Mattel, Mick Anglo, Mighty Mightor, Minute-Man, Miracleman, Mister Mind, Modern Age, Monster Society Of Evil, Monster Society of Evil, Mr. Scarlet and Pinky, Multiverse, NBC, National Comics, National Comics Publications v. Fawcett Publications, Neron, New Line Cinema, Oreo, Otto Binder, Outsiders, Paul Dini, Persian, Pete Costanza, Peter Tork, Presidential candidate, Prime, Republic Pictures, Robin, Roy Thomas, Satan, Scoop Smith, September 7, Seven Deadly Sins, Shadowpact, Shane Haboucha, Shazam, Shazam!, Silver Age of comics, Sir Percival, Spectre, Spy Smasher, Stargirl, Super Buddies, Superboy, Supergirl, Superman, Teen Titans, Thaddeus Bodog Sivana, The Adventures of Captain Marvel, The Andy Griffith Show, The Beatles, The Dark Knight Strikes Again, The Drew Carey Show, The Monkees, The Outsiders, The Power of Shazam!, The Shazam!/Isis Hour, Thin Man, Thor, Tom Tyler, Uncle Dudley/Uncle Marvel, Uncle Marvel, Underworld Unleashed, United States, Venus, Warner Bros. Television, Whiz Comics, World War II, World's Finest Comics, Young Samson, Zatanna, Zauriel, acronym, action figure, actor, alter ego, ancient Egyptian, animated series, archvillain, ashcan copy, brazier, cape, cartoony, comic book, comic strip, con artist, copyright infringement, copyright infringement suit from DC Comics, doll, exclamation, expletive, film, fleur-de-lis, funny animal, ghost, granite, graphic novel, humorous, intellectual property, janitor, laid off, lapel, lightning, lightning bolt, mad scientist, miniseries, myopic, news reporter, newspapers, nuclear powered, operas, pop culture, post-Crisis, rabbit, radio, retconned, robot, scarab, serial, sitcom, skirt, subway, superhero, surreal, suspended animation, television show, throne, tiger, twin, wizard, word balloons, worm, zoo
 Adapted from the Wikipedia article "Supporting cast", under the G.N U Free Docmentation License. Please also see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki |
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