
Next week sees the classic “New Teen Titans” return.
Well, kinda.
Next week actually sees the start of the ball rolling which will
eventually result in the classic Marv Wolfman/George Perez Teen Titans
(Nightwing, Starfire, Beast Boy, Raven, Cyborg, Donna Troy, and (former
Kid) Flash) coming back together in a new Titans ongoing series, written by Judd Winick, with art by Ian Churchill. That series will launch in early 2008.
But let’s not put the cart further ahead of the horse than we need to – the Teen Titans East Special
hitting next week by Winick and Churchill…it all starts there. We spoke
with Winick about the set up, how it all got rolling and the Titans
from the Wolfman/Perez days.
Newsarama: First off Judd - the upcoming Titans, as neither you nor DC has made any bones about hiding, follows up from this month’s Teen Titans East Special.
Draw the line a little bit connecting the two…given the respective
teams in the books, it feels as if there’s a strong possibility that
the “Titans East” didn’t work out, and the original members felt it was
their place to come back…or something like that…
Judd Winick: Or something like that…[laughs]. I guess the best
way to put it is that the Special is the first chapter. The discussion
came out of the idea that we originally wanted to bring back the
original Teen Titans from the Marv Wolfman/George Perez days. We like
the team, it’s a classic combination that works, and all of us were
really, really interested in putting them back together. Dan would go
from convention to convention and at virtually every panel, someone
would ask if him if DC was going to launch a Titans East book, and the
fans would go wild.
So in the back of Dan’s mind, that was where it started – if we were
going to do “Titans East,” we should do the Wolfman/Perez team. Not
some combination of new folks, but the originals. So from there, we
came to the idea of making a “Titans East” project a first chapter,
something that leads – somehow – to the creation/reunion of the
original New Teen Titans characters. And it all gelled. That’s why
there was a very brief fake-out where we showed the cover to Titans East,
which got us the response of “What the hell is this?” from the fans who
were asking for a Titans East team book. We expected that reaction, and
we got it. So we had our fun.
The Teen Titans East
one shot deals with these characters who are not very well known,
which, for me was sort of a nod to some of the real big misfires of the
‘80s and ‘90s, when they would put together some of the worst teams
imaginable under the biggest banners. I think everyone who’s been a DC
fan for the past 20 years has had a “This is the Justice League?”
moment. So that’s where it all began, and that was the idea behind it –
this would be the first chapter of a larger story that was going to
bring the original team back together.
NRAMA: But when you say bring the team back together – this isn’t back in the day when all the sidekicks could hang out together…
JW: Right – these are people who are living different lives and
are in different places – both geographically and emotionally. Some of
them have their own titles; some are on the other side of the universe.
There had to be a story large enough and dire enough for them to be
brought back together.
NRAMA: I’m gathering that you’ve said all you’re going to say about what brings them together…
JW: I have. Pretty much.
NRAMA: But what holds them together? With the original series, the characters didn’t
have their own books to appear in, and at the same time, Marv and
George made it feel as if these characters were each others’ best
friends, that they were a family. Everything’s moved on from that point…
JW: From a macro note on the book, this is about family. I got a piece of advice from Mark Waid a while back, when Outsiders was starting up – he asked Why do we need this team? What is their purpose?
Just getting together to fight bad guys is fine, but it’s really not
too interesting in the end. This was back when all we had was the germ
of the idea, which allowed it to turn into the concept that they really
didn’t like each other, but among them, they all shared the common
thread of wanting to get their hands dirty and do all the things that
everyone else was afraid to do.
With Titans though, they are a family. They’re family and friends
first, a team second. The way we’re going about it though is that
they’re not actually a team. There’s not going to be anyone on monitor
duty, there’s not going to be meeting s and roll calls – they basically
are coming together because they are
together> They’re one f the few groups in the DCU that can say they
grew up together. In growing up, reading these comics, there was a
point in time with these characters that they were younger.
Taken together, they’re one of the very few sets of characters who
actually aged during their fans’ life spans. Batman and Superman have
been pretty steady and stable. These characters all came in as children
– we have those books we can still look at. Now they’re not kids
anymore, they’re grown-ups doing gown up things. But – they have
history.
So,
the thrust of the book will be that this is a group without being a
group. They are a team without associating as a team, because they’re
more than that. They have a lot more history. No one is getting in
anyone else’s face about who’s the leader, or who will do this or that.
The adventures that will occur, and the missions that they will go on
will come from one of them needing some kind of help. Somebody will be
working on something, and they could use some backup from their
friends.
NRAMA: Like getting the gang from high school getting back together because you have to do something to help one of them out…
JW: Yeah. To anyone who knows these characters or has followed
them long enough, it makes total sense. The gang is all still alive and
intact, and, though they’ve all been through a lot of things, they’re
still there and still friends. That, right there, stands as testament
to Wolfman and Perez for creating this bedrock of story and character.
That’s why creators and fans always go, or want to goo back to it. It’s
why people still talk about The Judas Contract. For long time
readers, that’s one of the top ten seminal events in comics, and for
creators, that’s a benchmark that you’re always striving towards. So
why not try and stand on the shoulders of giants and see if we can’t
move these characters forward and build on what Marv and George have
left?
NRAMA: Yeah – speaking as a long-time fan myself, there are, and
have been many times when Nightwing would not want to call in Batman,
even though he’s arguably his most powerful resource that’s close at
hand…he’d call Wally or Donna, or one of the others…
JW: Right. And on top of that, do we ever think that Dick would call Batman for help, ever? We’re beyond that – Dick doesn’t want to become Batman. That was one of the lessons he learned in Outsiders
- he tried to be Batman on a larger scale. With these characters, he’s
beyond that. They know who he is, and they know his bullshit They all know each other’s bullshit.
It’s easy in that way. As a writer doing this now, the character
development and exchanges are so simple, because it’s all laid out very
well. Any questions I ever have, I just have to go back to the original
issues and it’s like, “Oh yeah – that’s how Dick relates to Donna” or
“Yeah – Vic and Raven have this kind of relationship.” Again,
it’s just a testament to how well those stories by Marv and George were
written. Those stories are as tight as a drum, from the
characterization to how they look. I mentioned it back when we talked
about the Green Arrow/Black Canary Wedding Special - back when Donna got married in Teen Titans, no one was in costume, and you knew
who everyone was, regardless, thanks to how George drew their faces,
how they stood, who they were with – it was amazing. Marv created these
characters from the inside, and George created them from the outside.
It’s still as tight as a drum, which makes carrying on from what they
created so easy. It’s all there.
And that’s what I like to do – I know that there’s a hard-core micro
minority out there that feels I like to change everything, but I don’t.
When you look at it, I really don’t like to change everything, I like
to contemporize it. I try to make a story that can be told now.
Sometimes characters are horribly antiquated, and if we try to stay
faithful and se the stories in the “now” of the DCU, we’re just going
to end up telling bad stories. But again, that’s not what we have to
worry about here – this will be as faithful as the day is long.
Nightwing is in charge – he’s the older brother to the guys who are the
same age as he is. Gar’s the funny one, Kory still manages to hang on
to a little bit of her naïveté…
NRAMA:
Hold up – you talked about being faithful and not changing, but showing
Starfire with naïveté? It’s that kind of what you were talking about of
being faithful just to be faithful, and winding up with crappy stories?
JW: Yeah – that is one of the harder things to deal with
nowadays. Kory’s seen far too much since she came to earth. Hell, she’s
kinda seen too much before she came to earth to be that
Mary Tyler Moore. Starfire has a bit too much kickass in her to be as
naive as she’s sometimes shown. She can still be sweet – and there is a
difference in that – there’s a difference between being Pollyanna and
being a sweet, sensitive person. But she’s been through war. She’s seen
people do horrible, horrible things to one another. She’s not really
naive.
NRAMA: Given the structure you mentioned earlier – the
“friends-helping-friends” angle, how does that run arc-wise, and in the
larger series? “Nightwing’s Story” is issues #1-#5, followed by
“Donna’s Story” after that?
JW: No – it’s far more organic than that. It’s not going to be
discrete arc featuring the different characters’ stories. They’re going
to talk about it, even – if they should be a team. Why they should be a
team when, like I said, they all know each other’s stories and crap.
These people have history – that’s what drew me to the book.
NRAMA: Let’s wrap this with a tease – what gets the story rolling in Titans East, and then how does that rope Titans in?
JW: Vic brings together a group in Titans East…
NRAMA: Power Boy, Hawk and Dove, and the rest seen on the cover?
JW: Right – and something goes horribly, horribly wrong when we
see the return of someone big and bad that we haven’t seen in a while. That
serves to bring the gang together in a very organic way – it’s obvious
that they have to be the ones to get together to take care of things.
By the end of the issue, no one will wonder why the Titans wouldn’t get together on this.
We’re going to be revisiting a classic villain that we haven’t see for
a while from the Wolfman/Perez era, and have the gang slug it out. At
the same time, I’m enjoying getting these guys back together again,
just to get to show them talking and hanging out. It’s a lot of fun.