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Black Vulcan

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Black Vulcan
Super Friends, Harvey Birdman, and DC Comics character
Black Vulcan as he appeared in Hanna-Barbera's Super Friends animated series in the 1970s and '80s.
First appearance"The Whirlpool" (The All-New Super Friends Hour; 1977)
Last appearanceHarvey Birdman: Attorney General (2018)
Created byAlex Toth
Voiced byBuster Jones (Super Friends)
Phil LaMarr (Harvey Birdman)
In-universe information
SpeciesMetahuman
GenderMale
TitleSupervolt
Mr. President (Harvey Birdman)
OccupationSuperhero
President of the United States (Harvey Birdman)
AffiliationSuper Friends
Justice League
Multi-Culture Pals
Significant otherNorlisa (ex-girlfriend; Harvey Birdman)
44th/46th President of the United States
In office
January 20, 2009 – January 20, 2017 (1st term)
October 12, 2018 – January 20, 2021 (2nd term)
Partnerships
Abilities
Catchphrases"Great Lightning!"
"In my pants." (Harvey Birdman)

Black Vulcan is an African-American superhero on the animated series Super Friends and Harvey Birdman, Attorney at Law by Hanna-Barbera, voiced in the former by Buster Jones and the latter by Phil LaMarr.

Fictional character biography

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Super Friends

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Black Vulcan debuted in The All-New Super Friends Hour in September 1977. He was created to replace Black Lightning, who could not be used due to disputes between DC and the character's creator Tony Isabella.[1] Vulcan was designed by cartoonist Alex Toth, responsible for the look of most Hanna-Barbera superheroes.

In the final incarnation of the series, The Super Powers Team: Galactic Guardians, Black Vulcan is replaced by fellow black superhero Cyborg.

DC Comics

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Comic book artist and Super Friends fan Alex Ross intended to create a modernized version of Black Vulcan for his rejected Captain Marvel series. The title would have had the character reimagined as Vulcan, an African-American child who could become an adult superhero after accidentally gaining the wizard Shazam's powers.[2]

Black Vulcan makes a cameo appearance in the DC One Million 80-Page Giant special as a member of an alternate universe Justice League.[citation needed]

Harvey Birdman

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Attorney at Law

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Black Vulcan appears in Harvey Birdman, Attorney at Law, voiced by Phil LaMarr.[citation needed] This version describes his powers as "pure electricity... in my pants", which becomes a running gag throughout the series, and originally went by the codename "Supervolt" before calling himself Black Vulcan at Aquaman's suggestion. In his most notable appearance in the episode "Very Personal Injury", Black Vulcan and Apache Chief, among other superheroes, form the "Multicultural Pals".[citation needed]

Attorney General

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Black Vulcan returns in Harvey Birdman: Attorney General, again voiced by LaMarr. Depicted as the 46th President of the United States preceding Phil Ken Sebben, who, on awaking amnesiac to find that he is now the 46.5th President, without having any memory of being elected, goes on to appoint his former employee and ghostwriter Harvey Birdman to the rank of Attorney Corporal to help him be removed from office, and instate Black Vulcan again in his place.

Powers and abilities

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Black Vulcan's powers include the ability to project bolts of electricity from his hands. By charging his lower body with energy, he can fly at superhuman speeds. On a few occasions, he has exhibited capabilities not shown before, such as converting his physical form into pure energy and traveling through lightspeed (in an unsuccessful attempt to escape a black hole).[3] He was able to open a rift in spacetime[4] via energy fluctuation. Black Vulcan is capable of spot welding microelectronics.[5]

In other media

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Television

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  • A character inspired by Black Vulcan named Juice appears in Justice League Unlimited,[citation needed] voiced by an uncredited CCH Pounder.[citation needed] He is an electrokinetic, genetically engineered superhero created by Project Cadmus to serve as a member of their Ultimen and operate independently of the Justice League, though the former group are led to believe that they are regular metahumans. Additionally, due to his powers, Juice speaks with a raspy voice that causes him to sound like he is speaking through a low-quality speaker or radio. In the episode "Ultimatum", the Ultimen discover the truth behind their creation and that they are suffering from cellular breakdown. They attack their manager Maxwell Lord in an attempt to find Cadmus member Amanda Waller, only to be thwarted by the League and taken back into Cadmus' custody. In the episode "Panic in the Sky", Cadmus utilizes an army of Ultimen clones in their siege on the League's Watchtower.[citation needed]
  • Black Vulcan serves as inspiration for Young Justice's incarnation of Static,[citation needed] voiced by Bryton James.

Film

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Merchandise

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References

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  1. ^ Morse, Ben (3 March 2007). "LIGHTNING ROD: How Black Lightning hurdled racism, knockoffs and wars between creators to become the new powerhouse of Justice League of America". WizardUniverse.com. Archived from the original on 11 January 2008.
  2. ^ Smith, Zach (January 6, 2011). "An Oral History of CAPTAIN MARVEL: The Modern Years". Newsarama.
  3. ^ "The World's Deadliest Game". Challenge of the Superfriends. Season 1, Episode 3. September 23, 1978.
  4. ^ "Secret Origins of the Superfriends". Challenge of the Superfriends. Season 1, Episode 8. 28 October 1978.[dead YouTube link]
  5. ^ "Dive to Disaster". Super Friends. Season 5, Episode 2. 20 September 1980.[dead YouTube link]
  6. ^ "The LEGO Batman Movie Easter Eggs & References". Screen Rant. 11 February 2017.
  7. ^ DC Universe Classics 18: Black Vulcan review, OAFE.net