Star Hawkins

Star Hawkins is a science fiction detective character published by DC Comics) in their flagship science-fiction anthology title Strange Adventures. He and his ever-present robot assistant Ilda first appeared in Strange Adventures #114 (March 1960) and featured in 21 issues of the title, but after that only made four other appearances in other DC Comics before he was killed off in Mystery In Space vol 2 #2 (December 2006). The characters were created by John Broome and Mike Sekowsky.

Star Hawkins
Star Hawkins and Ilda, art by Vince Colletta
Publication information
PublisherNational Comics (DC Comics)
First appearanceStrange Adventures #114 (March 1960)
Created byJohn Broome (writer)
Mike Sekowsky (artist)
In-story information
AbilitiesA seasoned detective.

Publication history

Star Hawkins appeared in 21 issues of Strange Adventures, first in the story "The Case of the Martian Witness" in Strange Adventures #114 (March 1960), written by creator John Broome and drawn by co-creator Mike Sekowsky and Bernard Sachs under the editorship of Julius Schwartz.[1] A series of 8/9-page stories was then published in rotation with two other series, The Atomic Knights and Space Museum, and appeared in every third issue of Strange Adventures from #119 - 158 (August 1960 - November 1963), all by the Broome-Sekowsky-Sachs team, and #162 (March 1964), written by France Herron. After Jack Schiff took up the editorial reins on Strange Adventures he brought Star Hawkins back in issue #173 (February 1965), featuring him again in every third issue until #185 (February 1966), this time all written by Dave Wood and drawn by Gil Kane. Star Hawkins never featured on the cover of Strange Adventures.

He later appeared in "Whatever will Happen to Star Hawkins" in DC Comics Presents #33 (May 1981), an 8-page tale by Mike Tiefenbacher (a freelance writer who was then editor of comics magazine The Comic Reader (TCR)), with artists Alex Saviuk and Vince Colletta.[2][3] Star Hawkins' only other appearances were in the non-canonical mini-series Twilight (1990) by Howard Chaykin and his death in the mini-series Mystery in Space vol 2 #2 (December 2006), written by Jim Starlin.[4]

Fictional character biography

Star Hawkins is a down-at-heel private investigator living in New City, Earth in the 21st Century. He is first shown in 2079, with a robot receptionist, cleaner and general dogsbody, Ilda (Robot F2324), bought from the 'Super-Secretary Robot Factory'. Because Star is always short of money, Ilda is regularly pawned (although Star always promises that was the last time). Although a sharp detective with athletic skills, it is normally Ilda who exhibits the intelligence and power to solve the crime or is critical to defeating the 'zips' (criminals), using low-powered telepathic ability— 'standard equipment in all models the year of Ilda's manufacture' ,[5]—or other robot powers.

His first known case comes when he is paid to hunt for a Martian who had been paid to go into hiding to avoid being a witness over the ownership of a jewel mine,[6] which he solves on his own. However, for his next cases it is Ilda who accidentally cracks a betting and forgery scam,[7] and uncovers a robot theft scam when pawned once again,[8] then steps in and takes the next job when Star is injured while fighting the Metal Men of Andromeda.[9] Eventually Star's reputation gets work from the National Science Center, Earth's law-enforcement agency, although it does not solve his perennial money problems.

Star Hawkins cases often have a humorous edge to them - once Ilda accidentally cleans the wrong apartment (in 2079 everyone has an identical apartment with the same furniture and accessories in the same place) and breaks up an alien invasion plan being plotted in the flat above 'terrible danger - apartment upstairs - alien invasion' .[10] She diagnoses a robot criminal as mad because he literally 'has a screw loose' ,[11] falls in love with a robot that is part of an alien invasion plan,[12] and attempts a film career (as Scarlet O'Toole in 'Gone With the Rust' - with a robot that looks like Cary Grant),[13] although she was only being duped for her information on Star.

Ilda cracks another case when, jealous of Star's attention to a stunning blonde, accidentally discovers an interplanetary spy ring,[14] although her 'Intuition Tubes' were wrong for once - the blonde was not one of the gang but an undercover agent for the government who had infiltrated them. Shortly afterwards Ilda gets a massive electric shock which scrambles her circuits into thinking she's the criminal 'The Slinker From Saturn'.[15][16] They come up against one group of space terrorists, the 'League of Five Planets', more than once; thwarting a plan to steal security codes and attack Earth's outer planetary bases[17] and then defeating them again in their last ever case more than fifteen years later.[2]

On three occasions, by blind luck Star Hawkins and Ilda become catalysts for significant changes to robot rights. Ilda is saved from being scrapped, having reached the end of her robot model's life, reprieved by the Government in recognition of her usefulness in crime solving. Both her and Star receive a Medal of Valor and incidentally save all other robots of her model from the obsolescence law.[18] Star and Ilda are also instrumental in changing apartheid-style rules when solving a case in a resort hotel in the asteroid belt.[19] Prior to this case, robots were classed as servants and not allowed in hotels but forced to stay outside. After Ilda smuggles herself into the hotel and Star and her prevent a crime, the law is repealed. Their third piece of legal history comes when Star retires and all robots are given their freedom and the right to 'life-pairing' because of Ilda's heroism.[2]

Star Hawkins retires in 2092, after defeating the 'League of Five Planets' again and earning 250 million credits reward. He marries Stella Sterling, a girl he had been guarding during this last case, and a descendant of Prof. Miller Sterling, the creator of Automan; while Ilda marries Automan. They open the 'Hawkins-Sterling Academy of Robot Detection', and Automan and Ilda become Head of Faculty, training robots as private detectives.[2][20]

At some stage after this Star is transported back to the 20th Century, although how and why is unknown. Eventually he takes up living on 'Hardcore Station', a corrupt commercial satellite station with a population of several million in a free space zone between a number of trading civilisations. Now a tragic figure, he lives near the Stardocks 'just an old man watching ships take off and land' .[4] Star has lost his private investigator license, is down on his luck again and a drunk - Captain Comet is his only known friend. Nobody is sure who or what he was, Comet describes him as '... more than a bit crazy, always claiming he was from the future whenever he got drunk' . Ilda hangs broken in his room like a puppet; although Comet offers to help fix her, Star won't because 'we'd never be able to get the ol' gal the way she was - and the Star Hawkins she knew is ancient history. Wouldn't want her to see me ... like ...' .[4] Star Hawkins is murdered shortly afterwards by a rogue telepath.[4]

Powers and abilities

Star Hawkins has no powers, he is an ordinary human. However, he does have a sharp mind and a keen eye, and is athletic and physically quick, and carries a ray gun. He is known to use an instant disguise spray to look like an old man.[13]

Ilda is highly intelligent, and able to use a range of robot abilities - strength, supersonics, and can shoot electric bolts and use heat powers by overloading her transistors or using an Infra-Red beam (normally used for emergency cooking).[21] She has Super-X vision, which enables her to see through walls, a certain measure of telepathic ability and 'Intuition tubes' which warn her of danger (mainly from other females). She is immune to ray-shots[22] and can forensically analyze soil samples.

Other versions

A version of Star Hawkins appears in the Twilight mini-series by Howard Chaykin and José Luis García-López in 1990. In this version his real name is Axel Starker, the estranged brother of Jon Starker, Manhunter 2070. He is bitter and twisted, with a deep resentment of Ilda, telling her he would have junked her years ago if he'd been allowed to. Eventually John Starker merges with Ilda, and is killed on an attack on the crazed dictator Tommy Tomorrow.[23]

Hawkins also appears in DC's 2013 Threshold comic by Keith Giffen.

Reprints

One Star Hawkins story is reprinted in the DC Comics trade paperback anthology "Pulp Fiction Library: Mystery in Space" (DC Comics, 1999) ISBN 1-56389-494-7

gollark: There aren't that many alternatives.
gollark: Personally, my suggested climate-change-handling policies:- massively scale up nuclear fission power, it's just great in most ways- invest in better rail infrastructure - maglevs are extremely cool™ and fast™ and could maybe partly replace planes?- electric cars could be rented from a local "pool" for intra-city transport, which would save a lot of cost on batteries- increase grid interconnectivity so renewables might be less spotty- impose taxes on particularly badly polluting things- do research into geoengineering things which can keep the temperature from going up as much- increase standards for reparability; we lose so many resources to randomly throwing stuff away because they're designed with planned obsolecence- a very specific thing related to that bit above there - PoE/other low-voltage power grids in homes, since centralizing all the AC→DC conversion circuitry could improve efficiency, lower costs of end-user devices, and make LED lightbulbs less likely to fail (currently some of them include dirt-cheap PSUs which have all *kinds* of problems)
gollark: You can get AR-ish things which just display notifications or something.
gollark: You can get limited AR glasses (nice ones you may want to actually wear as everyday ones) now, but it's expensive and not popular.
gollark: Yes, that might be interesting.

References

  1. Markstein, Don. "Star Hawkins". Don Markstein's Toonopedia. Retrieved 2 April 2020.
  2. Tiefenbacher, Mike (w), Saviuk, Alex (p), Colletta, Vince (i). "Whatever Will Happen to Star Hawkins?" DC Comics Presents 33 (May 1981)
  3. Wells, John (May 2013). "Flashback: Whatever Happened to...?". Back Issue!. TwoMorrows Publishing (64): 51–61.
  4. Starlin, Jim (w), Davis, Shane (p), Banning, Matt (i). "A Question of Resurrection" Mystery in Space v2, 2 (December 2006)
  5. "The Case of the 3-Eyed Invaders" in Strange Adventures #131 (August 1961)
  6. "The Case of the Martian Witness" in Strange Adventures #114 (March 1960)
  7. "The Case of the Counterfeit Credits" #119 (August 1960)
  8. "Case of the Vanishing Robots" in Strange Adventures #125 (Feb 1961)
  9. "The Case of the Robot Detective" in Strange Adventures #128 (May 1961)
  10. "The case of the 3-eyed invaders" in Strange Adventures #131 (August 1961)
  11. "The Case of the Robot Brother" in Strange Adventures #137 February 1962
  12. "The Case of the Romantic Robot" in Strange Adventures #158 (November 1963)
  13. "Ilda the Glamour Robot" in Strange Adventures #173 (February 1965)
  14. "The Case of the Blond Bombshell" in Strange Adventures #182 (November 1965)
  15. "Ilda - Gangsters-Inc" in Strange Adventures #185 (February 1966)
  16. Note: 'The Slinker' looks exactly like the Shadow with dark clothes and a red scarf around his face.
  17. "The Case of the Robot Counter-Spy" in Strange Adventures #146 (November 1962)
  18. "The case of the robot brother" in Strange Adventures #140 (Feb 1962)
  19. "Case of the Unwanted Robot" in Strange Adventures #143 (August 1962)
  20. Note: The head robot of the gang was robot number B10ROOM - a tribute to Star Hawkins creator John Broome, and the others in the gang are S12Ekow (- Mike Sekowsky), S12Achs (Bernard Sachs) and K7Ane (Gil Kane).
  21. "The Case of the Robot Detective" in Strange Adventures #128 (May 1961)
  22. "Case of the Rebellious Space-Crew" Strange Adventures #149 (February 1963)
  23. Twilight 1-3 (1990)
  • "The Silver Age Sci-Fi Companion" by Barr, Michael W. (TwoMorrows Publishing, 2007) ISBN 1-893905-81-0
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