Marvin and Wendy
Pre-Crisis
Created by E. Nelson Bridwell
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NAME + ALIASES:
Marvin White
KNOWN RELATIVES:
Daniel White (father), Diana Prince White (mother)
GROUP AFFILIATIONS:
Super Friends
FIRST APPEARANCE:
Super Friends #1 (Nov. 1976)
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NAME + ALIASES:
Wendy Harris
KNOWN RELATIVES:
Harvey Harris (uncle)
GROUP AFFILIATIONS:
Super Friends
FIRST APPEARANCE:
Super Friends #1 (Nov. 1976)
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Written by E. Nelson
Bridwell, excerpted from
Super Friends #1 (Nov. 1976)
Obviously, these kids are being trained for careers in law enforcement by the
Super Friends. The Hall of Justice is their training academy. But since it would
hardly have been built for only two young people, it stands to reason that the
super-doers plan to train others some time in the future. Wendy and Marvin are
a kind of pilot program.
But why these two kids particularly? That is a good question, and I have done
quite a bit of thinking on the subject.
The first scripts sent to us made Wendy
Bruce Wayne's niece — and, absurdly, had her openly referring to the Caped
Crime-fighter as "Uncle Bruce,"
while he introduced her to people who were not supposed to know The Batman's
identity as "my niece."
At the time, Bruce was believed to have been an only child, though later it
was revealed that he had a brother. However, due to brain damage, this sibling
had been institutionalized since infancy and so could not be Wendy's father.
He is now dead.
As far as the TV scripts go, Wendy has no last name (nor does Marvin). The
kids are not related, but are only referred to as friends. I therefore set out
to figure out their full names and origins.
Wendy Harris, I decided, was the young lady's full name. She is a niece,
not of the Batman, but of a detective named Harvey Harris. This man gave young
Bruce Wayne his first crack at real detecting when Bruce was in his teens.
As you probably know, Bruce's parents were killed by a criminal when he was
a small boy. He swore to devote his life to tracking down their killer and
other hoodlums. Eventually, he was to avenge their deaths. By the time he
reached his teen years, he was itching to get a crack at some genuine detective
work. He made a fancy costume, similar to that which he later created for
Robin, so Harris would not know his identity. Years later, when Harris dies,
he left a sealed letter to be delivered to Bruce, revealing that he had indeed
known who he was — for Harris was certainly one of the all-time greats in
the field.
Readers of DC mags may recall another Wendy Harris on the parallel world of
Earth-Two, where the Justice Society members live. She is not married to Rex
Tyler (The Hourman). Since many people on Earth-Two are older than their Earth-One
doubles (Superman, Batman etc.), perhaps this is the Earth-Two version of our
Wendy.
Marvin, I decided, is Marvin White — no relation to Perry White. His
father is Daniel White, inventor, and his mother is the former Diana Prince.
Hold it, you say — isn't Diana Prince Wonder Woman?
Well, not quite.
When Wonder Woman first came to America, she had no secret identity. Then
she met a young nurse who was her exact double. This was the real Diana Prince
— a remarkable coincidence, since Wonder Woman is Princess Diana of Paradise
Island. Miss Prince was sad because her fiancee, Dan, was going to South America,
but hadn't enough money for her to go along. The Amazing Amazon had recently
made some money doing her "bullets-and-bracelets" bit on stage,
so she bought the other Diana's credentials. Since she was herself a trained
nurse, with even more skill than her double, no harm was done by this imposture.
Ever since then, Diana White has known Wonder Woman's secret, though she has
told no one.
There can be no doubt Marvin was brought up to consider Wonder Woman the world's
number one heroine. He even named his dog Wonder, in her honor. And thus,
she would have a special interest in Marvin because of his mother. Just as
the Batman would feel he was paying back Harvey Harris by helping his niece.
None
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