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jaguarin
05-09-2003, 09:12 PM
Hey, I found this Barbara Gordon Biography, I hope you like:


Barbara "Batgirl" Gordon debuted in Detective Comics #359 in January 1967; her TV self debuted in September 1967.

Barbara's first dabblings in the hero business were the stuff of childhood fantasy. While her best friend Marcy came up with the roles, Barbara became them, dreaming of becoming a superhero — Rocketgirl! Marvelousgirl! Supergirl! or maybe... Batgirl.

After losing her mother in a automobile accident when she was only a preschooler, Barbara slowly lost her father to grief and alcoholism. He died when she was a preteen, and she was forced to leave Marcy & her Ohio childhood behind to go and live in Gotham City with her Uncle James and Aunt Barbara.

The two-part Legends of the DC Universe story "Folie a Deux" revised this story yet again. Instead of losing her parents separately, the story portrays her losing both of them in the car accident (caused in part by her father's drink-influenced recklessness, a detail which does maintain — or at least implies — the unhappy childhood which would result from living with an alcoholic) when she was somewhere in the vicinity of eight or nine years old and going to live with her uncle and aunt at that time.

Either way, however, it was after she moved to Gotham that she discovered her uncle (who became, soon after, her adoptive father) was no ordinary policeman.

He knew — was maybe even friends with — the Batman! Inspired by equal parts hero-worship and ambition, she set out immediately upon this discovery to train herself to become the Batman's partner and did not waver from her goal for the next several years until college and more "grown-up" dreams sidetracked her.

Again, the Legends story revises this, actually running more closely to the animated Batgirl's origin but with some "real" Batgirl history mixed in. I wish they'd stop doing this. Anyway, she is now portrayed as tripping her way into becoming Batgirl even before starting college. But! Since it doesn't come up, we shall assume that fate — in the guise of Killer Moth — still intervened and jump-started her career. To surprise her father and to relive the childhood excitement of pretending to be a superhero, Barbara designed and made a fully-functional "Batgirl" costume to wear to the policeman's masquerade ball, but on the way there, she happened upon a crime in progress and, instinctively, she leapt into action.

She saved Bruce Wayne from... well, apparently some rather sticky cleaning bills, and she met Batman again. He was his usual, charming self... it wasn't a pretty scene.

But the adrenaline rush was addicting. She started to go out at night as Batgirl, looking for trouble and putting a stop to it whenever she could. It didn't take long for Batman (or her father) to figure out who she really was. But confronting her and making her actually stop proved harder than the Dark Knight expected and, in the end, it was she who won the confrontation while also convincing Batman to train her.

For the next few years, wherever Barbara's "real life" took her, Batgirl went, too. She had wild adventures, captured all sorts of villains and baddies, teamed up with the original Boy Wonder on a number of occasions, and eventually won the Batman's respect and became one of the few to know his true identity — both equally impressive achievements.

Batgirl appeared in very few post-Crisis stories, and as a result, most of her pre-Crisis adventures are still "canon." Examples of the exceptions to this would be her friendship and adventures with the pre-Crisis Supergirl — though it has been speculated that the self-doubts she had about her effectiveness as a superhero which led to her retirement as Batgirl a few months before her crippling encounter with the Joker were a direct result of her feelings of failure at being unable to save Supergirl.

She didn't remember the cause of those feelings, post-Crisis, but the feelings remained to undermine her self-confidence, just as her near-fatal (and pre-Crisis) encounter with Cormorant also played a role in her decision to retire.

Her old friend Marcy turned up in her life just at the time she was seriously questioning her effectiveness as Batgirl and during Marcy's visit, "The Last Batgirl Story" took place. She conquered the foe she feared most — Cormorant — and was able to put Batgirl behind her with no regrets.

But, of course, the final nail in Batgirl's coffin (so to speak) was driven in by the Joker, and the awful irony of it was that the Joker was, in effect, gunning for Commissioner Gordon and for Batman and did not even know that he had crippled his past opponent Batgirl. She only mattered to him in this scheme because he could use her — Barbara Gordon — against her father.

This did not help her battered sense of her own effectiveness at all and she spent the next several months physically recuperating as much as she could while also hiding from the world, feeling defeated and useless. It wasn't until she discovered how powerful a tool the computer could be in her expert hands that she found her new purpose in life and her new identity. Oracle.

Impulse
05-10-2003, 02:00 PM
whew, Oracle's my favorite. I'm glad that I had that bio. would help me with her character.

srfrgrl
05-12-2003, 12:01 PM
That's awesome, Thanks Jag!

the_watcher
05-12-2003, 12:18 PM
Jag. rocks and BOP's - True so true

jaguarin
05-12-2003, 12:46 PM
I'm, glad that this be useful to all of you, Thanks :D