PropertyValue
rdfs:label
  • Peter Cannon, Thunderbolt
rdfs:comment
  • The character debuted in Peter Cannon ... Thunderbolt #1 (Jan. 1966), part of Charlton editor Dick Giordano's "Action Heroes" superhero line. The series then took over the numbering of the defunct title Son of Vulcan, and ran from issue #50–60 (March/April 1966 – November 1967), after which Morisi, a New York City Police Department officer and time-pressed with police work, left the title, which was canceled along with the rest of Charlton's "Action Heroes" comics line. As a police officer, Morisi signed his work with his initials, PAM, in order to keep his moonlighting hidden.
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Creators
Alliances
Caption
  • cover of Peter Cannon ... Thunderbolt #1 , art by Pete Morisi
Character Name
  • Thunderbolt
Real Name
  • Peter Cannon
Powers
  • Clairvoyance
  • Ability to ignore pain
  • DC Comics:
  • Low level telekinesis
  • Mind over matter
  • Psychic control over animals
Debut
  • Thunderbolt #1
Publisher
  • Originally Charlton Comics, later DC Comics.
abstract
  • The character debuted in Peter Cannon ... Thunderbolt #1 (Jan. 1966), part of Charlton editor Dick Giordano's "Action Heroes" superhero line. The series then took over the numbering of the defunct title Son of Vulcan, and ran from issue #50–60 (March/April 1966 – November 1967), after which Morisi, a New York City Police Department officer and time-pressed with police work, left the title, which was canceled along with the rest of Charlton's "Action Heroes" comics line. There were several backup series in Thunderbolt. "The Sentinels", by Gary Friedrich (writing his first superhero stories) and penciler-inker Sam Grainger, appeared in #54–59, and #60 had the Prankster, written by Dennis O'Neil with art by Jim Aparo. Morisi, who'd done work for Lev Gleason Publications in 1940s, reported in Comic Book Artist #9 (August 2000) that he had attempted to buy the rights to 1940s superhero Daredevil in the early 1960s. Gleason gave him his okay, but the character's primary writer-artist, Charles Biro, balked, requesting a percentage of future profits. Morisi declined and went on to create Thunderbolt in a scaled-down version of that Daredevil's symmetrically divided, red-and-blue costume. As a police officer, Morisi signed his work with his initials, PAM, in order to keep his moonlighting hidden.