Captain Triumph is a superhero from the Golden Age of Comics who first appeared in Crack Comics #27, published in January 1943 by Quality Comics.
The character was later obtained by DC Comics, though by that time he had already lapsed into the public domain. Some of his Golden Age adventures were reprinted by AC Comics in the Men of Mystery anthology. He is not to be confused with another DC Comics property named Triumph.
When America is drawn into the Second World War, Michael enlists in the U.S. Army Air Corps, becoming a pilot, while Lance "crusaded with his own weapons – the word and pen" by becoming a journalist. However, on Michael's 23rd birthday, as he brings his plane in to land, the hangar he is entering explodes. His fiancée, Kim Meredith, and brother Lance witness this act of sabotage, and the latter races into the burning structure, managing to find his badly injured sibling, only for Michael to die in his arms.
Lance swears vengeance on the murderers and those like them. Unknown to him, the Fates, creatures of myth, are watching all this and, impressed, decide to create a champion. Soon afterwards Lance receives a shocking visitation from Michael's ghost, who reveals that they remain linked together, and if Lance touches his birthmark they will merge, gaining superpowers as a result. Touching the mark a second time will separate them again. Calling himself Captain Triumph, Lance becomes a crimefighter. Crack Comics #27.
Captain Triumph belongs to that select class of superheroes who, like Superman/Clark Kent, is never recognized in his superhero identity, even when being seen, by the same person, as Captain Triumph immediately after being seen as Lance Gallant and vice versa – despite the fact that he wears no mask and does not even have Clark Kent's glasses to disguise his face.
In his fourth appearance, Captain Triumph encounters a down-on-his-luck professional clown named Biff who is on the verge of being fired from his job. Sympathizing, Cap uses his powers of flight and invisibility to ensure that Biff's next show is spectacular. Even though in the aftermath his job as a clown is at least temporarily assured, after being drawn into one of Cap's adventures, and thoroughly enjoying it, Biff readily accepts Lance Gallant's offer to become his personal assistant. Crack Comics #30.
According to Jess Nevins' Encyclopedia of Golden Age Superheroes, "his enemies include Sydney Greenstreet-like Spade the Ruthless, the mad scientist Dr. Vossburg ("the Man Who Conquered Flame"), the Nazi spy the Raven (and his stolen sonic death grenades), and the unspeaking criminal mastermind known only as Silent".
Eventually Lance, Kim and Biff wind up co-owners in a successful gold mine, Crack Comics #42. and Biff buys shares in a "record-breaking" oil well, Crack Comics #49. but though this makes them all independently wealthy they continue to stay, and adventure, together.
Both twins are intelligent, daring, and athletic. Though they are presented as being very similar, throughout the series it becomes obvious that Lance is the more thoughtful, and intellectually inclined of the two, while Michael is more the daredevil,"Thoughtful Lance Gallant knows how to call up the ghost of his daredevil brother, Michael --- together they are mystically combined into Captain Triumph!" Crack Comics #36. witness their differing vocations of journalist and military pilot, respectively.
When the twins merge into Captain Triumph, they form a composite personality, with neither obviously dominant, and when they split apart again they are both aware of everything that has occurred to them as Captain Triumph.
Within the context of this series, the Fates are presented as three hag-like crones, sisters named Chance, Destiny and Fortune. Crack Comics #28. They give Captain Triumph three "ghostly" powers: flight, invisibility and near invulnerability. As Michael Gallant says when his spirit first appears to his brother: "I can make you invisible! You shall fly through space within seconds! Nothing physical will harm you!" Crack Comics #27.
When the brothers are separated into two individuals, Michael, as a ghost, can move through walls, spy invisibly and then report back to Lance. On the initial occasion when Michael reveals his existence to Kim, Crack Comics #28. she is able to see and hear him. Thereafter, though Lance can always definitely see and hear Michael, whether Kim or Biff can do so is inconsistently presented throughout the series - and sometimes within the same story.
With intense concentration, Michael is able to communicate with, and influence the actions of, other people and creatures. When the Jacksons are threatened, Michael is able to influence April, the daughter of the family, that she should write to Lance Gallant for help. Crack Comics #37. In "The Castle of Shadows!" he controls a rat to gnaw through ropes binding Kim Crack Comics #38. and he compels a criminal to not search the hiding place of an important document. Crack Comics #43.
Captain Triumph has the ability to alter his physical appearance, shape and size, and at the same time change his voice, a power that comes in very handy when his adventures require impersonation. Crack Comics #s 28, 31.
Captain Triumph also has limited super-strength. He can stop a racing car by either grabbing its bumper Crack Comics #35. or standing in front of it and punching it, Crack Comics #42. bend rifle barrels, Crack Comics #38. break chains Crack Comics #s 36, 41, 54, 59. and snap rifle bayonets Crack Comics #32. with his bare hands. He can also punch through a brick wall, Crack Comics #40, 42. steel bank vault doors Crack Comics #45. and jail bars, Crack Comics #49. and routinely holds his own in physical confrontations against multiple, normal human attackers much larger than he is. However, his opponents are never seriously injured, and sometimes not even disabled, by his full-power enthusiastic blows.
Captain Triumph is almost but not completely invulnerable. On numerous occasions he is shot repeatedly, and the bullets have no effect. Crack Comics #s 27, 28, 30, 33, 34, 35, 36, 37, 39, 40, 42, 43, 44, 46, 49, 53, 54, 55, 56. Attempts to kill him with knives or swords Crack Comics #29, 32, 53, 58. see them bend or break on his body. Hitting him with an axe results in the axe handle breaking. Crack Comics #47. He survives a pointblank bazooka blast with no damage. Crack Comics #50. Being shot with an atomic beam that can cut through anything (and does in fact easily cut an oceangoing freighter completely in two) only causes him to laugh and say, "I’m ticklish!" Crack Comics #28. When faced with a powerful "explosive pill" about to go off and wreck a defense factory, his solution to the problem is to simply swallow the pill. Crack Comics #31. However, being exposed to the sonic vibrations of a "screaming bomb" that kills normal people does render him temporarily unconscious. Crack Comics #34.
Captain Triumph's only appearances during the Golden Age were within 36 issues of Crack Comics, from his introduction in #27 until the book's cancellation with #62. He was the lead feature within, and appeared on the cover of, every one of those issues.
Jim Shelley on Flashback Universe refers to this tale of an insane, murdering Captain Triumph as "his last appearance…probably best forgotten".http://flashbackuniverse.blogspot.com/2010/01/free-comics-monday-captain-triumph.html "Free Comics Monday: Captain Triumph".
James Robinson intended that The Golden Age be canon, and his subsequent series Starman assumed that many of the events in The Golden Age (for instance Ted Knight, the original Starman, having a nervous breakdown after his research was used to help create the atom bombs dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki) actually happened. However The Golden Age has always been classed as a non-canonical "imaginary story" by DC's powers-that-be.
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