Hercules

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The Most famous Greek legendary hero, a mighty hunter and warrior born to Alemene and fathered by Zeus.

In May-June 1944, a member of Metropolis’s Liars Club wins the club’s coveted Best Tall Tale award for a tale he concocts concerning a fictional meeting between Superman and Hercules. In the story, Superman encounters the legendary hero after allowing himself to be sent into the distant past, to ancient Greece in the age of the mighty Greek gods and goddesses, in order to test a time machine invented by scientist Professor Button. To his great surprise, the Man of Steel discovers that the man who has been immortalized in myth as a great hunter and warrior was actually a puny, cowardly weakling. And so, to safeguard Hercules’s hallowed place in folklore, Superman performs the legendary twelve labors in Hercules’s stead, thereby keeping alive Hercules’s reputation as the greatest Greek Hero. (S No.28, May-June 1944 "Stand-In For Hercules!")

In August 1960 “renegade scientist” Lex Luthor, serving out a term in Bleak Rock Prison, constructs an ingenious “time Ray” out of parts from an alarm clock and other everyday materials and uses it to draw the mighty Hercules “through the time-barrier” from the ancient past to Luthor’s prison cell in the twentieth century. By duping the legendary hero into believing that he has been wrongfully imprisoned by “an evil king” who stole his gold and hid it underground, Luthor is able to trick Hercules into using his superhuman strength to break Luthor out of prison and help him loot Fort Knox. Ultimately, however, Hercules discovers that he has been duped into helping Luthor commit crimes, and he seizes the evil scientist and turns him over to Superman.

When the Man of Steel offers to return Hercules to his own era by carrying him back across the time barrier, Hercules asks if he might remain in Metropolis awhile “to observe your future civilization!” Superman consents, but suggests that Hercules adopt an alternate identity during his sojourn in the twentieth century so that he will not be mobbed by curiosity-seekers everywhere he goes. Superman rents Hercules a place to stay, buys him a wardrobe of modern clothes, and gets him a job as a newspaper reporter, under the pseudonym Roger Tate, on the Daily Planet.

An unforeseen complication arises, however, when “Roger Tate” becomes infatuated with Lois Lane and he begs her to marry him.

“Great Olympia!” he thinks to himself. "Lois l… looks like a… a bewitching goddess!”

When Lois declines, citing Superman as her true love:

“No one can match Superman!”

Hercules flexes his powerful muscles, totally demolishing his “Roger Tate” business-suit disguise, and stands revealed in the brief animal-skin costume of the mighty Hercules. “Behold!” proclaims Hercules. “I was the mightiest hero of my past age as Superman is of this age!” Nevertheless, Lois refuses to marry Hercules, explaining that “…Superman is still my big heart-throb!”

Hurt at having been spurned by the woman he loves, yet determined to some how win her away from the Man of Steel, Hercules attempts, in the days that follow, to impress Lois with “mighty deeds” and feats of superhuman strength. It soon becomes apparent, however, that Hercules cannot hope to complete with Superman, for while Superman possesses many super-powers, Hercules only possesses superhuman strength. To rectify the imbalance, Hercules journeys to “The ancient Oracle’s Cave,” Near Athens, Greece, where he communicates with the ancient gods and heroes, including Venus, Vulcan, Mercury, Jupiter, and Achilles. After misleading the ancients into believing that he has undertaken a noble “mission” in the twentieth century, Hercules tells them that his efforts are doomed to failure “unless I gain magic powers and weapons from all of you!”

“Granted, my son!” proclaims Jupiter, as the great gods and heroes reach out simultaneously to touch Hercules. “At our touch, our individual Olympus Powers will flow into you! The Magic Weapons will appear later as you need them!...

“Use the Olympus Powers and Magic Weapons wisely, my son!” adds Jupiter. “Do not shame us! They must do good!”

“They’ll do good all right,” thinks Hercules,”…for ME! Ha, ha!”


Hercules, in his many forms, has appeared in the following Superman Comics

  • (S No.28, May-June 1944 "Stand-In For Hercules!")
  • (Adv No.257, Feb 1959 "The First Two Supermen!")
  • (AC No.267, August 1960 "Hercules in the 20th Century!")
  • (AC No.268, Sep 1960 "Superman's Battle With Hercules!")
  • (AC No.279, Aug 1961 "The Super-Rivals!")
  • (S No.155, Aug 1962 "The Downfall of Superman!")
  • (AC No.308, Jan 1964 "Superman Meets the Goliath-Hercules!")
  • (AC No.320, Jan 1965 "The Three Super-Enemies!")
  • (AC No.353, Aug 1967 "The Battle of the Gods!")
  • (DCCP No.57, May 1983 "Days of Future Past!")
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