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Jason Bard

Created by Frank Robbins and Gil Kane

Another pipe-sucking shamus from the backpages of Detective Comics, playing second fiddle to Batman?

Gotham City private eye and ex-Marine JASON BARD is a young “resourceful, battle-scarred Vietnam vet, his only weapon a cane and a razor-sharp intelligence.” In the straighter-than-thou world of DC of the seventies, Jason was positively mod-looking, what with the sideburns and a decent mop of hair (albeit neatly-trimmed). He doesn’t carry a gun, and he needs a cane to get around due to injuries he sustained to his right leg while in Vietnam.

The back story, according to Who’s Who in the DC Universe, is that when Jason was a child, his father murdered his beloved mother, Rose, and upon his return Stateside from Vietnam, he vowed to find him. The problem was that his mother had destroyed all her pictures of him, and so Jason had no idea what his father looked like. Jason attended college on the G.I. bill, majoring in criminology, and used those skills to finally track him down, although as a result of their confrontation, his father died.

After that, he became a private investigator, with a decent reputation (he occasionally referred to himself as “Gotham’s brightest, youngest private investigator”), and often worked with Barbara Gordon in her guise as Batgirl. Occasionally, even Batman used his services.

He lives alone, although he did start to date Barbara, apparently unaware of her secret identity, and while Batgirl doesn’t seem to pop up in costume in any of Jason’s cases, he certainly shows up in some of hers. At some point, Babs and Jason were even engaged to be married.

The Batman connection actually runs even deeper, though. Jason’s creator, Frank Robbins, was also a writer/artist for Batman at about the same time, and it is Robbins who seems to have scripted most of Jason’s adventures. Bard made his debut in issue #392, and later appeared in a string of cases from #425 to at least #433, collectively plugged as “The Master Crime Files of Jason Bard.”

Bard also made an appearance, along with a slew of other DC gumshoes, including Slam Bradley and Roy Raymond, in a special story marking the 500th issue of Detective Comics, not to mention popping up somewhere in the first two years of Batman and the Outsiders, whilst doing a background check on a former identity of one of the Outsiders. He also worked for a while for the New York City-based Childfind Agency, and at one pint even took on Man-Bat as a partner.

And then, in 1998, Jason Bard reappeared in the debut issue of Birds of Prey, older and maybe not quite so wise, shaken and stirred, travelling under another name, on a tropical hellhole of an island, consorting with local drug scum, much to the surprise of Barbara Gordon (now a sort of private eye herself, going by the name of Oracle). Jason also seems to have lost his aversion to guns. Relax, though — it turns out he was working undercover, and that he’s still a P.I., still based in Gotham… and he still has a thing for Babs.

But of course there had to be some retconning. In Crisis on Infinite Earths, Jason’s background was jettisoned and a new one nailed in place. He was now a former Gotham City police detective, forced to take early retirement due to injuries sustained on the job while trying to apprehend Killer Moth. And so it is that a surprisingly youngish Bard is “hired” by Batman to dig up info on Orca, a super-villain, who’s otherwise tied up, in an eight-part story arc entitled “Face the Face” that ran in 2006 in Batman (#651-654) and Detective Comics (#817-820).

More recently, Bard seems to have switched sides, and has even worked against the interests of Batman and Commissioner Gordon.

UNDER OATH

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Respectfully submitted by Kevin Burton Smith. Thanks to Dwight Williams and Anthony Durrant for their help with Jason’s past.

 

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