by Siskoid
The Legion of Super-Heroes has many traditions, and one of these is try-outs. It makes you believe you could be in the team if only you worked hard enough at your super Xbox skills. There are a number of things that can happen at a try-out.
a) A hero with a really lame power will be rejected.
a2) Said hero may or may not prove his worth and be accepted after all.
b) A powerful hero will be rejected for having the same powers as another member or have a power that is not innate.
b2) Said hero may or may not turn out to have one lame power no one has and be accepted after all.
c) A hero will turn out to be a villain and will be rejected.
c2) Said "hero" will instead be accepted and THEN show his or her true colors.
d) The established Legion will be real jerks to the hero trying out (hey, you think the cool kids are bad, imagine if they had super-powers).
SILVER AGE TRY-OUT: SECRET ORIGINS #46, December 1989
Personally, I loved Secret Origins, especially when the title went with some crazy concepts. It's not like I was wondering how Superman came to Earth, after all, so something like #46's origins of various superhero headquarters was just what the doctor ordered. Better yet, with the origin of the original Legion clubhouse, writer Gerard Jones gives us a crazy story that would have easily fit into the Legion's Silver Age, even more so since Silver Age superstar artist Curt Swan draws it. "The Little Clubhouse That Could" is essentially the Legion's second ever story, taking place just after the original three have formed the Legion.
They're looking for two things, and being the wholesome teens they are, they aren't the two things I'm always looking for. The Legion needs a clubhouse (and no neighborhood will have them, cuz who wants a bunch of teenagers loitering in front of their house?) and it needs new members. Cue the first Legion try-out! Check out that collection of freaks:





TRY-OUT CHECKLIST: A, A2, C, C2

In "The One-Shot Hero", Erg-1 is trying out for the team with a costume that's better than most for the era, but it does remind me of a motorcycle suit and the Doctor Who serial The Ambassadors of Death, all at the same time. What are his powers? Well, he's made of antimatter energy, which only his suit can contain. It seems to give him the powers of Superboy, Colossal Boy, Shrinking Violet, Chemical King and Phantom Girl, so of course they can't accept him as a member. So what if he's as powerful as five Legionnaires combined? Club rules say you must have one power no one else has, and rules is rules.
Then Bouncing Boy comes into the room and tells the team about an S.O.S. That's right. Bouncing Boy. The guy who can turn into a bouncing ball. He made the team. Wildfire did not. Now let me act as his lawyer for a second. The Legion actually has a number of members with the exact same powers: Superboy, Supergirl, Mon-El, and Ultra Boy are all pretty much the same. Turns out they made an exception for the two Kryptonians because they're icons from the past or something. So only Mon-El counts as a Kryptonian-like powerhouse. Ultra Boy? He's got "flash vision" instead of "heat vision", but these are the same. I believe his actual "unique" power is that his x-ray vision can see through lead (actually penetra-vision), whereas the others' cannot. Can you believe that? Why don't they just count the fact that energy comes out of Wildfire's feet to allow him to fly? Or that without a body, he's probably immune to a ton of things? BEING MADE OF ENERGY! Heck, I'd count that as a unique power.
But no. Thanks for trying out though. Back to the S.O.S.: There's this giant renegade "eating machine" that's sucking up all the crops on planet Manna-5. Just the kind of food emergency Bouncing Boy would bring to the Legion's attention. So a cadre of Legionnaires head for that world (but not Bouncing Boy - it's a lazy day for him) and Wildfire/Erg-1 tags along as a stowaway. However, the Legionnaires are defeated by the giant vacuum cleaner of death, and as it's about to suck in Colossal Boy, Wildfire shows off his one unique power:

Cut to one year later, and the Legion's holding try-outs again. The three candidates are first shown a video of Wildfire biting the big one, so that they know that 1) it's a dangerous business and 2) that he'll be back to life by story's end. First up is Porcupine Pete:



Not only are they not using the thing to fight evil, but it's not protected by a force field because Wildfire can get into it. He possesses it to wish the Legion back to life and himself back into his suit. (So he can possess machines? So why not Molecular Master?) Anyway, a battle ensues between the evil robot and our boy Wildfire, a battle which ends with one of the best super-powered martial arts moves I've ever seen:

TRY-OUT CHECKLIST: A, B, B2, C2, D
1980S TRY-OUT: TALES OF THE LEGION OF SUPER-HEROES #339, September 1986

The book is always full of throwaway lines, technologies, creatures and Encyclopedia Galactica entries that make you believe this is an intricately designed future. For example, the 30th century has its own language called Interlac, and Levitz makes sure all manner of signage is written in that invented alphabet. I love it! Thanks to Wikipedia, you can get your very own alphabet key and read all that stuff you never could before. Thanks Wikipedia! Now I know that the sign below says "Meeting in progress"! Those Legionnaires are voting on an
unprecedented number of new members because their original three are
retiring and they were down a couple before that. Who will make it in?
For my money, they gave too much of a chance to Comet Queen, a thoroughly annoying character who can put you to sleep with her comet gas:

Another loser is Energy Boy, who is wearing one of the worst costumes in Legion history (since the 70s, at any rate).

But this try-out is full of irregularities. If I had been rejected like Power Boy, Mentalla and those two goldfish I know nothing about...

Not that I'm complaining, you understand. Sensor Girl and Polar Boy are great. And cheers to the Legion for finally picking up a couple of non-humanoids. The days of the racist Legion are over. As for Magnetic Kid, well, nepotism is still wrong. That, and pink costumes.
TRY-OUT CHECKLIST: A, B
In the 90s, the Legion became all dark and nasty and adult, so they didn't have try-outs anymore. They were too busy becoming disguised Proties or werewolves or whatnot. But the writers saw there was a place for a teen Legion that was fun and happy-go-lucky, so they unveiled the SW6 Legion, a batch of clones that were just like the LSH of old, except a lot more hip. It gave us a Ferro Lad that could outlast an issue, and some pretty sexy babes thanks to artist Chris Sprouse. SW6 started in the regular Legion book, and then moved to their own title: Legionnaires.
And guess what? They could hold tryouts. They could, but they didn't. So halfway through their second issue, their meeting gets interrupted...

The gang is willing to give it a shot though, and up first is X-Bomb Betty.

Next up is Cera Kesh, who doesn't have a codename yet, but I think it probably would have been Plain Jane.

Anyway, they saved the best for last! Plaid Lad! The guy can turn any textile into plaid. And if you thought that would be enough to get him rejected, THE POWER ALSO TENDS TO GET OUT OF CONTROL!

TRY-OUT CHECKLIST: A, C, D
You get the gist, and you get it through various eras. Things haven't really changed since even if the Legion has. So what's YOUR story? Why were YOU rejected for membership?
The X-Bomb Betty line is a reference to the 1957 Looney Tunes cartoon Show Biz Bugs, where Daffy blows himself up, and that gag was lifted from 1949's Curtain Razor starring Porky Pig.
ReplyDeleteLSH v2 #14 is my favourite Legion issue ever, for exactly the reasons you said! Also the Legion aren't nearly as mean as they can be. Though you feel a bit for Energy Boy, putz though he appears.
ReplyDeleteFortress Lad story thrilled me because back then it seemed like a legend that had grown up around the team, like the Ferro Lad & Legion Academy movies.
I've always wanted to see him brought back as a hyper-competant martial artist that the Legion just didn't realize.
But his later incarnation as Splitter? Way to kill the joke there.
The try-outs have percolated throughout comics and even film but they've never been as integral to a series or ever gone beyond the silly joke stage. It kills me that people don't realise where it all started. The original and the best.