Atom (Al Pratt)

Atom (Al Pratt)

Superherobox|

caption=Art by Dave Johnson.
character_name=Atom
real_name= Albert "Al" Pratt
publisher=DC Comics
debut="All-American Comics" #19
(Oct 1940)
creators=Ben Flinton
Bill O'Conner
alliances=Justice Society of America All-Star Squadron
aliases= The Mighty Mite
powers=Superhuman strength and endurance, Enhanced speed and durability, radioactive "atomic-punch", invulnerability to forms of radiation.|

Al Pratt is a character in the DC Comics Universe, the original hero to fight crime as the Atom. He first appeared in "All-American Comics" #19 (Oct. 1940). He initially had no superpowers; instead, he was a diminutive college student and later a physicist, usually depicted as a "tough-guy" character.Citation | last = Beatty, Scott | first = Wallace, Dan | author-link = | contribution = Atom I | editor-last = Dougall | editor-first = Alastair | title = The DC Comics Encyclopedia | pages = 30 | publisher = Dorling Kindersley | place = London | year = 2008 | ISBN = 0-7566-4119-5]

Etymology and origins

The character of the Atom (Al Pratt) would seem to be influenced heavily by the life story of Joe Greenstein, a Coney Island strongman known professionally as "the Mighty Atom". Both the real-life Greenstein (at 5' 4" and 140 pounds) and the fictional Al Pratt were unusually short and had self-trained at boxing and bodybuilding to overcome poor health during childhood.

Fictional character biography

Golden Age

Initially a proverbial 98-pound weakling, the 5' 1" Al Pratt was trained to fighting condition by ex-boxer Joe Morgan (the same man who trained Pratt's fellow mystery men, Wildcat and the Guardian). Pratt soon became a founding member of the Justice Society of America, appearing in the team's various stories during their original Golden Age appearances. He later became a founding and active member of the All-Star Squadron. During World War II, Pratt served as a tank corpsman in the United States Army.

In 1948, the Atom gained super strength as a result of the latent effects of his 1942 battle with the reluctant supervillain Cyclotron (after whose costume Pratt redesigned his own). It was later revealed that he had taken partial custodianship of Cyclotron's daughter Terri.

Pratt's last Golden Age appearance was in "All Star Comics" #57 in 1951, also the last Golden Age Justice Society story. Later it was revealed that a special Senate investigation panel had moved to obtain the identities of all active superheroes, at which point virtually all members of the Justice Society retired.

Later years

Pratt was revived with the rest of the team in 1963 in "Flash" vol. 1, #137, and continued to make various appearances in the years that followed. His status with the Justice Society of America was as a reserve member up until after the formation of "Infinity, Inc.". Following the Crisis on Infinite Earths, the "Last Days of the Justice Society Special" (1986) told how Pratt, along with his teammates, prevented the unleashing of Ragnarök, a time-displaced and world-shattering event initiated by Adolf Hitler originally on April 12, 1945. In order to stave off the destruction of the world Al and the others chose to enter a magical limbo - seemingly for all eternity.

The 1992 mini-series "Armageddon: Inferno" brought Al Pratt and the other members of the JSA back into the post-Crisis world. The short-lived series "Justice Society of America" (1992-1993) told the tale of the team's reintegration into society. Al was depicted as a short, stocky, balding man with radioactive, super-powered hands and a body aged to about 60 years or so. He was also written as a man more interested in training the next generation of heroes than "running off on crazy super-hero missions" (issue #2), though he still was hotheaded. The series brought Al and the JSA into conflict with the Ultra-Humanite, Pol St. Germain, and Kulak the Sorcerer.

The Justice Society had been on active duty only briefly when 1994's "Zero Hour" miniseries depicted Al Pratt's murder by the temporal villain Extant.

Legacy

In the 1980s, Al Pratt's godson Al Rothstein was introduced; Rothstein was known as the superhero Nuklon (later changing his name to Atom Smasher), first appearing as a member of Infinity, Inc.

In the 1990s, it was revealed that Pratt had a son named Grant Emerson. Al Pratt was unaware of this - he had been told that there were complications with childbirth and that the child had not survived. In truth, Grant was kidnapped and genetically altered into a superbeing by the villain Vandal Savage; after the onset of puberty became the superhero Damage. Damage later appeared in two incarnations of the Teen Titans, eventually joined the Freedom Fighters and has since become a member of the Justice Society of America.

It was initially believed that the modern Manhunter Kate Spencer is his granddaughter. However, Kate is in fact the granddaughter of Phantom Lady and Iron Munro. Al Pratt allowed Sandra Knight (the Phantom Lady) to use his contact information in order to enter a home for unwed mothers, which led to the mix-up.

In the afterlife, the Atom also befriended the recently-deceased Starman, David Knight. In dreams, David brought his brother, the next Starman, Jack Knight to a banquet in limbo attended by Atom and several other deceased mystery men. ("Starman" vol. 2 #37)

External links

* [http://my.execpc.com/~icicle/GAATOM.html Bio of the Golden Age Atom]
* [http://www.dcdatabaseproject.com/Atom_(Al_Pratt) Bio at www.dcdatabaseproject.com]
* [http://www.mykey3000.com/cosmicteams/profiles/atom1.html another Bio]
* [http://www.geocities.com/Area51/Labyrinth/7393/wwatom.html Golden Age Atom chronology]

References


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