Adaptations of Black Canary in other media
Created byRobert Kanigher
Carmine Infantino
Original sourceComics published by DC Comics
First appearanceFlash Comics #86 (August 1947)
Films and television
Film(s)Batman Beyond: Return of the Joker (cameo)
Justice League: Crisis on Two Earths (2010)
DC Showcase: Green Arrow (2010)
The Lego Batman Movie (2017)
Scooby-Doo! & Batman: The Brave and the Bold (2018)
Birds of Prey (2020)
Television
show(s)
Legends of the Superheroes (1979)
Smallville (2001)
Birds of Prey (2002)
Justice League Unlimited (2004)
Batman: The Brave and the Bold (2008)
Young Justice (2010)
Arrow (2012)
The Flash (2014)
Legends of Tomorrow (2016)
Vixen (2015)

Black Canary is a DC Comics superhero who has appeared across a range of live-action and animated television shows, as well as in several video games. Originally the pseudo name of the character Dinah Drake, the mantle was later passed on to her daughter, Dinah Laurel Lance. Both characters have appeared in different comic continuations and in other media, but the character has also been known by other names. She is usually portrayed as a proficient fighter, using martial arts as well as her trademark sonic scream or "Canary Cry".

Television

Live-action

  • The Dinah Laurel Lance incarnation of Black Canary appears in Legends of the Superheroes,[1] portrayed by Danuta Wesley.
  • Characters based on Dinah Laurel Lance and Dinah Drake named Dinah Redmond and Carolyn Lance appear in Birds of Prey (2002), with Redmond portrayed by Rachel Skarsten as a teenager and AJ Michalka as a young girl and Carolyn portrayed by Lori Loughlin.[2][3] Redmond is a resident of Gotham City who possesses psychic powers, is a founding member of the titular Birds of Prey, and the estranged daughter of Carolyn, who previously operated as Black Canary before retiring. Additionally, only the latter possesses the "Canary Cry", which is activated through whistling instead.
  • The Dinah Lance incarnation of Black Canary appears in Smallville, portrayed by Alaina Huffman.[4] This version is a vigilante and mercenary who moonlights as a controversial, brunette conservative columnist and talk show host for the Daily Planet in Metropolis. Introduced in the seventh season, she is hired by Lex Luthor to capture Green Arrow under the belief that the latter is a terrorist. After being convinced otherwise, the Green Arrow recruits her into his Justice League.[5] In subsequent appearances, she would help Clark Kent defeat Doomsday,[6][7] battle an army of Kandorian clones,[8] and help the Green Arrow and Chloe Sullivan free their allies from virtual reality-induced stasis.[9]
  • Several characters based on Dinah Laurel Lance, Dinah Drake, and Black Canary appear in TV series set in the Arrowverse.
    • Sara Lance (initially portrayed by Jacqueline MacInnes Wood and by Caity Lotz in subsequent appearances) debuts in Arrow as a former lover of Oliver Queen, younger sister of Laurel Lance (see below), and youngest daughter of Quentin and Dinah Lance who operates as a vigilante simply called the "Canary" via a sonic device that enhances her screams. After being murdered and resurrected by Malcolm Merlyn, she is recruited by Rip Hunter to join his Legends in the spin-off series Legends of Tomorrow,[11] during which she adopts the alias of the "White Canary" and eventually becomes the group's leader.
    • Dinah Laurel Lance, or simply "Laurel Lance" (portrayed by Katie Cassidy),[12] debuts and primarily appears in Arrow as an attorney, Sara's older sister, Quentin and Dinah Lance's eldest daughter, and Oliver Queen's ex-girlfriend.[13] Following Sara's death, Laurel undergoes training with Ted Grant and Nyssa al Ghul, asks Cisco Ramon to upgrade her sister's sonic device, and joins Queen in his vigilantism as Black Canary, wielding a black side-handle baton as her primary weapon,[14][15] until she is killed by Damien Darhk in the fourth season. Additionally, Laurel makes guest appearances in The Flash and Legends of Tomorrow.
      • A villainous Earth-2 metahuman incarnation of Laurel Lance called Black Siren (also portrayed by Cassidy) debuts in The Flash episode "Invincible" as an enforcer for Zoom until she is captured by Team Flash and imprisoned in S.T.A.R. Labs' pipeline. She later appears in Arrow,[16] having been broken out by Prometheus to help him seek revenge on Oliver. In time, she would eventually defect to the latter's side.
      • A villainous Earth-X incarnation of Laurel Lance called Siren-X (also portrayed by Cassidy) appears in The Flash episode "Fury Rogue" as a Nazi and a member of the New Reichsmen.
    • Sara and Laurel's mother, Dinah Lance, appears in the first four seasons of Arrow, portrayed by Alex Kingston.[17][18][19][20][21]
    • Following Laurel's death, a teenage orphan named Evelyn Crawford Sharp (portrayed by Madison McLaughlin) briefly takes up the mantle of Black Canary in the Arrow episode "Canary Cry" to avenge her family's deaths by seeking violent revenge against H.I.V.E. until Oliver and his team talk her out of it.[21][22] By the fifth season, she joins Oliver as Artemis, though she is swayed by Prometheus into helping him.[23][24]
    • Dinah Drake (portrayed by Juliana Harkavy)[25] debuts in the fifth season of Arrow as a former undercover Central City Police Department detective unrelated to the Lance family who became a metahuman with a sonic scream after being exposed to dark matter when Harrison Wells' particle accelerator exploded. Team Arrow discover her in Hub City and aid her in apprehending her partner and lover Vincent Sobel's apparent killer before joining them as the new Black Canary.[26] Subsequently, she transfers to the Star City Police Department (SCPD),[27] but learns Sobel also became a metahuman as well as the murderous Vigilante. Throughout the seventh season, Drake is promoted to captain, but her secret identity is exposed and she loses her ability to perform the Canary Cry after being injured by Stanley Dover, forcing her to use Laurel and Sara's sonic device. As of flash-forwards to 2040 depicted in the eighth season, her injury has healed. Furthermore, the present Drake turns down a promotion in favor of relocating to Metropolis.
      • An Earth-2 incarnation of Dinah Drake (also portrayed by Harkavy) makes a minor appearance in the episode "Starling City" as a corrupt SCPD sergeant who works for her version of Tommy Merlyn until she and her Earth are destroyed by an anti-matter wave.

Animation

  • A character based on Dinah Drake / Black Canary called Donna Nance / Black Siren appears in the Justice League two-part episode "Legends", voiced by Jennifer Hale. She is a member of the Justice Guild of America who hails from an alternate universe that is viewed as fiction by inhabitants of the "prime" universe and died amidst a nuclear war.
  • The Dinah Laurel Lance incarnation of Black Canary appears in Justice League Unlimited,[28] voiced by Morena Baccarin. This version is a member of the Justice League, student of Wildcat, lover of Green Arrow, and rival of Huntress.
  • The Dinah Laurel Lance incarnation of Black Canary appears in Batman: The Brave and the Bold, voiced by Grey DeLisle. This version is a member of the Birds of Prey and an associate of the Justice Society of America (JSA) through Wildcat and her mother Dinah Drake / Black Canary (also voiced by DeLisle). Additionally, the latter appears in flashbacks depicted in the episode "The Golden Age of Justice!", in which she fought alongside the JSA until she was killed in action while saving people from a burning building. Before she died, she asked Wildcat to take care of her daughter for her.
  • The Dinah Lance incarnation of Black Canary appears in Young Justice, voiced by Vanessa Marshall.[29][30] Series co-creator Greg Weisman has said her role in the series was in part because she is his favorite DC Comics character.[31] This version is a member of the Justice League who serves as a combat trainer and counselor for the Team. In the second season, she becomes chairwoman of the League.
  • The Dinah Laurel Lance incarnation of Black Canary appears in the "Green Arrow" segment of DC Nation Shorts, voiced by Kari Wahlgren. This version's design is based on the Smallville incarnation.
  • The Dinah Laurel Lance incarnation of Black Canary appears in the Mad segment "That's What Super Friends are For", voiced by Tara Strong.
  • The Dinah Laurel Lance incarnation of Black Canary makes non-speaking cameo appearances in Justice League Action.

Film

Video games

Miscellaneous

  • The Dinah Laurel Lance incarnation of Black Canary appears in the Justice League Unlimited tie-in comic book.
  • The Arrowverse incarnation of Laurel Lance / Black Canary appears in Vixen, voiced by Katie Cassidy.
  • The Dinah Drake incarnation of Black Canary appears in the DC Super Hero Girls episode "Welcome to Super Hero High" as a graduate of the titular school.
  • In 2016, DC Comics released a three-track EP called EP 1 to promote the Black Canary comic book, in which the titular character becomes the lead singer of a band that shares her name.[41]
  • In 2020, Alexandra Monir wrote a novel called Black Canary: Breaking Silence, in which the Dinah Laurel Lance version of Black Canary discovers her powers in a Gotham City ruled by the patriarchal Court of Owls, for the DC Icons line.
  • Eben Brooks has a song called Dinah was Never on his album 'Heroes'

References

  1. "Legends of the Superheroes" "AV Club", Retrieved February 7, 2017.
  2. "Birds of Prey Takes Flight at WB" "IGN", Retrieved February 7, 2017.
  3. "Sins of the Mother". Birds of Prey. Season 1. Episode 5. The WB.
  4. Sands, Rich (2007-11-01). "Exclusive: Black Canary Swoops into Smallville". TVGuide.com. Archived from the original on 2007-11-02. Retrieved 2007-11-01.
  5. "Siren". Smallville. Season 7. Episode 11. The CW.
  6. "Odyssey". Smallville. Season 8. Episode 1. The CW.
  7. "Doomsday". Smallville. Season 8. Episode 22. The CW.
  8. "Salvation". Smallville. Season 9. Episode 21. The CW.
  9. "Collateral". Smallville. Season 10. Episode 12. The CW.
  10. "Absolute Justice". Smallville. Season 9. Episode 11. The CW.
  11. "Legends of Tomorrow's Season 2 Finale Closes the Door on a Beloved Arrow Character".
  12. Byrne, Craig (2012-02-15). "Arrow Finds Its Canary - And It's Katie Cassidy". GreenArrowTV.com. Retrieved 2012-02-15.
  13. "Pilot". Arrow. Season 1. Episode 1. The CW.
  14. Abrams, Natalie (2015-01-11). "'Arrow': Black Canary steps up now that Oliver has 'fallen'". Entertainment Weekly. Retrieved 2015-01-11.
  15. "The Return". Arrow. Season 3. Episode 14. The CW.
  16. "What We Leave Behind". Arrow. Season 5. Episode 9. The CW.
  17. "'Arrow' scoop: 'ER' actress cast as Laurel's mom".
  18. "Dead to Rights". Arrow. Season 1. Episode 16. The CW.
  19. "Heir to the Demon". Arrow. Season 2. Episode 13. The CW.
  20. "The Climb". Arrow. Season 3. Episode 9. The CW.
  21. 1 2 "Canary Cry". Arrow. Season 4. Episode 19. The CW.
  22. "The Recruits". Arrow. Season 5. Episode 2. The CW.
  23. Prudom, Laura (June 21, 2016). "'Arrow' Adds Artemis for Season 5 (EXCLUSIVE)". Variety.
  24. "Vigilante". Arrow. Season 5. Episode 7. The CW.
  25. Matt Mitovich (April 12, 2017). "Arrow's Juliana Harkavy Talks 'Iconic' Canary Gig, Possible Black Siren Brawl". TVLine. Retrieved May 25, 2017.
  26. "Who Are You?". Arrow. Season 5. Episode 10. The CW.
  27. "Second Chances". Arrow. Season 5. Episode 11. The CW.
  28. Black Canary's appearances in Justice League Unlimited at the Grand Comics Database
  29. G-Man (2010-07-24). "Comic-Con: Brave and the Bold & Young Justice Panel". Comic Vine. Retrieved 2010-07-26.
  30. Pepose, David. "NYCC 2010: Young Justice Video Presentation & Q&A Live!" Newsarama. October 9, 2010. Retrieved February 4, 2011.
  31. "Ask Greg Black Canary". s8. 2010-10-06.
  32. McMillan, Graeme (September 26, 2018). "'Birds of Prey': Who Are Huntress and Black Canary?". The Hollywood Reporter. Archived from the original on September 27, 2018. Retrieved September 26, 2018.
  33. "NYCC: Exclusive Birds of Prey Cast Interview!". YouTube. DC. September 8, 2019. Retrieved September 8, 2019.
  34. Chichizola, Corey (October 8, 2019). "What To Expect From Birds of Prey's Black Canary". CinemaBlend. Retrieved January 15, 2020.
  35. Schedeen, Jesse (24 January 2020). "How Birds of Prey's Black Canary Was Inspired by Injustice 2". IGN. Retrieved January 25, 2020.
  36. Kit, Borys (August 20, 2021). "'Birds of Prey' Spinoff In the Works With Misha Green, Jurnee Smollett". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved 2021-08-21.
  37. Harvey, James (August 24, 2023). ""Justice League x RWBY, Part Two" Animated Film Hits Oct. 2023". The World's Finest. Retrieved August 25, 2023.
  38. "Hands on: LEGO Batman 2: DC Super Heroes - GayGamer.net". Archived from the original on 2012-05-25. Retrieved 2012-05-27.
  39. "Injustice 2: Black Canary Gameplay Reveal Trailer - IGN First - IGN".
  40. InjusticeOnline (2019-03-15). "Multiverse White Canary Arena Season For Injustice 2 Mobile". InjusticeOnline. Archived from the original on April 11, 2020. Retrieved 2020-04-23.
  41. McMillan, Graeme (2 March 2016). "DC Entertainment Releases 3-Track EP to Promote 'Black Canary' Comic Book". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved 3 March 2016.
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