ĪēŅ¹¾ē³”

Alumni Life

Superhero Alumnus

Image
Black Ligtning Comic Cover

Jefferson ā€œJeffā€ Pierce, BSE ā€™69, Cleveland, OH, was a Golden Flash before he became DC Comicsā€™ Black Lightning. A Cleveland native, he enrolled at ĪēŅ¹¾ē³” in pursuit of a teaching degree. Pierceā€™s athletic abilities landed him a spot in the 1968 Mexico City Olympics, where he won gold in the decathlon. After this feat, he returned to ĪēŅ¹¾ē³” and completed a Bachelor of Science in education. Upon graduating, he became a teacher and later principal of Garfield High School in the south side of Metropolis. 

Pierce instilled a sense of purpose in his students, pushing them to realize their full potential. But it became increasingly difficult to teach in a town riddled with violence and crime, so he took matters into his own hands. Born with metahuman abilities to manipulate and generate electricity, Pierce had suppressed that side of himself until the time came to use his talents to protect his students and his town. His crime-fighting alter ego, Black Lightning, served justice wherever he was needed most. 

He later became one of the co-founding members of the Outsiders superhero team, and he also served as Secretary of Education under then-US President Lex Luthor. After resuming his life as a teacher/vigilante, Pierce continues to aid his fellow neighbors in the fight against criminals and villains looking to bully and take advantage of others.

Behind Black Lightning:

Jefferson Pierce (aka Black Lightning) was created by Tony Isabella, who has always been a lover of comics and aspired to write them himself. While he currently resides in Medina, Ohio, he grew up on the west side of Cleveland, which was quite segregated at the time. During his teen years, he was involved in a comic book club and soon realized that his Black friends werenā€™t well-represented within the stories they loved.

ā€œI always thought it was unfair that my Black friends didnā€™t have more characters like them. So, I told myself that if I got into comics I would try to work on, and create, characters of color,ā€ Isabella says. ā€œIt was one of the things I wanted to do with my career.ā€

He eventually found his way to comic writing while working at The Plain Dealer in Cleveland. His industry connections led him to an opportunity at Marvel, one of the biggest comic book publications. He got his start writing for some of Marvelā€™s most renowned characters, including Spider-Man, Ghost Rider, Moon Knight, the Avengers, Daredevil, the Fantastic Four, Black Goliath and Luke Cage.

Image
Black Lightning Comic Panel

Isabella later moved to DC Comics where he created the character of Black Lightning, who has been an icon in Black history and pop culture figures since his debut in 1977. Isabella chose ĪēŅ¹¾ē³” as his characterā€™s alma mater because he wanted Pierce to be from Cleveland, Ohio, and he thought ĪēŅ¹¾ē³” was an Ohio school everyone would recognize. However, his characterā€™s lightning symbol and powers had no connection to ĪēŅ¹¾ē³”ā€™s Golden Flashes.

He wrote Black Lightningā€™s short-lived 1970s and 1990s series and returned to the character in 2017 with the publication of the limited series Black Lightning: Cold Dead Hands. A Black Lightning TV series ran for four seasons on the CW Network, from 2018-2021. Isabella and artist Trevor Von Eeden received creator credit on each episode.

While Isabella has written for characters in many comics, he says Black Lightning holds a special place in his heart. ā€œThere are very few comics Iā€™ve written where I havenā€™t liked the character. But Black Lightning is always my favorite.ā€

Read more about Black Lightning and creator Tony Isabella .


BACK TO SPRING/SUMMER 2022