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Template:Use mdy dates Template:Infobox comics character Martin Stein is a fictional character appearing in American comic books published by DC Comics. He is commonly associated with, and sometimes is, the superhero Firestorm.

Stein has made several appearances in DC-related media. He is portrayed by Victor Garber in the Arrowverse and voiced by Stephen Tobolowsky in Justice League Action.

Publication history

He first appeared in Firestorm the Nuclear Man #1 (March 1978), and was created by Gerry Conway and Al Milgrom.[1][2]

Fictional character biography

Martin Stein is an esteemed physicist who created the Hudson Nuclear Power Plant. Following an attack on the plant, Stein and civilian Ronnie Raymond are fused into Firestorm. Due to Stein being unconscious during the accident, Ronnie controls Firestorm's body, with Stein advising him.[1] Stein is initially unaware of their dual identity and unable to remember his actions while transformed before Ronnie informs him of the truth.

After the accident, Firestorm takes to defending New York City from villains. During this time, several supporting characters are introduced: Firestorm's love interest Firehawk and stepmother Felicity Smoak.[3][4][5] After graduating high school, Ronnie enters college in Pittsburgh, where Stein is a professor.

When Conway left the series in 1986, John Ostrander began writing the Firestorm stories. His first major story arc sees Firestorm attempting to convince the United States and the Soviet Union to destroy their nuclear weapons.[6] He later battles Pozhar in Nevada, where an atomic bomb is dropped on them. This forms a new Firestorm, composed of Ronnie and Pozhar and controlled by Stein.[7][8][9]

After Firestorm becomes a Fire Elemental, Martin Stein is separated from the Matrix, but continues to support him.[1] He later becomes the sole Fire Elemental and leaves Earth before returning during Infinite Crisis.[1][10]

In One Year Later, Stein's former assistant Adrian Burroughs / Pupil kidnaps and tortures him before Jason Rusch and Firehawk free him. Later, Shilo Norman informs Stein and Rusch that the Firestorm matrix contains part of the Life Equation.[11] In Brightest Day, Deathstorm kills Stein by turning him into salt.[12]

The New 52

Martin Stein is later resurrected in The New 52 continuity reboot. He is depicted as a scientist who created the "God Particle" and is uninvolved with Ronnie Raymond and Jason Rusch, who obtain the Particle and become Firestorm together.[13][14]

DC Rebirth

Doomsday Clock reveals that Martin Stein is the head of the Department of Metahuman Affairs and deliberately transformed himself and Ronnie Raymond into Firestorm to research metahumans.[15][16] Despite this, the two continue to work together until Lazarus Pit resin corrupts the Firestorm matrix and causes Stein to age rapidly.[17]

Other versions

An alternate universe variant of Martin Stein appears in the "Trinity War" event.[18] This version experimented on humans to unlock the secret of life through death, transforming into Deathstorm and becoming a member of the Crime Syndicate of America.[19] He is killed by Mazahs, who steals his powers.[20]

In other media

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Television

Arrowverse

Template:See also Martin Stein / Firestorm appears in media set in The CW's Arrowverse, portrayed by Victor Garber.[26][27][28]

  • First appearing in the live-action TV series The Flash, this version developed the F.I.R.E.S.T.O.R.M. matrix before he was exposed to dark matter energy amidst the explosion of Harrison Wells' particle accelerator and presumed dead. As a result, Stein became fused with his matrix and Ronnie Raymond. Stein initially holds primary control over their fused form until Team Flash develops a way to safely separate them. Following this, Stein and Raymond master their powers and assist the Flash in fighting the Reverse-Flash until Raymond sacrifices himself to close a singularity that had opened over Central City. Afterward, Stein continues to assist Team Flash until the F.I.R.E.S.T.O.R.M. matrix begins to destabilize without a partner of the same blood type, endangering his life. Eventually, Team Flash find Stein's new partner in Jefferson "Jax" Jackson and the pair leave Central City to master their powers.
  • Stein appears in the animated web series Vixen.[29][23]
  • Stein appears in the live-action TV series Legends of Tomorrow, with Graeme McComb additionally portraying a younger version.[30] In the first season, he and Jax are recruited by Rip Hunter to join his Legends and defeat Vandal Savage. Amidst the team's mission, Stein is captured by and forcibly fused with Valentina Vostok, who intends to use his powers to create a Soviet Firestorm, but he escapes with Jax's help. By the season finale, Stein and Jax develop the ability to transmute matter and use it to foil Savage's plot to undo history. In the second season, Stein helps his teammates combat the Legion of Doom, encounters his past self, and inadvertently causes timeline changes that grant him a daughter named Lily Stein. Despite initially viewing Lily as a time paradox, he eventually comes to accept her. By the third season, Stein has become a grandfather after Lily has a son named Ronnie, prompting Ray Palmer and Team Flash to develop a formula to depower him so he can spend time with his family. During the "Crisis on Earth-X" crossover, Stein is fatally injured while helping the Legends and Earth-1's heroes defeat Nazis from Earth-X and drinks the formula to prevent Jax from dying alongside him.[31]

Video games

References

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External links

Template:Firestorm Template:Justice League characters Template:Navbox Template:The New 52

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 Template:Citation
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  4. "Felicity Smoak" "Comicvine", Retrieved January 17, 2017.
  5. Conway, Gerry. "Nuclear Reactions: Just Your Average Hot-Headed Hero," The Fury of Firestorm #1 (June 1982). DC Comics.
  6. Firestorm (vol. 2) #64. DC Comics.
  7. Firestorm (vol. 2) #67. DC Comics.
  8. Firestorm (vol. 2) #68. DC Comics.
  9. Firestorm (vol. 2) #69. DC Comics.
  10. Johns, Geoff. Infinite Crisis #5 (April 2006). DC Comics.
  11. As seen in Firestorm the Nuclear Man #33. DC Comics.
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  14. The Fury of Firestorm the Nuclear Men #1 (September 2011). DC Comics.
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  18. Justice League (vol. 2) #23
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  20. Forever Evil #7
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  23. 23.0 23.1 Template:Cite web A green check mark indicates that a role has been confirmed using a screenshot (or collage of screenshots) of a title's list of voice actors and their respective characters found in its credits or other reliable sources of information.
  24. Paul Dini (writer); Doug Murphy (director) (November 27, 2016). "Nuclear Family Values". Justice League Action. Season 1, Episode 6. Cartoon Network.
  25. Ernie Altbacker and Jennifer Muro (writers); Shaunt Nigoghossian (director) (September 2, 2017). "Nuclear Family Values". Justice League Action. Season 1, Episode 34. Cartoon Network.
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