Data courtesy of the Grand Comics Database under Creative Commons license.

Issue Details

Issue #1
Published November 1989
Cover Price 2.95 USD; 3.95 CAD
Pages 52
Editing Tony Caputo (Editor in chief); Katherine Llewellyn (Editor)

Cover Details

Characters Ruth Hopkins; Green Hornet I; Kato I
Genre super-hero; crime
Pencils Jim Steranko (painting) (signed)
Inks Jim Steranko (painting) (signed)
Colors Jim Steranko (painting) (signed)
Letters Typeset
Notes Steranko's cover painting was subsequently released as a lithograph; its depiction of the Hornet and Kato with gloveless hands is incorrect, as is the latter's domino mask instead of goggles; Ruth does not wear this shoulder-and-arm-baring dress in the inside story's rooftop climax.

35 page Green Hornet story "My Last Case"

Characters Origin: Green Hornet I [Britt Elijah Reid], Kato I [Ikano Kato]; GA: Daniel Reid, Sr., John [Lone Ranger] Reid, (flashback); Introduction: Dan Reid, Jr., Maggie Reid (GH I's parents), Jack (GH I's brother) & Helen Reid, Tom Reid (GH II's brother), Britt Reid II, Ruth Andrea Hopkins (Reid), Mike Sullivan; Gunnigan (dies); Villain: Gatland Tobias (Introduction, dies); Joey and Leo (Devane), Tobias thugs (Introduction)
Synopsis In his twilight years, Britt Reid I sits in his study and writes his memoirs. He describes his grandfather's ill-fated career as a Texas Ranger, his father's education in journalism and the founding of the Daily Sentinel newspaper. Then Britt himself enters the narrative, and he describes a trip to the Far East during which he met and saved the life of Ikano Kato. The increasing criminal activity found upon their return to The City ultimately leads Britt and Ikano to become the Green Hornet and his associate in 1936. In the autumn of 1945 (the September 1, 1945 surrender of Japan has already formally ended World War II, while Sequence 2 indicates that an event subsequent to this story occurs on December 8, 1945) the Hornet turns the willing-to-testify accountant of mob boss Gatland Tobias over to Police Commissioner Higgins, and privately informs the head cop of his own decision to "retire." However, Tobias has learned that he is dying, and intends to take Britt Reid with him. Done being the Hornet, Reid begins making plans to marry his secretary, Ruth Hopkins, while Kato wishes to return to Japan and help his homeland, now freed from Tojo, recover from the war (it is explained to Ruth at this time that Ikano, with documents arranged by influential friends of the Reids, has been posing as a Filipino to avoid being placed in an internment camp). A few evenings later, Tobias' men attack City Hall. Word reaches the publisher, and he and Ikano hurry to the Sentinel offices, only to find a similar assault has occurred there, with Gunnigan, the editor, killed and Ruth kidnapped in the bargain. A message has been left with Britt's ex-cop bodyguard-turned-reporter Mike Sullivan that Reid had to come to Tobias if he wants to ever see Ruth again, but as their apartment is only a few blocks away, he and Kato decide to send someone else. The Green Hornet and his man invade the building and reach Tobias' penthouse. In the final, hand-to-hand encounter, Gatland rips the mask off the Hornet's face, his surprise at the face he sees allowing Reid to flip him over the edge of the balcony. The career of the first Green Hornet is over.
Genre Crime; super-hero
Script Ron Fortier
Pencils Jeff Butler
Inks David Mowry
Colors Suzanne Dechnik
Letters Dan Nakrosis
Notes 1: Gunnigan, editor of the Daily Sentinel, is a character right out of the original radio series, while Mike Sullivan and Ruth Hopkins are thin paraphrases of its Mike Axford and Lenore "Casey" Case. 2: When Britt puts his fingers on his typewriter's keys, the words "Memoirs Continued..." appear in the art just above the machine, but the account that follows starts with his grandfather and great-uncle as Texas Rangers in the 1870s, leaving one to wonder just how many generations back he began his "memoirs." 3: This account states that Britt's brother married in 1934 and the tour of the Far East took place "the following year" (i.e., 1935) but the more in-depth account in Tales of the Green Hornet, Vol. 2, #1, dates the trip itself to 1934; this gives Ikano Kato a somewhat more plausible amount of time to complete his education and then secretly create the Black Beauty and gas gun). 4: The criminal character Leo will implicitly be given the surname Devane and a prominent position in The City's criminal organizations in the following sequence but is never mentioned again; a Jackknife Devane, given the first name Joey in this series' fifth issue and presumably the Joey in this story, will appear as an aging crime boss in #3.
Reprinted in Green Hornet, The (Now, 1989 series) #1 [2nd Print] [with an additional title page]; in Green Hornet, The (Now, 1990 series) #[nn]

4 page Green Hornet text story "Extract from Britt I's memoirs"

Characters Dan Reid, Jr. (Dies); Britt Reid I; Ikano Kato; Ruth Hopkins Reid; Police Commissioner Higgins; Leo Devane (villain): Oshi Yoshura Kato (Introduction and death); Diana Reid (Introduction); Hayashi Kato (Introduction); Tom Reid; Britt Reid II; Maggie Reid
Synopsis Britt Reid I fills in the gaps between the end of his Green Hornet career in 1945 and the beginning of his successor's, including his marriage, Ikano's return to Japan and marriage, both of them becoming fathers, Dan, Jr.'s 1949 passing and the burial of his ashes alongside his father's grave in a desolate Texas pass (on which occasion Britt revealed to his brother and two nephews that he had been the Green Hornet), and 19-year-old journalism major Britt II telling his uncle that he wants to become the Green Hornet someday. Also mentioned is that Gatland Tobias henchman Leo Devane (presumably the "Leo" from Sequence 1) was released from prison and quickly gained control of The City's criminal element.
Script Ron Fortier
Letters Typeset
Notes 1: In an email (11 July 08) to Ted Watson, Fortier confirmed his authorship of this piece and indicated the second listed reprint. 2: This feature is initially labelled an extract from Britt I's memoirs, describing his 1947-born daughter Diana's "teen years" (by definition, in the 1960s) in a nostalgic past tense; however, by the end it appears to be a private journal entry, describing a clearly 1950s incident (Britt II's announcement) as happening "last night," and then being "signed" with a date of "15 May 1955."
Reprinted in Green Hornet, The (NOW, 1989 series) #1 [2nd print] [expanded with illustrations to 6 pages] in Green Hornet, The (Now, 1990 series) #[nn]

1 page Green Hornet filler "The Reid Family Tree/The Kato Family Tree"

Synopsis A minimal depiction of members of the Reid and Kato families, indicating their biological and marital ties. Twenty-one people are listed, with twelve birth years and two wedding years (both Ikano Kato's) given.
Script Ron Fortier
Letters Typeset
Notes In an email (11 July 08) to Ted Watson, Fortier asserted that he created this feature, and also indicated the last listed reprint; Ikano Kato's first wife is identified here as Oshura, presumably an inadvertent compression of Oshi Yoshura, as given in Sequence 2; the son of Britt II and the former Lenore Case is identified here as Daniel Reid III, but stories consistently give his full name as Daniel John Reid, and he is therefore named after not just the first Dan Reid, but his brother John as well, rendering "III" incorrect; follow-up family tree features in Tales of the Green Hornet, Vol. 2, #2, and The Green Hornet, 1991 series (Vol. 2), #26, would give additional, and sometimes differing, information.
Reprinted in Green Hornet, The (Now, 1989 series) #2; in Green Hornet, The (Now, 1989 series) #3; in Green Hornet, The (Now, 1989 series) #4; in Green Hornet, The (Now, 1990 series) #[nn]

1 page NOW Newsflash promo (ad from the publisher)

Characters Maurice (from Little Monsters)
Synopsis An essay describing NOW's new Green Hornet and Little Monsters comic series, and their releases of Speed Racer videos. Along the left side is a list of nine titles "on sale NOW!" with main creative talent credits and synopses, beneath which is a boxed list of NOW's staff.
Pencils Jeff Laubenstein
Letters Typeset
Notes There is a solid yellow background to this sequence, which appeared on the last interior page of most NOW releases of this cover date; although the title and format of this feature would vary over the remainder of NOW's existence, the staff list would be a consistent presence, with a few exceptions.
Reprinted from Little Monsters (#1?), a headshot of Maurice, in b/w.