I was wondering if anything similar had been done with the death of Iris Allen. With Flash #270, Ross Andru took over as editor, and the style of the book completely changed from Julius Schwartz's more lighthearted fare (although even he brought the book into somewhat dark territory with the possibility of infidelity with the Ringmaster saga some issues before).
So I wonder, who was it who wanted Iris dead? Was it Cary Bates, the writer (for both Andru & Schwarts, as well as for Len Wein who followed, and all the way through the end of Barry's run). Was it Ross Andru (the likeliest culprit, in my mind). Was it the publisher or editor-in-chief at the time? Jenette Kahn, Dick Giordano, Paul Levitz?
Ross Andru edited the book for about a year (issues 270-283), when the rogues pretty much disappeared and crime got more realistic (a ring of heroin smugglers; a Clockwork Orange-like prisoner experiment) and the stakes got higher (Iris is killed, Barry gets dosed). The darker tenor of the book in general, I'm pretty certain Andru is responsible for. But who signed off on offing Iris? Anyone know?
Replies
I do recall Cary Bates had quite a hand in the stories they were telling, well besides obviously, being the writer. I mean as far as the direction of the series. Unless I am misremembering which is always possible with me.
As for the actual death of Iris Allen, I don't believe I've ever read that story, but I got the whole "Trial of the Flash" run dirt cheap, up to the end of the series. It was a chore to get through it, as Cary Bates was allowed to let it drag out far, far, far beyond its natural and proper length. The title was slated to die in tandem with The Flash's death in Crisis On Infinite Earths, so I suppose Bates preferred to extend the story he was already doing rather than invest any energy in other tales before the #350th issue rolled around.
Bob Ingersoll's criticisms in his "The Law Is An Ass" column of the "Trial of the Flash" story were a lot more entertaining than the actual tale.
And now I'm just realizing I never got around to picking up TwoMorrow's Flash Companion. If my question's answered anywhere, it'll be there, I bet.
Bates certainly had an ever-larger hand in the stories -- by the end of the run, he was both writer and editor, IIRC.
Also I think they always planned to use, or least have, Iris coming from the future as an out!
Though I have to say it hasn't aged well for me since then, particularly as I got a law degree between then and now and can see how utterly ridiculous the very premise is, to say nothing of the nitty-gritty details.
As for Iris... the very first Flash comic I ever read was 273, the one just preceding her death. Made a pretty big impact on me at the time.
And yet, somehow, I missed the issue where Iris gets killed. The next issue had a flashback to it -- heck, it's where Barry (and the rest of us) found out for sure that it was true. But it took me a few years to track down the issue with the fatal costume party.