. . . . . . . . "Doiby Dickles as he appeared in Green Lantern #3 ; art by Martin Nodell."@en . . "Doiby Dickles"@it . . . . . . . . . . . "Charles \"Doiby\" Dickles \u00E8 un personaggio immaginario della DC Comics. Fu la spalla di Alan Scott, la prima Lanterna Verde. Doiby (\"Derby\" pronunciato con il forte accento di Brooklyn) lavora come tassista per la Apex Broadcasting Company, dove Alan Scott \u00E8 impiegato."@it . . . . . . . . "Charles \"Doiby (Derby)\" Dickles is a fictional character from DC Comics. He was the original sidekick for Alan Scott (the first Green Lantern), appearing in comic book stories starring that hero from 1941 to 1949. The character was created by writer Bill Finger and artist Irwin Hasen. In an interview, Hasen said: I got it from the actor, Edward Brophy, who was an Irish detective before the World War in the 1930s Warner Bros. movies. He was an overweight little taxicab driver with a little derby and a cigar, and what an unlikely assistant for a guy like the Green Lantern! It was ridiculous. Kurt Mitchell and Roy Thomas wrote that Doiby was \"the first of the comic relief sidekicks that came to define the [All-American] approach to super-heroics in the early '40s\"."@en . . "Doiby Dickles"@en . "All-American Comics #27"@en . . "Charles \"Doiby\" Dickles \u00E8 un personaggio immaginario della DC Comics. Fu la spalla di Alan Scott, la prima Lanterna Verde. Doiby (\"Derby\" pronunciato con il forte accento di Brooklyn) lavora come tassista per la Apex Broadcasting Company, dove Alan Scott \u00E8 impiegato."@it . . . . "Use of a pipe-wrench as a weapon"@en . . . . . . . "Charles \"Doiby \" Dickles"@en . . . "8734"^^ . . . "Charles \"Doiby (Derby)\" Dickles"@en . . . . . . . . . . . "Doiby Dickles"@en . . . . "2260959"^^ . . "Skilled street fighter and driver"@en . . . . . . . . "Old Justice"@en . . . . . . "1111695072"^^ . . . . . . "Charles \"Doiby (Derby)\" Dickles is a fictional character from DC Comics. He was the original sidekick for Alan Scott (the first Green Lantern), appearing in comic book stories starring that hero from 1941 to 1949. The character was created by writer Bill Finger and artist Irwin Hasen. In an interview, Hasen said: I got it from the actor, Edward Brophy, who was an Irish detective before the World War in the 1930s Warner Bros. movies. He was an overweight little taxicab driver with a little derby and a cigar, and what an unlikely assistant for a guy like the Green Lantern! It was ridiculous."@en . . . . . "Doiby Dickles"@en . . .