It brought back Robin, Wonder Girl, and Kid Flash, and teamed them up with new characters Cyborg, Raven, and Starfire, along with previously-established character Beast Boy, now renamed Changeling. Written by Marv Wolfman and drawn by George Perez, this version of the series was the most successful and the most iconic (as well as being the version the 2003 animated series is most based on). In the Bronze Age, the series returned as The New Teen Titans, launched in 1980. Eventually, though, it was cancelled in 1973, brought back in 1976, and re-cancelled in 1978. Nevertheless, it was lighthearted and fun. The book depended heavily on Totally Radical, with Fad Super villains like the Mad Mod and Ding Dong Daddy and hamfisted attempts to address the issues of the day. The issue sold notably well, and, after a few more tryouts and the addition of Wonder Girl (despite that she was actually intended to be the original Wonder Woman as a girl, and not a contemporary sidekick) and Speedy, became an ongoing series. The original series began back in The Silver Age of Comic Books, with a one-shot story in The Brave and the Bold #54 (July, 1964), where three Sidekicks, Robin, Aqualad, and Kid Flash, teamed up. Often referred to as a " Justice Little League," though more often as a "Junior Justice League." The most famous team of teenage Super Heroes in The DCU (but not the first). Wonder Girl, Starfire, Robin, Cyborg, Changeling, Raven, Kid Flash
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