Archive for May, 2009

Steve Rogers: Former Sissy Boy?

Sunday, May 31st, 2009

captainamerica225Billed on the cover of Captain America #225 (9/1978) as “The Secret of Cap’s Other Life!”, this story written by Steve Gerber and drawn by Sal Buscema and Mike Esposito intended to add a layer to Steve Rogers’ transformation from a 4-F Army reject into the stalwart sentinel of American Liberty ®. A blurb on the cover promises “a Captain America you’ve never seen before!” and it was kind of true if by “Captain America” Marvel meant “Steve Rogers” because as a text box on the splash page proclaims this script concludes the “Search for Steve Rogers”. Never having been even a medium Cap fan means I’ve only got a few handfuls of his comics and I don’t think I have any others in this storyline. Plus it’s too much to dig through a sizeable chunk of comics in one closet to find the right box to check, so I’m content to take the “Slay, Monstrobot” blogger’s word when he writes that Cap “suddenly realized he had no memories of his life before he took the super-soldier serum.”

I suppose this was a late 70s version of deconstructing the superhero, and was maybe even a good read back in its day, but I agree with the blogger that this Cap was a whiney, brooding dope. The opening page shows Cap from the back overlooking the wreckage of a passenger train as the survivors either huddle together or are carried on stretchers by EMTs. And he just stands there lost in guilt because last issue’s villain attacked the train to get at Cap! That’s right, helplessly wallowing in guilt is the only response in an emergency situation. And Nick Fury isn’t any better! Showing up to surprise Cap, who isn’t so happy to see the cigar chomping, fellow World War II vet, he points out to Captain Mopey his obsession with a missing past blinds him to the present (especially those train wreck survivors about 40 yards away).

As our self-absorbed pair fly back to SHIELD headquarters without so much as an encouraging word to the crash survivors, Cap informs Fury that he thinks a scientist named Mason Harding can recover memories from Cap’s youth. Sounds good? Not really. See, the mustachioed Harding was coerced back in Captain America #199 into using his genius to create the “Mad Bomb” (a weapon Dick Cheney must wish the Bush administration had) while his daughter was held captive by “The Elite.” Now there’s a frightening name. Despite his doubts, Fury just wants to be Cap’s BFF again and gives in to Cap’s request to arrange a meeting with Harding at the federal penitentiary where Harding is held. In no time at all, Cap is spilling the story of his odd amnesia to Harding. Mr. “Mad Scientist under coercion” tries to hypnotize Harding Cap, but it’s useless because Rogers has been trained to resist it.

Harding calls out “Captain?” in an attempt to console the hero. It only frustrates Cap, who blurts out that his name is Steven Grant Rogers while punching his fist into the stone wall.So much for anger management, Cap! All is not lost for poor Steve though! The scientist confides with his now BFF Steve (watch out, Nick!) that he was working on a “different sort of mind probe–for humanitarian purposes” (always for humanitarian purposes!) before being forced to create the Mad Bomb. That’s all a desperate Cap needs to hear! Before you can say “Bucky Barnes is alive!”, Cap is using his superhero clout to get Harding put into his custody.

Flash forward several hours to a “laboratory in what passes as rural Connecticut.” Cue the typical visuals! Mad scientist’s white lab coat–check! Lair filled with bulky machinery meant to look impressive–check! Non-ergonomically designed seat in yellow (Hey! It’s Metropolitan Home’s color of the year) complete with arm restraints–check! Harding straps a buff Cap into the chair. A transparent helmet of sorts is lowered around Cap’s shoulders. Harding twists the dial. Energy crackles around Cap’s head (oh, how dramatic!) and the memory centers in Cap’s brain are stimulated!

Ooh, pretty colors and shapes crystallize into images of a young blond boy hitting a home run and being cheered by the spectators. Shades of mom, apple pie, and oh yeah, baseball! The boy looks like a young Steve, but no! Pan out and another younger, blond boy standing next to his father comes into focus. This squirt of a boy is Steve, the future Captain America. In the flashback we learn young Stevie isn’t a budding athletic jock into outdoor sports. The only outdoor thing this kid is interested in is plein-air art making, much to the delight of his mother Elizabeth. Oh, the sheer horror for dear old dad Walter who’s not thrilled one bit.
capsissy04
Walter was more than a little embarrassed and determined to make Steve into a proper son, symbolized with a little game of all-American catch between he and his two boys. An energetic pitch  from papa Rogers lands right on Steve’s head, knocking him to the ground. Older brother Mike just laughs and taunts while their mother tries to soothe everything over, and dear old dad just stands glowering in disapproval.

capsissy05The caption in the panel with Walter throwing the ball to Steve is interesting. It reads “Walter Rogers wasn’t a bad father–just anxious to see his sons grow up tall–and straight.” Emphasis from the comic. A few other emboldened words describing Steve stand out: “resigned, artistic, scrawny, sensitive.” Was emphasizing “straight” a hint that Gerber wanted the reader to think Walter was concerned Steve was a sissy, an Ethel Merman fan in the making? Now to be clear, at no point does Gerber ever use the word sissy, but it at least seems inferred to me. Maybe it seems that way because I can relate. A good part of my childhood was spent doing the same solitary activities that fictional young Steve did. And like Steve, I was the sensitive one, though I sure as hell didn’t shout it at my father. Being sensitive I also knew at the age of 5 that I was different from everyone around me, and in whatever way it was, it had to remain a secret. Only that didn’t work so well because the next year I heard my beloved grandmother tell my mom to cut the apron strings or she would have a sissy on her hands. And that’s the first word I had for being gay.

Just like any other wanker of a father, Walter’s apprehension only grows over time. In another panel Walter confronts his sullen wife. “It isn’t normal!” he barks. “He has no friends, no interest in girls or sports! He spends all his time locked up in there [Steve's room] with his paints and books! I worry about him, Elizabeth.” Steve overhears his father’s comments and has a few choice words of his own to shout at his father. Stand up for yourself, little Stevie!
capsissy03
Flash forward a couple years and brother Mike has graduated from the Naval Academy in Annapolis. Steve is supportive and happy to see Mike. Bitter Walter can’t leave things alone. He shouts at Steve for being a pacifist and his plans to study art. This little incident  is the last straw for Steve, who decides on the spot to get an early start on his new life in Manhattan.

A change is exactly what Steve needed. He dives right into academics, painting, and whiling away hours talking about art and politics at cafes in Greenwich Village. You know Greenwich Village! Yep, the same New York neighborhood where the Stonewall Riots occurred. In the context of this story those events were 17 years in the future, though nine years in the past publication wise. It’s a great life till that fateful morning of the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor. Steve’s fear for Mike, who was stationed there, is confirmed when he calls home by the sound of his sobbing mother. To make things worse, Walter is quietly consumed in anger and despair and refuses to talk with Steve.

Steve wanders the streets, settling in a movie theater to watch newsreels of the war in Europe that drive him to the realization that he needs to do something about “put[ting] a halt to the lunacy that’s gripped this planet–again! As one of the sane people–I’m obligated, like it or not!” Yikes! Talk about delusional thinking. And maybe that’s what Steve thought for a bit too because it took him a week of “agonized soulsearching” to appear at a recruitment center. And here’s where the inserted Steve Rogers story matches up with Cap’s time-honored origin: Rogers is still rejected because of a heart murmur and being underweight. An officer who appears to understand Steve’s frustrastion (he reeks of opportunism to me) proposes an option to Steve. Of course, it’s the super-soldier experiment that turns a frail Rogers into America’s avenger. Reliving the moment, Cap yells out, “They killed my brother–made a mockery of my ideals! I’ll–risk-anything! ANYTHING!” Oh noes! Much to Fury’s and Harding’s dismay, Captain America has inexplicably reverted to his original 98 pound, help-me-Charles-Atlas build. And Cap won’t be too happy about it either when he regains consciousness!

Don’t worry. Really. Though Cap spends most of the next issue running around in a saggy uniform while fighting some stupid robot named “Impact”, writer Roger McKenzie returns Cap to his muscle bound physique by having rage reactivate the serum. That’d have to be some nasty stuff to stick around in your body all those decades. The important part is Cap could stop moping around and put that amnesia nonsense behind just in time to deal with next issue’s menace!

Did Steve Gerber mean to imply in this story that a young Steve Rogers was anything but straight? Probably not. Even if he had intended to do just that, three factors would make it impossible for Gerber to come right out and proclaim it. First, Jim Shooter was Editor in Chief at the time (Shooter’s infamous Hulk story would appear in 1980) and comics were still subject to Comics Code censorship. And fans just wouldn’t have stood for this kind of character makeover. As for me, I like to think that maybe Steve Rogers could’ve been gay, or at least a sissy, and not just because of the anecdotal bits related above. The idea, no, the reality, that patriotism is independent of sexual orientation is especially relevant at this time when LGBT advocates are working to have “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell” repealed in order to let LGBT people openly serve our country.

Shatterstar

Tuesday, May 19th, 2009

shatterstar2Shatterstar’s origin is a mystery even to himself. When he first appears, he is assumed to be an artificial life-form engineered by the rulers of the Mojoverse (about a century in the future, as opposed to the Mojoverse which co-exists with the contemporary Earth dimension, making him a time traveler as well as a dimension-hopper) and educated in blood sports before becoming a warrior of the Cadre Alliance Rebellion, and he claims to have had no parents, only a “gestation chamber.” However, later storylines indicate that although Shatterstar indeed originated in the Mojoverse, his soul somehow came to inhabit (either since shortly after his arrival in the Earth dimension or only comparatively recently) the body of a comatose young man named Benjamin Russell. To complicate matters further, it has also been alleged that Shatterstar was not created in a laboratory at all but is the son of the X-Men Longshot and Dazzler.

In any event, pursued by enemies when he refused to serve the rulers of his world, Shatterstar journeyed from the Mojoverse to the Earth dimension and became a founding member of the mutant team known as X-Force. Although unfamiliar with human customs and initially fully prepared to slay any opponents, Shatterstar adapts to the life of a super-hero and his warrior prowess proves invaluable to his teammates. Eventually, however, Shatterstar becomes dissatisfied with his lot and sets out on his own, hooking up with fellow X-Force alumnus and best friend Rictor to help him shut down his family’s criminal activities; the pair continue to operate as partners in this effort.

Although Shatterstar was revealed to have a designated “genetic bond mate,” Windsong, in the Mojoverse, he later admitted that he has never felt any stirrings of romantic love and has long felt incomplete, even in his native dimension. He subsequently rescued a young man from what was clearly a gay-bashing incident, suggesting that the writers were toying with the notion of revealing that Shatterstar was gay, but this subplot (along with a similarly “adult” one in which his teammate Meltdown tried to help a young prostitute escape her situation) was scrapped, and the “Benjamin Russell” revelation leaves us to wonder, among many other things, if it was Russell, not Shatterstar, who was gay. This is most unfortunate, since the notion of a gay extradimensional artificial life-form with several Christian teammates (Baptist Cannonball and Catholics Sunspot and Siryn) has enormous potential—even if a Christian accepts that homosexuality is not part of “God’s plan” for this dimension, is it justifiable to assume that the same is true of the Mojoverse? How do arguments about what is “natural” and what is not relate to an artificial life-form whose design specifications are far more accessible? But it was evidently not to be. However, as noted, Shatterstar is currently partnered with Rictor, with whom he grew very close and who, Latino “machismo” expectations to the contrary, admitted to Shatterstar that he too was a virgin. It is not impossible that the two have in fact become lovers, but this remains to be seen.

Shatterstar possesses enhanced strength, speed, agility, and reflexes as a result of the extradimensional genetic engineering that created him. He is an excellent strategist and master of a variety of fighting styles. His bones are hollow, making him far lighter than he looks and further increasing his athletic skill. He customarily wields two swords and on occasion carries other weaponry as well. Shatterstar also has the mutant ability to emit a destructive vibratory pulse through the metal of his sword, but he rarely uses this power, prefering to rely upon his battle prowess.

rictor031His real name is Gaveedra-7 and may also be known as Benjamin Russell. The character has a mobile base of operations, having come from the Mojoverse to Earth 616 and Professor X’S School for Gifted youngsters. Shatterstar was presumably outed in X-Force #43 and #49 but is confirmed to have been romantically involved with Rictor in the current volume of X-Factor #45, after having been reintoduced in #43 (skipping #44).

Please read Rictor’s entry .

© and ® Marvel Comics. Used without permission.

Rictor

Tuesday, May 19th, 2009

Julio Estaban Richter was born into a family whose business was to smuggle guns and weapons. He was unaware of the nature of family business until a rival criminal leader abducted the young boy. Julio also witnessed his father’s death as a consequence of an arms deal gone wrong which involved the mutant villain Stryfe. More trauma struck the young boy when a militant group The Right abducted him and wired him to a machine in an attempt to level the city of San Francisco. The then current X-Factor team who took him and trained him rescued Julio. The Right attacked a second time during which time X-Force aide Cameron Hodge’s duplicity was revealed. Rictor contemplated killing himself before he and his teammates were rescued.

Rictor’s history partially reflects the expansion of the X-Men franchise, notably in his involvement with various teams, including X-Factor (Investigations and the original incarnation), X-Corporation, X-Force, Weapon: PRIME, and New Mutants. My unfamiliarity with Rictor’s complicated record leads me to suggest to interested readers to check Wikipedia’s entry for detailed accounts.

There are two reasons for the character’s inclusion on this site. The first is his intense personal friendship with Shatterstar, which had many gay readers wondering if their friendship didn’t include a sexual aspect and using their imaginations to fill in the blanks. Most recently in X-Factor #14, a conversation in a bar over beers happens between Rictor and Jamie Madrox. The subject of Jamie’s dupes having sex with both Monet and Theresa (Siryn) in a previous issue has come up when they both agree to change the subject.

Jamie asks about Rictor’s involvement with Quicksilver, whose motives may be questionable. Rictor replies: “Nothin’s ‘up.’ Dude’s got a lot of interesting stuff to say, that’s all. Keeps talking ‘bout giving me my powers back. Not sure if that’s on the level, though. So, I’ve been, y’know…feeling him out. No big deal. It ain’t like I’m sleeping with him…anymore.” Rictorassures Jamie it was a joke, not because of the “guy/guy thing” but because Quicksilver is “semi-evil.” Jamie goes on to bemoan the moral of the X-Factor members. Rictor comments how they’ve put the “fun in dysfunctional” and reminds him that at least Pietro and he aren’t an item. Jamie comments: “I mean, God knows you wouldn’t want to make Shatterstar jealous.” And the spit take is repeated, only this time with Jamie as the recipient.

It has been established that Rictor has had romantic relationships with women, Rahne being one of them. Series writer Peter David commented on the above scene in an interview with LiveWire. The comment below from David is excerpted from this interview.

“I have much more fun tweaking the fans than actually spelling anything out. If I definitely … I certainly don’t think we could say at this point that Rictor is definitively gay. I think we could make the argument that he’s bi, but I don’t see the point at this juncture in spelling it out – not because of any sense of homophobia or anything like that but out of a sense that I think it’s more entertaining and more thought-provoking if we keep it ambiguous.”

Writer Peter David reintroduced Shatterstar into the Cortex subplot with a last page entrance in X-Factor #43. Shatterstar skips #44. The reappearance fueled speculation for some fans that David would resolve long standing speculation that Rictor and Shatterstar had been romantically involved. The kiss between the two men in #45 confirms this.
rictor03
Please read Shatterstar’s entry.

As a mutant, Rictor had the ability to create and release seismic energy. This power was used to shatter or crumble objects or to induce earthquake like effects in larger objects. Rictor lost his power from events that occurred during Marvel’s HOUSE OF M mini series

Rictor first appeared in X-Factor #17 (vol 1) and is arguably outed in X-Factor #14 (vol 2).

Please refer to “The Pairing” for an in depth view on the relationship between Rictor and Shatterstar.

rictor02

© and ® Marvel Comics. Used without permission.

Power Girl #1

Friday, May 15th, 2009

powergirlWriters: Justin Gray and Jimmy Palmiotti

Artist: Amanda Conner

Colorist: Paul Mounts

DC, $2.99

Oh, look! A review for a comic over a week old. Shame on me!

Power Girl is one of those characters that readers tend to find problematic. If it isn’t her convoluted back story then it’s her amply endowed breasts which have become more ample and endowed over the years, especially depending on the artist. And there are probably readers who have it out for her on both counts. Oh, and let’s not forget the tit-window controversy! Why some gay men love the tit window version of her costume is beyond me. I can take it or leave it.

So what do you do if you’re given the character to write in her first solo outing since a four part mini series dated way back in 1988? You do what Gray and Palmiotti do. Give the knotted up history a brief acknowledgement consisting of one page and some interior monologue and then hit the ground running along with artist Amanda Connor.

The writers’ premise is to give PG (sorry, “Pee-Gee” just grates on me for some reason) a fresh start and the iconic immigrant trappings of the Statue of Liberty and New York City are the thematic backdrop for this refugee from another world and mangled continuity. Just ignore the fact that she’s been on this earth for however many years, and I’m willing to do that because I’ve enjoyed many of this writing teams’ past stories and I just like the character.

Power Girl is flying around Manhattan and the action gets rolling when scads of robots with a semi retro flair, and nicely drawn by Connor, drop out of a threatening mass of whirling clouds to threaten New York residents. They’re just the most visible threat as PG’s superhearing picks up screams and gun shots from across the five bouroughs.It’s “rock-’em, sock-’em” time but the robotic horde is holding its own because our spitfire heroine is simultaneously assailed by a psychic attack. Turns out the Ultra Humanite (sporting the shaggy white gorilla body) is behind all the nefarious deeds. He has grandiose plans for both Manhattan and Power Girl, and oh no! she’s trapped and put in an impossible position!

There’s more to the story than punching robots and a power mad human brain wearing a gorilla body. In her non-cape wearing life, Karen’s been busy buying back her Starrware company and finding the right people to transform it into a cutting edge nanotech powerhouse. A company takes people and Karen’s newest recruit is brilliant and awkward Dexter Nichols, who can’t stop himself from stealing a look at his new employer’s breasts. Without so much as a turn of her head, Karen gently points Desxter’s eyes toward her face. This scene is one of two that addresses PG’s breasts. The other deals with a pompous, arrogant researcher that she’s interviewing for her company, and Karen’s collection of snow globes which is pulled off fairly cleveryly I think by Conner’s skill. Truth be told though I hope the team doesn’t resort to using her breasts as a frequent device. If they do, I’d think at some point it would be true for PG to get angry after so many good-naturedly defused incidents. Rounding out the supporting cast for now is the youngish assistant Simon and the mile-a-minute-talking Marie Lieb who seems to be a consultant of some kind.

As for continuity, I certainly hope that Gray and Palmiotti avoid getting trapped in past details and possible future confabulations because I honestly think to go that route would prove to be weightier than her two-dimensional breasts. If I want to flagellate myself with continuity I’ll pull out previous relevant PG storylines followed up with some Claremont pieces till I rend my garments and gnash my teeth. Just take the parts of her past that make sense and build on them. For instance, re-establishing her Karen Starr identity and buying back her former company Starrware. She can’t just lounge around JSA headquarters all the time without being driven crazy by Maxine and her pet monkey, can she? Well, Karen may not be left alone by animals as there’s a cantankerous looking cat slinking around her unpacked office as at least a nod to the one she had back in the JLI/JLE days.

As for the art, I think Amanda Conner is both a good artist and a savvy choice. She’s good with facial expressions and characterization. Connor’s action scenes and layouts have a bit of an “old school” feel to me, perhaps in part because her style falls more into the cartoonist camp. That’s a positive attribute in my opinion because it helps to establish a fun dynamic as well as keep Karen’s breasts from upstaging her in her own series as a photo realistic style would almost guarantee. “The Melons of Mass Distraction guest-starring Power Girl!” Maybe on some other earth or in the minds of some straight fan boys.

It’s a good start to new series for a character afflicted with confusing continuity. Give it a shot if you haven’t already. I give it four stars.

Seven Miles A Second

Thursday, May 14th, 2009

sevenmilescoverWhen I was told I’d contracted this virus it didn’t take me long to realize I’d contracted a diseased society as well.
- David Wojnarowicz

Seven miles a second is the speed which an object needs to achieve to break free of the Earth’s gravity. It’s also the title of artist David Wojnarowicz’s graphic novel published by Vertigo in 1996, four years after the artist’s death from AIDS. This was Wojnarowicz’s sole venture into the comics medium, which likely makes his name unfamiliar to most comics readers.

The idea for the project came about around 1988. It was conceived as collaboration with James Romberger, with David’s writing and Romberger’s art. Romberger and his wife, Marguerite Van Cook, the book’s colorist, were friends of David’s. The story was unfinished at the time of his death until, as the story goes, Marguerite Van Cook, James’ wife, while using a Tarot deck claimed to receive an emphatic message from David (“Finish the fucking comic!”).

My copy of SEVEN MILES was snatched up on Ebay a while back. Back in 1996 I recall looking at it in a comic shop, but decided it was too dangerous. I’d recently been diagnosed with full-blown AIDS, and life as I knew it was rapidly disintegrating. In order to keep what little amount of sanity was left I censored any mention of death.

In attempting to write about Wojnarowicz’s life as depicted in the graphic novel I’ve tried to buffer myself from being overly affected, but it’s useless. I’ve been drawn in and the artist’s words and art have led – are still leading me somewhere. My attention has been primarily focused on Wojnarowicz, and I’ve rather unintentionally neglected talking much about the art. Romberger’s style amply brings to life together the external nightmares, angst and inner turmoil of David’s life. Van Cook’s eclectic, often acid-like colors bring a coherent and surreal feel to the art and story.

You may ask what the motivation is to write about a little-known, out of print graphic novel that’s currently fetching six to eight times its cover price when I was hesitant even to read it initially? David’s story is part of our history and culture. It illustrates the human ability to persist, if not thrive at least creatively, despite adversity. It’s a personal snapshot documentary of the horrors of the first ten to twelve years of the AIDS crisis that shouldn’t be forgotten as more people are infected with HIV every year, and ads from Big Pharma are intentionally designed to appear as if living with a relentless virus is a breeze. It isn’t that HIV isn’t manageable. It can be. AIDS – or at the very least the treatment drugs – have been turned into a lucrative commodity, and so its visual representations are often propagandized to give the impression your life will like a sunny and happy day at the beach or park. Side-effects notwithstanding, drugs are wondrous, until people won’t be able to obtain them because the systems in place are overwhelmed or future funding is jeopardized.

And it’s very possible that personal guilt may be the impetus in writing. That would be another, less interesting story though.

It would be impossible to recount all the events of the artist’s brief 37-year life within its 64 pages. Instead it’s composed of excerpts, memories, nightmares and fantasies of his waking and dreaming worlds, insights, and invectives against social apathy and discrimination. I have tried to fill in the blanks with my admittedly limited knowledge where appropriate.

David was born in 1954 in Red Bank, New Jersey, not all that far from New York City where he would later live and briefly attend the High School for Performing Arts. The Wojnarowicz family was dysfunctional; his father was extremely violent and physically and sexually abusive to his son. Yielding to the pre-invented existence went against his very nature. As “Thirst” and “Stray Dogs” in the book show, David took to the streets of New York, accepting prostitution, drugs, uncertainty, humiliation, and indignation over the abusive reality of his home life.

“Thirst,” the opening sequence illustrates an incident that happened in Times Square. This is not the sanitized Times Square that Rudy Giuliani had forcefully repackaged as safe for families that we know today. This is Times Square in the 1970s, a place for unseemly prostitution, where a twelve-year old David recounts frequently moving about to different spots to avoid attracting the attention of vice cops yet still hoping to find tricks like the seemingly innocuous balding, middle-aged businessman who propositions him.

They duck inside a food court; it’s one method to stop vice cops who might be trailing. I wonder if this could be the same one on 42nd Street. Sitting at a table, the man rambles on about his adult son’s problems and his reluctance to get involved and otherwise self-absorbed and oblivious not only of the prostitute sitting a few tables away with her hands and arms bandaged and bleeding, lamenting about not wanting her children to see her like this, but also of young David whose gums are bleeding while he smokes a cigarette. Later in a room at the nearby “Lucky Motel,” David is persuaded to watch through a hole in a communal door while a man and woman have sex. Despite his hustling experiences, he’s not so jaded that his curiosity isn’t piqued. His inquisitiveness turns to revulsion when confronted by the fresh scars marking the woman’s stomach and the man’s complete emotional detachment from her pain, he simply looks at the time on his watch, perhaps to measure whether he got full value for his money. David recoils from the sight of her scars, saying he thinks he’s going to vomit. The businessman simply pays him an extra $20 and instructs him to forget about it. Money used as a bribe, a salve for conscience and lack of compassion, money affording the means to continue the businessman’s sexual forays while keeping the fragile lies of his public and family life intact. Like the scarred woman, David’s pain and humanity are unrecognized by the older man, a family man, someone who should be trustworthy and loving, as his own father should have been. These scarred women are omens of David’s future.

sevenmiles1“Stray Dogs” picks up David’s life on the street with re-telling a nightmare. A giant wasp looms over a large group of well-dressed, socially elite people sitting down at a dinner party. It lunges and David jumps into an abandoned car to hide just before everything shifts. Inside a neglected, but elegant building, perhaps an abandoned cathedral, the party guests are transformed into a crowd of filthy and undistinguished street people strewn about the car. A dangerous and handsome knave attracts David. They lift the car through a doorway and drive into a storm filled countryside where they embrace and kiss. David wakes from the dream; the surroundings as grim as those in the dream. The boy from the dream, Willy, sleeps behind him on a concrete stoop. Willy is his only friend and protector on the street. It’s been their only sleep in a days-long jag of drugs and no food, and David believes he may be hallucinating. Desperation leads them to a Salvation Army where a morally condescending officer gives them a voucher for two nights at a sleazy motel and meal tickets. The food is rotten, the motel bedding deplorable and infested. Another night on the streets is safer.

David wrote that Willy was in love with him. He didn’t feel the same for Willy, but there was a need for companionship, for someone else to undergo the same experiences. One night David slips away from Willy to hustle some money for food, despite knowing Willy would fly into a rage if he knew how the money was obtained. Despite David’s skeletal appearance, an older man takes David back to his hotel. He strips and his mind starts to cloud over from the drug he realized too late was slipped into his soda. The man ties David up, and while he abuses him throughout the night David dreams of being on a subway platform late at night. A strange man appears on the tracks to stop an oncoming train. The man turns into a black dog, fearful and looking for an escape as three cops emerge from nowhere. They fire their guns, mortally wounding the animal. Lying frightened on its side, it can’t react as one of the dream cops digs his hand into the gash, the look in the dog’s eyes changing from terror to ecstasy as it dies. It’s clear from the juxtaposition in the art of scenes from the dream and images of David’s unconscious body that he is the dying dog. He wakes alone at dawn, head pounding, and manages to untie the ropes. A mystery: the bed sheet stained with blood, but he isn’t bleeding.

The remainder of this chapter chronicles David and Willy’s spree of abandon. A failed attempt at robbery with stolen cleavers, a game of throwing wino bottles at one another from opposite sides of the street, a primal urge to shatter every piece of phone booth glass in a wide swath of Manhattan. One night desperate for sleep they show up at the door of a transgendered man. David’s awakened by the man’s crying because there’s no money to continue the sexual transformation he’s begun; his boyfriend gone into hiding because of an accidental death in a botched robbery attempt to get money.

Wojnarowicz’s life as a hustler began at the age of nine and lasted till he was 17. Of this time he wrote: “…looking for the weight of some man to lie across me to replace the nonexistent hugs and kisses from my mom and dad.”

David left New York, probably alone. He traveled however he could and before the end of the 70s he’d been across the US, staying for a time in San Francisco. He managed to travel to Mexico and France, and worked in farming near the Canadian border before returning to New York some time in 1979.

Not incorporated in SEVEN MILES is David’s art making. It began in 1972 when a friend gave him a stolen camera. He pocketed film from drugstores so he could photograph despite having no money to develop the film. This unknown number of film rolls were stored in bus-station lockers, and then lost to David, likely destroyed rather than developed by a curious person. A super-8 movie camera, making a short film titled “Heroin,” and a 35mm camera became his methods of making art. His fascination with scandalous 19th century French poet Arthur Rimbaud became the theme for his first serious photos, “Arthur Rimbaud in New York.” Around this time, David and Peter Hujar met. Twenty years his senior, Hujar was an established, sought after photographer, and the two men became lovers. As far as I can tell they never collaborated though David probably came to the attention of the New York art circle sooner than he might have otherwise.

Wojnarowicz had solo art exhibitions in the early 80s and his first major exhibit in 1985 at the Institute of Contemporary Art at Philadelphia’s University of Pennsylvania. New York’s Whitney Museum invited David to participate in its 1987 and 1991 Biennials, considered one of the premier American art shows with considerable trend-setting influence. David’s art up to this point could be characterized as either filled with sensual abandon or despair, showing an affinity for the works of favorite writers and social outlaws Arthur Rimbaud and Jean Genet.

Unfortunately, Hujar died from AIDS in 1987 and David was diagnosed with it the same year. As a consequence of these two events, David became one of, if not the first American artist to address the AIDS epidemic, transforming his art which he now referred to as “post-diagnostic art” into scathing and outraged commentaries against an indifferent government and the religiously self-righteous. Wojnarowicz flung the accusation that people were dying “slow and vicious and unnecessary deaths because fags and dykes and junkies are expendable in this country” and it was true. Statistics show there were 24,842 reported deaths from AIDS by the end of 1986. The mortality rate might have been lower if President Ronald Reagan had adequately funded medical research in the beginning, but he ignored even addressing the health matter with the American public for a number of years. Gay men had had enough, and thanks in part to a speech by Larry Kramer, ACT UP was created as a response in March 1987. ACT UP became a forum for Wojnarowicz. Wojnarowicz became the focus of controversy over an NEA grant for the catalogue to a 1988 show at Artists’ Space in New York, in which he attacked the Catholic Church for its position on homosexuality. The artist successfully sued American Family Association director Donald Wildmon in 1990 for libel and copyright infringement. Wildmon appropriated images from one of Wojnarowicz’s works, hoping to incite Congress against future funding of the National Endowment of the Arts with a pamphlet about the Tongues of Flame exhibit that the NEA partially underwrote.

sevenmiles2SEVEN MILES’ final chapter covers the last years of David’s life in a somewhat non-linear, compressed fashion. It begins with what must seem like a surreal conversation today between David and a friend. It was no less surreal at the time no matter how many times it occurred for people. They’re seated at a table in David and Peter’s apartment. Inwardly, David confesses that sometimes hours pass by without about “this disease,” though the Pentamidine treatments and AZT side effects (increased mental activity for David) come around to remind him.

The mention here of Pentamidine is a subtle indication of how greatly HIV treatment has changed. Aerosol treatments were a standard part of care, the means to prevent PCP (pneumocystis carinii pneumonia), a once too common opportunitic infection, and cause of death. From my limited experience with the drug, I can tell you it has a very unpleasant taste, how you might imagine gasoline tastes.

“There are no more people in their 30s. We’re all dying out,” the friend says. He’s afraid another friend suddenly and mysteriously blinded will die soon (CMV is well known today). It was a common lament in the 1980s. “You know, he can still rally back. Maybe. I mean, people do come back from the edge of death,” David replies. “Well, he lost thirty pounds in a few weeks.”

Cut to a sleeping David waking up nauseous late at night. Some health care official calmly voices his hatred from the television set: “If I had a dollar to spend for health care I’d rather spend it on a baby or innocent person with some defect or illness not of their own responsibility, not some person with AIDS.” In the next panel David does something to which everyone can relate. His arm magically reaches into the TV screen and rips the man’s face in half.

Comments like these weren’t uncommon, as the non-stop text on these two pages and the next attest. A Texas politician once remarked, “If you want to stop AIDS shoot the queers.” His press secretary would claim it was only a joke that was made, thinking the microphone had been turned off. Christians outside St. Patrick’s Cathedral shout out to people during Gay Pride: “You won’t be here next year! You’ll get AIDS and die!” Others declared AIDS to be God’s judgement.

David’s rage against the “twelve-inch politician” on the TV fuels the fantasy further – a double-paged spread of a giant David looming over St. Patrick’s Cathedral follows, fists pummeling and feet stomping the building to the pavement, lashing out at the place from which Cardinal O’Connor spews his bigotry. Many people must have had similar dreams about the Cardinal. O’Connor was an outspoken critic of gay rights and vocal advocate of sexual abstinence, who did his utmost to prevent safe sex education from reaching people in need.

There’s the horrible realization during a hospital visit to see a friend (is this the same friend from the chapter’s beginning?) that David is also confronting his own death. “I’m a prisoner of language that doesn’t have a letter or a sign or a gesture that approximates what I’m sensing. I’m still fighting the urge to throw up. I realize I’m only nauseated by own mortality.” His friend resembles the skeletal figures from death camps documented in photos and films. Too sick to move, so sick he sees double.

Such cruel circumstances instigate a road trip into the Black Hills, hoping to have a reason or desire to continue living overcome him. A father and young son at a random gas station stop reminds him of the singular time his own father didn’t beat him. Longing does return if only momentarily as David lives out in his imagination a primal sexual encounter with the insensitive father. Then it’s pushing the car’s accelerator, racing across flat and straight stretches of asphalt, yearning to go fast enough to somehow leave behind his body.

David returns to New York. Overwhelmed by AIDS, Peter Hujar dies on November 26th, 1987. In the following two-page spread Romberger illustrates an achingly beautiful elegy. “When I put my hands on your body on your flesh I feel the history of that body, not just the beginning of its forming in that distant lake but all the way beyond its ending…”

The closing few pages illustrate the painful isolation of AIDS brought in its then unrelenting course. David is in the same apartment where light once streamed in through the tall windows – when there was life still ahead. Here it’s the darkness of night held off by a few interior lights. Physical pain is a constant feeling for David now. He’s begun to separate himself from his world. Friends have become incapable or afraid of recognizing David’s suffering, of accepting his approaching death that they resort to simple platitudes (“But you look good.”). Was it to appease guilt because they had limits to their compassion or was it as David mused that people simply can’t grasp suffering? There is no dignity in David’s plight, thinking one’s death has been hastened by the willful negligence of the morally pious because your life threatened to shatter the illusions of the “one tribe nation’s pre-invented existence.”

SEVEN MILES closes with an image of David’s empty apartment on East 12th seen from across the street and these words:

“I can’t abstract my own dying any longer. I am a strange to others and to myself and I refuse to pretend that I am familiar or that I have a history attached to my heels. I am glass clear empty glass. I see the world spinning behind and through me. I am a stranger and I am moving. I am moving on two legs soon to on all fours. I am no longer animal vegetable or mineral. I am no longer made of circuits or disks. I am no longer coded or deciphered. I am all emptiness and futility. I am an empty stranger, a carbon copy of my form. I can no longer find what I am looking for outside of myself. It doesn’t exist out there. Maybe it’s only here inside my head. But my head is glass and my eyes have stopped being cameras, the tape has run out and no gesture can touch me. I’ve been dropped into all this from another world and I can’t speak your language any longer. See the signs I try to make with my hands and fingers, See the vague movements of my lips among the sheets. I’m a blank spot I’m a dark smudge in the air that dissipates without notice. I’m a broken window. I am a glass human. I am a glass human disappearing in rain. I am standing among all of you waving my invisible arms and hands. I am shouting my invisible words. I am getting so weary. I am growing tired. I am waving to you from here. I am crawling around looking for the aperture of complete and final emptiness. I am screaming but it comes out like pieces of clear ice. I am signaling that the volume of all this is too high. I am waving. I am waving my hands. I am disappearing. I am disappearing but not fast enough.”
David died on July 22nd, 1992.

Quoted text is © The Estate of David Wojnarowicz. Used without permission.

Art from SEVEN MILES A SECOND is © James Romberger. Used without permission.

Sources consulted:
Interview by David Dashiel
GLBTQ article on the artist
Audio file of Wojnarowicz reading Fever
Queer Arts article
PPOW Gallery
Artnet.com
“Close to the Knives – A Memoir of Disintegration” David Wojnarowicz, Vintage Books 1991
“Brushfires in the Landscape” A collection of interviews Aperture Foundation, 1994
Other sites of note:
ACT UP New York
The Age of AIDS, Frontline/ PBS documentary recounting the history and impact of the AIDS pandemic. Click the first link to watch it online or here to purchase a DVD copy.

Vaughn Bodé

Thursday, May 14th, 2009

vaughnbode01Contributed by Diana Green

Vaughn Bodé, entrepreneur of underground comics and creator of Cheech Wizard, was self described as “ auto-sexual, heterosexual, homosexual, masso-sexual, sado-sexual, trans-sexual, uni-sexual, omni-sexual.”

Vaughn had a troubled childhood. His mother had to work constantly, due to the drinking of his father, poet Ken Bodé. In response to this, Vaughn immersed himself in fantasy worlds, both those of others and the hundreds of worlds he created.

He had a brief stint in the Army, but was dismissed for medical reasons in 1958. As his greatest refuge from a harsh youth was in art, he went on to Syracuse University, from which he graduated with a BFA and high honors. Some sources give this year as 1960, others as 1965. While at Syracuse, his first published comics work appeared in the student newspaper, the Daily Orange, and his illustrations appeared in the school literary magazine, Vintage. His cover for Vintage #3 is a premonition of his future work, replete with lizards, nubile, buxom women, vivid yet controlled color schemes, and a border that also serves as part of the setting.

In 1961, he married his childhood sweetheart, Barbara. Two years later, their son Mark was born. They divorced ten years later but remained amicable.

The formative years of Bodé’s career were spent in advertising. At this point, he was a fairly typical looking ad exec, with short square haircut and drab business suit. Finding the atmosphere stifling, he submitted work to the East Village Other, a New York underground newspaper that was publishing the early works of Robert Crumb and Spain Rodriguez, among others. Upon hearing from Trina Robbins that his work was being ignored and abused at the EVO offices, Vaughn went in person to see to the matter. This resulted in the creation of an all-comics underground paper, the Gothic Blimp Works. Gothic Blimp was Vaughn’s brainchild, and he became its editor.

Art by Vaughn Bodé

Art by Vaughn Bodé

This served as a catalyst for his strip Deadbone appearing in Cavalier magazine for several years, and for a long run with the character Cheech Wizard in the National Lampoon this time, as a result of exposure to a burgeoning youth culture, Vaughn began to come to terms with his sexuality. He began exploring different outlets for his sexuality and his spirituality. By 1972 he had changed his appearance from corporate nerd to androgynous glamour queen. He also began experimenting with bondage. In 1973, he presented himself as a candidate for sex reassignment surgery, but rejected the idea when female hormones killed his libido. His journey is presented in two autobiographical works, CONFESSIONS OF A CARTOON GOOROO and SCHIZOPHRENIA. The former is an essay written with Vaughn’s unique approach to the language which is heavily influenced by James Joyce and Walt Kelly. The latter is a full color comic story in which Vaughn stands on the moon in Bodé drag (hose, makeup, slit dress/robe, but no falsies) discussing his coming to terms with his sexual identity.

On July 18, 1975, Vaughn was experimenting further with pushing the bounds of his consciousness and his sexuality simultaneously. He was combining autoerotic asphyxiation, the practice of choking one’s self with a noose while masturbating. The noose releases when the subject passes out, supposedly intensifying the orgasm, and bondage. He had done this before, but this time, a necklace became tangled in the loop used for strangulation. The noose did not release, and Vaughn died.

Like Jimi Hendrix and Jim Morrison, Bodé became more of a cult figure in death. His work is more read today than ever. The bulk of his major work is in print through Fantagraphics. Vaughn’s son Mark is a successful cartoonist in his own right and has continued the Cartoon Concerts Vaughn created.

Images are © and ® Mark Bodé. Used without permission.

Life Is Not A Dress Rehearsal: A Memory of Kate Worley

Wednesday, May 13th, 2009

Contributed by Diana Green

I haven’t talked to Kate Worley in ten years. So why should her passing this week take me so by shock, sadden me so deeply?

Because that was the way Kate was with people. She got to you. There was no dodging with Kate, no false fronts. She gave you no choice but to be yourself.

There were certainly many who knew her better, or longer or deeper than I, yet if you’ll indulge me, I’d like to offer some memories of the impression her life made on mine.

When we met on the day I began my brief internship with Reed Waller on Omaha the Cat Dancer, Kate and I both knew we’d met somewhere before. But neither of us could remember where. Yet the sense of foreknowledge was so overpowering as to be undeniable. We never did figure it out, but it put us right at home with one another. On many occasions, the three of us – Reed, Kate and I – would find ourselves in one diner or another. Small restaurants, diners and greasy spoons were a passion for them both, and they knew all the best ones. Their favorite, the now defunct What’s Cooking, became a favorite of mine as well. The wait staff knew them on sight.

As Waller and Worley were both out as bisexual though the letters page in Omaha; I felt a reasonable comfort and only small reservation being out with them myself. I felt it necessary to be honest for a smooth working relationship. I was glad I phrased it that way. My work put me at a drawing board kitty corner (so to speak) from Reed’s, while Kate wrote Omaha and Roger Rabbit stories in the adjacent room. This made me privy to some of the day-to-day mundanities of their life, and on more than one occasion, one or both of them expressed frustration over intrusions into their privacy. These intrusions happened because they were out, and because they did a comic that was at least in part about sex. I never heard any harassing or threatening phone calls or anything harmful. These were more like annoyances and irritants from of people who had no boundaries in these areas. “Once you come out,” one of them once said, “everyone trusts you with their stuff, whether you want them to or not.”

Kate was quiet but sharp. We were driving back from an eatery and I noticed a young lady wearing a very short skirt and very high heels. I commented that when I was a kid, I used to think that was just a fantastic way to dress, but now all I could think of was how much those shoes hurt. Kate replied, “yeah, I never wear those any more”, and she almost whispered “in public” as an afterthought.

One afternoon I showed up for work a bit wobbly. I had been through a minor corrective surgery the week before and was not at full strength. Instead of my usual duties, Reed bought out his comic collection and had us put it in better order. Kate was also there working on other things, but none of us really worked too hard that day. We spent a sunny autumn afternoon talking about comics and just enjoying the day and each other’s company. Kate expressed frustration with some letters she’d been getting suggesting Chuck’s father was not really dead. “He was cremated! His ashes were sprinkled right there in the story, on panel! He’s not coming back!”

Another memorable lunch came after the opening ceremony for a local gallery show of comic art, called Misfit Lit. I was lucky enough to join the group, including Reed and Kate, Jamie Hernandez and S. Clay Wilson (who is an incorrigible flirt with delightful manners) for that lunch. Other than graciously accepting an offered condom from Clay, the whole day is a blur to me. As a comic geekete, I was in awe of the celebrity, but thanks to Reed and Kate’s ease and charm and genuine warmth, that wore off rather quickly and after that, I was just more grateful to know such fine people.

Besides the internship, we were all members of a comics creators group/drinking club known as the Minnesota Cartoonists’ League, which Reed was instrumental in founding. Reed also published the newsletter for a time. The last Tuesday night of each month would find us at O’Gara’s Pub in St. Paul, the former locale of Charles Schulz’s dad’s barbershop (with the authentic Schulz art and the barber chair enshrined there to this day to prove it!). We’d fly between one conversation and another, as new friends quickly became old friends. One night Selby Kelly, Walt’s widow, came in to address us. I remember her and Kate chatting afterwards and the two of them grinning from ear to ear.

These things may not have happened exactly that way. But this is the way I remember them, and if someone else’s truth is a little off from mine, I can live with it.

I’d like to offer more such stories, but truth be told, most of that time with them is a happy blur for me. It always made me happy just to know them.

After the internship ended, we lost touch briefly. When time came for my graduation, I called to invite them both. That’s when Kate told me of Reed’s cancer and impending surgery. She actually apologized to me for having to miss the graduation portfolio show! Needless to say, Reed’s health came first, and as did so many others, I told her to be sure and call on me if they needed anything at all.

After that, our lives drifted as lives will do. Eventually we found our way back across each other’s paths, every now and again. The changes in their lives are more public and need not be restated here. As this is Kate’s story and not mine, I’ll not go into my trials and tribulations now. Suffice to say that time wounded and healed us all in ways we never saw coming.

I did see Kate one more time, just before she left Minneapolis. I was lunching with a (then) new girlfriend at, of all places, What’s Cooking! Kate came in with Jim Vance. Before we left, I went over to their table to say hi, and she introduced me to Jim. We talked briefly about this and that (including my favorite work of Jim’s, the much neglected Owlhoots) and she and I agreed to get together another day. I knew she was moving soon, so I called and left a message suggesting we do coffee, but it was not to be. Bad timing, I guess. I never saw Kate again.

Like many admirers of her work, I was taken aback by her death. As she wrote in Omaha, people in mourning carry their own gloom. Though we were a quarter of a country apart physically and each had our own very different lives, I like living in possibility. And knowing that the possibility of being taken by surprise by Kate’s wit will never again be realized makes my world a little smaller. I know that those closest to her feel the same with an intensity that makes my sorrow pale. All I can offer is the hope that knowing the loss is shared serves as at least a measure of solace.

Rest well, Kate Worley. You were loved for your work and your spirit, more than you knew.

This title, “Life Is Not A Dress Rehearsal,” was Kate’s favorite saying, according to her bubble gum card.

Abbé

Tuesday, May 12th, 2009
Art by Steve Yeowell

Art by Steve Yeowell

Abbé is one of the supporting characters in Grant Morrison’s “Sebastian O” mini series which is set in an alternate steapunk-ish England. The character is introduced mid way through issue #2. Text states he had been defrocked and convicted on a number of charges, including pederasty, brought against him during the trial that followed the Club de Paradis Artificiel raid. Abbé earned an early parole by becoming a model prisoner and leading hardened convicts to Christ’s teaching through his daily sermons.

After his release, Abbé retired to his home in the country where he tends his creation, the Mechanical Garden, comprised entirely of elaborate mechanical flowers and trees. Abbé dresses in an embellished toga, and gestures a bit theatrically. The painting above his fireplace is of Saint Sebastian’s torso pierced with arrows. Of course, he also “cares for” a number of underprivileged and pre-pubescent boys on his grand estate.

While on the run, Sebastian O turns to Abbé for information about Lord Lavender’s plans and how it relates to the Club de Paradis Artificiel. The club’s purpose was to create an artificial environment of “cosmetics, luxuries, apollonian artworks.” Abbé replies that Lavender has taken the club’s creed to its extreme. What he doesn’t tell Sebastian is his role in this
business. Lavender had threatened both Abbé and George Harkness into helping him. Abbé’s expertise in creating the Mechanical Garden was crucial to Lavender’s attempts to utilize magic lantern technology for his self-serving purposes.

Their meeting is cut short when the remaining two Roaring Boys dispatched by Lavender to capture O arrive at Abbé’s estate. Off panel, one of the villains cuts out Abbé’s gums and as he lies dying in his world of artifice he asks O to hear his confession. O politely declines, and Abbé utters the words “magic lantern” as a final clue to Lavender’s schemes.

Morrison’s “Abbé” may be a reference to late 19th century artist and writer Aubrey Beardsley, whose initials are A B (pronounced like Abbé in French). Or the reference may be to the hero alternately named Abbé Aubrey, Chevalier Tannhäuser to Abbé Fanfreluche in Beardsley’s unfinished erotic book also alternately titled “Venus and Tannhäuser” and “Under the Hill.”

Abbé’s appears first on issue #1′s cover and is confirmed gay in the second issue.

Read the related bios for Sebastian O and George Harkness.

© and ® Grant Morrison and Steve Yeowell. Used without permission.

George Harkness & Phoebe

Tuesday, May 12th, 2009

George and Phoebe appeared as supporting characters in Grant Morrison’s “Sebastian O” mini series from 1993. They are members of a steampunk England’s social elite, a world where computers and modern technology are part of Victorian England. George is a woman who dresses in dapper, upper crust male attire and sports a pipe. Phoebe wears appropriate women’s dress: a billowing, pink hoop skirt and matching jacket, and uses a pink umbrella to shade her delicate skin from the sun. George is a writer, having written at least one novel titled “Daughters of Amberley” which was transcribed by Phoebe in her role as George’s “amanuensis.”

The pair are first met in the Sebastian O story when the title character runs from the Abbe’s estate with the police on his heels. George is hunting birds and Phoebe is simply Victorian eye candy when Sebastian comes across them in the woods near George’s estate.

Art by Steve Yeowell

Art by Steve Yeowell

As a tribad (lesbian), George was implicated in the scandal following the police raid on the Club de Paradis Artificiel. She might have suffered similar fates as Sebastian and Arthur Truro, who were imprisoned, had she not given in to Theo Lavender’s threats and ultimatums. Lavender coerced George in to creating a mathematical model of human group interactions, something she’d done in plotting her “Amberley” novel, for Theo to use as a basis for his plan with magic lantern technology.

George and Phoebe greet the police holding hands when they arrive in their search for Sebastian. George admits to knowing the escaped convict, and tricks the officers not to search the residence by admitting they suffer from the “contagion” of tribadism, and expressing concern that the men might transmit it to their wives and loved ones. Thus, they buy Sebastian the
time to confront Lavender and to put an end to his schemes. This is the last we see of the pair.

George and Phoebe may have been an allusion on Morrison’s part to the Ladies of Llangollen.

Additional note – Amanuensis comes from Latin, from the phrase (servus) a manu, “slave with handwriting duties,” from a, ab, “by” plus manu, from manus, “hand.”

Read the related bios for Sebastian O and Abbe.

© and ® Grant Morrison and Steve Yeowell. Used without permission.

Sebastian O

Tuesday, May 12th, 2009

 

Art by Steve Yeowell

Art by Steve Yeowell

 

Set in a steampunk version of Britain where modern day technology exists in Victorian times, Morrison’s Sebastian O is an analog or inspiration of real world Oscar Wilde. Like Wilde, Sebastian has been imprisoned for his debauched morality resulting from a raid on Club de Paradis Artificiel. A judge deemed O immoral based on a small book of poems and essays he’d written based on the theme of Uranian love (see below note). While others had been arrested during the raid, only O and a young man named Arnold Truro were sent to prison. O was put into solitary confinement from which he escapes by resorting to a gruesome means.

Lord Lavender, whose first name is Theo, was involved in the scandal following the club raid. He emerged from the scandal with his reputation intact. In fact, he rose to a place of power as Queen Victoria’s chief scientific advisor while he threatened others or had them maimed or murdered. Upon learning of O’s escape, Lavender and his nephew Piers plot his capture.

Meanwhile, as befits a self-styled dandy, Sebastian has returned home to clean up. A small contingent of police push their way into O’s home determined to apprehend the man. The house as designed by architect Lord Carhaix has hidden rooms and other devices that engage the police until O is dressed and ready to confront the police. After shooting the sergeant, O escapes into the sewer system. Lord Lavender decides to use extreme measures and sends a young servant boy to enlist the services of the ruthless Roaring Boys to capture O.

O dispatches the first of the three Roaring Boys with a bullet in the head while travelling through the sewers. As expected by Lord Lavender, O makes his way to the estate of Abbé , another Club regular, who became a model prisoner, offering the Lord’s guidance to other prisoners. Abbé offers O hospitality and champagne, but O wants to know how Lavender was able to buy Abbé’s silence during the Club scandal affair. Before O can learn anything from Abbé, the two remaining Roaring Boys burst into the mansion intent on capturing the dandy. O survives the encounter with cunning and luck while Abbé is not so fortunate. He barely is able to utter the words “magic lantern” as a clue to Lavender’s plans when O realizes the police have spotted him from one of their flying gun ships.

On the run, O has the good luck to run into George and Phoebe on an impromptu hunt. George is a woman who dresses in Victorian male drag, and Phoebe wears a grand hoop skirt. In George’s study, O recounts the story of the club raid, his suspicion the charges were trumped up by Lavender for unknown reasons, and of Arnold Truro’s fate in prison. George shares that she and Abbé were blackmailed into silence and cooperation with Lavender. George reveals his plan involved the use of magic lantern technology (virtual reality), but for what purposes she does not know.

Still on the hunt for O, a half dozen police arrive at George’s estate. The two women hand in hand greet the officers. In a small gambit, George admits to knowing who Sebastian is, but cautions the officers about entering with the confession the she and Phoebe “suffer” from tribadism (see below note), and it cannot be guaranteed the “disease” will not be carried back to their wives and loved ones.

The penultimate scene finds O jumping onto the roof of a train car as the train enters a tunnel. Sebastian enters Lavender’s private compartment while the interior lights are momentarily out, and deftly dispatches nephew Piers with a quick slash to the throat. Sebastian informs Lavender he wants a full pardon. Pushing a few buttons on his Victorian-era computer, Theo states the pardon is granted. In that statement, however, a greater truth is revealed: Queen Victoria has been dead some months and it is he that rules England through the use of computer generated imagery of the deceased monarch. A fight ensues when Lavender thrusts a blade tipped cane at O. The altercation continues on to the train car roof. The matter of Lavender’s treachery is settled when Sebastian fires a bullet into the man, loosening his grip, and sending him to his death on the pavement far below.

Sebastian eludes the bumbling police a final time, and upon returning home, is confronted with the last of the Roaring Boys. Thankfully, O dispatches this last threat in very little time before settling back into the debauched routines of his old life.

Additional notes – “Urning” is a term coined in the 19th century by Karl Heinrich Ulrichs, considered to be the first modern theorist of homosexuality. “Tribadism” is a precursor to the word lesbianism. Tribad corresponds to lesbian.

Read the related bios for George Harkness and Abbe.

© and ® Grant Morrison and Steve Yeowell. Used without permission.