Archive for June 9th, 2010

Starhawk II

Wednesday, June 9th, 2010

Contributed by Michael McDermott

Aleta Ogord is from the 31st Century, in an alternate future of the Marvel Universe. She was born on the planet Arcturus, a daughter of the warlike Reavers. As a young adult, she and her adopted brother–and husband–Stakar, travelled to the Forbidden City, where they discovered a statue of the powerful Hawk God.

Aleta accidentally triggered the statue, and her body was destroyed, converted into pure energy. She and Stakar were merged into a single being, a powerful new being known as Starhawk! Now only one of them could exist in physical form at a time. When Stakar was corporeal, Aleta would go into limbo until he released her and let her assume physical form. However, Stakar maintained control of the body most of the time. Rather than be pressed into service as a weapon for the Reavers, Starhawk left for space. However, Aleta’s father, Ogord, vowed revenge for them refusing to obey him.

Stakar and Aleta explored space for a time, but eventually grew lonely. They secretly returned to Arcturus, and petitioned the Hawk God to temporarily separate them. They mated and had children, Tara, Sita and John. Stakar and Aleta were re-merged, and Aleta had the physical form in order to raise the children.

However, after a time, Stakar was drawn to the stars again, and reclaimed control of the body. The children were left in a hidden home, where they could have instant communication with Starhawk.Unfortunately, while Starhawk was away, Ogord managed to locate the home, and kill the children before Starhawk had a chance to save them. Aleta never forgave Stakar for that failure.

During their travels through space, Starhawk encountered and joined the spacefaring heroes, the Guardians of the Galaxy. During the brief periods that Stakar let her out of limbo, Aleta joined the team as well. On one of the team’s missions, Stakar and Aleta were separated again, into two bodies. Aleta relished her new freedom, and divorced Stakar, since she now hated him for failing to save their children, and forcing her to exist in limbo for so long. Aleta fell in love with her fellow Guardian, Major Vance Astro, and pursued a relationship with him. They even got engaged to be married.

However, a few months later, Stakar began to weaken and fade. It turned out he could no longer survive without being bonded to Aleta. He forcibly reabsorbed her, and fled from the team. When the remerging was complete, Starhawk returned to the Guardians, but things were different now. This time, instead of trading physical forms, they both shared the one body. Now when Aleta was in control, she still possessed Stakar’s male form. Aleta attempted to resume her relationship with Vance, but he was unable to cope with the fact that his lover now had a male body. Eventually, Stakar and Aleta were separated into two bodies again, and she and Vance were able to resume their relationship.

As Aleta, she possessed the ability to turn light solid. She was able to use this solid light in a variety of ways, as objects to use as weapons, or shields, project it as a blast, or create flight discs to propel herself. She was also able to phase through solid matter. As Starhawk II, she could travel at light speed, and had cosmic energy powers, which could be used for energy projection, healing abilities, and other effects. She was also the One-Who-Knows, giving her vast cosmic senses.

Starhawk was affiliated with both the Defenders and Guardians of the Galaxy. Her first appearance is in Defenders #27 and she is shown as transgendered in Guardians of the Galaxy #22 (not the recent volume by Abnett & Lanning).
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Hayden

Wednesday, June 9th, 2010

Image taken from http://www.marvunapp.com/Appendix2/haydenpool.htmContributed by Ronald Byrd

Nothing is known about Hayden except that he is renowned in the super-villain community (“Four skulls—highest rating.”) for locating and subletting secret hideouts. He sublets one of Doctor Octopus’s old lairs to the mercenary Deadpool, but neglects to warn him upfront that he will be sharing the place with two super-villains, the Constrictor and Titania (who is actually Deadpool’s old flame Copycat in disguise). Presuming a setup, Deadpool attacks his new roommates, then, after the 3 come to an understanding, they vent their annoyance by tying Hayden up in the mechanical arms of a Doctor Octopus statue. Hayden is left in this condition for a while but is eventually released, and he is not seen again until he attends a funeral for Deadpool (who later returns from the dead).

Hayden’s attire (leather pants, pink shirt, purple jacket; he wears a laced shirt at Deadpool’s funeral), preference for gaudy jewelry, and somewhat campy speech patterns are apparently meant to convey an “effeminate” air, and when addressing him Deadpool twice corrects himself to identify Hayden as a “person” instead of a “guy” or a “man.” These overt and stereotypical hints (not what one would expect from a writer of Christopher Priest’s caliber) are presumably meant to imply that Hayden is gay, but nothing more definite is ever stated.

Hayden first appears in Deadpool #38.

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