Posts Tagged ‘Alan Moore’

Jack Phantom

Friday, October 2nd, 2009
Art by Gene Ha

Art by Gene Ha

Contributed by Ronald Byrd.

Jack Phantom (real name: Jackie Kowalski, AKA Jacks) is a police detective at the Tenth Precinct of Neopolis, a city inhabited by a wide variety of superhuman beings. To date, nothing has been revealed about her origin, history, or private life. So far she has not been seen to experience any homophobia at the precinct. The only officer who seems to have any problem getting along with her is Officer Jeff Smax, who really doesn’t get along with much of anybody (and who, based on a dream he has in #6, appears to have a bit of sexual interest in her). However, she does express appreciation to another officer, Duane Bodine, a.k.a. the Dust Devil, for being her partner during a case, suggesting that others have been less than enthusiastic about doing so. She frequently works alongside another high-ranking female officer, Lt. Cathy Colby, a.k.a. the Peregrine who, although a “born-again Christian,” has demonstrated no hostility toward the lesbian Jack. Jack and the Dust Devil appear to have a level of camaraderie, and he has admitted to finding her attractive but accepts being “just friends.” Although most of Top Ten’s officers dress in costume, Jack’s attire is a body-blouse and jacket, not unlike a stylized tuxedo. To date she has appeared in every issue of Top Ten except #2 and #6 (where, as noted, she was seen in Smax’s dream). Her preferred brand of coffee is regular expresso.

Jack Phantom is not currently in a relationship and jokes that she has little luck in finding women. When Officer Robyn Slinger, a.k.a. Toybox, starts work at the Tenth Precinct, Jack invites her out for a beer and shows some friendly interest in her, only to be rebuffed by the nervous newcomer. Later, she seems attracted to pathologist Dr. Sally-Jo Jessell, a.k.a. Micromaid. She has also admitted to being attracted toPeregrine, although she knows she has no chance with the married straight woman, and at one point she makes a remark suggesting she has a crush on actress Joan Crawford.

Jack is one of the officers who captures M’rrgla Qualtz, the so-called Vigilante of Venus, an extraterrestrial heroine turned porn star who is believed to be responsible for several serial killings; is listed as the arresting officer. Once in custody, the telepathic Qualtz, for unknown reasons, transmits an image of herself and Jack as lovers, a mental violation which enrages Jack. Qualtz’s former teammates have challenged her arrest, and what role Jack Phantom will play as the case unfolds remains to be seen.

jackphantom4Jack Phantom can become intangible at will. In this state she can pass through solid matter and is immune to physical attack. She becomes semi-transparent when using her power and occasionally remains so in her day-to-day activities. While in this state her voice may have an unusual sound, inasmuch as her word balloons also take on a faintly faded appearance. She has been seen floating through the floor of a room to the room below, but this does not appear to indicate any actual ability to fly.

Jack Phantom first appears and is confirmed as a lesbian in Top Ten #1.

Created by Alan Moore and Gene Ha. © and ® America’s Best Comics, LLC. Used without permission.

Cobweb

Wednesday, September 30th, 2009
Art by Melinda Gebbie

Art by Melinda Gebbie

Submitted by Ronald Byrd

Operating out of the disused Lakeland Ornamental Gardens and dressed in a sheer purple negligee with matching stockings and stilettos, Cobweb (the wealthy heiress Laurel Lakeland), assisted by her devoted chauffeuse Clarice, experiences a variety of adventures, many of them pastiches of pulp/romance material. Many in Indigo City (which is also protected by the Shadow-like Greyshirt, whose adventures are somewhat more traditional that Cobweb’s) believe that her career is “a cover for sex-kicks, or else a publicity stunt,” but her efforts seem sincere enough. Although one story claims that Cobweb first met Clarice when rescuing her from criminal circumstances, another depicts the two as having been children together, and in fact the rather flippant nature of “Tomorrow Stories” prevents any serious continuity from being established for most of the book’s characters. The general tone and nature of some of Cobweb’s stories, plus the intimate terms with which she and Clarice address each other (Clarice calls her by such names as “Gossamer One” and “Diaphanous One,” while Cobweb refers to Clarice as “my sweet” and remarks on how “radiant” she looks), suggest that the two are lesbians, but since the Cobweb series often satirizes the writing styles of earlier eras, it is unlikely that this will ever be anything but implied.

In the Greyshirt mini series, “Indigo Sunset” Cobweb and Greyshirt are shown to have a romantic/sexual relationship which happens to the knowledge of Cobweb’s chauffeuse Clarice. No definitive answer has been given to the length of this relationship or if it periodically recurs.

However, it has been stated that Cobweb and Clarice both have children together by parthogenesis (Google the term!) and follow their clan tradition of passing along their vigilante identities to their children, and returning to their ancestral home in Peru.

The Cobweb appears to be a skilled fighter and athlete. She first appeared in Tomorrow Stories #1.

Note from the admin: In the past several people have contacted me to tell me about the romantic/sexual relationship that happens between Cobweb and Greyshirt as shown in “Indigo Sunset” mini series, which I have not read. Their reasons were compelling and I believe sexuality is complicated. While the Cobweb stories I’ve read seem to indicate the character is lesbian, I’ve added “bisexual” as a tag.

The Cobweb is created by Alan Moore and Melinda Gebbie. © ABC Comics, LLC. Used without permission.

Rita Boyd

Thursday, May 7th, 2009

In Alan Moore’s V For Vendetta, a great war and devastating broke out in 1988. In England, a militant movement called Norsefire rose to power with the promise to save the country. Its slogan was “Strength through Purity, Purity through Faith.” In 1992 it began rounding up LGBT people and political dissidents, and sending them to resettlement camps. Dr. Delia Surridge agreed to conduct hormone research experiments on humans at Larkhill Resettlement Camp.

In Surridge’s diary she wrote: “Rita Boyd, the lesbian, died at tea-time. During the autopsy we found four tiny vestigial fingers forming within the calf of her leg.” (Issue #3) The only other mention of Rita Boyd comes in issue #6 when Valerie mentions in her autobiographical letter that Rita died two weeks previously.

This character and V For Vendatta were created by Alan Moore and Dave Gibbons. © and ® of DC Comics. Used without permission.

Valerie Susan Page

Thursday, May 7th, 2009

valeriesusanpageValerie was born in Nottingham in 1957 to a working class family. It was during her teenaged years that she first dreamt of being an actor. She also learned she was a lesbian when she became attracted to a fellow student named Sara. A Mr. Hird from the school persuaded Sara she was simply in a confused phase and the relationship ended.

Valerie came out to her family in 1976 by bringing home a girl named Christine to meet them. Her parents took the news poorly, and Valerie moved to London a week later. There she found happiness small roles on stage and dissatisfaction with the club scene. In time, her roles improved and in 1986 she starred in the critically “Salt Flats.”

It was while working on “Salt Flats” that Valerie met Ruth. The two fell in love and soon moved in together. During their relationship Ruth gave roses to Valerie on Valentine’s Day.

A terrible war broke out in 1988, and Norsefire. a Nationalist Socialist movement, came to power in Great Britain, enacting measures to curtail freedoms in the promise of saving the country. In 1992 the governement began a round up of LGBT citizens. Ruth was soon captured while away from home. She was tortured by burning cigarette butts pressed into her skin, and coerced to give Valerie’s name to her torturers.

Ruth killed herself for the betrayal without knowing that Valerie hadn’t blamed her. Valerie was abducted and told that her films would be burned. Her head was shaved, and she was taken to the Larkhill camp, where she was drugged. Larkill was this fascist England’s equivalent of Nazi Germany’s experimentations on “undesirables.”

It was during Valerie’s imprisonment at Larkhill that she wrote her autobiography written on toilet paper with a pencil stub she secreted on herself, somewhat in the form of a love letter to the unknown prisoner (and humanity) in the next cell. That prisoner was V.

Valerie died at Larkhill. One passage of her letter reads: “It is strange that my life should end in such a terrible place, but for three years I had roses and apologized to nobody. I shall die here. Every inch of me shall perish except one. An inch. It’s small and it’s fragile and it’s the only thing in the world that’s worth having.We must never lose it, or sell it, or give it away. We must never let them take it away from us.”

Valerie’s first appearance in issue #3 occurs while V is watching a preserved copy of her film, Salt Flats. She appears on a poster of the same movie in V’s Shadow Gallery in issue #4. Her sexual orientation is confirmed in issue #6.

This character and V For Vendatta were created by Alan Moore and Dave Gibbons. © and ® of DC Comics. Used without permission.

Roger

Wednesday, May 6th, 2009
Art by JH Williams III

Art by JH Williams III

Contributed by Ronald Byrd

Roger (last name unrevealed) is one of the Five Swell Guys, a quintet of adventurers or “science-heroes” who operate out of New York and clash with various menaces, most notably the “omnipath” known as the Painted Doll. The “muscle” of the team,

Roger works alongside leader Bob, mechanic Stan, genius Marv, and psychic Kenneth. Nothing is known of the origin of the Five Swell Guys or how long they have been active, but in 1995 Roger was transformed into a woman as part of “that Suffragette City episode.” Although Roger’s persona and abilities were evidently unaffected by the change, the general public appears to believe that the female Roger is a different person than the “old Roger,” whom she is believed to have replaced. As suits her role as “muscle,” Roger appears to be the most hot-headed of the Five. Issues #7 and 8 are relevant to the character.

Roger possess superhuman strength and is an effective fighter, even capable of holding her own in combat with a demon. She and the other Swell Guys travel on a flying platform.

Promethea is a © and ® of America’s Best Comics, LLC. Promethea is created by Alan Moore, J.H. Williams III and Mick Gray.

Promethea

Wednesday, May 6th, 2009
Art by JH Williams III

Art by JH Williams III

Contributed by Ronald Byrd

In Alexandria, Egypt, 411 C.E., a hermetic scholar is killed by a Christian mob. His young daughter, Promethea, flees into the desert and is ushered into the Immateria, the dimension of myth and fiction, by the god(s) Thoth-Hermes. Transformed into a “living story,” Promethea sometimes enters mortal imagination and is channeled into reality by various creative artists, who project her identity onto either themselves or their loved ones and create her persona according to their own imaginative tastes, i.e. a fairy handmaiden, a warrior angel of the trenches, a ruler of a lost continent, etc. The current vessel for Promethea is college student and poet Sophie Bangs, who manifests her as a heroic warrior to battle the various mystic foes who have dogged Promethea throughout her/their career.

It is known that at least one of Promethea’s mortal identities was gay, comic book writer and artist William Woolcott, who both chronicled the adventures of a super-heroine Promethea from 1939 to 1969 and was active as that heroine until he was killed by Promethea’s lover, FBI agent Dennis Drucker, who learned about Promethea’s male identity and was unable to accept it. (Issue #7) Others include Anna,housemaid of poet Charlton Sennet in the 1770s; cartoonist Margaret Taylor Case; fantasy artist Grace Brannagh; and Barbara Shelley, wife of Steve, who took over Woolcott’s comic book duties. There may have been others that have yet to be seen. As for the present-day Promethea, Sophie’s best friend Stacia van de Veer frequently teases her about being a lesbian, but whether or not this is true is presently unclear.

Art by JH Williams III and Jose Villarrubia

Art by JH Williams III and Jose Villarrubia

Promethea has various magical abilities which were still being defined throughout the series. She appears to possess superhuman strength, and she has been observed to fly and teleport, even into other dimensions which she accesses via imagination She carries a caduceus staff from which she can project mystic energy for a variety of effects. Promethea can perceive demonic entities in their true forms even when they are disguised as mortals.

Promethea is a © and ® of America’s Best Comics, LLC. Promethea is created by Alan Moore, J.H. Williams III and Mick Gray.

Joey

Thursday, April 30th, 2009
Art by Dave Gibbons from Watchmen #11

Art by Dave Gibbons from Watchmen #11

Joey, a cab driver for the Promethean Cab company, first appears in a crowd scene around a newspaper vendor, an older man who remains unnamed. She asks for a copy of the latest Gazette so she can look for apartments because she’s broken up with Aline. In issue #10 Joey is seen talking with the same newspaper vendor. We learn from her comments that Aline likes a band named Pale Horse and has complained to Joey that their planned meeting to discuss their personal lives clashes with her attending the concert.

Aline shows up at the newspaper stand hoping to catch Joey to speak with her. When the owner says he hasn’t seen Joey yet, Aline says she’ll wait outside the Promethean for her. He says to tell Joey the new Hustler is due in tomorrow, but Aline makes her disgust known, leaving the older man to wonder what he said that was offensive. A few pages later Joey and Aline are seen together for the first time, and the contrast could hardly be more striking. Joey in non-descript clothes, a turtleneck, hat, coat, and pants in monotone brown with shoulder length reddish hair tries to be tough as nails. Aline in a short pink dress, matching coat and ankle boots with short blonde hair is perfectly dressed for the magazine she works at.

Aline tells Joey there isn’t any way to salvage their relationship and tries to give her a book about relationships so she can understand why their breakup. Joey retorts she doesn’t want to “understand shit”, referring to Aline’s political views, and that “[she] just[s] wanna go to bed with you one time…and I wanna be straight…” Several scenes throughout the issue show the couple talking and then Joey beating up Aline, and then being restrained by a passerby. (Issue #11)

Ozymandias’s weapon is deployed as issue #11 closes. The women are last seen among the dead of New York City (with Aline’s head cradled in Joey’s lap) in the opening scene of isse #12.

© and ® DC Comics. Used without permission.

John Constantine

Tuesday, April 28th, 2009

Please note this entry focuses on a very specific part of Constantine, and does not deal with the fictional character’s entire history. Refer to Wikipedia’s Constantine entry for a much more detailed account.

hellblazer51page5bThe great love of Constantine was a woman named Kit Ryan, but her prominence in his heart doesn’t preclude others in his life. The first indication of Constantine’s bisexuality was casually mentioned in a single panel of the character’s internal monologue in Hellblazer #51 in a single-issue story written by John Smith and drawn by Sean Phillips.

After a serious incident in which Kit fears for her life, Kit decided to leave Constantine, saying she’s moving to Belfast (issue #67). Constantine goes on a drunken bender, getting into a fight on the street with three young men. Long time friend Chas stops John and takes him back to his flat. John proceeds to provoke a fight with his friend. The behavior escalates till John finds himself drunk in a cemetery at midnight.

John continues to spiral out of control until he ends up as a drunk living on the street. It isn’t clear how much long this has been his current state though test in issue #68 indicates the month is December. Two antagonists are introduced: one man that is referred to as either “my lord” or “king of the vampires” and a younger looking man named Darius. They’ve taken a man, stripped him and tied him up at the top of one of the towers on Tower Bridge. Constantine is the topic of conversation. Darius suggests forgetting him so as not to “spoil a perfect evening” but the hint is ignored till a third vampire named Mary arrives and their feast starts. Darius erotically licks the man’s blood dripping from his lord’s bare chest and stomach. Once finished here the trio makes plans to split up to find more victims and later meet an hour before dawn.

Constantine meets a young man named Davey also living on the streets, and begrudgingly befriends him. Davey confides his story of leaving Sheffield for London after college and becoming a rent boy when there wasn’t any work to be found. They continue talking and drinking into the night. The story takes a dramatic turn when the King of Vampires happens to chance across a sleeping Constantine. Davey is likewise sleeping; his head nestled on John’s shoulder. (Issue #68)

Davey wakes up feeling sick, rousing Constantine as well. They go for a walk and Davey complains of his neck hurting. The king of vampires looks on from a distance as Constantine pulls off the man’s coat, revealing a blood soaked shirt. The king snaps his fingers and blood from Davey’s carotid artery spurts out, causing him to lose consciousness and die. Meanwhile, Darius and Mary have returned to their spot on Tower Bridge. Darius is concerned for their missing lord, referring to him as lover, king, and friend. Cut back to Constantine’s predicament of either certain death or transformation into a vampire. Either way it looks like the end when the king bites Constantine. Ingesting Constantine’s blood causes the king to react violently, much to his horror and Constantine’s amusement when John realizes being tainted with demon blood has saved him. The sun rises and seals the vampire’s death. Below ground Darius and Mary react empathetically to the death. Darius leaves Mary to find his dead lover and join him in death. Constantine returns to where Davey died only to find a pair of police officers standing over his body. John’s enraged by their epitaphs and lunges at them, only to be beaten and kicked. (Issue #69) While this story doesn’t contribute directly to Constantine’s bisexuality, it does show his compassion for another person who may not be heterosexual, as some of Davey’s dialog implies.

johnconstantine2It isn’t until Brian Azzarello and Marcelo Frusin’s five-part story in issues #170 – 174 (“Ashes and Dust”) that Constantine’s bisexuality is a topic again.

FBI Agent Frank Turro arrives in Los Angeles to investigate a mysterious death that occurred in an exclusive S & M sex club. Turro is a recurring character that Azzarello introduced to the series in his initial story arc that told of Constantine’s incarceration in a U.S. federal prison.

The corpse in question is John Constantine. Turro persuades LAPD Detective Havlik to bring in the club’s members for questioning. The story of what happened that night slowly begins to take shape from several eyewitness accounts.

In between scenes at the LAPD is a closely connected story involving wealthy industrialist Stanley Manor, or S.W. as he prefers to be called, whose parents died when he was a child. S.W. sees Constantine mysteriously appear in a mirror and summons Father Sean to his estate so he can confess, or so he claims while waxing both pompously and philosophically.

Back at the police station, more puzzle pieces fall into place for Turro. A smug club employee named Graham mentions hating Constantine for his attitude and alludes to whipping a male club member that night but refuses to name the man. Joey, a transsexual, tells of being sexually teased by Constantine. Joey also relates a fuller account than Graham. A flashback shows Graham severely beating a man. Another man is seen taking the whip from Graham’s hand. The figure emerges from shadows; it’s Constantine. He approaches the shackled man whose face is shown clearly for the first time: it’s S.W. John leans in to kiss him and a conversation follows. A different witness refers to the pair as boyfriends. Another club patron is “physically persuaded” to give up the other man’s name to Turro, giving the FBI agent a solid lead.

Meanwhile, S.W. recounts to Father Sean a couple of important incidents with John. One of these occasions includes another kiss between the two men, though this time shown in silhouetted profile. S. W. relates that in this particular incident Constantine revealed his power to him. Intrigued, Stanley, as John calls him, allows himself to be shackled. John implicitly uses his magical ability to combine with Stanley’s pain as he flagellates his lover to conjure the ghosts of his dead parents. Their spirits express great disappointment in how their son has turned out as an adult. Stanley has done some horrible things, as Azzarello tells us through the character’s monologue and actions. Stanley’s love for John turns to hate when the Englishman walks away and out of his life, leaving him shackled and at the mercy of his spectral parents’ scorn.

Part five recounts the events in the sex club from S.W.’s point of view. It reveals a grand plan for revenge against Constantine in which S.W. used himself as bait to lure his former boyfriend. Azzarello also tells readers how Constantine burnt to death, but I’m not going to divulge everything here. Back in the story’s present, all hell is breaking loose on S.W.’s estate as events head to a close. A pyschologically and emotionally distraught S.W. chooses to elude impending arrest by Turro and shoots himself. Shortly thereafter, Constantine mysteriously appears to survey the aftermath and subsequently vanishes before Detective Havlik and her officers arrive at the scene.

Constantine was created by Alan Moore and first seen in Swamp Thing #37. He was revealed to be bisexual in #51.  Constantine is based primarily London, but some stories have taken place in other locations. Mostly a loner, Constantine on occasion has been associated with The Trenchcoat Brigade, The Newcastle Crew, The Order of St Oran, and Mucous Membrane.

According to the character’s Wikipedia entry, Constantine has a variety of abilities that include but are not limited to: divination, necromancy, demonic summoning, and making illusions.

© and ® DC/ Vertigo. Used without permission.

Silhouette

Thursday, March 19th, 2009

By Ronald Byrd

silhouetteReal Name: Ursula Zandt
Occupation: Crimefighter
Group Affiliation: The Watchmen
Base of Operations: New York City
Outed in: Watchmen #2

The Silhouette was one of several costumed crimefighters who debuted in 1939 and organized as the Minutemen in the fall of that year. Nothing is known about her origin. She was expelled from the Minutemen in 1946 when it was learned that she was living with a lesbian lover, and both she and her lover were killed by one of her past adversaries six weeks after the scandal.

In a bonus feature in Watchmen #9,  “Probe Profile: Sally Jupiter” , the interviewer brings up the topic of costumes as a sexual fetish. Jupiter states: “Well, let me say this, for me, it was never a sex thing.” The interviewer brings up the Silhouette. Sally confesses that she didn’t like Ursula because she “was not an easy person to get along with” but felt the woman deserved better treatment after newspapers published accounts of her homosexuality.

Jupiter fleetingly refers to the Minute Men voting Silhouette out of the group to minimize PR damage and then says it was unfair since a couple of guys who are now dead were known to the other Minute Men to have been gay.

The Silhouette relied upon her athletic ability, fighting prowess, and wits.

The Watchmen created by Alan Moore and Dave Gibbons. Art by Dave Gibbons. © and ® DC Comics. Used without permission.

Captain Metropolis

Thursday, March 19th, 2009

captmetropolis1By Ronald Byrd

Real Name: Nelson Gardner
Occupation: Crimefighter, former Lieutenant in the US Marines
Group Affiliation: The Watchmen
Base of Operations: New York City
Outed in: Watchmen #9

Captain Metropolis was one of several costumed crimefighters who debuted in 1939, and it was he who organized the team known as the Minutemen in the fall of that year. Nothing is known about his origin save that he was once a lieutenant in the US Marines and applied his knowledge of military technique and strategy to eradicating organized crime in inner urban areas. Unknown to the general public, Captain Metropolis had a gay relationship with one of his teammates, Hooded Justice, a relationship that may cast some light on his unexplained departure from the Marines; how he dealt with Hooded Justice’s disappearance and presumed death in 1955 is unrecorded. The Minutemen disbanded in 1949, but Captain Metropolis continued his activities, even attempting unsuccessfully to form a second team, the Crimebusters, in 1966; his tendency toward making racist statements about African-Americans and Hispanic Americans may have contributed to the declining popularity of costumed heroes during this era. Captain Metropolis was allegedly decapitated in an automobile accident in 1974.

Captain Metropolis had no superhuman powers but was an excellent military strategist, a skill he adapted to crimefighting; presumably, he was also a formidable opponent in hand-to-hand combat.

hoodedjustice2

Speculation has it the two men seen holding hands here are Captain Metropolis and Hooded Justice in their civilian identities.

The Watchmen created by Alan Moore and Dave Gibbons. Art by Dave Gibbons. © and ® DC Comics. Used without permission.