Posts Tagged ‘unknown orientation’

Coven

Sunday, December 13th, 2009
Art by Ivan Reis

Art by Ivan Reis

Contributed by Michael McDermott

Karl Coven was a psychotic serial killer, who killed at least 17 people including children, and used their remains for ritualistic purposes. Superhero sidekick Rick Jones witnessed some of these murders, and it was his testimony that got Coven arrested and put on trial.

Coven claimed to be an alien, and therefore not bound by human laws, but medical examinations showed him to be a normal human. He was sentenced to death by lethal injection. However, after being dead for a few minutes, Coven mysteriously returned to life! Since Coven had technically served his sentence, the court had no choice but to release him. Immediately, Coven came after Rick Jones to get his revenge. Rick Jones is currently bonded to cosmicsuperhero Captain Marvel, and so when Coven came after Rick, he wound up face to face with Captain Marvel!

Captain Marvel had recently been driven insane by his cosmic awareness, so instead of trying to stop Coven, he actually decided to recruit him as his partner! Marvel gave Coven a portion of his own cosmic power. The two of them started their own “legal system” and began serving out their own version of “justice”, which bought them some powerful enemies, including the family of an alien Caffrey, whom Coven executed for his “crimes”. Meanwhile, Rick was contacted by Lucy Harper, the wife of one of Coven’s victims. Since Coven escaped justice, she wanted Rick’s help to kill him. At first Rick refused, but after Coven made an attempt on Lucy’s life right in front of him, he agreed.

Rick convinced Captain Marvel to revoke Coven’s cosmic power so that he would have a chance to kill him. However, during the fight, Coven reclaimed all of Genis’s power, making him virtually invincible. He defeated Rick and was about to kill him and Lucy when Caffrey’s family showed up. Coven confidently told them to take their best shot–and then Captain Marvel took his power back! Coven was now vulnerable again and was killed instantly by energy blasts. According to Captain Marvel’s cosmic awareness, this time Coven will remain dead.

A number of times Coven flirted with Rick while taunting him, and even kissed him, sticking his tongue down Rick’s throat (Captain Marvel #9, volume 4). However, it is not clear if this was an actual attraction or just a way of taunting Rick, or even just part of Coven’s insanity.

He appeared to have a natural resurrection ability which was apparently due to his alien origin. The cosmic powers he temporarily had from Captain Marvel granted him superhuman strength, invulnerability, the ability to fly, and the ability to view the past.

Coven created by Peter David.

© and ® Marvel Comics. Used without permission.

Robin Vega

Saturday, December 12th, 2009
Art by John Romita, J.

Art by John Romita, J.

Contributed by Ronald Byrd

Robin Vega is a science major at Empire State University, alma mater of Peter Parker, a.k.a. Spider-Man. A mutant, Robin has dealt with persecution all her life, having been run out of towns and colleges several times. When the mutant-hating group known as the Friends of Humanity becomes active on campus, Robin finally grows tired of running and resolves to fight them, “not just for myself, but for everyone else who is different and just wants to be left alone.” Confronted by a group of the bigots, whose gunfire triggers an explosion, Robin brands them with the word “mutie” so that they too will experience distrust, rescues two people from the fire, and vanishes into the night, presumably to continue her war on the hate-mongers. Although Robin is never said to be a lesbian, her situation has so many parallels to that of a closeted gay woman (“I’ve spent most of my life trying to hide who I really am,” she tells Peter Parker. “You don’t know what it’s like…to spend your entire life hiding who and what you really are from the world.”) that she seemed worthy of mention.

Robin can convert her body into living molten metal, in which form she can alter her shape, i.e. stretching her arms to great length, changing her hand into a hammer, growing an armor of rock-like spikes, and so on. While in this form she also possesses superhuman strength and is impervious to bullets and fire. She can also melt herself into an amorphous form which allows her to crawl down walls.

Robin Vega appeared in Spider-Man #82 (1997). Written by Howard Mackie.

© and ® Marvel Comics. Used without permission.

Cloud

Tuesday, November 24th, 2009

cloudContributed by Ronald Byrd

A sentient nebula, destined to evolve into a star within the next thousand millennia, Cloud came to Earth as a condensed human-sized nucleus to seek superhuman aid when the stars in its region of space began to mysteriously disappear. Arriving upon Earth, Cloud attempted to rescue two teenage lovers, Carol Faber and Danny Milligan, from an automobile accident, but a telepathic link was inadvertently forged between the two humans and Cloud, who became an amnesiac teenage girl identical to Faber. Brainwashed by the Secret Empire, Cloud clashed with the super-team known as the Defenders, eventually rebelling against her masters and joining the team.

When she fell in love with the female Moondragon, Cloud was tormented by these “inappropriate” feelings until her subconscious enabled her to change into male form (identical to Milligan); however, her/his love was not enough to prevent Moondragon from falling prey to the evil influence of the Dragon of the Moon, and Cloud, still troubled by this new ability and unsure of what it meant regarding her/his true nature, later turned her/his attention to another fellow Defender, Iceman. Eventually regaining her/his memories and, with the help of the Defenders, returning to the vanished stars, Cloud returned to her/his original state as a nebula; appearing briefly in Solo Avengers to help the recovering Moondragon, Cloud evidently prefers her female manifestation, since she uses it to interact with humans on this occasion. Presumably Cloud continues to exist somewhere in the further regions of space, doing whatever it is that nebulas do.

In addition to being able to assume both male and female identities, while in mortal form Cloud could change into a gaseous cloud-like state, in which condition she could engulf opponents, discharge lightning, communicate telepathically, and fly. As a nebula and future star, Cloud possesses vast cosmic power whose limits are unclear.

© and ® Marvel Comics. Used without permission.

Tsultrine

Tuesday, November 24th, 2009

tsultrineFormer assassin Mysta (Laser Eraser) Mystralis and her cyborg lover, Axel Pressbutton are rogue adventurers in space. In issue #3 of Laser Eraser and Pressbutton, they’re unexpectedly caught off guard in a warp storm while in hyper drive. Shifting down into normal space leads them into another adventure when they land on a nearby uncharted planet. Mysta is lured (with Axel in tow) to a long abandoned underground chamber. Inside Mysta is drawn to a slumbering woman enclosed in some kind of stasis chamber. Opening the capsule, Mysta is drawn into an illusionary world created by the woman within. The capsule quickly seals itself. We’re visually cued by Tsultrine’s pointed teeth, pale skin, long dark hair, and dark eyes that she’s a villain, but the enthralled Mysta believes they’re lovers, and let’s herself be psychically seduced.

Distracted by his attempt to open the capsule and free his lover, Axel finds himself surrounded by a number of monkey-like beings. Naturally Axel misinterprets their actions to put Mysta in danger until an elder being telepathically relates to Axel the history of its and Tsultrine’s race. Creating weapons was something never done in their history. Instead, its people developed and trained their mental abilities, using sex as a way to take over the bodies of the beautiful, but weak-minded. The physically undesirable individuals eventually devolved into the monkey-like beings. Axel learns that Tsultrine is the last of her kind and her plan is to take over Mysta’s body so she can leave the planet and feed on new people.

At the same time Axel is learning this, Mysta begins to see through Tsultrine’s spell that in turn weakens it. Before her seduction of Mysta is realized, Axel pulls himself together and smashed through the capsule, pulling Mysta out of the vampire’s arms. The horde of monkey-beings beat Tsultrine’s withered body. Axel and Mysta immediately leave the planet and the experience behind them.

One might assume Tsultrin to be a lesbian or bisexual. The story’s single flashback scene leaves it unclear what her sexual orientation may be. Had Pressbutton not been a cyborg, she theoretically may have tried to possess him rather than Mysta.

This story from Laser Eraser and Pressbutton #3 was written by Pedro Henry with art by Jerry Paris and Garry Leach.

© presumably Pedro Henry and Jerry Paris. Used without permission.

Neptune

Thursday, November 19th, 2009

Contributed by Ronald Byrd

When she is removed from the Olympic swimming team because she “broke training rules,” Leona vows to take vengeance and “plunder the world that I hate.” Inspired by the nickname that the newspapers gave her, “the Mermaid Queen,” she becomes the pirate Neptune, disguising herself as the legendary male ruler of the sea and outfitting her all-female pirate band as mermaids. By 1944 she has sunk twenty-three merchant ships, erasing the crews’s memories with a will-controlling drug, but she is finally apprehended by Wonder Woman, at which point her identity and true gender is revealed. Speculations about deeper reasons for Leona’s choice of nom de guerre, coupled with her decision to surround herself with lovely “mermaids” and the precise circumstances under which she “broke rules,” might be interesting but are ultimately unanswerable at this late date.

As an enemy of Wonder Woman during World War II, Neptune originally, one would assume, existed on Earth-2; following the Crisis on Infinite Earths, history was altered so that Wonder Woman’s golden age adventures never took place, leaving her enemies of that era primarily in oblivion. However, continuity reconsiderations have recently determined that Wonder Woman’s mother, Hippolyte, was active as Wonder Woman during World War II. To date, the only original golden age rogue re-established into current continuity has been Dr. Poison (see Wonder Woman #151 or the entry on Dr. Poison).

Neptune had no superhuman powers but was an excellent swimmer and had access to various resources, including a mind-controlling drug.

Neptune appeared in Comic Cavalcade #9. Do you have an image of Neptune to share?

© and ® DC Comics. Used without permission.

Blue Snowman

Thursday, October 1st, 2009

bluesnowman1Contributed by Ronald Byrd

School teacher Byrna Brilyant’s scientist father died while working on his invention of “blue snow,” a special form of precipitation that freezes everything it touches. This invention was intended to “serve humanity,” although precisely how seems rather vague. Thinking to put her father’s work to more profitable use, Byrna creates the masculine identity of the Blue Snow Man and unleashes the petrifying power of blue snow upon the farming community of Fair Weather Valley demanding each farmer’s “life savings” in return for the chemical antidote that will free crops, livestock, and people from the snow’s effects. The Blue Snow Man is discovered in “his” mountain sanctuary by Wonder Woman, who forces “him” to defrost the valley. The Blue Snow Man, like many of Wonder Woman’s enemies, is sentenced to prison on the Amazon penal colony Transformation Island, but in 1948 she and seven other female super-villains escape and pool their talents as Villainy, Incorporated; led by the Saturnian slaver Eviless, the evil eight are again defeated by Wonder Woman. Byrna, also known as the Blue Snow Man, retained her male appearance and name in this second appearance, but what if anything is to be made of her choice of criminal identities with regard to her sexual orientation is unknown.

Art by Amanda Conner

Art by Amanda Conner

Blue Snowman made a surprise appearance as a villain on the run from Doctor Mid-Nite and Power Girl in Power Girl #7 by Justin Gray, Jimmy Palmiotti, and Amanda Conner. Described as a “former Wonder Woman foe with gender issues”, Snowman’s guise had been updated to that of a retro-style robot. The blue snow had been adapted for use through technology incorporated into the suit and pipe. Power Girl easily stops Snowman and is then distracted by the appearance of Vartox (a Supermnan foe) who has decided to make her his mate. To expedite matters, Vartox intends to seduce Kara with a pheromone based weapon. Instead, Snowman is seduced and very eager to fulfill Vartox’s desires. Such behavior doesn’t necessarily clarify Byrna’s orientation or gender identity. With Kara unaffected and justifiably offended, Vartox relies on his plan B, a demonstration of his masculinity by fighting an Ix Negaspike, the last of its kind and possibly an example of vagina dentata. Confused and disoriented by the pheromone weapon (and simply comic cannon fodder), Snowman rushes the creature to protect Vartox and is instead swallowed in two gulps by it.

As an enemy of Wonder Woman during World War II, the Blue Snow Man originally, one would assume, existed on Earth-2; following the Crisis on Infinite Earths, history was altered so that Wonder Woman’s golden age adventures never took place, leaving her enemies of that era primarily in oblivion. However, continuity reconsiderations have determined that Wonder Woman’s mother, Hippolyte, was active as Wonder Woman during World War II. It remains unclear if the Wonder Woman Blue Snowman fought was Hippolyte during World War II or Diana in an undocumented adventure. Considering her obscurity, no one will probably lose sleep over the mystery. Prior to Power Girl #7 the only original golden age rogue re-established into current continuity had been Dr. Poison (see Wonder Woman #151 or the entry on Dr. Poison).

The Blue Snow Man possessed no superhuman powers; she originally relied upon a “telescopic snow ray” which she used to create petrifying blizzards and a “defroster ray” to reverse their effect.

This profile was resourced using information from The Encyclopedia of Comic Book Heroes, Volume 2: Wonder Woman, written by Michael Fleisher.

The Blue Snow Man’s only appearances are Sensation Comics #59, 1946 and the later Wonder Woman #28.

© and ® DC Comics. Used without permission. Images provided by Mike S.

Dr. Poison

Thursday, October 1st, 2009

Contributed by Ronald Byrd

In 1942 Doctor Poison (AKA Princess Maru), who disguises her gender via a bulky hooded costume and mask, was the leader of a Nazi spy ring whose ultimate goal was to wreak havoc in the US Army by contaminating the army’s water with “reverso,” a drug that “confuses the brain centers…[making] soldiers do the exact opposite of what they are told.” This plan is foiled by the Amazon heroine Wonder Woman and Doctor Poison is imprisoned, but she later escapes and, in 1943, now working for Japan, grounds all US planes along the front of China via a “green gas” which “enters the carburetor and stops the engine.” Wonder Woman halts this scheme as well, and Doctor Poison is imprisoned on Transformation Island, the Amazon penal colony. She is not seen again until 1948, when she and seven other female super-villains escape and pool their talents as Villainy, Incorporated; led by the Saturnian slaver Eviless, the evil eight are again defeated by Wonder Woman. Throughout most of her first appearance Doctor Poison was believed to be a male due to her disguise, and she retained this “drag king” garb in her later appearances; whether this guise was simply a necessity of assuming power within the male-dominated Axis governments or indicative of something else is difficult to say at this late date.
drpoison1
In Wonder Woman #151 (volume #2), an unnamed grandchild of the original Dr. Poison appears in league with the demi-goddess Devastation. Dr. Poison’s gender remains ambiguous, the only clues being long fingernails and a lipsticked grimace somewhat like the Joker’s. While the continuity of most golden age Wonder Woman stories remains unspecified, it is made clear that Hippolyte, Wonder Woman’s mother, did fight Doctor Poison during the time Hippolyte spent as a heroine in the 1940s. Whether or not the rest of Wonder Woman’s original golden age rogues’ gallery has similarly been re-established into existence is unknown at this time.”

Doctor Poison possessed no superhuman powers but was a chemical genius. She was a spy, Chief of Nazi Poison Division, and Chemical Research Chief of the Japanese army. Since neither Nazi Germany nor Imperial Japan was ruled by a monarchy, precisely what Doctor Poison, a.k.a. Princess Maru, was princess of is unclear.

The Golden Age Dr. Poison first appeared in Sensation Comics #2 (1942) and is later seen in Sensation Comics #24 and Wonder Woman #28. Scan provided by Mike S.

© and ® of DC Comics. Used without permission.

Hypnota the Great

Thursday, October 1st, 2009

hypnota1Contributed by Ronald Byrd

A stage magician who conceals her gender via masculine costume and false facial hair, Hypnota (real name unknown) was accidentally shot in the head during the rehearsal of one of her act’s illusions. Experimental surgery saved her life, but it also released a “blue electric ray of dominance” from her “mid-brain,” granting her the ability to mesmerize others with a glance. Hypnota uses this new talent both in her stage act and in crime, including the selling of her mesmerized victims to slave merchants from the planet Saturn. When Saturn’s slave trade in Earthlings is banned as part of a peace treaty with Earth, Hypnota, hoping to revitalize her source of revenue, steals America’s contingency defense plans against the ringed world in order to foment hostility and break the treaty. Her warmongering efforts are thwarted by the heroic Wonder Woman with the aid of Hypnota’s twin sister Serva, who had been her magician’s assistant as well as an unwilling aide in her crimes. Hypnota, like many of Wonder Woman’s enemies, is sentenced to prison on the Amazon penal colony Transformation Island, but in 1948 she and seven other female super-villains escape and pool their talents as Villainy, Incorporated. Led by the Saturnian slaver Eviless, the evil eight are again defeated by Wonder Woman. Whether or not Hypnota’s masculine garb, which concealed her true gender throughout most of her first appearance and which she retained in her second appearance, is to be taken as anything more than a stage affectation is unclear.

As an enemy of Wonder Woman during World War II, Hypnota originally, one would assume, existed on Earth-2; following the Crisis on Infinite Earths, history was altered so that Wonder Woman’s golden age adventures never took place, leaving her enemies of that era primarily in oblivion. However, continuity reconsiderations have recently determined that Wonder Woman’s mother, Hippolyte, was active as Wonder Woman during World War II. To date, the only original golden age rogue re-established into current continuity has been Dr. Poison.

Hypnota was able to project “blue hypnotic rays” from her eyes and hands. Anyone who fell under the influence of these rays became slaves to her every command. She was also skilled in the use of various stage tricks.

Hypnota first appeared in Wonder Woman #11 (1944) and is last seen in Wonder Woman #28.

© and ® of DC Comics. Used without permission. Scan provided by Mike S