Posts Tagged ‘Vertigo’

Danny The Street

Thursday, January 28th, 2010

Contributed by Tom Peyer

Danny is a phenomenon unto himself. Neither man nor machine, fish nor fowl, flora nor fauna, he is in fact a sentient transvestite street – a short, two-lane avenue flanked by dozens of strange and eccentric shops and storefronts. Thanks to his mystical space-warping properties, Danny is quite the world traveler, having visited cities all over the globe – usually at night, when no one is looking, when he can surreptitiously shuffle city streets and make room for himself and become anything from a back road in Bangkok to an alleyway in Denver. Though no one knows precisely how Danny came to be, those poor and downtrodden souls to whom he has given shelter over the years love him dearly and trust him with their lives.

Through a series of unrevealed circumstances, Danny somehow ran afoul of Darren Jones, a self-proclaimed “normalcy agent” who sent a platoon of Men from N.O.W.H.E.R.E. to eradicate Danny. Jones knew Danny’s habits; he also knew that, in between his continental jaunts, Danny invariably returned to the estate grounds of his only real friend, writer Sara Furness. It was there that the Men from N.O.W.H.E.R.E. launched a surprise attack on Danny and his many inhabitants, among them the odd performers of the Danny the Street Perpetual Cabaret. Panicked, Danny took the battle to New York City; when the disturbance began to attract attention, the Doom Patrol came to investigate and found themselves defending Sara and the others from the N.O.W.H.E.R.E. Men.

Art by Richard CaseThe ensuing struggle was fast and furious, but the Men from N.O.W.H.E.R.E. made a fatal mistake when they tried to kill Sara. Enraged, Danny took himself and the Doom Patrol straight to Darren Jone’s house, where the performers of the Perpetual Cabaret exacted a strange and terrible vengeance on the man.

Since then, Danny has freely associated with the Doom Patrol and (over the protestations of Sara, who doesn’t much care for leader Niles Caulder) has volunteered to serve as the team’s mobile headquarters. With his powers at their disposal, they can travel anywhere on Earth – and beyond, for Danny knows many places that aren’t on any map.

Danny is kind, compassionate, and in his own way quite the poet. Though he has no voice, he communicates by forming his words out of anything from ambient manhole vapors to the letters of street signs. Morrison took inspiration for Danny the Street’s name from performer Danny La Rue.

Danny first appeared in Doom Patrol #35, volume 2 and to date has not appeared in following volumes of the Doom Patrol.

© and ® DC Comics. Used without permission.

Kay Watson

Thursday, January 28th, 2010

Art by Sonny LiewKay has been life-long best friend and confidante to Frankie, the titular character of this Vertigo mini-series. As Frankie’s best friend, Kay has indulged Frankie’s comments about her having a personal god named Jeriven though she doesn’t share her friend’s belief. That changes one day as the pair visit East Coast University and run into Dean Baxter, a mutual childhood friend.

Jeriven saved Frankie and Kay from a drowning accident, but he wasn’t able to rescue Dean. Out of guilt and despair, Frankie insisted Jeriven bring they boy back from the dead. He did, but the strange circumstances forced the three of them apart, till this one fateful day.

Frankie is the attractive extrovert who’s discovered guys though she’s not at all experiencing good luck with them, thanks to a secretively jealous Jeriven. Kay is steadfast, supportive, and the quiet, much more bookish introvert of the pair. She seemingly has no interest in guys, and feels left out when Frankie and Dean hit it off.

Unknown to either of them, Dean is secretly a pawn of a demon god with a vendetta against Jeriven. Dean charms Frankie with his personality and uses his good looks to seduce Frankie, all in a scheme calculated to make Frankie doubt and lose her belief in Jeriven.

Dean is able to trick Jeriven into manifesting into a human male form, trapping him as Dean persuades Frankie to disavow her faith. Kay happens upon the scene as Dean gloats over the now human Jeriven, and decides to help him.

Confused by new feelings, Jeriven kisses Kay, and immediately expresses regret by saying, “Kay, that was my first kiss, and I’ll never forget it, but Frankie is the only girl for me.” Kay simply replies, “Yeah. For me, too.”

Jeriven falls into the clutches of the demon god, and Kay and Frankie team up to rescue him. In one scene, Dean taunts Kay about being a lesbian, but Kay surprises him with her determination to protect Frankie, and takes him down. Jeriven destroys the demon god by trickery. As the trio walks away, Kay confesses that she and Jeriven are in love with Frankie, admitting that she’ll never make a pass at her friend. Frankie shocks Kay by kissing her and suggesting that the three of them start a relationship. The story closes by showing them happily settled into their new lives in California.

Kay first appears in My Faith in Frankie #1 and her crush on Frankie is revealed in #3.

© Mike Carey and Sonny Liew. Published by Vertigo. Used without permission.

Dedalus

Thursday, January 7th, 2010
Art by Davide Gianfelice

Art by Davide Gianfelice

Tall and raven-haired, Dedalus is a London detective who is drawn into strange and surreal events evoking themes of ancient Greek tragedies when called in to investigate the grisly murder of a woman whose savaged body was left on riverbank. When first seen Dedalus is having a phone conversation reassuring his lover John. It’s clear that Dedalus is closeted on the job when he replies “the usual” to a fellow detective’s query of “Woman trouble?” regarding the phone call.

As acts of violence and intimidation, more deaths, a trio of mysterious women (embodying the Furies) appear seemingly at random, and sheets of parchment with ancient Greek writing appear in unlikely places they become an obsession for Dedalus. How deeply the events affect Dedalus, especially when colleague Danny is killed, becomes clear in a scene between Dedalus and John, who tries to reassure Dedalus that the murderer will be caught. Dialog between the couple hints that Dedalus’ decision to be closeted is a source of recurring strain.

Dedalus gains a new partner with Rashid who is rather knowledgable of Greek tragedies. Whether Dedalus can maintain his secret from her remains to be seen.

Dedalus is first seen and confirmed as gay in Greek Street #1. John is first seen in #5.

© Peter Milligan and Davide Gianfelice. Published by Vertigo. Used without permission.

Lord Fanny

Wednesday, November 18th, 2009
Art by Phil Jimenez

Art by Phil Jimenez

Adelinda Morales and her husband Eugenio, and her mother, Dona Isola de Rios had moved to Rio de Janeiro from their native Mexico. Isola was the most feared bruja (witch) in the slums of Rio. Her power had been passed down to her from her mother just as she had passed hers on to Adelinda.

Isola was shocked when Adelinda gave birth to a boy, and demanded she become pregnant again in the hopes of having a girl to initiate as a bruja. The second pregnancy abruptly ended with a miscarriage, and forcing Isola to improvise. She’s convinced the answer is to raise Hilde as a girl. Adelinda seems agreeable but Eugenio voices his objection: “You can’t turn my boy into a sissy!” Isola shuts him up with a threat. Of course the first part of her plan is contingent on Hilde’s willingness to be raised as a girl. She tempts him with a frilly dress, and he accepts.

A drunk during Mardi Gras stabbed Adelina to death. Hilde was only seven and Isola and Aunt Marta (a woman who had slept with Hilde’s father) raised her. They taught Hilde magical plants and sorcerous arts, and told her stories of the gods and spirits that ruled the land in Pre-Columbian times.

Isola decided it was time to return to Mexico and the City of the Gods, Teotihuacan, when Hilde reached puberty and started to show an interest in boys. The time has come to initiate Hilde into brujeria. Hilde drinks hallucinogenic tea to start her vision quest, and to find her totem. Isola cuts Hilde’s thigh to simulate menstruation in order to attract the spirits. Reality becomes meaningless to Hilde in her altered state. A large butterfly alights on her forehead, becoming her totem.

The next step is an encounter with Tezcatlipoca, the Smoking Mirror, father of all witches. He comes to her in the form of a gaunt, headless figure with two wooden doors for his chest within which he keeps his heart. Hilde’s test is to snatch his heart in order to be granted a wish. Hilde succeeds and asks for both safe passage and return to Mictlan, the Dead Lands, to learn the secrets of magic from the Skeleton God.

In Mictlan Hilde earns the knowledge of magic. The Lord of the Dead insists she stay with him. Hilde objects, saying that Tezcatlipoca had promised her safe passage. Hilde offers to tell a joke in exchange for her freedom. She leaves the God’s throne room and enters the Garden of Life and Death. By gashing her tongue with sacred thorns Hilde learns the secret language of shamans. Finally, the goddess Izpapalotl commands her to leave or be killed. Hilde returns to her body and finds her grandmother and Aunt Marta waiting for her. As they’re driving away from the temple, Isola says she has a special gift for Hilde. It’s her first lipstick.

When Lord Fanny turned 18 she joined The Invisibles, a group of radical anarchists whose goals were to save humanity from being enslaved to the extra dimensional Archons and snap the world out of its mass hallucination commonly referred to as
reality.

Lord Fanny created by Grant Morrison. Fanny is an example of the shamanic traditions that were valid and accepted expressions of some Native peoples throughout the Americas which were seen as evil and satanic by European and white American conquerors. Native men and women who had same sex attractions were seen as powerful and special. They often assumed clothing and gender roles of their opposite sex, and were often highly sought after as spouses. While Fanny may have been raised as a female, I believe the character is a little too complicated to label simply as transgendered and could also be considered gay, though no contemporary label will be totally accurate since modern notions of accepted sexual identities are too constrictive.

Lord Fanny first appears and is outed in The Invisibles #2, vol 1.

© and ® DC/ Vertigo Comics. Used without permission.

Marisol Del Rios

Wednesday, November 11th, 2009
Art by Michael Kaluta

Art by Michael Kaluta

Marisol is the red-haired woman that Madame Xanadu takes as her lover during the late 15th century in Spain just after the beginning of the dark days of the Spanish Inquisition. Her parents have died and seems to be without other relatives when Xanadu arrives in Spain. She was a quality seamstress, a trait she shared with her mother, and sewed vestments for the church. Please read the Xanadu entry for more information.

Madame Xanadu

Tuesday, November 10th, 2009

This bio narrowly focuses on developments in the five part “Exodus Noir” story in Madame Xanadu #11 – 15. The year is 1940 and Madame Xanadu has settled into her Greenwich Village abode strongly associated with the character’s ambience. Socialite Catherine Shepherd is distraught over the inability of police and private invesitgators to solve her father’s grisly death which has been attributed as a rare example of spontaneous human combustion. After hearing many rumors and vague account, she turns to Madame Xanadu for help. Xanadu empathizes with the woman’s anguish and agrees to help, starting with a visit to the man’s deluxe apartment suite where a faint odor recalls bittersweet and horrific memories of her experiences of life in Spain just after the start of the Inquisition.

Ferdinand and Isabella, the Spanish crown who financed Columbus’ journey to the New World, have conquered the final territories of Moors and reunited the land under Christendom. With Muslims expelled, the Vatican has decreed that all Jews remaining in Spain must convert to Christianity, leave Spain and forfeit their belongings and wealth, or stay and face the Inquisition’s wrath. The Inquisition, along with the lesser known Portuguese one, was also designed to cleanse the nation of sodomites and tribads (gay men and women) on threat of death by public immolation.

When we first see Xanadu in Spain it is with a redhaired woman named Marisol as they’re witnessing an auto de fé, the part of public procession of the condemned among the townspeople, partially intended to instil fear. Xanadu reacts with horror while Marisol has little reaction to it. They part to do errands, their hands lingering a moment longer. After Marisol has an unsettling encounter with Torquemada himself, she rushes back home where the two women kiss. Unknown by the pair, two boys witness the embrace while spying on them, ensuring they come under the Inquisition’s wary eye. On several occasions Marisol also refers to Xanadu as “novia”, Spanish for girlfriend.

Art by Michael Kaluta

Art by Michael Kaluta

Xanadu acts as midwife to a neighbor woman in delivery, giving her some potion and untwisting the baby’s umbilical cord to ensure a healthy, live child. Her feat comes to the attention of a priest who’s also been called to pray over the woman, and he relates the incident in terms of witchcraft to Torquemada, naming Marisol as a witness.

Later When Marisol drops off finished work at the rectory a priest insists on taking her to Torquemada. The priest inquires about the dark haired woman “who seems familiar with the arts normally reserved for doctors”, doctors traditionally being men while midwives were becoming largely suspect of witchcraft. Marisol can only agree when he insists she be taken to receive the host and confess her sins or attract undue attention to them both and risk the nature of their relationship being discovered.

Xanadu returns with a basket of fish only to find Marisol distressed when she politely explains she can’t partake in the sacrement because she isn’t Catholic. Xanadu’s comment that “[their] love is as natural as a bird in flight, as the rains in the fields…” doesn’t calm her. She cavalierly dismisses Marisol’s concern over arousing Inquisition suspicion toward them and leaves her lover to forage rare ingredients to make tinctures, perhaps even the one which keeps her youthful. Alone, Marisol is accosted and taken into custody. A zealous Torguemada confronts Marisol, beaten and bloodied, demanding to know where her “sister in sin” is. She accuses Torquemada of secretly being Jewish, enraging the man, and in turn she is locked away in a dank prison to wait to be put to “The Question”, surely a euphemism for torture.

In the final chapter, Xanadu returns from her foraging. Seeing something is amiss and Marisol nowhere to be seen, she approaches another neighbor who tells her to stay away, calling her a “whore of Satan” and informing her that her “ruddy bed bitch” is getting “what she deserves!” A hasty consultation of her forsworn Tarot deck confirms danger and a horrific scene awaits Xanadu upon entering the town. Marisol is standing atop a pyre, held captive by black hooded executioners while a crowd of townspeople stand silently as witnesses. As she’s bound to the stake Marisol sees her lover and shouts out “Novia! Yo te amo, novia…” Xanadu is unable to save Marisol’s life; one executioner snaps her neck, calling it a gesture of pity. Xanadu recoils in shock, confessing her love which catches the attention of a priest standing nearby and calls out for guards to seize her. Thankfully Xanadu has enough wits about her to blind the priest with some enchantment so that she can escape in the confusion. Wagner ends the story of Marisol and Xanadu here by simply writing she flees Spain never to look back.

While Wagner tells a fictional story, the Inquisitions that he places the lovers in were a historical series of events in which contemporary gays and lesbians (or sodomites and tribads) were persecuted, tortured, publicaly humiliated, and murdered at the behest of the Catholic Church, whose hands were considered bloodless for having put the Spanish Crown in charge of meting punishments.

As revealed in the beginning of Matt Wagner’s initial story arcXanadu is first known long ago as Nimue Inwudum, a name she stopped going by after being deceived by Merlin. Readers have seen Xanadu in a romantic relationship with magician John Zatara, father of Zatanna, who very much wanted to marry her. His proposal was turned down because Xanadu had seen the future love of Zatara’s life in a vision.

After her short lived series ended, Xanadu became a supporting character during part of the second volume of The Spectre. It remains to be seen if or how Wagner will acknowledge or incorporate any elements of her appearances there in his stories or the more recent events that occurred in Days of Vengeance in which an out of control Spectre blinded Xanadu struck out against magic and its users.

Xanadu’s first appearance was in Doorway To Nightmare #1, her first short lived comic. Matt Wagner reveals Xanadu having loved Marison in Madame Xanadu #11. Read Madame Xanadu’s Wikipedia entry for more information.

The “Exodus Noir” trade is available for pre-order at Amazon.

Please read Nobody Expects the Spanish Inquisition.

© and ® Dc/ Vertigo Comics. Used without permission. Created by David Michelinie and Val Mayerik.

Kathy and Lennie

Sunday, October 25th, 2009
Art by Chris Bachalo or Jan Duursema

Art by Chris Bachalo or Jan Duursema

Kathy George came from a fairly well off Southern family, but decided to move north and become free spirited. She fell in love with Roger, an African American, perhaps out of defiance to her family’s attitudes. She convinces Roger to meet her parents. Shortly before Kathy and Roger arrive at her parents’, Troy Grenzer breaks into the house and brutally murders her parents. Grenzer is caught in the aftermath by Kathy and goes after her. Roger comes to her aid, attacking Grenzer. When the police arrive, they decide that Roger is the murderer and fatally shoot him.

Time passes with Kathy in a state of depression. She’s outside the prison on the day of Grenzer’s execution. At the same moment of his execution Shade crosses over from the Area of Madness, possesses Grenzer’s body, teleports in front of Kathy, and orders her to drive off. Thus starts their great American road trip to search for the Madness Stream that’s been affecting people.

Kathy winds up alone scared and without money in New York, and has no luck searching for friends she knew from before. Her last hope is to find Ray. Like all her other friends, Ray has moved on. Lennie (Lenora Shapiro), the new tenant is intrigued by Kathy and takes her in. They share a little adventure in which Lennie holds up a cabdriver. Shade makes his way back through the Madness Stream to Kathy, and for lack of anything else to do, Lennie gets involved in their bizarre,
“hallucinogenic” road trip.

Later, Kathy and Lenny visit relatives of Kathy’s who live on a Montana farm. Alone in the barn, they have a long conversation and kiss. Neither is quite sure what to make of it, especially Kathy who has been in love with Shade. The story in issue #26 is told from Kathy and Lennie’s points of view as they lay naked in bed talking with each other. Peter Milligan, the series’ writer, comes up with the most surprising way for Shade to find out this bit of news. Kathy and Lennie’s relationship continues for a while. Jealous, Shade asks Kathy if she and Lennie are still having sex, and then tries to turn the table on them by kissing Lennie. Soon afterwards, Kathy gets pregnant by Shade. During her pregnancy Kathy realized she’s not in love with Shade, and they become friends. In a case of being in the wrong place at the wrong time, Kathy is shot while shopping. She lives long enough to deliver her baby.

Being part human and part Metan, Kathy’s baby George isn’t normal. His metabolism is much faster than a human’s and he grows up and dies within a short time. Shade uses his power to safekeep George’s soul until he can transfer it into another body. As irony would have it, the child’s new body belongs to Lilly, Lennie’s estranged daughter.

Milligan wraps up the series by having Shade go back in time. History is rewritten so that Troy Grenzer never murdered Kathy’s parents and her fiance Roger was never killed by police. Lenny was back in New York, Kathy was living in a Montana farmhouse and Shade had gone to be with her.

Kathy first appears in Shade #1, vol 2 and Lennie in #8. Kathy may have been bisexual. In any case. they’re outed in #20.

© and ® Vertigo Comics. Used without permission. Created by Peter Milligan.

Enigma

Saturday, October 24th, 2009
Art by Duncan Fegredo

Art by Duncan Fegredo

Contributed by Bill Reid

We meet Michael Smith, a compulsive, late-20’s, heterosexual phone repairman living a highly-structured life in Pacific City, California. We’re told he knows he’ll be having sex with his girlfriend tonight because it’s Tuesday, and they always and only have sex on Tuesday.Other characters include Titus Bird, the queer writer of the superhero comic book series “The Enigma,” which stopped after three issues when the publisher folded.

Characters from the series start appearing in Pacific City, over 25 years after the series ended. The title character of “The Enigma” was a major part of young Michael’s life, “a man in a mask and a cloak who was his mysterious friend. . . glimpsed in the unlit alleyways of his childhood,” (Michael’s father was killed in an earthquake, and he was abandoned by his mother around age 9).

Shortly after the series abruptly ended, an infant is born who is an extraordinary leap forward in human evolution. He causes his father’s face to be disfigured. His horrified mother throws the baby down an almost-dry well and shoots the father’s head off with a shotgun. The baby is able to survive on his own and lives in the well for 25 years. After he is discovered, he wanders the Southwest, eventually finding the ruins of Michael’s childhood home and, of course, copies of “The Enigma.” He adopts the identify of The Enigma, and causes other people to adopt the identities of the villains from the books he found.

Michael tracks down Titus in Texas and rescues him from a group of crazed fans, The Enigmatics, who consider Titus to be “some kinda guru.” Neither can understand how or why these characters are suddenly appearing, but they are sure that Michael is somehow directly linked to the events. They decide do some investigating.

enigma2In a bar they stop at on their way back to California, Titus makes a pass at Michael, who in turn floors Titus with a punch. Titus apologizes, and Michael is shocked that Titus assumed he was queer. Michael’s violent reaction to Titus’ offer of sex is later revealed to be because he is starting to realize that perhaps he is indeed sexually attracted to men and was “scared of the truth.” He succumbs to this desire when he finally meets The Enigma, who is an essentially emotionless being of incredible powers and unfamiliar with the concepts of right and wrong.

In the final issue we learn that The Enigma caused Michael to become homosexual because he needed to experience emotions, to learn to “be a little more . . . human. To feel a little love and compassion. . .” because he knows he needs this to defeat his most powerful enemy, his mother, who had gone insane after she discovered what a freak he was. The Enigma had sought out Michael specifically because he could tell how much the comic books had meant to young Michael when he found them. The Enigma offers to change Michael back to the way he was, (a heterosexual), but Michael declines the offer. The series ends just as Michael, Titus, and The Enigma go off to meet The Enigma’s mother, who had recently been transformed into a monstrosity.

Like the Sebastian O mini series by Grant Morrison, The Enigma was originally part of Disney’s planned line of mature comics that never appeared. Karen Berger picked up the two series and used them in Vertigo’s launch. The Engima tpb can still be found on Amazon.

Smith and The Enigman first appear in Enigma #1, Titus in Enigma #3. Titus is outed in #3, Michael and The Enigma in #6.

Enigma © and ® 1993 by Peter Milligan and Duncan Fegredo.Published by DC Comics. Used without permission.

Jayesh & Karl

Saturday, October 24th, 2009
Art by Chris Weston

Art by Chris Weston

Jayesh is a young man working in his father’s small grocery store in Hamburg, Germany. They’re immigrants, perhaps from India since the name “Jayesh” seems to be on Indian origin. Jayesh is first seen returning to the family store where his father his alarmed by a skinhead that’s walked in off the street. Jayesh grabs a bat to scare off the stranger, and is surprised to see a young, blond man named Karl. He’s looking for antiseptic ointments for cuts he received on his arm.

Jayesh finds Karl attractive and finds the courage to ask Karl out for a drink later that night. Karl accepts but warns him to come to the back door at his job. Karl’s friends are racists and it wouldn’t do for them to be seen together. Jayesh is quite happy.

Unfortunately, his happiness is very short lived. Later that night Karl with his friends in tow surprises Jayesh. They surround and threaten him, calling him “queer” and “bhaji boy.” Suddenly Jayesh is being kicked and beaten on the dirty alley. One of the men hands a broken bottle to Karl and tells the others to pull down Jayesh’s pants. Karl is instructed to shove the bottle into Jayesh’s exposed buttocks. He does so, but seems to be in shock judging from his blank state at the
bloody glass.

Karl himself is first seen earlier in the story in a scene in which he’s getting a tattoo. The design is a “Deutsher Sieg,” a raised fist with the phrase above and below it. Karl has a low pain threshold and stops before the design is completed. So, there were no mysterious cuts on Karl’s arm. He simply wasn’t telling the truth to Jayesh.

The two men are seen again much later in the series. They’re living together and Karl is taking care of Jayesh, who is suffering the after effects of the beating. For some reason Karl believes Jayesh is unaware of his culpability in the beating. In reality, Jayesh does know Karl’s role, but will not bring up the issue because in the end he has Karl’s love and devotion.

Jayesh and Karl first appear in Lucifer #2 and not seen again until #62 when their story concludes.

© and ® Vertigo Comics. Used without permission. Created by Mike Carey.

Charles Mowbray & Jeremy

Saturday, October 24th, 2009

Contributed by Ronald Byrd

In what is presumably a few years in the future, 32-year-old Charles Mowbray, heartbroken when Jeremy, his boyfriend of six years, leaves him, undergoes “a series of injections and some electrotherapy” to change his sexual orientation. A week after the procedure which “chemically altered the gene that predisposed [him] to homosexuality,” Charles (or “Chuck,” as he renames himself), starts pursuing women and hits it off with Lisa Killing, who accompanies him back to his apartment. However, Lisa leaves when Jeremy returns asking forgiveness; despite the procedure, Charles cannot deny his love for Jeremy, and the two are reconciled.
charlesmowbray
Heartthrobs was a four-issue DC/Vertigo anthology of various stories relating to sex and relationships, many of them rather macabre or pessimistic; Charles’s story (“Genes and a T-Shirt” from #1) was one of the most straightforward and romantic.