Posts Tagged ‘villains’

Dumas

Friday, October 23rd, 2009

dumas1Contributed by Ronald Byrd

Born in the American South early in the twentieth century, Stephen Lee’s mutant ability manifested itself in childhood when his facial features collapsed into a putty-like form. In adulthood he learned to reshape his face into that of anyone else but was unable to reconstruct what his own adult face should have been. Taking the name Dumas after the author of “The Man in the Iron Mask,” he became a deadly US intelligence agent in the Far East and later a freelance assassin in Japan, developing a reputation as an operative who would never back off from an assignment once he had accepted it.

Early in his adult life Dumas’s power developed to the point that he could reshape his entire body and, feeling that he could never find a woman to love, he assumed female form himself to become Olivia Vancroft, a socialite of the late 1930swhom he came to regard as a separate individual with “her own life, her own soul,” leading him to wonder “who is real and who is the mask.” Many of his missions were carried out, as far as the rest of the world knew, on behalf of the interests of the beautiful and reclusive Vancroft, whose appearance he did not allow to age over the decades; in fact, as Vancroft “she” went through the motions of formally hiring Dumas through other parties. In both personalities, Dumas was fascinated by masks; as Dumas he pursued a passion for kabuki masks, and Olivia Vancroft owned a large collection of those worn by super-heroes and super-villains.

When Vancroft decided to acquire the mask of Mark Shaw, a.k.a. Manhunter, Dumas clashed with the heroic mercenary a few times before Manhunter learned his secret and was finally forced to kill him in battle. After his death, Dumas’s body was used to develop a serum to duplicate his powers, and a Japanese gangster took on the identity until he too was defeated by Manhunter.

Dumas had the ability to reshape his face and body into that of any person he can visualize; however, he was unable to disguise his heartbeat ratio or voiceprint, and his facial features ran like putty if he did not maintain concentration on a given appearance. Dumas was a master at hand-to-hand combat and the martial arts; he also used a variety of weapons, including guns, knives, and throwing darts, which he wielded with precision. His costume was insulated to protect him from electrical shock.

Dumas’ birth name is Stephen Powell Lee. Olivia Vancroft was first seen in Manhunter #1 and as Dumas in #2. Dumas’ operated out of Tokyo while Vancroft was located at Cliff House in southwest Wisconsin. Dumas’ bifurcated sexuality was revealed in Manhunter #4. It remains unclear if Dumas’ orientation is bisexual, transgendered, transsexual, straight, or possibly even “all of the above”.

© and ® DC Comics. Used without permission.

Cannon & Saber

Thursday, October 22nd, 2009

Contributed by MikiShawn

Marshall Saber and Henry Cannon had a passion for murder, and each other. Clad in a green uniform, the red-haired Saber was an expert marksman, an assassin for a New York City mobster named Leibowitz. Cannon hid his Moe Howard haircut in a dark blue body suit, offset by a yellow robe, gloves and boots and was a blade master in the service of the Rinaldi Mob. The men decided a career move was in order and each murdered the other’s boss. They did so on the orders of a woman within the District Attorney’s office who vowed to consolidate Manhattan’s gangs under her control. Saber had thrown down his rifle almost without a fight when he encountered the Vigilante while Cannon simply surrendered to the police. They did so knowing that D.A. Marcia King would “put in an application for both assassins with the Government Witness Relocation Program” and set them free.

Appalled that the duo was literally getting away with murder, the Vigilante raided their apartment and quickly found himself outmatched. Brought down by successive knife and bullet wounds, the Vigilante might well have been shot to death by Saber had it not been for the intervention of another concerned citizen — the Electrocutioner. Arriving on the scene, the police found three unconscious gunmen — the Vigilante and the electrocuted but still breathing Cannon and Saber (Vigilante # 5, by Marv Wolfman, Keith Pollard and Romeo Tanghal).

In a rather ludicrous scene, the couple escaped the hospital after Cannon threw a lightweight plastic knife at CaptainArthur Hall. Instead of falling to the ground, as it would have in the real world, the knife slashed Hall’s throat (# 7). The assassins took their services to the West Coast. It was at their Malibu beach house that they accepted a contract to kill the Vigilante (# 35).

By now, the mantle of the Vigilante had passed from Adrian Chase to Alan Welles to Dave Winston. Despite his unfamiliarity with the duo, Winston held his own and managed to get a shot off at Saber, wounding him seriously enough for Cannon to abandon the battle and flee. In the course of the conflict, the men had revealed their client’s Long Island address and, with Saber recovered, they raced to the scene to salvage their reputation. In the end, Vigilante maneuvered them into striking each other: Saber took a blade to the shoulder and Cannon was felled by a bullet in the abdomen (1986′s Vigilante Annual # 2, by Paul Kupperberg, Ross Andru and Tony DeZuniga, with edits by Wolfman).

Cannon and Saber were slated to return in 1989′s Manhunter # 10, which would have introduced a gay supporting cast member named Vince Nuncioin into the series. As described by co-writer John Ostrander in Amazing Heroes # 145, “Mark Shaw was cellmates with him in prison. In prison, as on the streets, if you need something, he’ll arrange it.” According to AH # 157, the episode had “already scared a couple of artists off” and, with Manhunter’s cancellation in early 1990, the story’s completion became a moot point.

Both show a high proficiency for hand to hand combat. Saber has an almost instinctive ability to aim quickly and accurately firearms. Cannon’s affinity is for using edged objects as weapons, ranging from playing cards to throwing knives.

Cannon and Saber were confirmed as gay and a couple in Vigilante #5

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