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Vixen (comics)

Vixen
Vixen as depicted in Justice League of America: Vixen #1 (January 2017).
Art by Ivan Reis.
Publication information
PublisherDC Comics
First appearanceAction Comics #521 (July 1981)
Created byGerry Conway
Bob Oksner
In-story information
Alter egoMari Jiwe McCabe
SpeciesMetahuman
Team affiliationsJustice League Detroit
Suicide Squad
Checkmate
Ultramarine Corps
Justice League International
Justice League of America II
Justice Foundation
Justice League Task Force
Birds of Prey
PartnershipsDoctor Light
Green Lantern
Batman
Wonder Woman
Black Canary
Black Lightning
Aquaman
Hawkgirl
Animal Man
Abilities
  • Expert martial artist and hand-to hand combatant
  • Indomitable will
  • Use of mystical Tantu Totem grants:
    • Animal imitation
    • Enhanced strength, speed, stamina, durability, agility, reflexes, and senses
    • Enhanced vision
    • Razor sharp claws
    • Accelerated healing
    • Morphogenetic field energy manipulation
    • absorbed superpowers

Vixen (Mari Jiwe McCabe) is a superhero created by Gerry Conway and Bob Oksner. She first appeared in Action Comics #521 (July 1981), published by DC Comics.[1] Through the Tantu Totem, which allows her to harness the spirit (ashe) of any animal, past or present, and use its abilities.

Two versions of the character appeared in The CW's Arrowverse. The Mari McCabe version debuted in the CW Seed animated series Vixen, voiced by Megalyn Echikunwoke, who also reprised her role in an episode of the live-action parent series, Arrow. Legends of Tomorrow introduced a World War II-era Vixen and Mari's grandmother, Amaya Jiwe, portrayed by Maisie Richardson-Sellers.

Creation

In an interview, Conway discussed his reasoning for the character's creation:

"...what I was trying to address was what I perceived to be a lack of strong female leads in DC’s comics at the time. Or, let me put it this way: there was an opportunity, as DC was looking for additional books. Surveying the titles that they have, it seemed to me there were some obvious openings for characters that had been underrepresented. One of them had been lead female super-heroes. They had Wonder Woman. To a lesser degree they had Supergirl, Power Girl (who I also created), and Wonder Girl. There were a lot of girls, but not a lot of full-formed adult female super-heroes operating at DC, so I wanted to create one I also wanted to create a character who was a minority, and the idea of a female Black super-heroine hadn’t been played up to any great extent at that point. I think Storm (of the X-Men) was around, but I don’t think there were very many other representations of that type of character in the field...She was kind of based on what we called supermodels at the time. It was a very strange social phenomenon that was starting to occur back then. You had these women who were obviously objects of the male gaze, but they were also extremely empowered. They took charge of their own image, their own business, and identity. I wanted to show that. This was the 70s, so I hope female readers today will give us a bit of a pass on this. There were not that many active role models regarding careers for women at that time where you could reasonably say: this woman would have the resources to maintain a career as a super-heroine. What were the jobs available to women in the mid- to late-70s? Clerical work. Teaching jobs. There were very few potential jobs that would provide the potential resources and money that a character like Vixen would need to carry on a super-hero career. That’s a horribly sexist reality we were dealing with. Plus, she’s a minority, and that adds another whole layer of disadvantage that she has to overcome. So, it was a bit of wish fulfillment (for that character, not necessarily for me as the writer), and a bit of practicality to reflect something that was real in our society, i.e. the advent of these take-charge, supermodel/businesswomen."[2]

Publication history

Page from Cancelled Comic Cavalcade showing the intended cover to The Vixen #1. Art by Bob Oskner and Vince Colletta.

Vixen was intended to be the first African female DC superhero to star in her own series, but the first issue of her series was cancelled in the DC Implosion in 1978, never to be released. The story was subsequently printed in Cancelled Comic Cavalcade.

Since her debut in Action Comics, she has primarily appeared in team books, most notably various incarnations of the Justice League and Suicide Squad.

In October 2008, G. Willow Wilson began a five-issue limited series, Vixen: Return of the Lion.[3][4]

Character biography

In ancient Ghana, the warrior Tantu asked Anansi the Spider to create a totem that would give the wearer all of the powers of the animal kingdom, only if they would use the power to protect the innocent. Tantu used the totem to become Africa's first legendary hero. The totem was later passed down to Tantu's descendants until it reached the McCabes.

Growing up in a small village in the fictional nation of Zambesi, M'Changa province, Mari Jiwe McCabe heard the legend of the "Tantu Totem" from her mother. Sometime later, Mari's mother was killed by poachers and she was raised by her father Reverend Richard Jiwe, the village priest. Reverend Jiwe himself was killed by his half-brother (Mari's uncle) General Maksai. Maksai wanted the Tantu Totem, which Jiwe had possessed.

Vixen debuts in Action Comics #521.

Mari ultimately moved to America, where she established an identity as Mari McCabe and worked as a model in New York City. She used her newfound wealth to travel the world. On a trip back to Africa, she came across her uncle and took back the Tantu Totem, using its power to become the costumed superhero Vixen.

Fighting crime

Vixen made only two appearances as a solo crime fighter: once fighting poachers in India[5] and once fighting against the techno-psycho criminal Admiral Cerebrus.[6] She was a reluctant hero until the Justice League of America was reorganized by Aquaman. She applied for full-time League membership and was accepted.[7] During her time with the JLA, the totem was taken from her by General Maksai, who still sought its power.[8] The totem would only grant its full power to those who would use it to protect the innocent, and it caused Maksai to be transformed into a raging beast. Maksai died in battle with Vixen.[9] When the team faced the killer android Amazo, Vixen and several of her teammates were beaten into unconsciousness and then left bound and gagged in a walled-off pit. Vixen saved the lives of herself and her fellow Leaguers by using her powers to shatter her bonds and dig to freedom.[10] Vixen continued with that particular incarnation of the JLA until her teammates, Steel and Vibe, were killed, leading to Martian Manhunter disbanding the team.[11]

Around this time, Vixen teamed up with Animal Man. She traveled to his suburban house with knowledge of a mysterious, murderous force that was affecting Animal Man's powers. He found himself unable to access his powers correctly.[12]

Suicide Squad

Vixen returned to modeling, but a Caribbean photo session turned violent; Mari's colleagues were killed by drug smugglers. She appealed to the government, who turned the matter over to the Suicide Squad. She went undercover to capture the drug kingpin Cujo, whose appearance had been revealed by footage from the photo shoot. Along with Captain Boomerang and Black Orchid, she destroyed the operation, but not before she lost control and killed the criminal kingpin. Revolted by what she had become, she agreed to work with the Squad until her animal instincts could be curbed.[13] She worked with the Squad for some time, again seeing more teammates and friends killed. When it was disbanded for a year,[14] Mari returned to modeling and even launched a successful line of clothing. Her failed romance with Ben Turner (the Bronze Tiger) made Vixen decline an offer to rejoin the Squad. She realized that Turner needed mental support, and she reluctantly returned.[15] She ultimately gave up on a future with the Tiger, sensing that he would never admit to needing help, and left the team.[16]

Other adventures

After the Suicide Squad's heyday, Mari continued to do undercover work. She was drafted for at least one mission for Checkmate (the Squad's brother organization).[17] At some point, she assisted Oracle and the Birds of Prey. She went undercover to investigate a strange "superhero" cult, where the leader was using mind control and wound up brainwashed by him herself. The Huntress tried to help her and was nearly killed. Vixen regained her senses by channeling the stubbornness of a mule to hold back the mind control of the cult leader. She and Huntress then rescued the other brainwashed heroes.[18]

Vixen may still have had trouble controlling her animal side while using the totem, as witnessed when she worked alongside the Flash to stop Gorilla Grodd.[19] She also served on one mission with the Justice League Task Force,[20] helped Wonder Woman during a battle with Circe,[21] and helped her former JLA comrades protect Lex Luthor.[22] She then joined the loose-knit Ultramarine Corps.[23] While part of the Corps, Mari was brainwashed by Gorilla Grodd who sent her and other heroes to battle the JLA. Ultimately, Vixen and the others were freed.

Infinite Crisis

After Sue Dibny is killed in the Identity Crisis miniseries, Vixen rejoined her Justice League colleagues. She was present when the original Firestorm died during a battle with the Shadow Thief. Vixen adopted a new uniform in Infinite Crisis #7, resembling her Justice League Unlimited counterpart.

One Year Later

Vixen was tricked into battle in Hub City by Solomon Grundy, who had gained increased intelligence following his resurrection.[24][25][26] Using her totem, Grundy planned to merge his spirit with Amazo's body and thus gain further power. Without her totem, Vixen found that her innate connection to the "Red", the 'essence' of animal life', was falling apart.[27] She managed to 'lock onto' the totem, but her mind became lost in a flock of migrating birds. After mimicking the abilities of a young boy, Vixen managed to regain her mind and quickly flew to New York to retrieve her totem.[28] Vixen literally dropped into the JLA battle against Amazo.[29] After the villains were subdued, Vixen became a charter member of the newly revamped Justice League of America.[30]

Justice League of America

Vixen's main story arc in the early issues of Justice League of America Vol. 2, revolved around a change in her powers; Vixen changed from no longer drawing on animal characteristics, but to drawing on the powers of those around her. She matched others' skill levels and, as she suspected, drained powers from them. Superman was first to catch on to this and she subsequently revealed it to Red Arrow.[31]

Vixen sought out her former Suicide Squad teammate Bronze Tiger to discuss her situation, and subsequently admitted everything to the League.[32] Chairperson Black Canary instructed her to hand in her credentials and removed her from the team. Afterward, Dinah discussed with Mari the possibility of fixing the properties of the totem with the assistance of Zatanna.

When Zatanna attempted to find the source of the problem, she saw a mystic image of Vixen and Animal Man as puppets. When she tried to break the spell, she was repelled by an unknown force. When Vixen attempted to defeat the newly restored Amazo by absorbing all his stolen powers, she became mysteriously weak.[33] She then fell unconscious, with Amazo bearing down on her.[34]

When Zatanna and Red Tornado finally resolved the crisis, Vixen went to seek Animal Man, since he had been affected by similar power fluctuations, and was left unable to tap into the powers of Earth-borne animals. There, they were both sucked into the Tantu Totem, where, like in Zatanna's vision, they were trapped in Anansi's net. Anansi revealed his powers and how being the god of stories, he changed Buddy and Mari's personal histories and sources of powers to test them.[35]

In an attempt to keep them contained, Anansi restored their connection to the Red, but altered the personal histories of the Leaguers, to prevent them from ever founding the JLA. However, Vixen escaped and sought the new Leaguers to fight Anansi at their side. Although she succeeded in gathering allies, they were still no match for Anansi's power. Vixen held a gun to her totem, even though she knew that if the totem was destroyed, they would all be destroyed. This forced Anansi to return things to normal. Anansi then revealed to Mari that the whole thing was actually a test. He explained that reality had been changed on a fundamental level, and he needed someone to act as his agent against an individual who could take advantage of the situation. He restored Mari's powers, returned her and the JLA to their homes, and said that he would one day call upon her.[36]

Return of the Lion

Vixen: Return of the Lion is a limited series detailing Vixen's return to her home village for the first time. In that series, Vixen found that a local warlord named Aku Kwesi and his men had taken over several Zambesi villages. It turned out that this was the same man who killed Vixen's mother years ago. When Vixen confronted him, she found that he had powers that rivaled, and possibly surpassed, hers. These powers were based on advanced technology and chemicals that were given to him by Intergang lieutenant Whisper A'Daire. The rest of the Justice League of America went to Africa to render assistance, only to have several members get doused with Kwesi's Vodun zombie potion. This allowed A'Daire to take control of Superman and Black Canary and pit them against the rest of the League.

Final Crisis

During the Final Crisis crossover event, Vixen attends Martian Manhunter's funeral, and was later at the Hall of Justice when Empress, Sparx, and Más y Menos come there seeking help after being attacked by Mirror Master and Doctor Light. She later participates in a massive battle with Darkseid's forces after he nearly conquers Earth with the Anti-Life Equation.

After Final Crisis

In the aftermath of Final Crisis, the JLA was in tatters, with many of its members having to leave. Mari and the remaining team members enlisted the aid of Hardware after Kimiyo Hoshi went missing in her search for Shadow Thief and Starbreaker.[37][38] With help from Superman's friend Icon, the team emerged victorious in the battle with Starbreaker, with Mari having bright hopes for the future of the team.[39]

A short while later, Vixen broke her leg in a battle between the JLA and the dangerous villain Prometheus with Hawkman's mace.[40] While she and the rest of the team tried to recover, they were ambushed by Despero, who sought to destroy the weakened League. The JLA eventually defeated Despero, only to be informed by Zatanna of the horrific events of Blackest Night taking effect across the globe.[41] After the Black Lanterns attacked,[42][43] Vixen told Kimiyo that she was taking a leave of absence from the team to recover from her injuries.[44]

According to writer James Robinson, Vixen was initially intended to have a significantly different exit from the team. According to him, issue #41 of Justice League of America was supposed to have Mari returning to Africa to help defend the continent in the wake of Freedom Beast's murder in Cry for Justice, eventually establishing a team of African superheroes known as the Justice League of Africa.[45]

Despite no longer working with the League, Vixen was one of the heroes hunting down Maxwell Lord at the start of Justice League: Generation Lost, and was presumably mind-wiped by him along with most of the Earth's population. She and Black Canary later traveled to San Francisco to help Zatanna capture a group of humans who had been transformed into Were-Hyenas.[46]

Sometime after her resignation from the JLA, Vixen traveled to the rundown neighborhood of Liberty Hill to recruit Tattooed Man for a new team of heroes she is putting together. However, Vixen discovered that a group of gang bangers who had formerly worked under Tattooed Man had taken control of the community and made a fortune for themselves through crime. Mistakenly believing that Tattooed Man was responsible for the acts of violence committed by his former thugs, Vixen rescinded her offer and attacked him.[47] After a brutal fight, Vixen willingly surrendered and agreed to leave and let Tattooed Man take care of his neighborhood in his own way.[48]

The New 52

In The New 52 (a 2011 reboot of the DC Comics universe), Vixen was recruited as part of the new Justice League International.[49] Her tenure with the team proved short, since she was injured in an explosion and rendered comatose.[50] Her old friend David Zavimbe later joined the team in her honor as Batwing.[51]

After the JLI disbanded, Vixen was seen as one of Cyborg's new recruits for the main Justice League roster.[52]

DC Rebirth

Vixen is recruited by Batman to join his new Justice League of America. Vixen is later seen working on behalf of the League, investigating a lead on a mysterious technology threatening America.[53]

Powers and abilities

Vixen can harness the power of Anansi to connect with the Earth's morphogenetic field, also called the Red. This enables her to use the powers of and transform into animals.[54][55] After losing her animal abilities, Vixen temporarily gains the ability to mimic metahuman abilities.[56]

Other versions

In other media

Television

Vixen as she appears in Justice League Unlimited.
Vixen (left) as depicted in Batman: The Brave and the Bold.

Arrowverse

Vixen on Arrow.
Vixen on Legends of Tomorrow.
Megalyn Echikunwoke as Mari McCabe from the animated web series in the live-action Arrow (left) and Maisie Richardson-Sellers as Amaya Jiwe in DC's Legends of Tomorrow (right).

Characters inspired by Vixen appear in series set in the Arrowverse

Film

Video games

Miscellaneous

See also

References

  1. ^ Cowsill, Alan; Irvine, Alex; Korte, Steve; Manning, Matt; Wiacek, Win; Wilson, Sven (2016). The DC Comics Encyclopedia: The Definitive Guide to the Characters of the DC Universe. DK Publishing. p. 320. ISBN 978-1-4654-5357-0.
  2. ^ "GAME CHANGERS: Gerry Conway on Vixen | Comicosity". 19 August 2014.
  3. ^ Talking to G. Willow Wilson - Air, Vixen and More, Newsarama, August 29, 2008
  4. ^ G. Willow Wilson talks "Vixen", Comic Book Resources, September 10, 2008
  5. ^ Action Comics #521 (July 1981)
  6. ^ DC Comics Presents #68 (April 1984)
  7. ^ Justice League of America Annual #2
  8. ^ Justice League of America #234–235
  9. ^ Justice League of America #239
  10. ^ Justice League of America #242
  11. ^ Justice League of America #261
  12. ^ Animal Man #10–12 (April–June 1989)
  13. ^ Suicide Squad #11–12 (March–April 1988)
  14. ^ Suicide Squad #39 (March 1990)
  15. ^ Suicide Squad #40 (April 1990)
  16. ^ Suicide Squad #58 (October 1991)
  17. ^ Hawk and Dove vol. 4 #2–5 (December 1997–March 1998)
  18. ^ Birds of Prey #69–72 (September–October 2004)
  19. ^ Flash vol. 2 #44–46 (November 1990–January 1991)
  20. ^ Justice League Task Force #7–8 (December 1993–January 1994)
  21. ^ Wonder Woman vol. 2 #174–175 (November–December 2001)
  22. ^ JLA/JSA: Virtue & Vice (December 2002)
  23. ^ JLA #26
  24. ^ Justice League of America vol. 2, #1 (October 2006)
  25. ^ Justice League of America vol. 2, #2 (November 2006)
  26. ^ Justice League of America vol. 2, #3 (December 2006)
  27. ^ Justice League of America vol. 2, #4 (January 2007)
  28. ^ Justice League of America vol. 2, #5 (February 2007)
  29. ^ Justice League of America vol. 2, #6 (April 2007)
  30. ^ Justice League of America vol. 2, #7 (May 2007)
  31. ^ Justice League of America vol. 2, #11 (September 2007)
  32. ^ Justice League of America vol. 2, #22 (June 2008)
  33. ^ Justice League of America vol. 2, #23 (July 2008)
  34. ^ Justice League of America vol. 2, #24 (August 2008)
  35. ^ Justice League of America vol. 2, #25 (September 2008)
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  50. ^ Justice League International (vol. 3) #6–7
  51. ^ Justice League International (vol. 3) #8
  52. ^ Justice League #16
  53. ^ Justice League #26 (2019)
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    • Hawk and Dove #4-5 (February–March 1998)
    • Birds of Prey #73 (November 2004)
    • JLA Classified #24 (August 2006)
    • JLA Classified #24 (August 2006)
    • Justice League of America 80-Page Giant Size #1 (October 2006)
    • Justice League of America (vol. 2) #28 (February 2008)
    • Justice League of America (vol. 2) #40 (January 2010)
    • Justice League of America (vol. 5) #23 (January 2018)
    • Justice League of America (vol. 5) #23 (January 2018)
    • Truth and Justice #1 (January 2021)
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    • Animal Man #12 (June 1989)
    • The Flash (vol. 2) #45 (December 1990)
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  64. ^ Brooks, Tamara (March 6, 2015). "GUGGENHEIM, BUTTERS ON "AGENT CARTER'S" FUTURE, "ARROW'S" ROGUES & MORE". Comic Book Resources. Archived from the original on March 8, 2015. Retrieved March 7, 2015.
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  76. ^ Graeber, Brendan; Defreitas, Casey. "Premiere Skins - Injustice 2 Guide". IGN. Retrieved April 14, 2024.
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