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News, Reviews & Commentary on Gay and Bisexual Men in Entertainment and the Media

Ten of the coolest gay superheroes you (probably) haven't heard of


In talking to Who Wants to Be a Superhero's Parthenon, we discovered a shared appreciation of Young Heroes in Love, one of those underappreciated gems whose fans are always surprised to find each other. That got me thinking to other great superhero characters who haven't (yet) found the wide audience they deserve.

Frostbite and Off-Ramp (DC Comics)
From: Young Heroes In Love

Young Heroes in Love was a smart parody of soap operas and superhero comics that never showed any disrespect to either genre. The series followed a team led by Hard Drive, a telekinetic who hid his telepathic abilities (mostly because he was subtly using his mind control abilities on his teammates) and Monstergirl, a shapeshifter who also hid her true abilities (why risk ruining the fun of seducing the team hunk by taking the shape of his girlfriend?)

Off-Ramp was a bit of a loner and curmudgeon, someone who didn't really seemed suited for a team, except that he was very loyal to Hard Drive. His ability, to create warp portals, was well suited to his misanthropic tendencies since it let him disappear for periods of time. However, Frostbite, a bisexual snow elf with an irresistible exotic sexuality, chipped away at Off-Ramp's walled off personality, eventually establishing a connection. During the series' short run, there were plenty of hints that Off-Ramp might be gay. When the series wrapped up its storylines in its seventeenth issue, Frostbite finally convinced him to come out. In the series final issue, set thousands of years in the future, older versions of the two meet and talk like former lovers.

Jetman
From: Top Ten comics (America's Best Comics)

British writer Alan Moore completely reexamined the superhero comic in his landmark graphic novel Watchmen. He took a meta view of the genre with 1963 and Supreme, where pastiches of Marvel and DC superheros, respectively, were used to comment on the history of the genre. When he created the America's Best Comics imprint, he attempted to re-invent the superhero genre once more with titles like Tom Strong, Promethia, Tomorrow Stories and Top Ten.

Top Ten imagined what it would be like to be a police officer in a world where everyone was a superhero. Full of visual gags and jokes about what it would be like to incorporate super powers into everyday lives, Top Ten intriguingly mixed the police procedural with the superhero comic. At the end of Top Ten's first volume, we learn that Captain Steve "Jetman" Teynor goes home to a husband who loves him very much. Their relationship gets a major focus in Top Ten graphic novel, The Fourty-Niners, which shows how the two met and fell in love in 1949.

Lord Fanny
From: The Invisibles (Vertigo Comics)

One of the strangest comics was this story of an anarchist team seeking to save the world from forces seeking to suppress the human spirit and force mindless conformity. The Invisibles summoned the soul of John Lennon for advice, traveled in time to consult with the Marquis de Sade and raided a facility that kept a cure for AIDS from the general populace.

A core character in The Invisibles was Lord Fanny. The only child of a witch who's family has passed down their powers from woman to woman, Hilde Morales was raised as a girl so that his family's magic powers could survive. When Hilde came of age, he learned to become a shaman from the gods of the pre-Columbian era. Always managing to stay fabulous no matter how dangerous the situation, this Brazilian transvestite shaman saves his team on a several occasions and was always a valuable player.

Hulkling and Wiccan
From: Young Avengers (Marvel Comics)

After The Avengers were dissolved, a new team of young heroes debuted, all appearing to be younger versions of more famous heroes. They included Hulkling and Asgardian who seemed to be young versions of The Hulk and Thor. From the beginning, the two seemed like a couple, with banter reminiscent of The Avengers' past superpowered couples, like The Vision and The Scarlet Witch or Hank Pym and The Wasp. The relationship was quickly confirmed to readers by th end of the first story arc. Most of the team turned out to have a different history than initially was suggested, including Hulkling and Asgardian. (I'll save that surprise for those of you who might pick up a Young Avengers trade.) When it became clear that Asgardian had no connection to Thor, a teammate suggested he change the code name to avoid inspiring homophobic jokes, prompting a name change to Wiccan.

One of the memorable scenes for this couple comes when the team decided the all had to tell their parents about their extracurricular activities. Hulkling and Wiccan's attempt was derailed when their parents mistake the discussion as an attempt to come out as gay -- they learn that their parents have known and approved of their relationship for some time as they waited for their sons to be ready to discuss it with them.

Unfortunately, these characters are currently in limbo. Grey's Anatomy writer Allan Heinberg created Young Avengers and is committed to writing future issues of the series. Heinberg's busy schedule led to the final Young Avengers story arc to be shortened and his run on Wonder Woman to end early. More issues of Young Avengers are promised, but they will have to wait until Heinberg has time in his schedule.

Enigma
From: Enigma (Vertigo Comics)

At the center of Enigma was a comic within the comic -- "The Enigma," a surreal hallucinogenic comic that only lasted for three issues in the 1960s. As a child, Enigma's main character, a boring man named Michael Smith, was obsessed with "The Enigma," even making him an imaginary friend. In his adult years, Michael is shocked when characters from "The Enigma" make appearances in real life -- bizarre villains such as The Interior League (who sneak into people's home at night and can rearrange the furniture in a way that drives the occupants insane when the discover it) suddenly cause very real havok, only to be stopped by a very real Enigma. In his quest to figure out why his childhood hero has come to life, Michael learns that he is meant to become The Enigma's lover as the two head out to fight The Enigma's greatest foe together.

Obsidian

From: Manhunter (DC Comics)

The long lost son of a Green Lantern and the multiple personality Rose/Thorn, Obsidian was a poorly-adjusted young man. He grew up under an abusive adoptive father. As an adult, his close relationships with his sister Jennie-Lynn and his close friend, Albert seemed to get in the way of his functioning normally. He eventually had a nervous breakdown and turned evil. However, after receiving treatment for his mental illnesses, he became a changed man. He was finally comfortable with his sexual orientation and he began dating an Assistant District Attorney while working for the Department of Extranormal Operations, a government agency dealing with superpowered individuals.

Phat and Vivisector
From: X-Force and X-Statix (Marvel Comics)

When given the chance to completely revamp the aging X-Force, Enigma creator Peter Milligan threw out the established team and replaced them with a group of young mutants more interested in fame and riches than benefiting mankind or other mutants. They filmed their violent exploits to sell as Pay-Per-View specials, licensed their images on a variety of products and abused trademark law to steal the X-Force name from the team that was currently using it.

At first the bookish Vivisector, a literature student who could turn into a werewolf, and Phat, a white rapper who could enlarge parts of his body, clashed. When they realized they lagged behind their other teammates in popularity, however, the two suddenly announced that they had a "special relationship" at a press conference. Initially, the relationship was only about publicity but the two developed real feelings for each other. In the series' final issue, the entire team, including Phat and Vivisector, died in a botched mission.

Have you got a favorite, little-known gay superhero that I missed? Do you also have fond memories of Young Heroes in Love? Talk about it in the comments.

  • Lyle Masaki's blog
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  • jakob's picture

    I rather like the character

    I rather like the character Anole, who is a young student at the X-Men's acadamy & who appears in New X-Men.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anole_(comics)

    http://www.marvel.com/univers/Anole

    Evan's picture

    Gay Superheroes

    Obsidian is the coolest on the list.  He has the look and pedigree of a top tier character.  Unfortunately, he is rarely seen.

    It would have been great if Wiccan was related to Thor since I like Thor.  He's probably the most popular new Avenger.

    I looked at the link jakob provided to the Marvel Universe.  The gay characters are shortchanged when it comes to powers.  Some characters that do not have super strength ability are right behind Hulkling in strength.  Anole is a cool character.  According to Marvel he has minimal powers.  He probably will be killed off just looking at those statistics.  Nightcrawler has a following among gay readers even though he's religious and anti-gay.  I think Anole is modeled after him.

    I've been looking at gay characters in comics the past couple days and it's discouraging.  There are only a couple that appeal to me, Obsidian and Ultimate Colossus.  The rest are either dead, never seen, or are poorly conceived.  I liked Hulkling and Wiccan in the beginning but they didn't pan out the way that I hoped.  Hulkling now has reptilian skin and claws which look like that of Hulk 2099.  Nobody liked that version of Hulk so why would they put those features on Hulking?  I think it was an attempt to gross the readers out that Wiccan was kissing another boy WITH reptilian qualities.  I really think they are trying to marginalize these two characters because of that change in appearance.  I can't think of any top tier superhero that looks beastly or has a lover that does.  Midnighter and Apollo need to be redesigned.  They look like third tier heros not the top tier ones they are supposed to be.

    Patrick Fillon does an amazing job of creating appealing gay characters over at Class Comics even though they are pornographic.  Class comics have a number of titles, you should check one out.

    François Peneaud's picture

    The anti-gay Nightcrawler is

    The anti-gay Nightcrawler is only the Ultimate version of the character, isn't it?
    Having him Christian and anti-gay is rather clichéd. I haven't read that Ultimate X-Men in years, but I tought he had changed. The writers need to make him evolve.

    I don't agree with you regarding Wiccan and Hulkling. I thought Heinberg did a wonderful job writing those two characters and integrating their relationship in the team dynamics. I wish we'd seen them showing affection more than we did, but apart from that, they really felt like people in love.

    Nice list, Lyle. Although calling Enigma a super-hero is stretching it a bit, especially in a list which is otherwise completely mainstream. It's even less a traditional super-hero comic than, say, Watchmen was.

    François
    ---------------
    http://gaycomicslist.free.fr

    Evan's picture

    Comic Relations

    In the comics, tv shows, and movies I've seen Nightcrawler was always Christian.  He rarely said anything about gay people so I don't know exactly what his thoughts were from the different story variations.

    Francois I recently looked at all the gay couples in comics and literally around half involve an animal or animal-like humanoid.  It's not a coincidence.  Comic creators seem to avoid idealizing gay relationships unlike straight relationships.  Superman and Lois, Cyclops and Jean Grey, and on and on; these are all idealized straight relationships.  Where are the idealized gay relationships?

    François Peneaud's picture

    Well, Jean Grey is dead, and

    Well, Jean Grey is dead, and Cyclops is with the White Queen, isn't he? One step away from a gay relationship, with the vamp/camp factor of the White Queen :)

    You know, gay characters who are shape-shifters are interesting: they could morph into a female (remember the gay male Promethea, although that's not exactly the same thing?), or into an even more attractive guy, and they don't. They stay with their partners. I quite like that idea.

    François
    ---------------
    http://gaycomicslist.free.fr

    Evan's picture

    No

    I'm talking about appearance.  Jean Grey and Cyclops etc were idealized images of straight couples.

    With the prevelance of gay hero couples that involve an animal or animal-like humanoid I have to question whether the writer had anything to do with Hulkling's reptilian appearance.

    I simply do not want gay relations tied with animals.  There are way too few gay relationships in comics and of those way too many invovle animals or animal-like humanoids.

    François Peneaud's picture

    Jean and Scott haven't been

    Jean and Scott haven't been idealised for years, especially in the Ultimate universe.
    A lot of famous super-heroes have had a disastrous love life (Batman, anyone?), so straight couples aren't that well off nowadays.

    I think it's very cool that the son of an important character like Captain Marvel is gay, and that his boyfriend is the son of an android. How ludicrous is that? :)
    I don't care about his physical appearance at all. But then, I like hybrids and shape-shifters.

    François
    ---------------
    http://gaycomicslist.free.fr

    Evan's picture

    Ok

    Ok, we've established that you don't care about gay comic book characters' appearance or what they are while I do.

    When I was a kid I collected X-men stuff.  Marvel released trading cards of Scott and Jean on the beach in romantic situations with Scott being tall, very muscular, handsome and having a funny personality and Jean having large breasts, slim build, and a fun attitude.  They also released a swimsuit edition comic book with all the characters looking their best.  Where is that for gay characters?  I want them to look their best too.

    Psionycx's picture

    Not a beast

    But Hulkling isn't bestial full-time.  His natural form is that a normal human (pink kree) teenage boy, as demonstrated when the Super Skrull used an anti-shapeshifting  device on him.  The Super Skrull also referred to Teddy's strength as "impressive" after Teddy knocked him across the street.  Finally, while Teddy and Billy have been shown hugging and such, I can't recall a single instance where Teddy was in his "hulk" form while doing so.  So I'm not seeing any element of "bestiality" here.  I think Hulkling and Wiccan are probably the best gay heroes to date.

     I used to be more fond of Apollo and the Midnighter but it's been waning lately.  Like Will on Will & Grace, Apollo seems to have lost his masculinity as the series as gone on and become a bit of a dated stereotype.  And Midnight has just become incomprehensible.

    dekko's picture

    Thanks for mentioning

    Thanks for mentioning Off-Ramp and Frostbite--two of my favorite characters in one of my favorite series that seems to have been lost to time. It's a shame their storyline was kind of ended abruptly by the series getting cancelled--I'd love to see this one in trade someday.

     

    I'd add the blue-skinned Starman Mikaal from James Robinson's Starman series as well--technically bisexual and also an alien, but still a great character that challenged sexual stereotypes.

     

     

    François Peneaud's picture

    Oh yes, the relationship

    Oh yes, the relationship between Mikaal and his black boyfriend was really well done. Very well integrated in the stories.
    I don't know if anything has been done with that character since the Starman series ended.

    François
    ---------------
    http://gaycomicslist.free.fr

    bhtirey's picture

    Ah Lord Fanny!

    Thanks so much for including Lord Fanny of my favorite comic series ever, The Invisibles.  His big arc in the first round was the fun Apokolipstick tale, though I always loved him best when he made one of his rare none dragged up apperances.  They were few and far between and the greatest was not even a story, Fanny (along with King Mob) came as a paperdoll in a vertigo christmas special.  You could dress him up and down, drag and not, or like me leave him in his undies.  Sadly in the final issue of the third series we see that time was not kind to Fanny, he failed to follow the advice he himself sent back in time and gained much weight. I loved the series so much one of my geek friends made me a hoodie like Jolly Roger's, the leader of the all lesbian invisible cell, the poison pussies.

    What with all that the only character I can think to add is the sick twisted Oscar Wilde clone, Sebastian O.  Out about the time of the Enigma series, Sebastian may not be a true super hero but he is like James Bond in Fop clothing.  Loved it, wish they would give us a second helping of him.

    rozz01's picture

    Enigma

    You know... Enigma is one of the few graphic novels that I can go back to again and again.  Milligan sense of pathos and sense of humor shine the the whole book/series.
    QueerSUPE's picture

    Over 250 listed at The A-Z LGBT Comic Book Character Superlist

    If you like those 10, try checking out over 250 more at the A-Z LGBT Comic Book Character Superlist at QueerSUPE!