Darkstar (Marvel Comics)
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Darkstar | |
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Publication information | |
Publisher | Marvel Comics |
First appearance | Champions #7 (August 1976) |
Created by | Tony Isabella George Tuska |
In-story information | |
Alter ego | Laynia Sergeievna Petrovna Krylova |
Species | Human Mutant |
Team affiliations | X-Corporation Soviet Super-Soldiers Winter Guard Siberforce Champions of Los Angeles Exiles (Earth-616) KGB |
Partnerships | Titanium Man Crimson Dynamo Griffin |
Notable aliases | Tyomni Zvyozda (Russian translation of codename); formerly "Great Beast" (with Vanguard & Ursa Major) |
Abilities | Darkforce manipulation Flight Teleportation Concussive blasts Ability to create solid constructs composed of Darkforce energy |
Darkstar (Laynia Petrovna) is a fictional character, a mutant superheroine appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. She has been a member of various super-teams in her career, including X-Corporation and Champions of Los Angeles.
Publication history
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Darkstar first appeared in Champions #7 (August 1976), and was created by Tony Isabella and George Tuska.[citation needed] She became a regular character in Champions for the remainder of the series's brief run, though she never actually joins the titular supergroup. A memo from series writer Bill Mantlo reveals that he intended her to be a "floating" member who would come and go from the book as the occasion called for.[1]
Fictional character biography
Laynia Petrovna and her twin brother Nikolai Krylenko were born in Minsk. When she grew up, she became a special operative of the Soviet government.
Champions
Darkstar joins a Soviet super-team recruited to bring Natasha Romanoff (the Black Widow) back to the USSR.[2] She turns sides,[3] and then fights alongside the Champions.[4] Champion Iceman is smitten with her, but Laynia does not reciprocate his feelings.[1] She helps the Champions on a few more missions before returning to Russia, leaving behind a devastated Iceman.[5]
In Russia's employ
Darkstar becomes a member of the Soviet Super-Soldiers with her brother Nikolai (alias Vanguard) and the Crimson Dynamo. The Soviet Super-Soldiers battle Iron Man and Jack of Hearts on the moon, but wind up helping them against renegade Rigellians led by Commander Arcturus.[6] Helping the very people they were sent to stop became a habit for the group.
Later, Darkstar and Vanguard are sent along with new Soviet Super-Soldier Ursa Major by the KGB to defeat Sergei the Presence. Darkstar and Vanguard learn that Sergei is their father, and that Professor Phobos had exploited the Super-Soldiers. Darkstar aids in freeing Sergei and Starlight, and defeating Phobos.[7]
The Soviet Super-Soldiers are then sent by the Soviet government to Khystym to battle the Gremlin. They fight the Spaceknights Rom and Starshine, but later ally with them against the Dire Wraiths. The Super-Soldiers wind up befriending the Gremlin instead of fighting him.[8]
Later, the Soviet Super-Soldiers agree to help bring Magneto to justice. They fight the Avengers, but turned against the Crimson Dynamo when it turns out that he had been manipulating events.[9]
The Soviet Super-Soldiers Darkstar, Vanguard, and Ursa Major defect to the United States seeking political asylum. They arrive at Avengers Island, asking for Captain America's help. They are beaten nearly to death by the Supreme Soviets, who had disguised themselves as members of the Avengers. The comatose subconscious minds of the Super-Soldiers form a "Great Beast" that follows the Supreme Soviets back to the USSR and tries to kill them. Captain America persuades the "Great Beast" to stand down, and the three Super-Soldiers later regain consciousness and recover from their injuries.[10]
The Soviet Super-Soldiers are captured and returned to the Soviet Union. They are rescued by Blind Faith and the Exiles (not to be confused with the reality-hopping team the Exiles), whom she joins.[11]
When the Supreme Soviets (who had changed their name to People's Protectorate) are rechristened the Winter Guard, Darkstar is recruited back into the team.[volume & issue needed] After that team also disbands, Darkstar and Vanguard team with a Russian mutant team,[volume & issue needed] and later join forces with their father, the Presence.[volume & issue needed]
After Vanguard dies on the Starbrand mission led by Quasar, Darkstar and her father Sergei decide to kill Quasar, who allows them to believe that they have succeeded while he has in fact left earth.[12]
Death
Darkstar joins the Paris branch of X-Corporation,[13] in which she is possessed by Weapon XII, a creation of the Weapon Plus Project, and subsequently killed by Fantomex. A funeral is held at Père Lachaise Cemetery in Paris, where she is buried.
Darkstar is temporarily resurrected by means of the Transmode Virus to serve in Selene's army of deceased mutants during their assault on the mutant nation of Utopia.[14]
New Darkstars
A new, red-haired Darkstar first appeared as a member of the Winter Guard in Hulk #1. Her name is Sasha Roerich.[15] She was genetically modeled to resemble the previous Darkstar. After being again altered by The Presence, her body betrays itself, and she is transformed into a multi-tentacled Darkforce beast. She is killed by Red Guardian.[15]
With Sasha's death, Reena Stanicoff takes over the role.[15] Reena is killed during an attack on Winter Guard headquarters by a Dire Wraith, who then begins to assume her form.[16] Although the Winter Guard fights off the attack, Reena's death is subsequently covered up by the government.
Laynia Reborn
The Dire Wraith who assumed Reena's form is suddenly overwhelmed and taken over by darkforce energy. The original Darkstar (Laynia Petrovna) seizes control of the creature and resurrects herself.[16] She reunites with her brother Vanguard and returns to active duty alongside her brother and Ursa Major.[volume & issue needed] She fights Hyperion.[17]
Laynia, along with the other members of the Winter Guard, is blasted into space by the Intelligencia, a team formed by some of the smartest villains of the Marvel Universe.[18]
Powers and abilities
Darkstar is a mutant who can psionically access the extra-dimensional energy of the Darkforce dimension, which grants her a number of superhuman abilities. She is connected to the Darkforce dimension by means of her consciousness being split between her physical body and a Darkforce representation of same, both symbiotically linked. Darkstar can thus utilize the Darkforce for various purposes. She can cause Darkforce to behave like either matter or energy. Most often she projected it as simple mentally-controlled solid objects possessing the density of steel such as pincers, rings, columns, and spheres, or as beams of concussive force. If Darkstar is rendered unconscious any Darkforce constructs of her making immediately dissipate. Darkstar can teleport herself and up to three others by opening a portal into the Darkforce dimension and travelling through it. The maximum distance she can teleport has never been revealed. Because crossing the Darkforce dimension disorients her sense of direction, and the light of Earth blinds her for several seconds upon reemergence, traveling in this manner is risky.
Darkstar can levitate herself and fly at subsonic speeds by generating a virtually invisible portal into the Darkforce dimension along the contours of her body without passing through it, then balancing the attractive force of the dimension against that of the Earth's gravity. The upper limits of her powers are still unknown.
Darkstar is a skilled hand-to-hand combatant, having been trained by the KGB, and from the Black Widow. She is fluent in both Russian and English.
While the original Darkstar's costume was designed by the Soviet government and was made of a synthetic stretch fabric insulated against the cold, the other two Darkstars had costumes which were composed of Darkforce material.[15]
Other versions
Civil War: House of M
Darkstar is seen as a member of the Soviet Super-Soldiers.[19]
Other
- On Earth 3470, the native timeline of Heather Hudson of the dimension-jumping Exiles, the Soviet Union still exists. Darkstar is part of the Soviet Super-Soldiers.[20]
- An alternate version of Darkstar was shown in yet another universe. She was a member of the Republican Guard, Russia's superhuman team, alongside Crimson Dynamo, Omega Red, Gremlin, and the Titanium Man.[21]
In other media
Television
- Darkstar guest-starred in the X-Men animated series. In the episode "Red Dawn", she's initially the mutant enforcer for a group of Russian generals seeking to reestablish the Soviet Union with the aid of Omega Red. After witnessing the crimes committed by Omega Red, Darkstar rebels against the generals and sides with the X-Men and Colossus.
- Darkstar appears in the Avengers Assemble animated series, voiced by Laura Bailey in a Russian accent.[22] In the episode "Secret Avengers", she appears as a member of the Winter Guard.
Notes and references
- ^ a b Walker, Karen (July 2013). "'We'll Keep on Fighting 'Til the End': The Story of the Champions". Back Issue! (65). Raleigh, North Carolina: TwoMorrows Publishing: 17–23.
- ^ The Champions, no. 7 (August 1976). Marvel Comics.
- ^ The Champions, no. 10 (January 1977). Marvel Comics.
- ^ The Champions, no. 11 (February 1977). Marvel Comics.
- ^ Peter Parker: The Spectacular Spider-Man #17 (April 1978)
- ^ Iron Man #109, 112
- ^ Incredible Hulk #258–259, by Bill Mantlo
- ^ Rom #45-46
- ^ X-Men Vs. Avengers #1–3
- ^ Captain America #352–353
- ^ Soviet Super Soldiers #1 (November 1992)
- ^ Quasar #60
- ^ New X-Men, vol. 1, no. 130 (October 2002). Marvel Comics.
- ^ X-Force (vol. 3) #21, January 2010
- ^ a b c d Hulk: Winter Guard, vol. 1, no. 1 (December 2009). Marvel Comics.
- ^ a b Darkstar & The Winter Guard, vol. 1, no. 3 (August 2010). Marvel Comics.
- ^ Age of Heroes, vol. 1, no. 3 (August 2010). Marvel Comics.
- ^ Amazing Spider-Man #676
- ^ Civil War: House of M #2
- ^ Exiles (vol. 1) #84
- ^ Exiles, no. 43 (Jan 2005). Marvel Comics.
- ^ "Secret Avengers". Avengers Assemble. Season 2. Episode 17. May 10, 2015. Disney XD.
External links
- Wikipedia articles needing copy edit from January 2008
- Characters created by George Tuska
- Comics characters introduced in 1976
- Female characters in comics
- Fictional Belarusian people
- Fictional characters who can manipulate darkness or shadows
- Fictional Soviet people
- Fictional twins
- Marvel Comics characters who can teleport
- Marvel Comics mutants
- Marvel Comics superheroes
- Russian superheroes