Monstress (character)

For the comics series, see Monstress (comic book).
Monstress

Monstress
Publication information
Publisher DC Comics
First appearance Legion of Super-Heroes v4 #82 (July 1996)
Created by Tom Peyer
Tom McCraw
Lee Moder
In-story information
Alter ego Candi Pyponte-Le Parc III
Species Metahuman
Place of origin Xanthu(31st century)
Team affiliations Legion of Super-Heroes
Abilities Super-strength Invulnerability

Monstress (Candi Pyponte-Le Parc III) is a fictional character, a superheroine in the 30th and 31st centuries of the DC Comics universe, and a member of the Legion of Super-Heroes in the post-Zero Hour continuity.

Fictional character biography

She is a pampered daughter of a rich industrialist from Xanthu who gains her abilities and monstrous appearance from an explosion caused by a gene-altering bomb within a plant on one of Candi's father's labor farms. The bomb is activated by a protester who was disgusted at the conditions in the facility.

She joins with Xanthu's Uncanny Amazers Kid Quantum and Star Boy. They have a friendly competition with the Legion.[1] The two teams fight Mordru, the Dark Lord. Impressed with the Legion, she asks to join and is accepted.[2] She helps recruit Kid Quantum.[3] By chance, Element Lad alters her skin from green to orange.[4] Monstress also befriends the time-lost Lori Morning.

The aliens known as the Blight attack, causing ten Legionnaires to be transported to the far-side of the universe.[5] Monstress is featured in the first eleven issues of the series Legion Lost, detailing what happened to these ten Legionnaires. Fellow Legionnaire Element Lad had been separated and tossed through time and space; his personal trip renders him mad. Monstress, who had developed feelings for Element Lad, tries to talk him out of his madness. He calls her inferior and kills her with a touch.[6]

Most of the Lost make it home, they hold a memorial for Monstress and Element Lad.[7]

Fan reaction

Dan Abnett: "When we took over Legion, Monstress was deeply unpopular. We'd regularly get letters and posts demanding we bump her off. We actually liked her, and through 'Legion Lost' we did our best to make her an appealing, interesting character. When she died, tragically, at the end of 'Lost,' people were suddenly upset!"[8]

References

  1. Legion vol. 4 #82
  2. Legionnaires #52
  3. Legion Of Super-Heroes #102
  4. Legionnaires #68
  5. Legion #125
  6. Legion Lost #1-11 (2000-2001)
  7. The Legion #15
  8. Comic Book Resources, March 18th, 2002
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