List of Marvel Comics characters: P

Karen Page

Paibok

Paladin

Pandemic

Paradigm

Paralyzer

Paris

Benjy Parker

Ben Parker

Kaine Parker

May Parker

Richard and Mary Parker

Pasco

Pathway

Pathway (Laura Dean) is a fictional mutant in the publications of Marvel Comics. She first appeared in Alpha Flight #53 (December 1987), and was created by Bill Mantlo and Jim Lee.

Laura Dean's parents were extremely mutaphobic and decided to abort Laura's twin fetus because it was obviously a mutant. While still a fetus, Laura protected her twin sister by using her mutant abilities to send her to another dimension, dubbed "Liveworld".

Laura grew up withdrawn from the world. In an attempt to cure her, her parents sent her to the New Life Clinic, which was actually run by the insane villain Scramble. Laura managed to escape, but was later caught by Bedlam and forced to become a member of his team of Derangers. During the clash with Alpha Flight, Laura swapped places with her twin in Liveworld, whom she had named Goblyn.

After Alpha Flight defeated Bedlam, Goblyn and Laura were admitted into Beta Flight under the misbelief that they were the same person. However, this was all sorted out when Alpha Flight travelled to Liveworld and there encountered the Dreamqueen. When they returned to Earth, and Alpha disbanded, Laura and Goblyn went to live with Purple Girl.

They re-joined Beta Flight when Talisman dispatched them on a quest for Northstar, thanks to Laura's ability to open portals to other dimensions. The two stayed on when the team was once again funded by the government and Department H was re-formed. However, both were severely injured when Wild Child went insane and attacked them. Laura sent Goblyn instinctively to Liveworld and had to return with Beta Flight to save her.

Patriot

Jeffrey Mace

Eli Bradley

Rayshaun Lucas

Peace Monger

Peepers

Penance

Peregrine

Perrikus

Persuasion

Perun

Pestilence

F.R. Crozier

Ichisumi

Mike Peterson

Phage

Phantazia

Phantom Eagle

Phantom Reporter

Phantom Rider

Carter Slade

Jamie Jacobs

Lincoln Slade

Reno Jones

Hamilton Slade

J. T. Slade

Jaime Slade

Phaser

Phastos

Phat

Chester Phillips

Chester Phillips is a World War II general in the Marvel Universe. The character, created by Stan Lee and Jack Kirby, first appeared in Tales of Suspense #63 (March 1965).

Within the context of the stories, General Chester Phillips is one of the army officers overseeing subject selection for Project: Rebirth. He takes a personal interest in Steve Rogers as the best candidate for the first test.[1] Both he and Abraham Erskine refuse to allow General Maxfield Saunders to have Clinton McIntyre receive the first full treatment. When Saunders steals the serum and apparently kills McIntyre, Phillips has the body shipped away and Saunders arrested.[2]

Chester Phillips in other media

The character of Chester Phillips has been adapted for appearances in two animated television shows, The Marvel Super Heroes and The Avengers: Earth's Mightiest Heroes.

The character has also been adapted for the film Captain America: The First Avenger where he is a colonel and portrayed by Tommy Lee Jones.[3] The same character was mentioned during the follow-up Marvel One-Shot, Agent Carter, as well as in Captain America: The Winter Soldier. Chester Phillips, Howard Stark, and Peggy Carter founded S.H.I.E.L.D. after the SSR was able to defeat HYDRA."

Phobos

Phoenix Force

Phone Ranger

Photon

Monica Rambeau

Genis-Vell

Piecemeal

Gilbert Benson

Cyborg

Alexander Goodwin Pierce

Donald Pierce

Piledriver

Pink Pearl

Pinky Pinkerton

Pip the Troll

Pipeline

Piper

Piranha

Pisces

Noah Perricone

Life Model Decoy

Second Life Model Decoy

Female Life Model Decoy

Ecliptic

Thanos' Pisces

Pixie

Plague

Plantman

Plunderer

Pluto

Plutonia

Pod

Poison

Polaris

Polestar

Porcupine

Alexander Gentry

Roger Gocking

Billy Bates

Portal

John Porter

Possessor

Post

Kevin Tremain was a mutant captured and studied by the Mandarin. His first appearance was in X-Men v2, #50. On a secret mission, the Six Pack attacked the secret base Tremain was held in. Tremain was mortally injured; Cable tried to save his life, first by using his telekinesis to keep Tremain's body together, and finally by giving him a blood transfusion. Although it seems he survived this trauma, Cable seemed to think Tremain had later died.

Years later, Tremain resurfaced as Post, the lowest of Onslaught's emissaries. Post had superhuman size, strength, stamina, and sturdiness. He was also a mathematical genius. After being infected with the T-O virus via blood transfusion from Cable, Post became a cyborg, who was also able to generate energy discharges, cloaking fields, biogenetic scanners and teleport himself to remote locations.

Postman

Pepper Potts

Poundcakes

Malcolm Powder

Malcolm Powder is a fictional character in Marvel Comics. The character, created by Brian Michael Bendis and Michael Gaydos, first appeared in Alias #6 (April 2002). Powder was a high school student that was a fan of Jessica Jones.

He makes his first appearance in the most unusual way possible: breaking into Jessica's apartment and answering her phone. Jessica, understandably, kicks him out. Later, while Jessica was looking for a Rick Jones (not the famous one) Malcolm shows up again asking for a job as her personal part-time secretary; he is kicked out once again.[4]

Malcolm arrives again, this time asking Jessica about the secret identities of Captain America and Daredevil. Once again, he asks for a job and Jessica finally agrees under the condition that he find information on Mattie Franklin, who is missing.[5] To Jessica's surprise, Malcolm shows up with a girl named Laney, who claims that her brother was dating Mattie around the time she disappeared.[6] He is last seen answering Jessica's phone, this time as her secretary.[7]

Malcolm Powder in other media

  • Malcolm Joseph Ducasse is a supporting character on Jessica Jones, portrayed by Eka Darville.[8] He is a neighbor who lives just down the hall from Jessica's apartment. Jessica first meets him when she saves him from two muggers, a meeting she does not recall because that was also the night that Kilgrave first brought her under his control. It is later revealed that Malcolm was planning on getting into social work, but after Jessica escaped from Kilgrave's control, Kilgrave tracked Malcolm down and ordered him to get addicted to drugs, and made him secretly take pictures of Jessica. When Jessica finds out, she leaves Malcolm handcuffed in her bathroom and forces him to go into withdrawal.[9] He soon becomes the leader of a support group for Kilgrave's victims,[10] helps Robyn get closure after Kilgrave kills her brother,[11] stays by Luke's bedside while he's recovering from a concussion, and after Kilgrave is defeated, begins to work for Jessica as her secretary.[12]
  • Malcolm is a recurring character in The Defenders. He is introduced popping in to Jessica's apartment while she is invested in a missing persons case, much to Jessica's annoyance, and offers a helpful tip that allows Jessica to track down her mysterious caller's location.[13] Later on, John Raymond, learning that Jessica is trying to find him, forces his way into Jessica's apartment and holds Malcolm at gunpoint. Malcolm and Jessica try to talk Raymond into going to the police, but Elektra breaks into the apartment and tries to kill Raymond, who shoots himself rather than let her kill him. Elektra flees the scene while Jessica and Malcolm are arrested by Detective Misty Knight.[14] Misty attempts to interrogate the two for information, but Matt Murdock shows up to bail them out of custody.[15] Later on, when the Hand begin targeting the heroes' loved ones, Jessica has Trish and Malcolm hide with Colleen Wing, Claire Temple, Karen Page and Foggy Nelson at Misty's precinct.[16] After the Hand is defeated, Malcolm is last seen helping Jessica fix up her apartment and painting over the bullet holes left from Jessica and Trish's fight with Simpson.[17]
  • In the second season of Jessica Jones, Malcolm continues to be an associate to Jessica and is constantly taking notes of advice from her, regardless of whether they are intentional or not.[18] Jessica uses him to track down leads on IGH as well as settle a tenancy dispute with their new building superintendent Oscar Arocho. When Jessica and Trish find an IGH nurse named Inez Green, they task Malcolm with delivering Inez to Jeri Hogarth.[19] In the midst of the IGH investigation, Malcolm also helps Jeri uncover dirt on her partners who are tried to get her fired. Malcolm later hooks up with Trish and begins a sexual relationship with her,[20] though this ends when Trish, seeking to get powers like Jessica from Dr. Karl Malus, knocks out, ties up and stuffs Malcolm in the trunk of her car when he tries to bring Dr. Malus in. Then finally, she kidnaps Dr. Malus and threatens to shoot Malcolm if he tries to stop her.[21] Fed up with Trish and Jessica using him, Malcolm quits and goes to work for rival private investigator Pryce Cheng, who in turn has been retained by Hogarth's new private law firm for some task of which Jessica would not approve.[22]

Powderkeg

Power Broker

Curtiss Jackson

Successor

Power Man

Luke Cage

Victor Alvarez

Power Princess

Power Skrull

Powerhouse

Rieg Davan

Unnamed

Predator X

Presence

Prester John

Pretty Boy

Pretty Persuasions

Preview

Primus

Android

Alien

Explorer

Princess Python

Prism

Proctor

Prodigy

Ritchie Gilmore

David Alleyne

Timothy Wilkerson

Professor Power

Professor Thornton

Professor X

The Profile

Prometheus

Olympian

Pantheon

Protector

Proteus

Protégé

Protégé is a cosmic entity from an alternate future of the Marvel Universe.

The character, created by Jim Valentino, first appeared in Guardians of the Galaxy #15 (August 1991) as the childlike ruler of the Universal Church of Truth of the alternate timeline/reality Marvel Comics designated as Earth-691. Valentino modeled him after his son Aaron at seven years old.[23] He is depicted as a superhuman of unlimited potential, with the ability to duplicate not only super-powers, but also the skills of others simply by observing the ability being used; thus, he could acquire the psychokinetic powers of the Guardian Vance Astro as easily as he could the marksmanship ability of Astro's teammate Nikki, by watching them in combat.

Within the context of the Marvel Comics universe, Protégé is the deity and leader of Universal Church of Truth to which Replica, a member of the Guardians of the Galaxy, belongs. In order to save the lives of her teammates, she offers herself as a playmate to Protégé who is accompanied by Malevolence.[24]

Later, Protégé uses its abilities to duplicate the powers of the Living Tribunal, nearly usurping its place in Marvel's cosmology.[25] When attempts to defeat Protégé fail, The Living Tribunal states that any and all realities rest on Protégé's shoulders. Protégé itself claims to have become the new One-Above-All.[26] Scathan the Approver, a Celestial, saves all realities by judging against Protégé. The Living Tribunal then absorbed Protégé into itself to prevent him from endangering all realities again.[27]

Protocide

Proton

Prowler

Hobie Brown

Cat Burglar

Rick Lawson

Clone

Aaron Davis

Kitty Pryde

Madelyne Pryor

Psi-Hawk

Psycho-Man

Psyklop

Psylocke

Puck

Eugene Milton Judd

Zuzha Yu

Puff Adder

Pulsar

Pulse

Puma

Punchout

Punisher

Punisher 2099

Puppet Master

Purple Man

Henry Pym

Hope Pym

Pyre

Pyro

References

  1. Danny Fingeroth (w), Gary Hartle (p). "Who Saves the Hero...?" Marvel Super-Heroes v2, 1 (Fall 1990), Marvel Comics
  2. Dan Jurgens (w), Greg Scott (p). "Who Is...Protocide?!" Captain America 2000 (November 2000), Marvel Comics
  3. "Captain America Movie: Col. Phillips Cast". Marvel Comics. 2010-06-28. Retrieved 2011-03-23.
  4. Alias #9
  5. Alias #17
  6. Alias #18
  7. Alias #27
  8. Armitage, Hugh (November 28, 2015). "Jessica Jones's Marvel Easter eggs - from Luke Cage hookups to Officer Stan Lee". Digital Spy. Retrieved August 2, 2017.
  9. Surjik, Stephen (director); Dana Baratta (writer) (November 20, 2015). "AKA The Sandwich Saved Me". Marvel's Jessica Jones. Season 1. Episode 5. Netflix.
  10. Surjik, Stephen (director); Edward Ricourt (writer) (November 20, 2015). "AKA You're a Winner!". Marvel's Jessica Jones. Season 1. Episode 6.
  11. Briesewitz, Uta (director); Scott Reynolds & Liz Friedman (writer) (November 20, 2015). "AKA I've Got the Blues". Marvel's Jessica Jones. Season 1. Episode 11. Netflix.
  12. Rymer, Michael (director); Scott Reynolds & Melissa Rosenberg (story); Jamie King & Scott Reynolds (writer) (November 20, 2015). "AKA Smile". Marvel's Jessica Jones. Season 1. Episode 13. Netflix.
  13. Clarkson, S.J. (director); Douglas Petrie & Marco Ramirez (writer) (August 18, 2017). "The H Word". Marvel's The Defenders. Season 1. Episode 1. Netflix.
  14. Clarkson, S.J. (director); Lauren Schmidt Hissrich & Marco Ramirez (writer) (August 18, 2017). "Mean Right Hook". Marvel's The Defenders. Season 1. Episode 2. Netflix.
  15. Hoar, Peter (director); Lauren Schmidt Hissrich & Douglas Petrie (writer) (August 18, 2017). "Worst Behavior". Marvel's The Defenders. Season 1. Episode 3. Netflix.
  16. Briesewitz, Uta (director); Lauren Schmidt Hissrich & Douglas Petrie & Marco Ramirez (writer) (August 18, 2017). "Take Shelter". Marvel's The Defenders. Season 1. Episode 5. Netflix.
  17. Blackburn, Farren (director); Lauren Schmidt Hissrich & Marco Ramirez (writer) (August 18, 2017). "The Defenders". Marvel's The Defenders. Season 1. Episode 8. Netflix.
  18. Foerster, Anna (director); Melissa Rosenberg (writer) (March 8, 2018). "AKA Start at the Beginning". Marvel's Jessica Jones. Season 2. Episode 1. Netflix.
  19. Shelton, Millicent (director); Jamie King (writer) (March 8, 2018). "AKA The Octopus". Marvel's Jessica Jones. Season 2. Episode 5. Netflix.
  20. Fuentes, Zetna (director); Gabe Fonseca (writer) (March 8, 2018). "AKA Ain't We Got Fun". Marvel's Jessica Jones. Season 2. Episode 8. Netflix.
  21. Lynch, Jennifer (director); Jack Kenny & Lisa Randolph (writer) (March 8, 2018). "AKA Three Lives and Counting". Marvel's Jessica Jones. Season 2. Episode 11. Netflix.
  22. Briesewitz, Uta (director); Jesse Harris (story); Melissa Rosenberg (writer) (March 8, 2018). "AKA Playland". Marvel's Jessica Jones. Season 2. Episode 13. Netflix.
  23. Buttery, Jarrod (July 2013). "Explore the Marvel Universe of the 31st Century with... the Guardians of the Galaxy". Back Issue!. Raleigh, North Carolina: TwoMorrows Publishing (65): 30.
  24. Jim Valentino (w), Jim Valentino (p). "Should One of us Fall!" Guardians of the Galaxy 16 (July 1991), Marvel Comics
  25. Michael Gallagher (w), Kevin West (p). "It Ain't Over Till It's Overkill" Guardians of the Galaxy 48 (May 1994)
  26. Michael Gallagher (w), Kevin West (p). "Time is the Rider that Breaks Us All" Guardians of the Galaxy 49 (June 1994)
  27. Michael Gallagher (w), Kevin West (p). "Coldly Sublime, Intolerably Just!" Guardians of the Galaxy 50 (July 1994)
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