Magenta (comics)

Magenta
Publication information
Publisher DC Comics
First appearance The New Teen Titans #17 (March 1982) as Frances Kane, Teen Titans Spotlight #16 (Nov 1987) as Magenta
Created by Marv Wolfman
George Pérez
In-story information
Alter ego Frances 'Frankie' Kane
Team affiliations Injustice League
The Project
Rogues
The Cyborg Revenge Squad
Abilities Magnetism manipulation - ability to control and/or generate magnetic fields.

Magenta is a fictional character in the DC Comics' series Teen Titans. She is a former hero turned villain.

An early concept design for Magenta by George Pérez appeared in DC Sampler #2, with the character's initial name being Polara and her color scheme consisting of red and blue rather than magenta and white.

Fictional character biography

Frances Kane was Wally West's girlfriend during his Kid Flash days. When Wally was a member of the New Teen Titans, Frances began to have strange experiences, including objects flying around without control. Frances' mother believed that she had been possessed, a theory that gained credence when, during an especially powerful episode, the silhouette of a large horned person appeared. The Titans managed to save Frances, who was thereafter discovered to have magnetic superpowers. Unbeknown to the Titans, the silhouette had not been a demon, but the magnetically powered supervillain Doctor Polaris, who had been trapped in another dimension by Green Lantern and was trying to use Frances' nascent powers to escape.

Wally pushed her to become 'Kid Flash's girlfriend' — a superhero. She became Magenta (a word that suggests "magnet"), and used her powers as Kid Flash's "super girlfriend" and as a Titans ally. The pressure of being a superhero put a lot of stress on her, and the pair broke up.[1] West regretted this in his adult life.

Despite the break-up, Frances still had feelings for Wally (some of them negative), and when the Justice League fought the Teen Titans, Magenta came to help, even using her abilities to jump-start a machine that was vital in saving Earth from massive chunks of debris from a falling planet.

Her heroic efforts masked her growing mental illness. Though Frances was often called "bipolar" (as a darkly humorous pun on her magnetic powers), her illness more closely resembled multiple personality disorder; all the stress and resentment emerged into a vindictive and aggressive new identity, while her "regular" personality became unusually weak-willed and mousy. It is notable that this split personality problem has also cropped up in Doctor Polaris, though his mental illness apparently predated his super-villain career.

The "new" Magenta forced a confrontation with Wally West (now the third Flash) which quickly devolved into a brawl, and when police intervened, she used her powers to rip the fillings from their teeth. Flash was horrified by Frances' nearly homicidal tendencies.

Frances would encounter Wally on and off again many times. In one incident, she was calm and non-violent, realizing that using her powers would awaken her 'darker' side. Unfortunately, she had to use her powers as one of Flash's enemies had teleported a bomb to a computer-determined random location in the city. Frances, riding on Flash's back, was able to detect the bomb with her powers and, risking turning evil, levitate it high enough so its explosion harmed no one. During her time, she formed a friendship with Linda Park, Wally's girlfriend, bonding over things Wally had done in the past.

Later, she would return and attempt to kill the Flash. Using her powers to hijack a car transport vehicle, she raced it through town. She flung car after car at the Flash, who didn't have the simple luxury of just dodging the cars, as he had to protect the townspeople from Kane herself. With the help of Linda, Frances calmed down enough to end her rampage.

Later, when Cicada began to attack the Flash, Magenta was an early convert. She was present at the final battle between the two, but escaped. She joined Blacksmith's rogues and garnered the unrequited attraction of Girder. She came to her senses and ripped Girder in half. Her interference allowed Flash the chance to defeat his other adversaries.

In the 2005 'Rogue War' storyline, she was shown as a member of James Jesse's reformed Rogues (alongside Jesse, Heatwave, and the Pied Piper). When they attacked Captain Cold's group, she was defeated by the Weather Wizard.

She was seen among the new Injustice League and is one of the exiled villains in Salvation Run. On Earth, she got involved with the Cyborg Revenge Squad, a loosely formed group of villains with mastery over metals and cybernetics assembled by the shady Mister Orr, on the behest of Enclave M to capture the cybernetic hero Cyborg and harvest his discoveries and technologies for military uses. Cyborg gave her an electric shock so powerful it brought her back to her senses, unaware of where she was and what she had done but still able to recognize Cyborg.[2]

DC Universe

She appears in the post-Rebirth DC Universe. In the "Flash War" prelude, Wally West is hoping to find people from his past who still remember him, so he approaches Frances Kane. She initially doesn't know who Wally West is, but she suddenly regains her missing memories and reacts violently as Magenta. However, Wally West manages to calm her down and they reconcile over their shared history.[3]

Powers and abilities

Magenta can generate and control magnetic fields, which she can use to move, lift, and manipulate ferrous metals. She can focus her powers into blasts of concussive magnetic force that can shatter steel, or fire electromagnetic pulses to disrupt electronic systems. She can concentrate her magnetic powers into a protective shield that repels metals and most physical assaults. By surrounding herself with an aura of magnetism that has an equal polarity to the Earth's own geomagnetic field, she can cause the Earth to repel her upward, and thereby fly by magnetic levitation.

In other media

Magenta appears in season 3 of the CW series The Flash, portrayed by Joey King.[4]

References

  1. Baron, Mike (w), Guice, Jackson (p), Mahlstedt, Larry (i). "The Kilg%re" The Flash v2, 3: 2/2 (August, 1987), DC Comics
  2. DC: Special: Cyborg
  3. The Flash Annual #1 (March 2018).
  4. "Harley Quinn Smith Wants to Play Young Harleen Quinzel in Gotham City Sirens". Comicbook.com. January 24, 2017. Retrieved June 9, 2018.
  • The DC Comics Encyclopedia. Dorling Kindersley Limited. 2004. p. 192. ISBN 0-7566-0592-X.
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