Jump to content

英文维基 | 中文维基 | 日文维基 | 草榴社区

Dazzler (Marvel Comics)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected from Dazzler (comics))

Dazzler
Dazzler on the cover of Dazzler #20.
Art by John Romita Jr.
Publication information
PublisherMarvel Comics
First appearanceThe Uncanny X-Men #130
(February 1980)
Created byTom DeFalco
John Romita Jr.
In-story information
Alter egoAlison "Ali" Blaire
SpeciesHuman mutant
Team affiliations
Notable aliasesThe Disco Dazzler
Abilities
  • Ability to convert sound into light of various forms and intensity:
    • Light energy granting flight, invisibility, and hologram generation
    • Light projection
    • Ultraviolet light
    • Sound release
    • Echolocation
    • Light shield
    • Light beam
  • Polarizing eyes preventing blindness and dazzlement from light
  • Trained singer, actress, and dancer
  • Highly skilled athlete and hand-to-hand fighter[1][2]
  • Highly accomplished roller-skater[3][4][5][2][6]

Dazzler (Alison Blaire) is a superheroine appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics, often in association with the X-Men. She first appeared in Uncanny X-Men #130 (February 1980).[7]

A mutant with the ability to convert sound vibrations into light and energy beams, Dazzler was developed as a cross-promotional, multi-media creation between Casablanca Records and Marvel Comics until the tie-ins were dropped in 1980. The character was created by a committee of Marvel staff, principally writer/editor Tom DeFalco and illustrator John Romita Jr. She starred in a self-titled series in the early 1980s which lasted forty-two issues, a Marvel Graphic Novel titled Dazzler: The Movie, a four-issue limited series co-starring The Beast titled Beauty and the Beast, and later joined the cast of Uncanny X-Men. She has also featured in other Marvel teams.

Dazzler's sexuality has given the character notoriety among the LGBT community.[8][9][10][11]

Halston Sage portrays Dazzler in Dark Phoenix.

Creation

[edit]

Dazzler was conceived in early 1979[12] as a joint venture between Marvel Comics and Casablanca Records, a subsidiary of Universal Music Group[13] that had achieved considerable success with notable disco acts including Donna Summer and Village People.[14] Accounts differ as to which party made the first move; in 1986 Louise Simonson would tell Amazing Heroes that Casablanca approached Marvel;[14] however, in a 2011 blog post Jim Shooter would credit the idea to Marvel employee Alice Donenfeld and based on the success of The Archies, who later pitched it to Casablanca supremo Neil Bogart.[15] Bogart was enthusiastic, not only wanting to produce music 'by' the character (who initially had the working name of 'Disco Queen')[14] but also launch it with a half-hour animated special featuring numerous Marvel characters.[15] Marvel began shaping the character; Shooter assigned the development to Tom DeFalco (who, like Shooter, had experience working at Archie Comics), Roger Stern, Roberta 'Dickie' Mackenzie and John Romita Jr. while continuing to oversee the project himself. Shooter recalled that DeFalco pitched the name 'Evelyn Free' (a pun on "evil and free") for the character's civilian identity before the group decided on Alison Blaire.[15] At this stage much about the character was in flux; Romita Jr. initially designed her as African American, heavily based on singer/actress Grace Jones[16] with a costume inspired by the skin-tight and revealing eveningwear he had seen on women at New York nightclubs;[12] her name was changed, first to Disco Dazzler and then to simply Dazzler at the suggestion of Stern;[14] and initially her powers were to be an ability to make people tell the truth. DeFalco objected to the latter, feeling it was "not very interesting for a comic book". Instead he successfully suggested that as her name was Dazzler light-based powers made more sense.[12] Casablanca held final approval over the character at this stage, and vetoed some of Marvel's ideas. DeFalco would recall that the numerous delays led the creative team to believe disco "would be dead" before Dazzler's debut as the various parties hammered out the initial story, which DeFalco and Romita turned into an origin story[14]

Meanwhile, the multimedia side of the project changed several times. Shooter had produced a pitch for the TV special that had impressed Bogart so much he wanted to turn it into a live-action special with many stars he had under contract (including Cher, Donna Summer, Kiss, Lenny and Squiggy, Robin Williams and the Village People) to appear as Marvel characters.[15] However, soon afterwards Casablanca struck financial trouble, and Bogart was forced out of the company. Instead filmmaker John Derek showed interest in Dazzler as a potential film vehicle for his wife Bo, who were looking to build on the success of 10 with studio Filmworks. As such the comic character was redesigned to more closely resemble Derek herself, becoming a white blonde,[14] requiring Romita Jr. to redraw the work already done on the comic. The artist was unimpressed with the changes to the lead character.[17] According to DeFalco, the Dereks' involvement in the project ended after the poor reception of their vehicle Tarzan, the Ape Man[12]

Publishing history

[edit]

Marvel had planned to release the 34-page Dazzler comic as part of the Marvel Comics Super Special series, which generally dealt with media adaptations,[12] while some thought was also given to releasing it as a black-and-white magazine.[14] After Casablanca and Filmworks both withdrew, Marvel shipped the concept around other record labels and film studios without success. While this was happening, Dazzler had appeared in other titles to build anticipation. The character had debuted in Uncanny X-Men #130 (dated February 1980) as an ally of the X-Men, and subsequently guested in issues of Amazing Spider-Man (#203, April 1980) and Fantastic Four (#217, April 1980). Due to the character still being in flux while these issues were produced they featured some inconsistencies - Richard Gagnon of Amazing Heroes noted the character was considerably more streetwise in her X-Men appearance than she would be for most of her subsequent appearances, while in the Spider-Man guest spot Dazzler fired beams from her eyes due to DeFalco having to tell Marv Wolfman to simply take pot luck over which of the three potential variations in powers Casablanca were mulling over at the time would be finalised.[14]

Dazzler (1981-1985)

[edit]

Rather than simply have the work done go to waste, Shooter meanwhile instead decided to repackage it as an ongoing comic series. DeFalco would write additional exposition and other material to turn the 34-page one-shot into two 22-page single issues. As Romita Jr. had moved on to other projects an uncredited Walt Simonson provided the art for the new pages. In order to make the debut still something of an event, Shooter decided it would be Marvel's first ongoing series that was exclusive to the direct market - i.e. sold only to specialist comic stores, rather than also to newsstands - a model used by several smaller independent publishers. This also made the comic non-returnable for retailers. Given a healthy promotional push, the first issue - dated May 1981 - was a resounding commercial success for Marvel, with around 400,000 copies sold to stores - around double the number of most of the company's best-selling titles.[18][19][20]

With the Romita Jr. material running out midway through the third issue (which also featured work from Alan Kupperberg), Frank Springer became the title's new regular artist.[14] The first issues contained a plethora of Marvel's finest as guest stars as a legacy of the book's origin as a one-off special, and the pattern was kept up for the early issues of the title to support the new character's sales - Dazzler #3-4 featured Doctor Doom; #6-7 guest-starred Hulk; #9 saw an appearance by Quasar; and #10-11 saw Dazzler cross paths with Galactus.[12] Some of these appearances drew criticism due to the unsubtle way many of Marvel's established heroes were in awe of the newcomer.[14] After issue 6 DeFalco left the title, partly due to his growing editorial commitments at Marvel and partly because he was disagreeing over the direction of the series with Springer, who wanted to draw more on romance comics than traditional superhero fare. Dazzler #8 also saw another talent added to the book, with Bill Sienkiewicz contributing the first of what would be a number of covers for the series.[12]

DeFalco's replacement was relative newcomer Danny Fingeroth, initially working from his predecessor's outlines. Fingeroth would also write Dazzler's first appearance in alternative universe anthology title What If, contributing a story that was based on the Galactus storyline from Dazzler #10-11. Issue #17 saw the start of a short stint by the X-Men team-member Angel as a suitor; Fingeroth would admit this was an attempt to draw readers to the series, which had not kept up its early sales.[12] As with other guest appearances, Angel's behaviour in his Dazzler appearances drew mixed responses, with Gagnon describing him as "boorish".[14] Dazzler #20 introduced the villains Doctor Sax and Johnny Guitar, named by Fingeroth after the Jack Kerouac book and the Nicholas Ray film respectively, while #21 was an extra-sized issue exploring the fates of Alison's parents; Fingeroth felt such human interest was an important part of a superhero series' appeal to readers. It also featured another unusual attempt to make the title stand out - a photo cover of model June McDonald posing as Dazzler.[12] The following issue saw Fingeroth also leave the title; Springer briefly wrote and drew the title, before scripts by Shooter and Ken McDonald. Despite a change of direction that saw Dazzler change from a singer in New York to an aspiring actress in Los Angeles (which also saw the much-derided original costume finally dropped for a series of leotards) the series' fortunes failed to improve, and from #31 the title switched to bi-monthly publication. Dazzler #32 saw Mike Carlin take over for an ultimately short stint as writer, and shortly afterwards Geof Isherwood started art duties on the title.[12]

In an attempt to draw more attention to the series Shooter, Springer and Vince Colletta created Dazzler the Movie, the twelfth entry in the Marvel Graphic Novel series; the story publicly outed Alison as a mutant, a development that would drive subsequent issues. It did little to boost sales, and Gagnon would later call Dazzler the Movie "the most extravagant waste of the graphic novel format to date".[14] In the regular series, Dazzler #33 featured a Sienkiewicz cover closely referencing Michael Jackson's hugely popular Thriller music video, and cameos by long-dormant Marvel humour characters Millie the Model and Chili Storm.[12]

Another attempt to find an audience came with the spin-off mini-series Beauty and the Beast, pairing Dazzler with the popular Hank McCoy, at the time a member of the Defenders. The series was written by Ann Nocenti, and along with Louise Simonson's Power Pack and Trina Robbins' fashion comic Misty was an attempt by Marvel to find the female audience the publisher had lost over the previous decade. To this end Nocenti attempted to write Beauty and the Beast as a romance comic, though she would later reflect it was a "tough assignment" pairing a "blonde airhead" with a "deep intellectual".[12]

Dazzler's redesigned costume, from Dazzler #40. Art by Jackson Guice.

Dazzler #38 saw another new direction, with the popular Archie Goodwin as writer and Paul Chadwick as artist. Goodwin redesigned the character's costume and planned to return the series to superheroics rather than personal and showbiz drama.[12] He would later admit he took the Dazzler series on as no-one else wanted it and he needed work at the time.[14] Chadwick had caught Goodwin's eye after pitching his creator-owned series Concrete when the latter was an Epic Comics editor. Goodwin also introduced bounty hunter O. Z. Chase to the series as a supporting character.[12] The relaunch attracted a mild improvement in critical response,[14] but following Dazzler #40 (which tied into the Secret Wars II crossover) Goodwin and Chadwick were told the series would be ending after two further issues due to poor sales, ending after #42 (dated March 1986). While sanguine about his experiences on the book, Chadwick would later note the modifications to the cover of the final issue - which saw another artist add the Beast to his original work - was a factor in his decision to return to launching Concrete rather than to continue working with Marvel.[12]

At the time the series was not greatly mourned; reviewing the final issue of the series for Amazing Heroes, R. A. Jones felt Dazzler would "not be missed" and criticized its lack of success across several genres - though also expressed that the book might have been more successful if Goodwin and Chadwick had arrived earlier.[21] Shortly afterwards in the same publication, Richard Gagnon described it as "easily one of the worst comics that Marvel Comics Group has ever put out".[14]

Retrospective reviews have been kinder, however. Angelo Delos Trinos of CBR.com ranked the Dazzler comic book series 5th in their "10 Times Comics Changed The World" list, writing, "The '80s were some of comics' most profitable years, and this was thanks in part to the growing speculator market. Publishers were already moving away from young readers to adults who treated comics more as an investment than populist entertainment. They finalized this shift after Dazzler #1, by Tom Defalco, John Romita Senior and Junior, John Buscema, Alfredo Alcala, Bob McCleod, and Glynis Wein became a blockbuster."[18]

Subsequent appearances

[edit]

Following the cancellation of Dazzler, the character was considered as a possible founding member of X-Factor, but the decision to resurrect Jean Grey put that idea aside.[22] Instead, Dazzler would find a home in the pages of Uncanny X-Men, still under the aegis of Chris Claremont - who had scripted the character's debut appearance. In-fiction Dazzler had twice turned down membership of the X-Men before finally joining the team from Uncanny X-Men #214 (dated February 1987) and would go on to be a member of the team until #248, when she was effectively written out after travelling through the Siege Perilous and losing her memory.[23]

Subsequently, Dazzler made only occasional appearances between 1989 and 2005, before returning to regularly featuring in monthly publication for the first time in 15 years when she joined the cast of New Excalibur.[citation needed] New Excalibur also saw Dazzler gain the power of being able to instantly resurrect herself, a development that was effectively forgotten about soon afterwards.[24][25] After the title was canceled, Dazzler was brought back as a supporting character in Uncanny X-Men written by Matt Fraction.[citation needed]

In February 2010, Marvel published a one-shot Dazzler special by writer Jim McCann and artist Kalman Andrasofszky as part of the Women of Marvel series.[26] According to Diamond Comic Distributors, the special was the 115th best selling comic book of May 2010.[27][28] Doug Zawisza of CBR.com called Dazzler #1 a ""Greatest Hits" comic album of Dazzler's best material",[29] while Bryan Joel of IGN, calling the character "a great candidate to show off the themes central to the "Women of Marvel" drive."[30]

The 2012 series X-Treme X-Men featured Dazzler as the leader of a dimension-hopping X-Men team, and later that year she appeared Uncanny X-Men as an agent of superspy outfit S.H.I.E.L.D.[citation needed] Beginning in May 2015, Dazzler appeared as one of the main characters in A-Force, an all-female Avengers launched by G. Willow Wilson, Marguerite Bennett, and Jorge Molina during Marvel's "Secret Wars" storyline.[31][32]

2018 saw the character feature in another starring one-shot, Dazzler: X-Song. The issue was the 100th best selling comic book in June 2018.[33][34][35] and received positive reviews, with Mike Fugere of CBR.com referring to it as "the most important X-story Marvel has published in years", noting "Maybe Dazzler isn’t the beckon [sic] of social progress we were looking for, but it seems she has become the one we have."[36] Joshua Davison of Bleeding Cool stated, "'Dazzler: X-Song #1 is an excellent self-contained story centering around the ever-lovable Allison Blaire of the X-Men. The themes are interesting, the characters that are supposed to be likable succeed in being so, and the art looks great."[37]

Fictional character biography

[edit]

Early life

[edit]

Alison Blaire was born in Gardendale, New York to Carter Blaire and Katherine Blaire. Her mutant powers first manifest when she is in junior high school. An aspiring singer, she volunteers to perform at her school dance when her light-generating abilities first appear. Everyone at the dance assumes it is a technologically generated special effect, an assumption commonly made before she reveals herself to be a mutant later in her life.[volume & issue needed]

Becoming Dazzler

[edit]

Using the stage name "Dazzler", Alison sets out to make a name for herself in the music industry, using her light powers and dancing ability to enhance her performances. It is at one of her shows that Alison first meets the X-Men while they are attacked by the forces of the Hellfire Club. Angry at the interruption of her show, Alison lashes out in anger at the Hellfire intruders, unintentionally making one member catatonic.[38] Alison subsequently aids the X-Men in finding Kitty Pryde. She had always assumed that life as a disco queen would be exciting but finds the fight with the X-Men's enemies going a bit too far, and turns down their offer to join the team.[39]

Dazzler hid her status as a mutant from all but those closest to her. After acquainting herself with the various Marvel Comics superheroes, Alison finds herself continually using her abilities to fight both ordinary criminals and rogue superhumans—often at the expense of her career ambitions. On one occasion, she meets Spider-Man, teaming up against the Lightmaster.[40] She later battled the Enchantress,[41] is overwhelmed by Doctor Doom, the Absorbing Man and then fights off Nightmare.[42] She briefly allied with the hero Blue Shield,[43] and aids the X-Men and Spider-Woman against the misguided Caliban.[44] On another occasion, she battles and defeats the Hulk,[45] and establishes a long-standing feud with the then-mentally unstable Rogue.[46] She fights against the cybernetic Techmaster.[47] She also has a romantic affair with Warren Worthington III.[48] In the course of her inadvertent adventures, she even encounters the planet-devouring Galactus, who initially thought she was of little import and generally ignores her. Nevertheless, Galactus temporarily endowed her with cosmic energy so she can retrieve the herald Terrax.[49] Alison was also asked to audition for a place in the Avengers; she declined, saying that the superhero life was of no interest to her.[50]

Moving to Los Angeles

[edit]

Dazzler moved to Los Angeles in a fruitless attempt to help her half-sister Lois London, who has the mutant power to kill anyone with a touch, but has little to no control over the ability.[51] While in Los Angeles, Alison attempts careers in fitness training, dancing, modeling, and acting. Influenced both by her lover Roman Nekoboh and her desire to abate the growing anti-mutant sentiment, Alison publicly declared her mutant identity soon afterwards. The revelation backfired, destroying her reputation and career and inflaming anti-mutant sentiment - also sending Alison into a depressive state.[52] Forced into hiding, she spent some time as a keyboard player and back-up vocalist in fellow mutant singer Lila Cheney's band. [53] A covert anti-mutant army unit accidentally transformed one of its own members, a latent mutant named Zalme, into a creature called Dinosaur Man, who attacked Dazzler.[54][55]

Joining the X-Men

[edit]

While on tour, the band's plane crashed and they were rescued by Cannonball and Joshua. Lila had been knocked out, so Dazzler used the music Joshua plays at the scene to blast a hole through the wreckage.[56] She was later possessed by the psychic mutant Malice; after an encounter with the X-Men coming to warn her about the Marauders, Dazzler was freed from possession and became a member of the team.[57] During her tenure with the X-Men, Dazzler received training, attains greater control over her powers, and develops a romance with the extra-dimensional Longshot.[58] She was also forced to work alongside the now-reformed Rogue, which caused tension between them at first. Over time, Alison eventually found Rogue to be genuinely remorseful and forgave her teammate.[59] Eventually she and her teammates in the X-Men enter the mystical Siege Perilous.[60]

Amnesia and Mojoworld

[edit]

Discovered in an amnesiac state washed up on a beach by her former bodyguard Guido, she was nursed back to health by Guido and Lila, though their efforts prove unsuccessful in helping restore her memory.[61] Her memory was eventually restored when she was found by Longshot some time later.[62] Devastated by the loss of her career in the interim, Alison ventured to Longshot's native dimension Mojoworld, joining her lover and Lila in rebellion against the tyrant Mojo.[63]

Alison's life on Mojoworld was fraught; she suffered an apparent miscarriage[64] and the apparent corruption of the X-Babies before returning to Earth without Longshot. Despite this, Dazzler helped Jean Grey fight against Magneto on Genosha. She and Jean lead a small band of mutants to back up Cyclops and Wolverine. She was apparently incinerated by Magneto,[65] but was actually alive and well, having used a hard-light hologram of herself to distract Magneto while they recovered Professor X After returning to Westchester, the X-Men offered Alison help, but she declined and left the mansion.[66]

Many years later, Shatterstar and Rictor encountered a past-version of Dazzler while time-traveling through Mojoworld. At this point in her life, Dazzler and Longshot were still married and active in the revolt against Mojo. Rictor discovered Dazzler just as she was about to give birth to the child that had been believed to result in a miscarriage. The surviving infant was revealed to be Shatterstar, resolving speculation that Shatterstar actually was the biological child of Dazzler and Longshot. Exhausted from her ordeal, Dazzler passed out, and Shatterstar revealed the necessity of wiping both her and Longshot's memories of the event, and taking his infant self a century into Mojoworld's future, to be raised as a warrior away from his birth parents.[67]

New Excalibur

[edit]

Dazzler later re-established her musical career by marketing her original, signature disco image as part of the Techno/Trance genre. Alison moved her career abroad to England and joined with X-Men allies such as the Juggernaut and Captain Britain.[68] Later she was reunited with Longshot, although he was suffering from amnesia and did not remember her, though he later regained his feelings for her and some of his memories.[69] Longshot left the Exiles to re-establish a relationship with Dazzler but they soon parted ways, due in part to Dazzler's frustration with other women's attraction to Longshot and the realization that Longshot is no longer the man she loved.[70]

Return to the X-Men

[edit]

Alison subsequently re-joined the X-Men in San Francisco[71] while continuing her revived musical career.[72] Later she took part in the fight against the Skrull invasion of Earth.[73] After a night of drinking with team-mates Northstar and Pixie, Dazzler came under attack by the Sisterhood. In retaliation, she later accompanied Emma Frost, Storm and Karma in an attack on the Sisterhood in San Francisco, where she engaged a mind controlled Psylocke in battle. While Psylocke gained the upper hand, Dazzler absorbed all the sound from the city outside, which she turned into a beam of light that burnt the right side of Psylocke's face off. After the Sisterhood retreated, Dazzler is happily reunited with Psylocke after she regained control.[74]

Along with Gambit, Anole, Northstar, Cannonball, Pixie and Trance, Dazzler traveled to Limbo to rescue Magik. However, they were overwhelmed by the demons.[75] She was rescued by Northstar but they come under attack from a possessed Gambit, who turns her into a state much like Gambit's Death persona. They eventually infected the other X-Men in Limbo[76] They were freed thanks to Magik's Soulsword.[77]

During the Schism between Cyclops and Wolverine, Dazzler chose to remain in San Francisco with Cyclops's side. Dazzler was then asked to lead a "Street Team" of X-Men, to which she agreed.[78] As a result, she worked alongside Boom Boom and Lifeguard.[79]

Dazzler was later summoned to Utopia to help Cyclops and Danger with a Ghost Box; when opened it showed several alternate reality X-Men fighting an evil version of Professor X.[80] She subsequently gets sucked through a portal and is whisked away from Earth-616, narrowly avoiding the conflict between the X-Men and the Avengers. She becomes team leader after Emmeline Frost opts to stay on a world where mutants are gods.[81] Dazzler was later reunited with former teammate Sage when she tried to rescue a child version of Nightcrawler.[82] Her leadership skills and abilities impressed both Cyclops[83] and Wolverine, the latter of whom offered her a position at the Jean Grey School, believing she would be an invaluable resource to the students. Reluctant to accept the invitation after having spent a year traversing and saving the multiverse as well as witnessing the death of some of her friends, Dazzler opted instead to make a decision at a later time; Wolverine advises the offer still stands and to contact when she figures things out.[84]

Instead, in an attempt to better understand the mutant community and Cyclops's talk of mutant revolution, Maria Hill personally asked Dazzler to become an agent of S.H.I.E.L.D., a proposition Alison accepts.[85] However, soon after her first mission Dazzler was poisoned and replaced by the shapeshifter Mystique.[86] Dazzler was later rescued by Magneto, and joined Cyclops's Uncanny X-Men team.[87]

A-Force

[edit]

While participating in a roller derby in Miami, Dazzler was approached by Singularity, She-Hulk, Captain Marvel, Nico Minoru and Medusa to help them defeat Antimatter, since they required a powerful light source to defeat their foe. They attempted to negotiate with Antimatter but Dazzler was critically injured and died on the operating table. She woke up following the failed operation to realize it seemed like she was unable to die, and rejoined the fight against Antimatter in time to take Singularity into a pocket dimension to protect her from dying when Antimatter was destroyed. Singularity sensed something else had broken through into their universe; teleporting to Astoria, Oregon they found the dimension-hoppers were Dazzler Thor - an alternate version of Dazzler from Battleworld - and her opponent Countess. The Countess vanished following her defeat and A-Force took Dazzler Thor to get "ale" and Nico convinced Dazzler to talk to Dazzler Thor. Dazzler revealed to her alternate self that she had accidentally come into contact with Terrigen Mist and contracted M-Pox, which sterilizes and kills mutants. Dazzler woke up alongside the rest of A-Force and Dazzler Thor in a jail cell, without any powers. Nico appeared under the mind control and was made to send She-Hulk into a murderous rage, but they used this to escape. A-Force attacked the Countess; Dazzler Thor used a hologram to get close to the Countess, who attacked and injured her. Dazzler picked up Light Bringer to defend her but after the battle Dazzler Thor succumbed to the M-Pox virus and died in a flash of light. Dazzler revealed to the rest of A-Force she also had the lethal disease and left behind Light Bringer in respect for her fallen alternate self.[88]

During the second superhero Civil War, Dazzler went with Captain Marvel to fight Thanos; She-Hulk was seriously injured in the fight. Shortly afterwards, Ulysses predicted that Nico would murder an innocent woman named Alice. Dazzler disagreed with Captain Marvel, who wanted to pre-emptively arrest her team-mate, and warned Nico when she arrived. Nico escaped, with Dazzler and Singularity opposing Captain Marvel and Medusa's decision to hunt her down. They followed the pair to Arizona, where Nico is hiding with Elsa Bloodstone and find it overrun by an infection turning people into a swarm of giant bugs. After a brief confrontation when the rest of A-Force find Nico they split into two teams: one to find Alice and the other to protect the civilians. While searching for Alice in an abandoned mine, Danvers, Minoru and Bloodstone are attacked by a giant bug. The bug incapacitates Danvers and Bloodstone before telepathically communicating to Minoru that she is Alice and has been inadvertently infecting the townspeople after her transformation. Alice tells Minoru that killing her is the only way to save the people. When Minoru refuses, an infected Bloodstone threatens to kill Danvers. Medusa, Singularity, and an infected Dazzler are overrun by bugs and regroup with the others just as Bloodstone infects Danvers. After Dazzler infects Medusa, Minoru casts a spell to transform Alice back into a human but it does not cure the rest of the populace. Alice explains that she must be killed and Minoru reluctantly casts a death spell on Alice which transforms the infected back into humans. Alice then remerges in her final form and tells A-Force that she is no longer a threat as she now has greater control of her powers.[89]

Inhumans vs. X-Men

[edit]

During the war between the X-Men and the Inhumans, Dazzler assisted Emma Frost in the beginning of her plot to defeat the Inhumans, disguising herself as an Inhuman performer shortly before ambushing Black Bolt in his own Quiet Room.[90]

Residing on Krakoa

[edit]

Dazzler later becomes a citizen of Krakoa.[91] After Krakoa is attacked by Orchis and leaves Earth for the White Hot Room, Dazzler returns to her career as a singer.[92]

Powers and abilities

[edit]

Dazzler is a mutant with the ability to transduce sonic vibrations which reach her body into various types of light. This ability seems to operate over a great range of frequencies, including the audible spectrum, and a great variation of sound pressure levels regardless of the complexity, dissonance, or randomness of the sound. Sounds as different as a car crash and a symphonic passage both produce convertible incoming acoustic vibrations.[93] Dazzler prefers utilizing the sound of music, particularly that which is rhythmically sustained. Not only is music more pleasant to her ears, but the steady beat of contemporary music provides a more constant source of sound to convert.[94] Dazzler has been shown to create a "null space" of sound in a certain radius of her person, as a result of "pulling" the sound in her area to her person, to either protect a crowd of people or to supercharge her power reserves.[95]

Left undirected, Dazzler's light will radiate from her body in all directions, producing regular flashes of white light. By conscious control over the light she produces, she can control its direction, frequency (color), amplitude (intensity), and duration. Her mutant ability can produce numerous other effects. She can create simple patterns out of rays of light or combinations of patterns which produce trance-like effects in her targets. She can create a pulse of light on the order of several thousand watts of power, which temporarily blinds people with its brilliance. She can create a cascade of sparkling lights and colors that severely upsets other people's equilibrium, or a pulsating strobe-light effect. She can also radiate light in gentle, soothing patterns to calm a person's mood. Dazzler can generate a coherent beam of light, approximating a laser beam, or generate a shield from laser energy that can deflect projectiles or energy beams.[volume & issue needed] Dazzler has polarizing eyes and cannot be blinded or dazzled by light.[96]

With effort, she can create holograms of human beings and other three-dimensional beings and objects.[97] With similar effort she can also turn herself temporarily invisible and inaudible.[65] She can also use light energy to generate some form of propulsion for flight or at least rapid ascent.[98]

She generally directs lasers from a single finger when she requires precision. She most often uses her hands for directing her light effects, but she could also use other parts of her body. Since studying with the X-Men, she has become adept at directing her blinding strobe light blast from her eyes.[99] The most powerful manifestation of her laser abilities is a concentrated stream of solid photons she usually fires from her index finger but can emit from her entire body. The beam is extremely powerful and as a consequence uses a great deal of her energy reserves. She has also demonstrated the ability to stretch the electromagnetic spectrum to produce devastating microwave energy.[volume & issue needed] She has since learned how to produce these blasts without draining herself, while still providing them with considerable power.[volume & issue needed]

Since the events of Dazzler: The Movie, Alison's body can store sound energy for future discharge as light. Thanks to Professor X, Dazzler's costume contains devices that enable her to store sonic energy more efficiently and to gauge and focus the light she generates with greater skill. She has also demonstrated on at least one occasion the ability to expel the stored sound into a devastating wave of sonic energy, that once destroyed her foe Silence.[100] Dazzler is immune to the injurious effects of her light transducing abilities. Her ability to transduce sound also protects her from being deafened by loud sounds; In Dazzler vol. 2 #1, it was indicated that her ears are highly developed allowing her to detect sounds on frequencies that others cannot register.[26] In X-Treme X-Men vol. 2 #4, she demonstrates the ability to use sound waves for echolocation before absorbing them for energy.[101] Dazzler has also been shown to be immune to the powers of her half-sister Mortis, which ordinarily kills living subjects instantly.[102] With considerable strain, Dazzler is capable of generating ultraviolet light in omnidirectional waves of such intensity that it will melt large metal structures.[102]

Dazzler is a highly skilled athlete and hand-to-hand combatant thanks to her training with the X-Men and Gladiators,[1] able to defeat over a dozen human combatants at once while purposely avoiding use of her mutant abilities.[2] In addition, she is a talented singer, actress, and dancer. Dazzler is also a highly accomplished roller skater[3][4][5][6] and can move at high speed;[5][2] she is skilled enough to use her roller skates as weapons to strike an opponent's solar plexus in a flying kick.[103][5] Dazzler occasionally wears a pair of roller skates which magnetically adhere to her boots.[2]

Characters in the Marvel Universe who are counted among her fans are Juggernaut,[104] teammate Colossus,[105] Hulk,[106] Northstar,[107] Rhino,[108] Molly Hayes,[109] Kitty Pryde,[44] Moon Knight,[110] Captain Marvel,[111] and Pixie.[112]

Cultural impact and legacy

[edit]
Fans cosplaying as Dazzler.

Critical reception

[edit]

Jerry Stanford of CBR.com referred to Dazzler as a "compelling hero," writing, "Dazzler has a fan following strong enough to keep a strong demand for her in the X-Men family of titles. Although her creation is mired in a failed cross-media event with a record company, her legacy in comics is achieving greatness despite her crass origins. Although much of her early adventures are trite, she went on to fame as one of the X-Men."[113] Mike Avila of Syfy described Dazzler as "one of Marvel’s most unique and even notorious characters," writing, "After Dazzler headlined her own comic book series, Claremont further developed her as a member of the X-Men. She’s no longer quite as prevalent as she used to be, but Dazzler still has a devoted fan following 40 years after her debut."[114] Chris Condry of Looper found Dazzler to be "worthy of more film time and fandom," asserting, "If Alison Blaire, aka Dazzler, were a real person, we daresay that she would be the most iconic woman on Earth. Blaire's day job, or more accurately night job, is as a world-famous pop star... Essentially, Dazzler is what would happen if Lady Gaga spent her free time as John Wick."[115] Bradley Prom of Screen Rant called Dazzler one of the characters who would be perfect for their own animated series.[116]

Alex Welch of Inverse wrote, "She’s basically what it would look like if a pop star was an actual superhero."[117] George Marston of Newsarama stated, "The fact is, Dazzler kicks ass. Her ability to turn sound into light has been expanded in creative and crafty ways time and time again, and her look has evolved from disco queen to aerobic video model, to an angst-inspired, darker look, and finally to her current style that combines elements of her previous looks with a modern twist."[118] Marc Buxton| of Den of Geek asserted, "Alison Blaire may have started out as somewhat of a joke, a way for Marvel to take advantage of the disco craze of the 70s, but she hasn’t remained that way. Instead, Dazzler has become one of the most beloved X-Men characters ever."[119] In November 2005, during an interview with Newsarama, writer Brian K. Vaughan asserted, "Ultimate Dazzler, on the other hand, may very well be Bendis' single greatest contribution to the free world, so I use her way too much."[120]

Accolades

[edit]

Dazzler has been referenced in various internet Listicles.

  • In 2011, Comics Buyer's Guide ranked Dazzler 83rd in their "100 Sexiest Women in Comics" list.[121]
  • In 2012, ComicsAlliance ranked Dazzler 38th in their "50 Comics and Characters That Resonate with LGBT Readers" list.[122]
  • In 2015, Entertainment Weekly ranked Dazzler 52nd in their "Let's rank every X-Man ever" list.[123]
  • In 2015, BuzzFeed ranked Dazzler 22nd in their "95 X-Men Members Ranked From Worst To Best" list.[124]
  • In 2016, GameSpot included Dazzler in their "25 Most Criminally Underrated X-Men" list.[125]
  • In 2017, Screen Rant ranked Dazzler 14th in their "Marvel: 17 Most Powerful Agents Of SHIELD" list.[126]
  • In 2018, Comic Book Resources (CBR) ranked Dazzler 4th in their "20 Mutants That Look More Powerful Than They Really Are" list,[127] 14th in their "Marvel's 15 Fiercest Female Mutants" list,[128] and 15th in their "20 Most Powerful Mutants From The '80s" list.[93]
  • In 2019, CBR ranked Dazzler 8th in "10 Most Powerful Members Of Excalibur" list[129] and 8th in their "10 Superheroes Who Became Celebrities On Their World" list.[130]
  • In 2021, Screen Rant included Dazzler in their "10 Most Powerful Members Of Marvel's A-Force" list.[131]
  • In 2022, CBR ranked Dazzler 1st in their "10 Best Comic Book Musicians" list[132] and 11th in their "X-Men: 15 Alpha-Level Mutants Who Are Deceptively Powerful" list.[133]

Impact

[edit]

Ira Madison III of MTV described Dazzler as a "gay icon in the annals of Marvel legends," asserting, "Dazzler remains a hugely popular character, particularly among queer Marvel fans. [...] Even though her stories were never tied to the disco scene at large, her journey of struggling for acceptance from a dismissive father and longing for the love of her missing mother was something that queer readers, who only years earlier could have been arrested for showing signs of affection toward a member of the same sex in public, connected with."[8] Jerry Stanford of CBR.com asserted, "Almost since the beginning, the story of mutants in the Marvel Universe has been an allegory for the civil rights of marginalized groups... Dazzler strives for unity and her words mirror things said in the LGBTQ community. Different groups sometimes seek to alienate others as not worthy of inclusion, and the fight here makes a stand for a big tent movement."[113] Andrew Wheeler of ComicsAlliance stated, "Ideas of self-ownership occur again and again in Claremont's stories and characters... Dazzler is mutantdom's first drag performer, using stage theatrics to present her true self to the world. On the stage she could embrace her mutant identity in a way that wouldn't feel safe on the street."[10]

Brian Andersen of The Advocate said, "Dazzler isn’t queer. But being the premier superhero pop singer in the Marvel Universe means a strong argument can be made that she’s a gay icon."[11] Hayden Manders of Nylon wrote, "All socio-political commentary aside, superhero narratives are filled with strong female characters, which we know makes up a huge percentage of queer icons. Characters like Wonder Woman, Storm, Dazzler, Captain Marvel, and Buffy the Vampire Slayer are fierce and independent, capable of kicking just as much (if not more!) ass as their male counterparts. [...] That sort of representation is vital to the queer experience; it helps normalize what the world often sees as abnormal. Their superpowers only add another element of fearlessness to the community, because to be queer is to have superpowers."[9]

Other versions

[edit]

Age of Apocalypse

[edit]

In the Age of Apocalypse reality, Dazzler appears as a member of the X-Men. She is a chain smoker, having no use for a singing voice in this timeline. She is also more skilled with her powers, being able to create hard-light constructs, as well as manipulate both light and sound energies. With this new power-set, Dazzler serves as a one-woman training facility, as well as a messenger via holographic transmissions.[134] She was romantically involved with Exodus.[135]

Dazzler was one of the characters involved in the original Age of Apocalypse to be brought back for the Age of Apocalypse 10th Anniversary miniseries. Against the battle with Mr. Sinister's Sinister Six, Dazzler was swallowed within Cloak's dark dimension, but is ultimately saved by a lightning bolt from Storm which forces Cloak to spit her back out.[136]

Battle of the Atom

[edit]

In X-Men: Battle Of The Atom, Dazzler becomes the first mutant President of the United States in the future. However, during her Inauguration speech, she is assassinated by fire from flying demons along with Jamie Madrox, and several audience members.[137]

Earth X

[edit]

In the Earth X timeline, Dazzler had her heart torn out by Mephisto though due to the "death" of Death, she lives on in constant agony.[138]

Earth-721

[edit]

A woman from Earth-721 was given the powers and appearance of Dazzler by Interlocking Technologies. She came to Earth-616 and impersonated the original Alison. She toured the Western States of the US in Dazzler's original costume. However, she was ultimately discovered, stripped of her powers and returned to Earth-721.[139]

House of M

[edit]

In the House of M reality, Dazzler is one of the most famous mutants on Earth. After having a successful singing career as a teenager, Dazzler continued her career as the world's primary media personality via her syndicated talk show.[140] The House of M newsprint special featured a tabloid-esque blind article, indicating that Alison's signature lightshow was fading due to a rare blood disorder, which was causing her to lose her mutation. Storm used Alison's popular talk show to sound off on her disapproval of Magneto's handling of mutant affairs and Mister Sinister was seen watching the Alison show when Deadpool went to rescue an infant Cable.[141]

Marvel Zombies

[edit]

In the Marvel Zombies universe, Dazzler appears as one of the few uninfected heroes in the limited series Marvel Zombies vs. The Army of Darkness. There, she is almost eaten by an infected Winter Soldier until he is killed by Ash Williams.[142] Ash is attracted to Dazzler, but she does not reciprocate his feelings. As a thanks for saving her, Dazzler agrees to help Ash find the Necronomicon book that might put an end to the zombies. The duo pair up with the Scarlet Witch to discover that the Necronomicon is being kept at Doctor Doom's fortress in Latveria.[143] An infected Enchantress bites off her finger, infecting her, but Doom appears and vaporizes the two before Dazzler is turned.[144]

Secret Wars

[edit]

A version of Dazzler appeared during the 2015 "Secret Wars" storyline as part of the Thor Corps, a paramilitary organization charged with policing Battleworld and enforcing the will of God Emperor Doom. Dazzler Thor later appears in the mainstream Earth-616 universe, after coming through a multi-dimensional portal and joins A-Force in their fight against the Countess, a dragon who came through the same portal. After Countess is defeated, Dazzler Thor succumbs to the effects that this universe's Terrigen Mists had on her system and vanishes.[145]

Ultimate Marvel

[edit]

The Ultimate Marvel incarnation of Dazzler is introduced as a punk rock singer in Ultimate X-Men #42. She briefly joins Emma Frost's Academy of Tomorrow when promised a record deal, but joins the X-Men after they rescue her from a Sentinel attack. There she is called "Dazzler" after the name of her band.

She often shows a lack of enthusiasm for the X-Men and their endeavors, but after learning of a proposed public execution of a mutant, she convinces a group of teammates to go on a rescue mission. When the mission goes astray and Angel is captured, Dazzler takes initiative and leads the team in a recovery operation. This leads to the accidental release of Longshot.[146]

Later, she and Angel go out on a presumed 'date' (really an effort to get themselves involved with the X-Men's latest mission) preventing the Academy of Tomorrow students from attacking the Triskelion. During the incident, power is lost and one of the inmates, Deathstrike, impales Dazzler through the chest. Ironically, Deathstrike is defeated by the very killer Dazzler has assisted before.[147]

Dazzler stays in a coma for several weeks, visited many times by Nightcrawler having an unrequited crush on her. Unfortunately, many factors have combined to unhinge Nightcrawler and as soon as she is able to be moved, she is fooled into thinking they must escape. Initially trusting Nightcrawler, she cooperates until the rest of the X-Men rescue her.[148] The others, understanding Nightcrawler is mentally ill, plan to rehabilitate. Dazzler does not accept this and quits the team in protest.[148]

She has since been labeled as one of the "most important" mutants to the X-Men's cause by the future Bishop.[149] Dazzler later joins Bishop's new team in Ultimate X-Men #82. When Bishop dies in Ultimate X-Men #90, Dazzler returned to the Xavier Institute to be with Angel and on Xavier's X-Men team once again. She is seen to be on Colossus's enhanced team, using the drug Banshee to boost her powers. The drug-enhanced team battles Xavier's main X-Men and eventually leave their drug-filled lives and return to the X-Mansion.[150] When Magneto's worldwide devastation hits the X-Men,[151] Dazzler is revealed by Jean Grey to have been killed in the tidal wave along with teammates Beast and Nightcrawler.[152]

The Ultimate iteration of Dazzler does not convert sound into light in this continuity. Her powers are defined as "Matter Detonation"; by detonating small particles in the air, she is able to create brilliant photokinetic effects, controlling the color and intensity of the light created.[153] Under the influence of the drug Banshee, Dazzler's powers are vastly increased, and she is able to create solid light constructs such as a sword, a tiger for her to ride into battle, and even a copy of Wolverine's claws, which she uses to fight Wolverine.[154] Dazzler's true powers are shown when she detonates the matter making up Sentinel robots, completely destroying them with her sheer power.[155][156]

X-Babies

[edit]

A member of the X-Babies is based on Dazzler.[157]

X-Men: The End

[edit]

In X-Men: The End, a series about the X-Men's hypothetical future, Dazzler continued her career as a singer. An occasional "reserve" team member, she joined Storm and X-Men members Iceman, Bishop, Psylocke, and Sage for Xavier's "Plan B" team. Co-piloting a ship to the extraterrestrial Shi'ar homeworld, Dazzler used her powers to create a light show, calming the passions of the battling X-Men and Shi'ar Imperial Guard. Cassandra Nova then manifests, slaying the Imperial Guard and leaving the remaining X-Men as her sole adversaries. Dazzler attempted to subdue Cassandra along with Storm and Iceman. While she uses her ability to laser a hole through Cassandra's head, Storm strikes her with lightning, giving Iceman a chance to freeze her. Bishop then shatters her to prevent her from returning. However, Cassandra simply reforms and, as a form of retaliation, blasts a hole through Dazzler, strikes Storm with energy, and freezes Iceman. She successfully killed Storm and Dazzler, but Iceman survived the ordeal. Dazzler is believed to be among the slain X-Men that were invited to a plane of higher existence by the Phoenix.[158]

What If

[edit]

Dazzler was featured in two issues of What If:

  • In What If #33 (June 1982), Dazzler decides to stay Galactus' herald after she defeats Terrax. After many years of servitude during which she guides Galactus to feed on uninhabited worlds to spare the lives of beings on other planets, she is free to return to Earth. When she arrives, Dazzler discovers the Earth had become a barren wasteland. With nowhere else to go, she returns to Galactus who welcomes her return.[159]
  • In a two-part What If? story (What if Cable had destroyed the X-Men? and What if Magneto took over the U.S.?) based on Uncanny X-Men #269, Dazzler is an agent of Magneto.[160] She is ultimately killed by a Sentinel warhead.[161]

In other media

[edit]

Television

[edit]

Film

[edit]

Video games

[edit]

Collected editions

[edit]
Title Material collected Published date ISBN
Dazzler: The Movie Marvel Graphic Novel #12 January 1990 978-0871350008
Essential Dazzler Vol. 1 Dazzler #1-21, X-Men (vol. 1) #130-131, Amazing Spider-Man (vol. 1) #203 August 2007 978-0785126959
Essential Dazzler Vol. 2 Dazzler #22-42, Marvel Graphic Novel #12, Beauty and The Beast #1-4, Secret Wars II #4 April 2009 978-0785137306
Marvel Masterworks: Dazzler Vol. 1 Dazzler #1-13, X-Men (vol. 1) #130-131, Amazing Spider-Man (vol. 1) #203 March 2020 978-1302922122
Marvel Masterworks: Dazzler Vol. 2 Dazzler #14-25, material from What If #33 April 2021 978-1302928674
Marvel Masterworks: Dazzler Vol. 3 Dazzler #26-34, Marvel Graphic Novel #12 May 2022 978-1302933180
X-Women Dazzler (vol. 2) #1 and X-Women #1, X-23 (vol. 2) #1, Cloak & Dagger (vol. 4) #1 February 2013 978-0785162797
Dazzler Omnibus Dazzler (vol. 1) #1-42, X-Men (vol. 1) #130-131, Amazing Spider-Man (vol. 1) #203, Marvel Graphic Novel #12, Beauty and The Beast #1-4, Secret Wars II #4, material from What If #33 October 2024 978-1302959609

Further reading

[edit]
  • The Spectacular Sisterhood of Superwomen: Awesome Female Characters from Comic Book History by Hope Nicholson, Quirk Books (2017)

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b Beauty and the Beast #3. Marvel Comics.
  2. ^ a b c d e Dazzler, vol. 1, no. 35 (January 1985).
  3. ^ a b "Top 10 Oddest Marvel Characters". Time. August 31, 2009.
  4. ^ a b Dazzler, vol. 1, no. 1 (March 1981).
  5. ^ a b c d Dazzler, vol. 1, no. 7 (September 1981).
  6. ^ a b X-Men: To Serve and Protect, vol. 1, no. 4 (April 2011).
  7. ^ Brevoort, Tom; DeFalco, Tom; Manning, Matthew K.; Sanderson, Peter; Wiacek, Win (2017). Marvel Year By Year: A Visual History. DK Publishing. p. 197. ISBN 978-1465455505.
  8. ^ a b "The Queer Importance Of Dazzler, Marvel's Disco-Inspired, Rollerskating Superheroine". MTV. Archived from the original on August 18, 2022. Retrieved August 30, 2022.
  9. ^ a b M, Hayden; ers (July 17, 2017). "Where Do Superheroes Fit Within The LGBTQIA Community?". Nylon. Retrieved August 30, 2022.
  10. ^ a b Wheeler, Andrew (June 30, 2014). "Mutant & Proud: Understanding The Queerness Of The X-Men". ComicsAlliance. Retrieved August 30, 2022.
  11. ^ a b "Queer-Casting the Next X-Men Movie". www.advocate.com. June 20, 2014. Retrieved August 30, 2022.
  12. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Ash, Roger (August 2016). "Dazzler Lights Up Marvel". Back Issue!. No. 90. TwoMorrows Publishing.
  13. ^ Wagland, Aidan Joshua (April 12, 2022). "Marvel: 10 Unexpected Movies That Nearly Happened". ScreenRant. Retrieved November 11, 2022.
  14. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Gagnon, Richard (April 1, 1986). "Dazzler: A Hero History". Amazing Heroes. No. 92. Fantagraphics Books.
  15. ^ a b c d "The Debut of the Dazzler – JimShooter.com". jimshooter.com.
  16. ^ "Kistler's Nerdy Love Letters: Dazzler of Marvel Comics". July 21, 2021.
  17. ^ Modern Masters Volume 18: John Romita Jr. TwoMorrows. 2008. ISBN 9781893905955.
  18. ^ a b Trinos, Angelo Delos (September 24, 2022). "10 Times Comics Changed The World". CBR. Retrieved November 11, 2022.
  19. ^ "The birth and death of Pacific Comics | San Diego Reader". www.sandiegoreader.com. Retrieved August 30, 2022. Dazzler #1, with a roller-skating heroine, sells 400,000 copies, about twice normal for a Marvel comic.
  20. ^ "The Queer Importance Of Dazzler, Marvel's Disco-Inspired, Rollerskating Superheroine". MTV. Archived from the original on August 18, 2022. Retrieved August 30, 2022. Dazzler #1 became the first comic book sold exclusively to comic book shops, selling over 400,000 copies.
  21. ^ Jones, R. A. (January 15, 1986). "Comics in Review". Amazing Heroes. No. 87. Fantagraphics Books.
  22. ^ "Jean Grey's return in X-Factor - uncannyxmen.net". www.uncannyxmen.net.
  23. ^ "X-Men Mutantversity: The Quest For the Siege". June 7, 2022.
  24. ^ "Marvel Made A Hero Immortal And Completely Forgot About It". ScreenRant. May 19, 2021.
  25. ^ Young, Andrew (March 8, 2017). "10 Comic Book Plots That Will Never Be Resolved". WhatCulture.com.
  26. ^ a b Richards, Dave (February 8, 2010). "McCann Makes Dazzler Sing Once More". Comic Book Resources. Retrieved March 19, 2010.
  27. ^ "Comichron: May 2010 Comic Book Sales to Comics Shops". www.comichron.com. Retrieved December 29, 2022.
  28. ^ "Top 300 Comics Actual--May 2010". icv2.com. Retrieved September 12, 2022.
  29. ^ Zawisza, Doug (May 27, 2010). "Dazzler #1". CBR. Retrieved August 30, 2022.
  30. ^ Joel, Bryan (May 26, 2010). "Dazzler #1 Review". IGN. Retrieved August 30, 2022.
  31. ^ Dickey, Josh (February 6, 2015). "Marvel assembles first all-female Avengers team, the 'A-Force'". Mashable. Retrieved February 5, 2015.
  32. ^ "Female Avengers team comes to the fore with 'A-Force'". USA Today.
  33. ^ "Top 100 Comics: June 2018". www.diamondcomics.com. Retrieved September 12, 2022.
  34. ^ "Top 500 Comics--June 2018". icv2.com. Retrieved September 12, 2022.
  35. ^ "Comichron: June 2018 Comic Book Sales to Comics Shops". www.comichron.com. Retrieved September 12, 2022.
  36. ^ Fugere, Mike (June 19, 2018). "Dazzler: X-Song May Be The Most Socially Relevant X-Men Story In Decades". CBR. Retrieved August 30, 2022.
  37. ^ Davison, Joshua (June 7, 2018). "Dazzler: X-Song #1 Review: Freedom in Music". Bleeding Cool News And Rumors. Retrieved August 30, 2022.
  38. ^ Chris Claremont (w), John Byrne (p), Terry Austin (i). Uncanny X-Men, vol. 1, no. 130 (February). Marvel Comics.
  39. ^ Chris Claremont (w), John Byrne (p), Terry Austin (i). Uncanny X-Men, vol. 1, no. 131 (February). Marvel Comics.
  40. ^ Marv Wolfman (w), (various) (p), (various) (i). The Amazing Spider-Man, vol. 1, no. 203 (April 1980). Marvel Comics.
  41. ^ Dazzler #1-2. Marvel Comics.
  42. ^ Dazzler #3-4. Marvel Comics.
  43. ^ Tom DeFalco (w), Frank Springer (p), Ricardo Villamonte (i). Dazzler, vol. 1, no. 5 (July 1981). Marvel Comics.
  44. ^ a b Chris Claremont (w), Dave Cockrum, Joe Rubinstein (p), Joe Rubinstein (i). Uncanny X-Men, vol. 1, no. 148 (August 1981). Marvel Comics.
  45. ^ Dazzler #6-7. Marvel Comics.
  46. ^ Dazzler #22-23. Marvel Comics.
  47. ^ Dazzler #8
  48. ^ Dazzler # 17-28
  49. ^ Danny Fingeroth, Tom DeFalco (w), Frank Springer (p), Vince Colletta (i). Dazzler, vol. 1, no. 10 (December 1981). Marvel Comics.
  50. ^ Jim Shooter, David Michelinie (w), Bob Hall (p), Brett Breeding (i). The Avengers, vol. 1, no. 221 (July 1982). Marvel Comics.
  51. ^ Dazzler #26-27. Marvel Comics.
  52. ^ Jim Shooter (w), Frank Springer (p), Vince Colletta (i). "Dazzler the Movie" Marvel Graphic Novel, vol. 1, no. 12 (1984). Marvel Comics.
  53. ^ Chris Claremont (w), Bill Sienkiewicz (a). The New Mutants, vol. 1, no. 29 (July 1985). Marvel Comics.
  54. ^ Dazzler #30
  55. ^ "Zalme (Assistant Editors' Month)".
  56. ^ Chris Claremont (w), Jackson Guice, Kyle Baker (a). The New Mutants, vol. 1, no. 42 (August 1986). Marvel Comics.
  57. ^ Chris Claremont (w), Barry Windsor-Smith (p), Bob Wiacek (i). Uncanny X-Men, vol. 1, no. 214 (February 1987). Marvel Comics.
  58. ^ The Uncanny X-Men #214-247. Marvel Comics.
  59. ^ The Uncanny X-Men #221-222. Marvel Comics.
  60. ^ Chris Claremont (w), Jim Lee (p), Dan Green (i). Uncanny X-Men, vol. 1, no. 248 (September 1989). Marvel Comics.
  61. ^ Chris Claremont (w), Marc Silvestri (p), Dan Green (i). Uncanny X-Men, vol. 1, no. 260 (April 1990). Marvel Comics.
  62. ^ Jim Lee, John Byrne (w), Jim Lee (p), various (i). X-Men, vol. 1, no. 5 (February 1992). Marvel Comics.
  63. ^ Jim Lee, Scott Lobdell (w), Jim Lee (p), Bob Wiacek (i). X-Men, vol. 1, no. 11 (August 1992). Marvel Comics.
  64. ^ Scott Lobdell (w), Andy Kubert (p), Cam Smith, Jesse Delperdang (i). X-Men, vol. 1, no. 47 (December 1995). Marvel Comics.
  65. ^ a b Scott Lobdell (w), Tom Raney (p), Scott Hanna (i). Uncanny X-Men, vol. 1, no. 393 (May 2001). Marvel Comics.
  66. ^ Scott Lobdell (w), Leinil Francis Yu (p), Dexter Vines, Edgar Tadeo, Gerry Alanguilan (i). X-Men, vol. 1, no. 113 (June 2001). Marvel Comics.
  67. ^ Peter David (w), Carmen Carnero (p), Jay Leisten (i). X-Factor, vol. 1, no. 259 (September 2013). Marvel Comics.
  68. ^ Chris Claremont (w), Michael Ryan (p), Rick Ketcham (i). New Excalibur, vol. 1, no. 1 (January 2006). Marvel Comics.
  69. ^ X-Men: Die by the Sword #4-5. Marvel Comics.
  70. ^ Peter David (w), Larry Stroman (p), Jon Sibal (i). X-Factor, vol. 5, no. 35 (November 2008). Marvel Comics.
  71. ^ Ed Brubaker, Matt Fraction (w), (various) (a). Uncanny X-Men, vol. 1, no. 500 (September 2008). Marvel Comics.
  72. ^ Ed Brubaker, Matt Fraction (w), Greg Land (p), Jay Leisten (i). Uncanny X-Men, vol. 1, no. 502 (November 2008). Marvel Comics.
  73. ^ Mike Carey (w), Cary Nord (a). Secret Invasion: X-Men, vol. 1, no. 1 (October 2008). Marvel Comics.
  74. ^ Matt Fraction (w), Greg Land, Terry Dodson (p), Jay Leisten, Rachel Dodson (i). Uncanny X-Men, vol. 1, no. 511 (August 2009). Marvel Comics.
  75. ^ Christopher Yost (w), Harvey Tolibao (p), Sandu Florea (i). X-Men: Hellbound, vol. 1, no. 1 (July 2010). Marvel Comics.
  76. ^ Christopher Yost (w), Harvey Tolibao, Tom Raney (p), Sandu Florea, Scott Hanna (i). X-Men: Hellbound, vol. 1, no. 2 (August 2010). Marvel Comics.
  77. ^ Christopher Yost (w), Harvey Tolibao, Tom Raney (p), Sandu Florea, Scott Hanna (i). X-Men: Hellbound, vol. 1, no. 3 (September 2010). Marvel Comics.
  78. ^ Kieron Gillen (w), Billy Tan (a). X-Men: Regenesis, vol. 1, no. 1 (December 2011). Marvel Comics.
  79. ^ Kieron Gillen (w), Carlos Pacheco (p), Cam Smith (i). Uncanny X-Men, vol. 2, no. 1 (January 2012). Marvel Comics.
  80. ^ Greg Pak (w), Stephen Segovia (p), Dennis Crisostomo (i). X-Treme X-Men, vol. 2, no. 1 (September 2012). Marvel Comics.
  81. ^ Greg Pak (w), Stephen Segovia, Paco Diaz (p), Dennis Crisostomo, Paco Diaz (i). X-Treme X-Men, vol. 2, no. 3 (November 2012). Marvel Comics.
  82. ^ X-Treme X-Men vol. 2 #6-7. Marvel Comics.
  83. ^ Greg Pak (w), André Lima Araújo, Raul Valdes (p), André Lima Araújo, Lorenzo Ruggiero, Walden Wong (i). X-Treme X-Men, vol. 2, no. 7.1 (February 2013). Marvel Comics.
  84. ^ David Lapham (w), (various) (p), (various) (i). X-Termination, vol. 1, no. 2 (June 2013). Marvel Comics.
  85. ^ Brian Michael Bendis (w), Frazer Irving (a). Uncanny X-Men, vol. 3, no. 6 (July 2013). Marvel Comics.
  86. ^ Brian Michael Bendis (w), Chris Bachalo (p), (various) (i). Uncanny X-Men, vol. 3, no. 9 (September 2013). Marvel Comics.
  87. ^ Brian Michael Bendis (w), Kris Anka (a). Uncanny X-Men, vol. 3, no. 24 (September 2014). Marvel Comics.
  88. ^ A-Force vol. 2 #2-7. Marvel Comics.
  89. ^ A-Force vol. 2 #8-10. Marvel Comics.
  90. ^ Charles Soule, Jeff Lemire (w), Leinil Francis Yu (p), Jerry Alanguilan (i). Inhumans vs. X-Men, vol. 1, no. 1 (February 2017). Marvel Comics.
  91. ^ Jonathan Hickman (w), Pepe Larraz (a). House of X, vol. 1, no. 6 (December 2019). Marvel Comics.
  92. ^ "Dazzler Lights Up the World in New Solo Comic Book Series". Marvel. May 15, 2024. Retrieved October 19, 2024.
  93. ^ a b C. B. R. Staff (September 2, 2018). "Fast Times At Mutant High: The 20 Most Powerful Mutants From The '80s". CBR. Retrieved August 30, 2022.
  94. ^ a b Schedeen, Jesse (June 14, 2019). "Dark Phoenix's Dazzler Explained: Who Is the Mutant Singer in the X-Men Movie?". IGN. Retrieved November 11, 2022.
  95. ^ Dazzler: The Movie Marvel Graphic Novel #12
  96. ^ The Official Handbook of the Marvel Universe vol. 2 #3. Marvel Comics.
  97. ^ Allan, Scoot (August 9, 2022). "10 Characters Who Use Hard Light Like Ms. Marvel". CBR. Retrieved August 30, 2022.
  98. ^ Friedman, Nicholas (May 19, 2017). "15 STUPID Powers That Are Actually SUPER POWERFUL". CBR. Retrieved August 30, 2022. Dazzler's power of music allows her to pull sound in from outside sources, remain less predictable in frequency and much, much more, like how she can create holograms of people -- or fly.
  99. ^ Allan, Scoot (July 18, 2020). "10 Times Dazzler Proved She Was The X-Men's Most Powerful Mutant". CBR. Retrieved August 30, 2022.
  100. ^ Dazzler #42. Marvel Comics.
  101. ^ X-Treme X-Men Vol. 2 #4. Marvel Comics.
  102. ^ a b Dazzler One-Shot (2010). Marvel Comics.
  103. ^ Dazzler, vol. 1, no. 3 (May 1981).
  104. ^ The Uncanny X-Men #217. Marvel Comics.
  105. ^ Dazzler #38. Marvel Comics.
  106. ^ Dazzler #6. Marvel Comics.
  107. ^ The Uncanny X-Men #392. Marvel Comics.
  108. ^ Deadpool #67. Marvel Comics.
  109. ^ Runaways vol. 2 #19. Marvel Comics.
  110. ^ Moon Knight #191. Marvel Comics.
  111. ^ Jessica Jones: Purple Daughter. Marvel Comics.
  112. ^ The Uncanny X-Men #500. Marvel Comics.
  113. ^ a b Stanford, Jerry (December 10, 2020). "10 Best Dazzler Stories Ever, Ranked". CBR. Retrieved August 30, 2022.
  114. ^ "From Grace Jones to Bo Derek: 40 Years of Marvel's Dazzler". SYFY Official Site. December 11, 2019. Retrieved August 30, 2022.
  115. ^ Condry, Chris (January 15, 2022). "Marvel's Most Underrated Female Superheroes". Looper.com. Retrieved August 30, 2022.
  116. ^ Prom, Bradley (August 22, 2022). "MCU: 10 Characters Who Would Be Perfect For Their Own Animated Series". ScreenRant. Retrieved August 30, 2022.
  117. ^ Welch, Alex (May 15, 2021). "'Ant-Man 3' leak may reveal how the first X-Men joins the MCU". Inverse. Retrieved August 30, 2022.
  118. ^ George Marston (April 16, 2022). "Marvel's most underrated superheroes". gamesradar. Retrieved August 30, 2022.
  119. ^ jbindeck2015 (February 3, 2017). "40 X-Men Characters Who Haven't Appeared in the Movies But Should". Den of Geek. Retrieved August 30, 2022.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  120. ^ "An Ultimate Fifth: Brian K. Vaughan on Ultimate X-Men". Newsarama. Archived from the original on November 24, 2005. Retrieved January 22, 2007.
  121. ^ Frankenhoff, Brent (2011). Comics Buyer's Guide Presents: 100 Sexiest Women in Comics. Krause Publications. p. 53. ISBN 978-1-4402-2988-6.
  122. ^ Wheeler, rew (June 29, 2012). "Comics Pride: 50 Comics and Characters That Resonate with LGBT Readers". ComicsAlliance. Retrieved December 29, 2022.
  123. ^ Franich, Darren (June 9, 2022). "Let's rank every X-Man ever". Entertainment Weekly. Retrieved August 30, 2022.
  124. ^ Perpetua, Matthew (January 28, 2014). "95 X-Men Members Ranked From Worst To Best". BuzzFeed. Retrieved November 11, 2022.
  125. ^ "The 25 Most Criminally Underrated X-Men". GameSpot. Retrieved August 30, 2022.
  126. ^ Erao, Matthew (January 21, 2017). "Marvel: 17 Most Powerful Agents Of SHIELD, Ranked". ScreenRant. Retrieved November 11, 2022.
  127. ^ C. B. R. Staff (November 24, 2018). "Beta Level: 20 Mutants That Look More Powerful Than They Really Are". CBR. Retrieved August 30, 2022.
  128. ^ Cardona, Ian (May 22, 2018). "Hath No Fury: Marvel's 15 Fiercest Female Mutants, Ranked By Raw Power". CBR. Retrieved November 11, 2022.
  129. ^ Allan, Scoot (August 9, 2019). "The 10 Most Powerful Members Of Excalibur, Ranked". CBR. Retrieved August 30, 2022.
  130. ^ Avina, Anthony (December 30, 2019). "10 Superheroes Who Became Celebrities On Their World". CBR. Retrieved November 11, 2022.
  131. ^ Harn, Darby (December 29, 2021). "The 10 Most Powerful Members Of Marvel's A-Force". ScreenRant. Retrieved November 11, 2022.
  132. ^ Kennedy, Cole (May 24, 2022). "10 Best Comic Book Musicians". CBR. Retrieved August 30, 2022.
  133. ^ Raguparan, RaguVarman (August 27, 2021). "X-Men: 15 Alpha-Level Mutants Who Are Deceptively Powerful". CBR. Retrieved August 30, 2022.
  134. ^ Nicieza, Fabian and Andy Kubert. Amazing X-Men #1-2. Marvel Comics.
  135. ^ Amazing X-Men #1. Marvel Comics.
  136. ^ Age of Apocalypse #6. Marvel Comics.
  137. ^ All-New X-Men #17. Marvel Comics.
  138. ^ Paradise X #2. Marvel Comics.
  139. ^ She-Hulk vol. 2 #21. Marvel Comics.
  140. ^ Bendis, Brian Michael and Oliver Coipel. House of M #2. Marvel Comics.
  141. ^ Cable and Deadpool #17. Marvel Comics.
  142. ^ Marvel Zombies vs. the Army of Darkness #2
  143. ^ Marvel Zombies vs. the Army of Darkness #3. Marvel Comics.
  144. ^ Marvel Zombies vs. the Army of Darkness #5. Marvel Comics.
  145. ^ A-Force vol. 2 #5-7 (May–July 2016). Marvel Comics.
  146. ^ Ultimate X-Men #57. Marvel Comics.
  147. ^ Ultimate X-Men #65
  148. ^ a b Ultimate X-Men Annual #2. Marvel Comics.
  149. ^ Ultimate X-Men #82. Marvel Comics.
  150. ^ Ultimate X-Men #97. Marvel Comics.
  151. ^ Ultimatum #1. Marvel Comics.
  152. ^ Ultimate X-Men #98. Marvel Comics.
  153. ^ Ultimate X-Men #84. Marvel Comics.
  154. ^ Ultimate X-Men vol. 1 #95-97. Marvel Comics.
  155. ^ Ultimate X-Men #85
  156. ^ Ultimate X-Men #87. Marvel Comics.
  157. ^ The Uncanny X-Men Annual #12. Marvel Comics.
  158. ^ Claremont, Chris and Sean Chen. X-Men: The End: Book 3 #5-6. Marvel Comics.
  159. ^ What If...? #33. Marvel Comics.
  160. ^ What If...? vol. 2 #46. Marvel Comics.
  161. ^ What If...? vol. 2 #47. Marvel Comics.
  162. ^ a b Addiego, Frank (August 2016). "Dazzler in the Media (and Beyond!)". Back Issue!. No. 90. TwoMorrows Publishing.
  163. ^ jbindeck2015 (May 31, 2019). "Pryde of the X-Men: The Animated Series We Almost Got". Den of Geek. Retrieved November 11, 2022.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  164. ^ Sims, Chris (February 24, 2014). "The X-Men Episode Guide 3x12: 'Dark Phoenix Part I: Dazzled'". ComicsAlliance. Retrieved November 11, 2022.
  165. ^ Lesley Goldberg (February 11, 2019). "Marvel, Hulu Set Four-Show Animated Slate". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved February 11, 2019.
  166. ^ Lawrence, Gregory (December 4, 2019). "Marvel/Hulu Series 'Tigra & Dazzler Show' on Hold After Writing Staff Exits". Collider. Retrieved December 4, 2019.
  167. ^ Goldberg, Lesley (January 24, 2020). "Marvel's 'Howard the Duck,' 'Tigra & Dazzler' Dead at Hulu". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved January 24, 2020.
  168. ^ Hickson, Colin (April 9, 2024). "X-Men '97 Promo Reveals the Return of Fan Favorite Mutant". CBR. Retrieved April 9, 2024.
  169. ^ a b "Dazzler Voices (X-Men)". Behind The Voice Actors. Retrieved October 19, 2024. A green check mark indicates that a role has been confirmed using a screenshot (or collage of screenshots) of a title's list of voice actors and their respective characters found in its credits or other reliable sources of information.
  170. ^ Christopher Baggett (September 6, 2017). "15 Game-Changing Superhero Movies That Almost Were (But Never Will Be)". cbr. Retrieved September 16, 2018.
  171. ^ jbindeck2015 (March 19, 2015). "Female superhero adaptations that nearly happened". Den of Geek. Retrieved November 11, 2022.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  172. ^ Molloy, Tim (June 6, 2019). "'Dark Phoenix': Why Dazzler Took 40 Years to Get to the Big Screen". The Wrap. Retrieved June 6, 2019.
  173. ^ "Dazzler will definitely appear in the upcoming X-Men film 'Dark Phoenix'". Entertainment Weekly. June 23, 2017.
  174. ^ "Emeli Sandé - Extraordinary Being – In Collaboration with X-Men: Dark Phoenix". May 23, 2019 – via www.youtube.com.
  175. ^ Allan, Scoot (September 18, 2019). "10 Best X-Men Video Games, Ranked". Game Rant. Retrieved November 11, 2022.
  176. ^ Meisfjord, Tom (May 21, 2021). "The History Of Marvel's Murderworld". Looper. Retrieved November 21, 2022.
  177. ^ Browne, Ben (March 10, 2017). "Every X-Men Video Game Ever, Ranked Worst To Best". ScreenRant. Retrieved November 21, 2022.
  178. ^ "X-Men II: The Fall of the Mutants Characters". Giant Bomb. Retrieved November 21, 2022.
  179. ^ Cipriano, Jason (February 16, 2011). "Every 'Marvel VS. Capcom 3' Cameos - Worlds Truly Colliding". MTV News. MTV. Archived from the original on December 11, 2021. Retrieved November 6, 2021.
  180. ^ Ladies and Gentlemen! You've asked for her! Dazzler rolls into #MarvelPuzzleQuest!
  181. ^ "This X-Men is bringing disco fever to MARVEL Future Fight! | This X-Men is bringing disco fever to MARVEL Future Fight! Share your groovy tips for how to use Dazzler in the comments. | By Marvel Future Fight | Facebook". www.facebook.com.
  182. ^ Danielson, Matthew (January 30, 2023). "Marvel SNAP: Dazzler Deck Guide (Tips, Cards, & Strategies)". ScreenRant. Retrieved March 16, 2023.
  183. ^ Holtey, Quain (November 2, 2022). "Marvel Snap: The 10 Best Ongoing Effects". TheGamer. Retrieved March 16, 2023.
[edit]