Here are some of my favourite lesbians and bisexual women Super heros. The characters cover the full range of heroes, anti-heroes, villains, and supporting cast.
Tank Girl
Real name: Rebecca Buck
Comic: Tank Girl
My first comic crush, Tank Girl is a tank driving, bounty hunted bad-ass. Her character is well-known for her lack of manners, bad behaviour, and carelessness with the hearts of her lovers. Besides this, she can usually fight her way out of any pickle.
Mystique
Real name: Raven Darkholme
Comic: X-Men
Mystique’s first made an appearance X-men universe in the comic Ms. Marvel. One of the most famous X-villains, Raven had a lifelong on-again, off-again affair with fellow mutant Destiny. Writer Chris Claremont stated that he originally planned to have Mystique and Destiny be Nightcrawler’s biological parents, but due to the Comics Code Authority, Marvel refused to do this. However, years later Mystique and Destiny were confirmed to be a lesbian couple.
Miss America
Real name: America Chavez
Comic: Young Avengers
Miss America story starts when her mothers sacrifice their lives to save their home planet, Utopia, forcing her leave home to fight injustice in more crime-ridden dimensions. She teams up with other superheroes including Loki, Hulkling, and Wiccan. In Young Avengers #12 she flippantly mentions that she is a lesbian.
Scandal Savage
Real name: Scandal Savage
Comic: Secret Six
One of the most bad ass characters around, Scandal is the daughter of immortal caveman Vandal Savage. She was dating Knockout at the time of the other’s death, and is currently involved with Liana Kerzner. She has a healing factor, and wields her Lamentation Blades with deadly skill.
Batwoman
Real name: Kate Kane
Comic: Batwoman 52
Easily the most prominent lesbian character in superhero comics, Kate’s backstory is tragic and includes the loss of both her mother and twin sister at the hands of a terrorist organisation. As an adult, she joins the Marines to please her father, but is eventually outed as a lesbian and is dishonorably discharged. Upon her return to Gotham as a socialite, she parties and binge drinks every night until an encounter with Batman incites her to begin fighting crime.
Renee Montoya
Real name: Renee Montoya
Comic: Batwoman 52
One time girlfriend to Batwomen, and former Gotham City police officer, Renee picked up the legacy of her friend Vic Sage after he passed away from lung cancer, becoming the second Question. As her desire to fight the good fight intensifies, she reconnects romantically with Kane. Unfortunately, in recent iterations of Batwoman, Montoya is no longer a superhero and simply a member of the police force. Although her big relaionship was with Batwoman, she has also had a long term relationship with Darla Hernandez. Currently she has the co-feature/back-up in DC’s flagship title, Detective Comics.
Maggie Sawyer
Real name: Maggie Sawyer
Comic: Batwoman 52
Created back in the 1980s when the comic code prohibition against lesbian comic characters was in effect, Maggie was as ‘out’ as one could possibly be, even getting a girlfriend named Toby Raynes. Originally created as a supporting character for Superman, Maggie was later shifted over to the Batman universe, first as a cast member in Gotham Central and more recently as a potential love interest for Batwoman in Detective Comics.
Ramona Flowers
Real name: Ramona Flowers
Comic: Scott Pilgrim
Ramona Flowers is a subspace-traveling, mallet-weilding, endlessly desirable bisexual woman. How else would someone end up with seven evil exes? She’s guarded and maybe a bit cold, but she isn’t particularly interested in how most people feel about her. However, when she’s jealous or upset her head glows.
Gwendolyn
Real name: Gwendolyn
Comic: Saga
Gwendolyn is the most enigmatic characters in new Saga series. Her story, well Gwendolyn is on the hunt for her ex-fiancé, Marko. She doesn’t want him back, but he stole a family heirloom from her, a set of rings that allow languages to be translated between two speakers. After becoming infected with Heroine (a parasite that alters brain chemistry), Gwendolyn sees a naked mirage of the first woman she ever slept with, Velour.
4 thoughts on “Gay Women In Comics, and There are Plenty”
Pingback: Soska Sisters to Direct Movie About Bisexual Superhero 'Painkiller Jane'
Pingback: Awww, DC Comics’ Batwoman Proposes to Her Girlfriend -
Pingback: Would There Ever be a Queer Superhero in a Marvel Film? Studios President Says Maybe | KitschMix
Pingback: Marvel To Debut New Comic With Queer Women Taking Centre Stage | KitschMix