Tag Archives: Kate Kane

Ruby Rose As Batwoman Will Be First Openly Gay Superhero

Ruby Rose will play the first openly lesbian lead superhero in a new TV production of Batwoman.

The Australian actress will play the title lead in a new series on The CW Network in America.

The series will see Batwoman’s alter ego Kate Kane portrayed as a lesbian, and is expected to air in late 2019/early 2020.

Kane has been openly gay in the comics since 2006, in an effort by DC Comics to make its publications more diverse.

One of the show’s writers posted on Twitter that the show had “struck gold” with Ruby.

Celebrating the casting news, Rose responded to fans congratulating her.

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The series is part of a collection on The CW focusing on characters from the DC Comics universe.

They include Supergirl, Arrow and The Flash.

It’s believed Rose will make her debut as Batwoman in an upcoming season crossover of all three.

And it’s fair to say fans are excited to see what she can bring to the table.

DC’s ‘Batwoman’ Solo Series Will Honour Her Queer Identity

Batwoman is flying high in the pages of Detective Comics right now, but DC Entertainment announced that Kate Kane is getting her own solo comic once again – one that will honour her queer legacy.

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In an interview with Inverse, Dan DiDio says Batwoman’s identity as a lesbian has been a part of her character since she first appeared in a New 52 issue.

We introduced Batwoman back in 2006, and that was purely to introduce a gay character who was a part of one of our major franchises. It’s one thing to write a gay character in a book, but it’s another to make a player in a major franchise — Batman, Superman — gay. It brings a level of importance to the role, and it validates that character immediately.”

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Batwoman backstory is an important one. She was a highly competitive trained soldier who was dismissed from a military academy – despite being a top student – for being a lesbian.

After losing her military career, she fell into drug use and tried to escape her frustrations through risky behaviours. That’s where concerned father figure Bruce Wayne stepped in, and Kane soon became a vigilante beside him.

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DiDio insists that Batwoman’s creation, despite being for the explicit purpose of adding a gay character in DC’s books, was an organic one.

She’s not a throwaway, and she hasn’t changed one bit. She’s a hero who happens to be gay, which is no different than Bruce Wayne being a hero whose parents were murdered. She has a different point of view, and she stands unique among our pantheon of heroes.”

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DC has escaped much of the controversy that surrounds Marvel, though both publishers have made public decisions this year to value stories about non-white, non-straight, and non-male superheroes.

Fans seem particularly upset with Marvel swapping in new, diverse characters under existing titles — Riri Williams taking Iron Man’s position, or Jane Foster stepping in as the rightful Thor — and DC’s decision to showcase Batwoman seems to side-step that strategy.

After all, as DiDio points out, Batwoman has been a part of DC’s canon for ten years now, so her first solo series is only capitalising on a business strategy that began long before Marvel’s diversification movement took centre stage.