Jump to content

Dolphin (character)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Dolphin
Dolphin as depicted in Showcase #79 (December 1968). Art by Jay Scott Pike.
Publication information
PublisherDC Comics
First appearanceShowcase #79 (December 1968)
Created byJay Scott Pike
In-story information
Species
Team affiliationsForgotten Heroes
Black Lantern Corps
Justice League Task Force
Justice League
AbilitiesArtificially adapted for deep subaquatic life: underwater breathing, superhuman strength, speed, durability, stamina, reflexes, resilience to deep water pressures, Aquatic Respiration (originally)
Seachanged atlantean physiology: conventional atlantean adaptions, light manipulation, omnifarious shapeshifting, claw retraction, scale manifestation, humanoid camouflage (current)

Dolphin is a fictional character, a superheroine in the DC Comics universe.[1] Created by writer-artist Jay Scott Pike, she debuted in Showcase #79 (December 1968).[2]

Creation and publication history

[edit]

Dolphin was created by Jay Scott Pike; at the time the writer-artist was primarily known for his work on DC's line of romance comics. After debuting in Showcase #79 in December 1968, Dolphin was not seen for nearly a decade before appearing in a cameo in Showcase #100 (May 1978), which linked the character to Aquaman. After another hiatus, Dolphin appeared in a Rip Hunter storyline in Action Comics '552-553 and then DC Comics Presents #78 (January 1995) with a redesigned costume.[3]

Fictional character biography

[edit]

Dolphin was a very young girl when she fell overboard from a cruise ship (Secret Origins #50) only to be saved from drowning when a mysterious alien race abducted her to use as an experimental prototype for a subaquatic humanoid race. These experiments empowered her with various biophysical adaptations similar to ocean-themed fauna forms or mariner races.[4]

When the alien scientists abandoned the experiment, Dolphin escaped their underwater lab. Oblivious to her former humanity, the feral young Dolphin scavenged underwater for her livelihood, eventually finding her trademark short blue-jeans and white shirt inside a sunken ship. She has been alone her entire life, constantly swimming and enjoying her personal freedom. As she grew into young womanhood, she became tired of living an isolated, lonely life. One day, the crew of an oceanology vessel saved her from a near lethal encounter with a dolphin-killing shark and took her aboard their ship to help her.[5]

Over time, the ship's crew tried to educate and care for the girl they'd dubbed "Dolphin", but her lack of contact with either humans or Atlanteans had left her mute. Though she grew to understand spoken language fairly quickly, the act of speech itself remained beyond her. Then, a young female doctor on the crew had the bright idea to instruct her in sign language. Finally able to communicate, Dolphin explained what she could of herself and her story, and expressed her desire to resume her undersea life. At some point, Dolphin finally mastered spoken language, but never lost her shyness and reluctance to speak. She has since been a woman of few words.

Crisis years

[edit]

Dolphin has stayed mostly on the fringes of the superheroic community, although she was a member of the Forgotten Heroes until their dissolution and fought alongside them during the Crisis on Infinite Earths.

Meeting Aquaman and marrying Tempest

[edit]

During the Zero Hour events, she met Aquaman, and took part in the battle against Charybdis, a villain interested in the aquatic powers of the two heroes. When Charybdis, after robbing Aquaman of his telepathic powers, stuck Aquaman's hand in a pool of water teeming with piranhas, the normally pacifist Dolphin was forced to shoot the madman. She carried both the wounded Aquaman and Aqualad back to Atlantis for medical attention, saving their lives and earning their trust and love.

Afterwards, she became a supporting character in the Aquaman comic book, and soon won the affections of an Aquaman embittered by the loss of his hand. Over time, she came out of her shell, and displayed a more energetic and bubbly, though naive, personality.

In issue #25 of Aquaman volume 5 it was revealed that Kordax, an evil merman ancestor of Aquaman's, had secretly set Dolphin free from the lab, and used mind control to prompt her to infiltrate the royal court and kill Aquaman as the agent of his revenge on the royal house of Atlantis. The strong-willed Dolphin broke free of his control, and her romantic involvement with the king of Atlantis grew into love.

Dolphin remained Aquaman's lover until Mera, Aquaman's wife, returned from her exile in another dimension called the Netherworld. In the same period, Aqualad, now calling himself Tempest, returned from several years of extradimensional magic studies with increased powers and confidence, winning Dolphin's heart with a kiss. Though initially taken aback, Aquaman blessed the relationship. Eventually, Dolphin became pregnant by Tempest, and the two were married in an Atlantean ceremony attended by Tempest's second family, the Titans.[1]

Dolphin gave birth to a son, whom Aquaman named Cerdian (after Cerdia, a surface nation annexed by Atlantis). The weight of new familial responsibilities initially strained the relationship between Dolphin and Tempest. These tensions came to a head when Dolphin demanded Tempest choose between his duties as a hero and his duties as a father and husband. Tempest complied, and quit the Titans. When Aquaman was exiled for his role in the sinking of Atlantis, the family fell under suspicion as friends of the deposed king. The new sorcerous rulers deemed Dolphin and her family collaborators and put them under house arrest. This government is eventually overthrown, and Dolphin and her family have a brief moment of happiness in a free Atlantis.

When Tempest channels the magic of all Atlantis' sorcerers to undo a spell that had turned Mera into an air-breather, he is noticed by the Spectre, who unleashes his full power on Atlantis. The resulting cataclysmic destruction obliterates Atlantis entirely. Tempest is missing and presumed dead, but Dolphin, sent away during Atlantis' destruction, may have survived, along with the young Cerdian.

One Year Later

[edit]

Further evidence of her survival is given by the ghost of Vulko. Able to sense the passing of Atlanteans, he claimed never to have felt the death of Garth, Dolphin, and Cerdian, so the three are possibly alive. However, despite having spent months researching his beloved ones,[6] Garth eventually reveals that he had found the bodies of his wife and son and reasons that Dolphin and Cerdian may have died during the evacuation of Atlantis, buried in the rubble while searching for shelter. Slizzath, his necromantic uncle, confirms this version, hinting a possible return of Dolphin as a Black Lantern[7]

Blackest Night

[edit]

In Blackest Night #2, Dolphin, Tula, and Aquaman are raised at Mercy Reef as Black Lanterns tasked with killing Tempest and Mera. Tula and Dolphin contend for Tempest's affection and mercilessly taunt him for being unable to save either of them. At the conclusion of the conflict, Tempest is killed and subsequently raised as a Black Lantern.[8] Dolphin appears to battle the Titans before Dawn Granger destroys her body with a burst of light.[9]

Rebirth

[edit]

Dolphin made her return when she joined Aquaman in defending seachanged Atlanteans from persecution and harassment in the Aquaman Rebirth series. She is currently on the run with Aquaman as they hide from the underwater authorities. In the new series, Dolphin is a mutation which is contemptibly referred to as a taintblood in the various tribes of Atlantis, having triggered it while facing segregation from the drift out of self-defense. She and a clutch of other 9th tride denizens were rescued by a ghost of the locale whom was none other than the believed to be deceased Arthur Curry.[10]

Powers and abilities

[edit]

Pre-Crisis, Dolphin's anatomy had been tampered with by an unknown alien race at the biomolecular level, resulting in various oceanic-adapted capabilities, such as gills, webbed fingers and toes, shining white hair, superhuman physical conditioning, resilience to deep water pressures, and a slowed aging process.[1] She is an adept yet untrained hand-to-hand combatant who was psychologically programmed with an aptitude for high-powered artillery. The biomolecular tampering and psychological programming resulted in Dolphin being strong, fast, and abled enough to match Mera in a straightforward fistfight while underwater.[11] During the Blackest Night run, she was reanimated by the Black Lantern Ring, turning her into an all but unstoppable necrotized carcass with all the conventional powers of a Lantern Corpsmen coupled with vast self-regenerative capabilities.[8][9]

In the Rebirth run, Dolphin is a natural-born Atlantean with paranatural alterations due to being born sea-changed, a magical mutation, which occurs in certain Atlanteans due to overexposure to the metaphysical energies that sustained them during Atlantis's fall, causing some water breathers to adopt more traits from fish and other marine biological lifeforms.[12] Dolphin has all the typical Atlantean augmentations that come with surviving the crushing ocean depths.[10] She possesses minor metamorphic abilities, such as the manifestation of light blue scales, webbed hands, and razor sharp nails, which can draw blood from other Atlanteans. Dolphin's biophysical deviance also enables her to generate natural light from her body, which is potent enough to induce seizures in individuals who look directly into her glare.[12] She can focus her radiance to give it more concussive punch on top of increasing her physical melee.[13] Dolphin can also use it to make air-drawings to articulate her thoughts and intentions.[14]

Other versions

[edit]

In the Elseworlds story JLA: The Nail, Dolphin makes an appearance in Professor Hamilton's Cadmus Labs.[15]

In other media

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b c Greenberger, Robert (2008), "Dolphin", in Dougall, Alastair (ed.), The DC Comics Encyclopedia, New York: Dorling Kindersley, p. 107, ISBN 978-0-7566-4119-1, OCLC 213309017
  2. ^ Showcase #79 (December 1968) at the Grand Comics Database.
  3. ^ John Brent (April 1, 1985). "Splash! A Hero History of the Underwater Heroine". Amazing Heroes. No. 68. Fantagraphics Books.
  4. ^ Cowsill, Alan; Irvine, Alex; Korte, Steve; Manning, Matt; Wiacek, Win; Wilson, Sven (2016). The DC Comics Encyclopedia: The Definitive Guide to the Characters of the DC Universe. DK Publishing. p. 95. ISBN 978-1-4654-5357-0.
  5. ^ Wells, John (2014). American Comic Book Chronicles: 1965-1969. TwoMorrows Publishing. p. 216. ISBN 978-1605490557.
  6. ^ Aquaman: Sword of Atlantis #50
  7. ^ Titans (vol. 2) #15 (2009)
  8. ^ a b Blackest Night #2 August 2009)
  9. ^ a b Blackest Night: Titans #3 (October 2009)
  10. ^ a b Aquaman (vol. 8) #25 (July 2017)
  11. ^ Aquaman (vol. 5) #12 (September 1995)
  12. ^ a b Aquaman (vol. 7) #26 (August 2017)
  13. ^ Aquaman (vol. 7) #33 (April 2018)
  14. ^ Aquaman (vol. 7) #29 (December 2017)
  15. ^ JLA: The Nail #3
  16. ^ Eisen, Andrew (October 4, 2013). "DC Characters and Objects - Scribblenauts Unmasked Guide". IGN. Retrieved May 12, 2024.
  17. ^ Matadeen, Renaldo (August 2, 2019). "Young Justice: Outsiders Gives Aquaman a New Sidekick". CBR. Retrieved May 12, 2024.
  18. ^ Adreena, Ilylia (23 December 2020). "James Wan Is Reportedly Looking For A New Asian Female Lead For 'Aquaman 2'". Rojak Daily. Retrieved 26 December 2020.
  19. ^ a b "'Aquaman 2' looking to cast an Asian actress as new female lead". www.msn.com. Retrieved 2020-12-26.
  20. ^ James, David (2020-12-22). "Aquaman 2 Reportedly Eyeing Asian Actresses For New Female Lead". We Got This Covered. Retrieved 2020-12-26.
[edit]