Cheetah (character)
Cheetah | |
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Publication information | |
Publisher | DC Comics |
First appearance |
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Created by |
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In-story information | |
Alter ego |
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Species | Human (Priscilla Rich and Deborah Domaine) Metahuman (Barbara Ann Minerva and Sebastian Ballesteros) |
Team affiliations |
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Abilities | Priscilla Rich
Deborah Domaine
Barbara Ann Minerva and Sebastian Ballesteros
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The Cheetah is a fictional character appearing in DC Comics publications and related media, most commonly as the archenemy of the superhero Wonder Woman.[1] Like her nemesis, she was created by William Moulton Marston and H. G. Peter, debuting in the autumn of 1943 in Wonder Woman #6.
There have been four incarnations of Cheetah: Priscilla Rich (Golden and Silver Age), Deborah Domaine (Bronze Age), Dr. Barbara Ann Minerva (post-Crisis and current), and Sebastian Ballesteros (a male usurper who briefly assumed the role in 2001).
The Cheetah character has been adapted in various forms of media outside of comics, including animated series, films, and video games. Kristen Wiig portrayed the Barbara Minerva version of the character in the 2020 DC Extended Universe film Wonder Woman 1984, marking the character's live-action debut.[2]
Publication history
[edit]Name | First appearance | Date of first appearance | Created by |
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Priscilla Rich | Wonder Woman #6 (autumn 1943) and Sensation Comics #22 (October 1943)1 | October 1943 | William Moulton Marston and H. G. Peter |
Deborah Domaine | Wonder Woman #274 | December 1980 | Gerry Conway and José Delbo |
Barbara Ann Minerva | Wonder Woman (vol. 2) #7[3] | August 1987 | Len Wein and George Pérez |
Sebastian Ballestreros | Wonder Woman (vol. 2) #170 | July 2001 | Phil Jimenez and Joe Kelly |
Fictional character biography
[edit]Golden Age, Silver Age, and Post-Crisis comics history
[edit]Before the 12-issue DC Comics series Crisis on Infinite Earths in 1985 (which is regarded as the starting point for DC's continuity before the 2011 New 52 reboot), there were two women who donned spotted cat costumes to fight Wonder Woman as the Cheetah: socialite Priscilla Rich and her niece Deborah Domaine. While modern incarnations of Cheetah possess superhuman powers, Rich and Domaine do not.
There are two Post-Crisis Cheetahs: Barbara Minerva and Sebastian Ballesteros, Minerva being the more prominent of the two. While the pre-Crisis Cheetahs are simply women in costumes, the Post-Crisis Cheetahs are mystical werecats.
Priscilla Rich
[edit]The first woman to become the Cheetah is Priscilla Rich, a 1940s-era blonde Washington, D.C., debutante and aristocrat.[4] She has a split personality that compels her to commit crimes dressed as a cheetah.[5]
Following conflicts with Wonder Woman, Rich eventually retires and dies of old age.[6][7]
Rich does not appear as the Cheetah following the Crisis on Infinite Earths reboot, and is killed by successor Barbara Minerva.[8][9]
Deborah Domaine
[edit]Deborah "Debbie" Domaine is Priscilla Rich's niece, who was kidnapped by Kobra and forced to become Cheetah.[7]
Debbie also serves as a member of the Secret Society of Super Villains and battles the Justice League and Justice Society.[10] She has not appeared since Crisis on Infinite Earths.
Barbara Ann Minerva
[edit]The third Cheetah is British archaeologist Barbara Minerva, the heiress to a vast fortune in her ancient family seat in Nottinghamshire. Ambitious, selfish, and severely neurotic, Barbara develops a passion for archaeology that leads her to finance an expedition to find a tribe in Africa, which is said to be protected by a female guardian with the powers of a cheetah. A band of marauders kill the guardian and most of the expedition party. Barbara, with the aid of a tribal priest named Chuma, the caretaker of the ancient plant god Urzkartaga, agrees to become the tribe's new guardian after being told that she would gain immortality. Her powers are conferred to her by ingesting a potion made from human blood and the berries and leaves of Urzkartaga, which gives her orange skin with black spots, a tail and claws, as well as superhuman senses and reflexes.[11] Unfortunately for Minerva, the host of the Cheetah persona is intended to be a virgin. Minerva is not, so her transformations were part curse and part blessing, as she experiences severe pain and physical disability while in her human form and bloodthirsty euphoria while in her cat form.[12]
This Cheetah was active before Wonder Woman's post-Crisis appearance, and confronts Catwoman in Rome during the events of Batman: Dark Victory and Catwoman: When in Rome.
This version of Cheetah first comes into Wonder Woman's world when Barbara discovers that Diana possesses the Lasso of Truth. As an archaeologist, Barbara covets the lasso, hoping to add it to her collection of historical items. She first attempts to do so through trickery, claiming that there is a matching ancient Golden Girdle of Gaea of the same kind from which the lasso was fashioned. Although the scheme proceeds far enough for Minerva to hold the lasso, its magical power to make people tell the truth forces her to confess her true intentions. Diana, profoundly distraught that she would be so treacherous, takes back the lasso and returns home in tears. With the subtle approach having failed, Minerva resorts to attacking the Amazon as the Cheetah to rob her of the lasso. Their initial battle ends with inconclusive results, as Diana's friend, Julia Kapatelis, shoots the Cheetah and forces her to retreat.
Over the years, Barbara's interest in the lasso wanes and she becomes more interested in besting Diana in battle due to her bruised ego. The rivalry between the Cheetah and Wonder Woman fluctuates over time, however. Wonder Woman saves the Cheetah's life during an adventure in the Balkan country of Pan Balgravia.[13][14] The country's dictator, Baron von Nastraed, for unknown reasons, chooses to aid a demon named Drax by capturing a powerful metahuman woman. The captive woman's body would be used to provide a body for Drax's alternate dimension bride Barremargux to inhabit. When the Baron captures the Cheetah for this purpose, Wonder Woman travels to the country to save her. At the last moment, when Barremargux is about to enter Earth-One, Barbara closes the gateway before the crossing could be completed by jumping into the gateway instead. Barbara is trapped in this demonic dimension until Boston mob boss Julianna Sazia has her scientists open the dimensional gateway to retrieve Barbara for use as a living weapon. Barbara double-crosses Julianna, choosing to aid Wonder Woman when she is caught up in a war between Sazia and rival mobster Paulie Longo. Considering her debt to Wonder paid, the Cheetah continues her quest to defeat Wonder Woman, but only when it is convenient to her.
For a brief period of time, Minerva loses her powers to businessman Sebastian Ballesteros, who convinces Urzkartaga that he could be a more effective Cheetah than she was. Minerva later kills Ballesteros, offers his remains as a sacrifice, and regains her powers.
The relationship Minerva has with Urzkartaga is strained at times, despite Minerva showing complete deference and loyalty to her patron god. At one point, the god punishes her for her failures by leaving one of Minerva's hands human looking and untransformed even while she is in her Cheetah form, though it appears to still be fully empowered as the rest of her body and equally as deadly. With help from Zoom, Minerva attains a level of super-speed even greater than she previously possessed. She accomplishes this by murdering Priscilla Rich, who previously went by the alias of Cheetah, thus seemingly establishing herself as the true Cheetah based on Zoom's own psychological insight. They later join the latest Secret Society of Super Villains and seem to be engaged in a sexual relationship, though Zoom considers himself to still be married to his former wife.
In the "One Year Later" storyline, the witch Circe places a spell on Minerva that allows her to change her appearance from human to the Cheetah at will, even though she still remains in her Cheetah form in either guise. She also gains control over three actual cheetahs and still possesses her super-speed, which is demonstrated by her ability to steal the golden lasso away from Donna Troy several times in battle. She is later seen in the Justice League of America Wedding Special, forming a new Injustice League alongside Lex Luthor and the Joker. She also appears in Salvation Run. Later still, in Final Crisis: Resist, she joins forces with Checkmate to rebel against Darkseid, and has a brief relationship with Snapper Carr. In the pages of Wonder Woman, she is revealed as the power behind the Secret Society, having taken responsibility for the creation of Genocide. She arranges to have her ally Doctor Psycho take the place of Sarge Steel as director of the Department of Metahuman Affairs which, in the middle of Genocide's onslaught, she targets for destruction.[15]
The New 52
[edit]In 2011, DC relaunched its comic books and rebooted its continuity in an initiative called The New 52. The character was re-made to be a corrupt image and antecedent to Wonder Woman and the ideals she represents. Barbara Minerva (having used several aliases that happen to be the names of various incarnations of the character) is given a revised backstory: she is established as an ally of Wonder Woman's due to her knowledge of dangerous relics, and having previously grown up in an all-woman commune called "Amazonia". In the possession of a dagger once belonging to a lost tribe of Amazons, she accidentally cut herself on it. This caused her to become possessed by the "Goddess of the Hunt", transforming her into a human-cheetah hybrid. Her claws transform Superman into a cheetah-like being when she scratches him. The origin of Cheetah is dated back to the Sun Tribe, who for centuries had hunted alongside the cheetahs. Every generation, one of their members is chosen to become the host of the Goddess of the Hunt, until one day a hunter killed the current host; the knife used to kill her was cursed until it fell into the hands of Minerva. The Cheetah is subdued by the Justice League and placed in Belle Reve. However, once there, she makes contact with someone telling him she is where he requested, implying her capture was staged as a part of a bigger plan.[16]
During the "Forever Evil" storyline, Cheetah's mysterious benefactor is revealed to be the Crime Syndicate to join the Secret Society of Super Villains.[17] Psi shares a vision with Steve Trevor showing Cheetah in possession of Wonder Woman's lasso and hiding out in Central Park.[18] When Steve Trevor and Killer Frost arrive in Central Park to look for the Cheetah, they end up being ambushed by the Cheetah and her Menagerie (consisting of Elephant Man, Hellhound, Lion-Mane, Mäuschen, Primeape, and Zebra-Man). The Cheetah manhandles Trevor using Wonder Woman's lasso. Steve Trevor manages to overcome the lasso and explains that only Diana could use it, as she was herself truthful and pure. As the Cheetah is not that, Trevor manages to get the lasso off and onto the Cheetah. While Killer Frost escapes and freezes the Cheetah's Menagerie, Steve Trevor knocks the Cheetah out.[19]
DC Rebirth
[edit]After the events of DC Rebirth, the Cheetah's origin was altered once more. As a young girl, Barbara Cavendish enjoyed mythology and showed an affinity for languages. Her father disparaged her interest in mythology, deriding it as childish. In defiance of her father, her passion for myth and legend remained and as an adult, she changed her surname to Minerva in honor of her late mother. By age 26, she had mastered seven languages and earned two PhDs in archaeology. On a dig in Ukraine, she discovered proof of the existence of the Amazons, but the dig site collapsed and was abandoned. Minerva was able to take photos before the collapse and continued her investigation until she found herself at a dead end when she reached a seemingly deserted island in the Black Sea.[20] After Princess Diana of the Amazons returned U.S. Navy SEAL Steve Trevor to the United States, the Navy assigned Dr. Minerva to translate for Diana as she spoke only the Amazonian language. Minerva became close friends with Diana and her minder, Lt. Etta Candy, and with her help, Diana learned English and several other languages.[21] After the war god Ares attacks the naval base where Diana is staying and several of the Olympian Gods (in the forms of animals) assist Diana in defeating him,[22] Minerva became even more obsessed with the divine. Seeking out proof of other deities, Minerva learns of Urzkartaga and obtains funding for an expedition to the fictional African nation of Bwunda from industrialist Veronica Cale. Unbeknownst to Minerva, Cale was acting on behalf of the sons of Ares, Deimos and Phobos, who intend to turn Minerva into a demigod like Diana so she can help them locate Themyscira. Diana provides Minerva with a Wayne Enterprises GPS signaling device in case she needed help, which Doctor Cyber, a secret ally of Ares, remotely disabled. As a result, Wonder Woman was unable to prevent Minerva from being "wed" to Urzkartaga and undergoing a ritual to become the Cheetah.[23] Blaming Diana for letting her be transformed into a beast consumed by bloodlust and cannibalistic urges, the Cheetah joined Cale's Godwatch group.
Years later, Wonder Woman traveled to Bwunda in search of her old friend. She was met with aggression from the Cult of Urzkartaga, a pack of were-hyenas, and ultimately the Cheetah herself. The battle continued until Wonder Woman revealed to the Cheetah that she was unable to locate Themyscira and needed her enemy's help.[24] In exchange for Minerva's assistance in finding Themyscira, Wonder Woman agreed to kill Urzkartaga to restore Minerva's humanity. The pair battled their way through Urzkartaga's Bouda (were-hyena) minions and defeated Andres Cadulo, a worshiper of Urzkartaga that planned to sacrifice Steve Trevor to the plant god.[25] Minerva then learned that she had not been turned into the Cheetah because she wasn't a virgin, which turned out to be a lie told to her by Urzkartaga. The Cheetah and the women before her were actually his wardens, charged with keeping the evil plant god imprisoned. Cheetah used the Lasso of Truth to bind the plant god back into a harmless plant form and prevent his escape. She then became human once again and agreed to help Wonder Woman find her way back to Paradise Island.
Shortly thereafter, Minerva and Etta Candy, who at that point were in a loving relationship,[26][27] were attacked by Godwatch. After reuniting with Steve Trevor, Minerva and Candy were again attacked by Godwatch, and Minerva ultimately surrendered to them in the hopes of reasoning with Cale. Cale, having taken possession of the Urzkartaga plant, threatened to have Candy and Trevor killed unless Minerva agreed to become the Cheetah again.[28] Cale then flew them and her daughter Isadore (whose soul the sons of Ares had stolen to force Cale to do their bidding) to the island in the Black Sea that Minerva had mistaken for Themyscira. Wonder Woman and Trevor arrived and fought the Cheetah and Cale until Diana's blood opened a gateway to Ares' prison. Diana, Cale, and Isadore went through the gateway, leaving the Cheetah and Trevor behind.[29] By the time they returned, the Cheetah had gone into hiding, only coming out when everyone had left. Approaching the gate to Ares' prison, she begged to be let in but was rebuffed. Enraged by the gods' rejection, the Cheetah swore revenge against them and the Amazons. She later went to Cale's home and, stating that she is content with being the Cheetah, attacks Cale. Diana intervenes and subdues her, but the Cheetah escapes custody shortly thereafter, her friendship with Diana broken for good.[30]
Shortly after, Lex Luthor recruited the Cheetah into his new Legion of Doom. She accompanied Luthor, the Joker, Sinestro, Black Manta, and Gorilla Grodd as they ambushed Vandal Savage's hideout.[31] As a member of the Legion of Doom, Cheetah hunted down and killed the sea god Poseidon.[32] She was later given the mythical "God Killer", a sword able to kill even the strongest of the Olympian Gods. She used the God Killer to strike down Wonder Woman's patron goddess Aphrodite.[33] With the loss of Aphrodite's influence, the weakened Wonder Woman was easily defeated by Cheetah.[34]
After a series of battles, Wonder Woman managed to defeat Cheetah and destroy the God Killer blade. As punishment, Cheetah was condemned to imprisonment in Doom's Doorway, a prison deep beneath Themyscira.[35] The mysterious Dark Fates then freed Cheetah, who went on a killing spree throughout Themyscira. With Hera's assistance, Wonder Woman defeated Cheetah using the Lasso of Truth.[36]
Cheetah later recruited the Queen of Fables into creating a perfect storybook world where she would be known as Queen Cheetah. Deathstroke was hired to travel to Cheetah's storybook world and bring her into custody. Deathstroke battled his way through Cheetah's feline forces and confronted her. While Cheetah easily overpowered Deathstroke, the assassin ultimately destroyed the magical page which ended Cheetah's fantasy world. In exchange for her release, Cheetah provided information about the villainous organization T.R.U.S.T., then returned to the Legion of Doom.[37]
During Dark Crisis, Cheetah and many other members of the Legion of Doom were possessed by the Great Darkness.[38]
At some point, Cheetah was captured by Veronica Cale's company and brought to Brazil where she was brainwashed into becoming a feral creature. Wonder Woman rescued Cheetah and used her magic lasso to restore Barbara's intellect.[39] With her humanity restored, Cheetah temporarily joined Checkmate to help Wonder Woman defeat Hera's forces.[40]
Soon after the United States government turned on the Amazons and formed the Amazon Extradition Entity (A.X.E.), Cheetah was captured by the mysterious Sovereign, the secretive king of America.[41] The Sovereign imprisoned Cheetah on an unspecified island. After several failed attempts to break Wonder Woman, the Sovereign left the amazon princess on the same island as Cheetah, hoping that the starved monster would accomplish what he could not. Cheetah battled Wonder Woman for several days and ultimately defeated her. However, Cheetah spared her life when Wonder Woman stated that she felt hope and love for Cheetah. Later that night, Cheetah bonded with Wonder Woman over their mutual love/hate relationship. She then agreed to assist Wonder Woman and her allies against the Sovereign, who noted that the relationship between the two archenemies is more complicated than that of Batman's with the Joker or Superman's with Lex Luthor.[42]
Sebastian Ballesteros
[edit]Argentine business tycoon Sebastian Ballesteros becomes the fourth Cheetah, as well as the only male Cheetah. He is an agent of the Amazon's enemy, Circe, as well as her lover. He seeks the plant god Urzkartaga to become a new version of Cheetah, a supernatural cat-creature like Barbara Minerva. Appealing to Urzkartaga's ego, Sebastian makes the case that the previous Cheetahs have failed in their actions and that a male Cheetah could be superior. Once Urzkartaga is convinced, Minerva's access to the Cheetah is cut off and Sebastian is given the power in her place. Later, Sebastian proves responsible for turning Wonder Woman's old friend, Vanessa Kapatelis, into the third Silver Swan. Angered at the loss of her powers, Minerva battles Ballesteros for control of the Cheetah's power by becoming the temporary host of Tisiphone. Minerva kills Sebastian, regains her powers, and gives Sebastian's blood to Urzkartaga as a sacrifice.[43]
Sebastian does not appear following The New 52 reboot.
Powers and abilities
[edit]The Barbara Minerva and Sebastian Ballesteros incarnations of Cheetah exhibit similar abilities. Their basic attributes consist of enhanced strength and speed on par with Wonder Woman, as well as heightened senses of smell and hearing for hunts and night vision for stealth. Their reflexes and agility are similarly augmented, allowing them superior gymnastic abilities for inhuman mobility. These superhuman traits allow them to challenge Wonder Woman in physical battles. Additionally, their fangs and claws are preternaturally sharp and strong. While the two more modern incarnations of Cheetah possess superhuman powers, the earlier versions of Priscilla Rich and Deborah Domaine do not.
Originally only able to change during a full moon and remaining weak and frail in her human body, Barbara Minerva was chemically enhanced by the sorceress Circe to remain in her Cheetah body indefinitely and change at will. This also gave her dominion over all species of felines. In The New 52 continuity, Barbara Minerva is shown to pierce Superman's invulnerable skin with her fangs just as easily as if he were human. Additionally, her bite transfers some of her powers into her victims, turning them into feline hybrids under her control.
Other versions
[edit]- An unidentified alternate universe variant of Cheetah appears in JLA/Avengers as a minion of Krona.
- An unidentified alternate universe variant of Cheetah appears in Wonder Woman: The Blue Amazon.
- An alternate universe variant of Priscilla Rich / Cheetah makes a cameo appearance in DC: The New Frontier.
- An alternate universe variant of Priscilla Rich / Cheetah appears in Wednesday Comics. This version is an young archaeologist from a wealthy Baltimore family whose abilities are derived from enchanted artifacts.
- An alternate universe variant of Priscilla Rich / Cheetah appears in Justice. This version is a member of the Legion of Doom.
- An unidentified alternate universe variant of Cheetah appears in the Odyssey storyline. This version was created from the corpse of a murdered Amazon after it is lowered into a mystical restoration pit and infused with the spirit of Magaera.[44][45]
- An unidentified alternate universe variant of Cheetah appears in Flashpoint. This version is a member of Wonder Woman's Furies before being killed by Etrigan.[46][47]
- An unidentified incarnation of Cheetah appears in Scooby-Doo Team-Up. This version is a member of the Legion of Doom.[48]
- An unidentified incarnation of Cheetah appears in Sensation Comics Featuring Wonder Woman.[49][50][51]
- An alternate universe variant of Priscilla Rich appears in The Legend of Wonder Woman. This version is an ally of and financial backer for the Nazi Party.[52]
- An alternate universe variant of Barbara Minerva appears in Superman: American Alien.[53]
- An alternate universe variant of Barbara Minerva appears in Wonder Woman: Dead Earth.[54]
In other media
[edit]Television
[edit]- The Priscilla Rich incarnation of Cheetah appears in the Super Friends franchise, voiced by Marlene Aragon. This version is a member of the Legion of Doom.
- The Barbara Minerva incarnation of Cheetah appears in series set in the DC Animated Universe (DCAU), voiced by Sheryl Lee Ralph.[55] This version is a former scientist who was involved in valuable genetic research and eventually resorted to experimenting on herself due to lacking funding and test subjects, causing her to mutate into a human-cat hybrid. Shunned by the scientific community for her recklessness and ostracized by humanity as a freak, she turned to crime to fund further research to undo the change. In Justice League and Justice League Unlimited, Minerva respectively joins Lex Luthor's Injustice Gang and Gorilla Grodd's Secret Society.
- An amalgamated incarnation of Cheetah appears in Batman: The Brave and the Bold, voiced by Morena Baccarin.[55] This version resembles Priscilla Rich, is identified as Barbara Minerva, was empowered by the god Urzkartaga, and is a member of the Legion of Doom.
- The Barbara Minerva incarnation of Cheetah appears in the Super Best Friends Forever short "Name Game".[55]
- The Priscilla Rich incarnation of Cheetah appears in the title sequence of the "DC Super Pets" segment of DC Nation Shorts. Additionally, her pet cheetah, Chauncey, appears in the short "Have Your Cake and B'Dg Too".
- The Barbara Minerva incarnation of Cheetah appears in DC Super Hero Girls (2015) and its tie-in films, voiced by Ashley Eckstein.[55] This version is a student at Super Hero High with an antagonistic attitude towards Wonder Woman and her classmates, though she often helps them during fights.
- The Priscilla Rich incarnation of Cheetah appears in DC Super Friends, voiced by Blaze Berdahl.[55]
- The Barbara Minerva incarnation of Cheetah makes a non-speaking appearance in the Justice League Action short "Quality Time".[55]
- The Barbara Minerva incarnation of Cheetah appears in DC Super Hero Girls (2019), voiced by Tara Strong.[55] This version is a wealthy teenage high school student who uses the civilian nickname "Barbi", can control her transformations at will, and does not speak while transformed. Additionally, she gained her abilities after accidentally cursing herself with a golden cat idol while attempting to use it on Diana Prince after becoming jealous of her popularity.
- The Barbara Minerva incarnation of Cheetah makes non-speaking cameo appearances in Harley Quinn as a member of the Legion of Doom.[56]
- Minerva appears in Kite Man: Hell Yeah!, voiced by Lake Bell.
Film
[edit]- The Barbara Minerva incarnation of Cheetah makes a cameo appearance in Wonder Woman (2009).
- An unidentified incarnation of Cheetah makes a cameo appearance in Justice League: The New Frontier.
- The Barbara Minerva incarnation of Cheetah appears in Superman/Batman: Public Enemies.[55]
- The Barbara Minerva incarnation of Cheetah appears in Justice League: Doom, voiced by Claudia Black.[55] This version is Australian and a member of Vandal Savage's Legion of Doom.
- The Barbara Minerva incarnation of Cheetah appears in JLA Adventures: Trapped in Time, voiced by Erica Luttrell.[55] This version is a member of the Legion of Doom.
- The Barbara Minerva incarnation of Cheetah appears in the Batman Unlimited series, voiced by Laura Bailey.[55]
- The Barbara Minerva incarnation of Cheetah appears in Lego DC Comics Super Heroes: Justice League – Attack of the Legion of Doom, voiced by Cree Summer.[55][57] This version is a member of the Legion of Doom.
- The Barbara Minerva incarnation of Cheetah appears in films set in the DC Animated Movie Universe (DCAMU), voiced by Kimberly Brooks.[55][58][59] This version is a member of the Legion of Doom, Villainy Inc., and the Suicide Squad. In Justice League Dark: Apokolips War, Minerva is killed during an assault on a LexCorp building.
- The Barbara Minerva incarnation of Cheetah appears in Injustice.[55]
- The Barbara Minerva incarnation of Cheetah appears in Wonder Woman 1984, portrayed by Kristen Wiig.[60] Similar to her DC Rebirth backstory, this version is initially a friend and colleague of Diana Prince who is ignored and shunned for her unattractive appearance and poor social skills. After wishing to be just like Prince while holding a magical artifact called the "Dreamstone", Minerva develops a more confident personality, her appearance becomes more conventionally attractive, and she develops superhuman physical abilities. However, she also becomes more mean-spirited and arrogant, which leads to her turning on Prince. Impressed, Maxwell Lord offers her more power. Wishing to become an "apex predator", he bestows upon her a cheetah-like appearance and superhuman abilities with the bloodlust and rage to match. However, Prince eventually defeats Minerva before confronting Lord. After convincing him to renounce his wish, Minerva loses her powers and reverts to her human form.
- The Barbara Minerva incarnation of Cheetah appears in Batman: Death in the Family.[55] While being arrested by the police, she is killed by Jason Todd as either Hush or Red Robin depending on the viewer's choices.
- The Barbara Minerva incarnation of Cheetah appears in Catwoman: Hunted, voiced by Kirby Howell-Baptiste.[61][55] This version is a member of Leviathan and figurehead for Talia al Ghul.
- The Barbara Minerva incarnation of Cheetah makes a non-speaking appearance in Teen Titans Go! & DC Super Hero Girls: Mayhem in the Multiverse as a member of the Legion of Doom.[55]
- An unidentified incarnation of Cheetah appears in Justice League: Crisis on Infinite Earths, voiced by Cynthia McWilliams.[62]
Video games
[edit]- The Barbara Minerva incarnation of Cheetah appears as a playable character in Justice League Task Force.
- The Barbara Minerva incarnation of Cheetah appears in DC Universe Online, voiced by Adrienne Mishler.[55] In the hero campaign, she serves as a boss. In the villain campaign, she is a vendor in the Hall of Doom's magic wing.
- The Barbara Minerva incarnation of Cheetah appears as a boss and mini-boss in Justice League: Injustice for All.
- The Barbara Minerva, Priscilla Rich, and Sebastian Ballesteros incarnations of Cheetah appear as character summons in Scribblenauts Unmasked: A DC Comics Adventure, with Minerva additionally appearing as a boss.[63]
- The Barbara Minerva incarnation of Cheetah, based on her New 52 appearance, appears as an unlockable costume in LittleBigPlanet 2 via the "DC Comics Premium Level Pack" DLC.
- The Barbara Minerva incarnation of Cheetah appears as a playable character in DC Legends.
- The Barbara Minerva incarnation of Cheetah appears as a playable character in DC Unchained.
- The Barbara Minerva incarnation of Cheetah appears as a playable character in Lego Batman 3: Beyond Gotham. This version is a member of the Legion of Doom.
- The Barbara Minerva incarnation of Cheetah, based on her New 52 counterpart, appears as a playable character in Injustice 2, voiced again by Erica Luttrell.[64][65] This version is a member of Gorilla Grodd's "Society".
- The Barbara Minerva incarnation of Cheetah appears as a playable character in Lego DC Super-Villains,[66] voiced again by Erica Luttrell.[67] This version is a member of the Legion of Doom.
Books
[edit]- An unidentified incarnation of Cheetah appears in Attack of the Cheetah and The Fastest Pet on Earth, both by Jane B. Mason and published by Capstone as part of their DC Super Heroes line of illustrated children's books.[68][69] Similarly to the Priscilla Rich incarnation, this version has a pet cheetah named Chauncey.
- An unidentified incarnation of Cheetah appears in the Capstone children's book, Cheetah and the Purrfect Crime, by Laurie S. Sutton.[70]
Miscellaneous
[edit]- The Priscilla Rich incarnation of Cheetah appears in the first two issues of the non-canonical Super Friends comic book series. She along with the Penguin, Toyman, Poison Ivy, and the Human Flying Fish mentor junior criminals, with Rich being partnered with a teenage girl named Kitten.
- The Deborah Domaine incarnation of Cheetah appears in the 1982 Wonder Woman audiobook story "Cheetah on the Prowl", voiced by Sonia Manzano.
- The Priscilla Rich incarnation of Cheetah appears in a flashback in Teen Titans Go! #54.
- The Priscilla Rich incarnation of Cheetah appears in the Batman: The Brave and the Bold tie-in comic book series.
- The Injustice incarnation of Barbara Minerva / Cheetah makes a minor appearance in the Injustice: Gods Among Us prequel comic.
- The Priscilla Rich and Barbara Minerva incarnations of Cheetah both appear in Wonder Woman '77. The former appears in issue #6 as an illusion created by Doctor Psycho[71] while the latter makes recurring appearances later in the series after being empowered by Mafdet.[72][73][74][75]
Cultural impact and legacy
[edit]Every since her first appearance, Cheetah has been refer to as most iconic Wonder Woman villain. Abraham Josephine Riesman of The Vulture referred to her as an Big Deal stating "she’s one of the all-time most iconic Wonder Woman foes. She’s ubiquitous and colorful enough to possibly be defined as Diana’s Joker. Case in point: When the legendary Challenge of the Super Friends DC cartoon aired back in the day, WW’s counterpart on the Legion of Doom was Cheetah, confirming her archnemesis status".[76] Sarah Moran of Screen Rant stated "Ares isn't Diana's most iconic villain, he isn't her Joker or Lex Luthor. That would be Cheetah,[77] Rachel Leishman of The Mary Sue wrote, "Minerva is a fun villain in general because she often connects with people like Lex Luthor or the Joker to come after our heroes, and while neither of them are in 1984, it could set up future connections between the Superman and Batman villains and Cheetah as DC’s interconnected movie universe finds its path forward. The more I look at Wiig as Cheetah, though, the more I’m concerned that I’m going to end up really loving her as the villain".[78]
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ Cowsill, Alan; Irvine, Alex; Manning, Matthew K.; McAvennie, Michael; Wallace, Daniel (2019). DC Comics Year By Year: A Visual Chronicle. DK Publishing. p. 41. ISBN 978-1-4654-8578-6.
- ^ Betancourt, David (March 9, 2018). "Kristen Wiig will star in 'Wonder Woman' sequel as the Cheetah, Patty Jenkins confirms". The Washington Post.
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External links
[edit]- Beatty, Scott (2009). Wonder Woman: The Ultimate Guide to the Amazon Princess. Dorling Kindersley Publishing. pp. 76–77. ISBN 978-0-7894-9616-4.
- Jett, Brett. "Who Is Wonder Woman?--Bonus PDF"", (2009): "The Villains: Major Allegories", pp 5–6.
- Jett, Brett. "Wonder Woman's Core Theme" Archived 2017-10-24 at the Wayback Machine", (Article) (2017, October 13): World Of Superheroes online.
- Marston, William Moulton. Emotions on Normal People. London: Kegan Paul, Trench, Trübner & Co, Ltd. 1928. ISBN 1406701165
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