Jump to content

Tigress (DC Comics)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Tigress
Artemis Crock as Tigress in JSA #17 (Dec 2000); art by Stephen Sadowski.
Publication information
PublisherDC Comics
First appearance
Created by
In-story information
Alter ego
Abilities
  • Hand to hand combat

Tigress is the name of three different comic book supervillains, all of whom have appeared in various series published by DC Comics.

An original incarnation of Tigress called Tabitha Galavan appeared in the live-action series Gotham, portrayed by Jessica Lucas. Additionally, the Paula Brooks incarnation of Tigress appeared in the live-action DC Universe / The CW series Stargirl, portrayed by Joy Osmanski.

Publication history

[edit]

The first Golden Age Tigress was a thief/spy and foe of Zatara in the late 1930s. She debuted in Action Comics #1 (June 1938), and was created by Fred Guardineer. She wore tiger-striped sweaters and ran gangs of thieves and murderers. She apparently had no powers.

The second Tigress is Paula Brooks, who was a member of the Young All-Stars, who later became a villainess named the Huntress.

The third Tigress is Artemis Crock, the daughter of the second Tigress, and is a member of the Injustice Society. She debuted in Infinity Inc. #34 and was created by Roy Thomas and Todd McFarlane.

Fictional character biography

[edit]

Zatara foe

[edit]
The original Golden Age Tigress.

The original Tigress appeared as Zatara's primary foe throughout twelve issues of Action Comics, including issues #1, 3, 6, 7, 9, 10, 22, 23, 25, 30, 35 and 42. In her initial appearance, she battles Zatara and his assistant Tong while attempting to rob a freight train. She escapes and later resurfaces in stories using various methods in attempts to kill wealthy men, including using an attacking airplane, poisoning their drinks and infecting them with a disease from a rare South American insect. She also uses her influence as a mob boss to pressure other criminals into assisting her in crime sprees, which usually involve bank robberies and thefts of other valuables.

The Artemis entry in Who's Who Update '87 #1 states that the Golden Age Tigress is the mother of Paula Brooks (the second Tigress and original Huntress) and the grandmother of Artemis Crock (the third Tigress). However, Who's Who Update '87 #5 included a retraction of that information and stated that neither Paula Brooks nor Artemis Crock is related to her.

Paula Brooks

[edit]

The second Tigress is Paula Brooks. She was a member of the Young All-Stars and later became the villainous Huntress. She later married the Sportsmaster, and had a daughter, Artemis Crock, who becomes the third Tigress.

Artemis Crock

[edit]

Artemis Crock is the daughter of the Golden Age villains Paula Brooks and Crusher Crock. She had taken up a career in crime, modeled after that of her parents, but only after some years did she take on the mantle of Tigress.

Other versions

[edit]

Earth-S

[edit]

An unknown woman nicknamed Tigress from Earth-S appears in Spy Smasher #2 (December 1941). This version is an enemy of Spy Smasher.

Quality Universe

[edit]

An unknown woman dubbed The Tigress or Tiger Lady appears in Blackhawk #11 (June 1946). This version is the leader of a gang of international criminal fugitives who had fled the civilized world and hid herself in a jungle fortress within a mountainous, tropical part of the world before she is killed by island natives while her forces are killed by the Blackhawk Squadron.

In other media

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Matt Webb Mitovich (26 June 2015). "Exclusive Gotham Season 2 Casts Jessica Lucas as the Bullwhip-Cracking Tigress". tvline.com.
  2. ^ Nellie Andreeva (25 June 2015). "'Gotham' Casts James Frain As Regular, Will Play New Villain & Tigress' Brother". Deadline Hollywood.
[edit]