Information about Phantom Stranger

Phantom Stranger

The Phantom Stranger #1 vol. 3, (October 1987), cover art by Mike Mignola and P. Craig Russell.
DC Comics/Vertigo
First appearancePhantom Stranger #1
(August-September 1952)
John Broome
Carmine Infantino
Sy Barry
Characteristics
Alter egoUnknown
Team
affiliations
The Quintessence
Justice League
Trenchcoat Brigade
Sentinels of Magic
Notable aliasesBrotherless One, Grey Walker, Wandering Jew (unconfirmed)
AbilitiesVast mystical powers making him the near-equal of the Spectre


The Phantom Stranger is a fictional character of unspecified paranormal origins who battles mysterious and occult forces in various titles published by DC Comics, sometimes under their Vertigo imprint.

Publication history

The Phantom Stranger first appeared in his own series, publication date August/September 1952, by John Broome and Carmine Infantino. It lasted six issues. After an appearance in Showcase #80 (February, 1969), he received another series on May-June 1969 that lasted until February-March 1976. The first three issues consisted of reprints with new framing stories, but moved to new stories beginning with the fourth issue, produced by Len Wein, Jim Aparo, Neal Adams, Tony Dezuñiga, and others. In these stories, while the Stranger's past remained a mystery, the writers added a semi-regular cast of characters for him. A blind psychic named Cassandra Craft would assist him (first appeared in #17), an alchemist/sorcerer named Tannarak (first appeared in #10) was first an enemy and would later assist him against the Dark Circle (first appeared in #20) and a demonic sorceress named Tala would become his major personal enemy (first appeared in #4). The stories hinted at a romantic attraction between the Stranger and Craft, but he eventually left her, deciding she could not be part of his life. Doctor Thirteen appeared in the early issues, usually as a foil to the Stranger, whom he thought was a fake.

However, the Stranger is better known for his role as a supernatural assistant to other heroes, such as the Justice League. The League offered him membership, though he initially left before accepting. This leaves the actual date of his admission unclear. He was not, as some accounts have reported, a mere honorary member. He twice asserted his membership status when other Leaguers challenged his input, particularly during the vote on the League's re-admission of Wonder Woman. She would later confirm his membership status in a subsequent League adventure. He also affirmed his membership in the JLA/Avengers mini-series when the League doubted he was there to help.

The Stranger also starred in a miniseries in 1987. This series portrayed him as an agent of the Lords of Order. For refusing to help them in their war against the Lords of Chaos, they temporarily stripped him of his powers. This series also featured Eclipso as an agent of Chaos. However, no stories have referenced these events since, and they might no longer be in continuity due to the reality-alterations during Zero Hour and Infinite Crisis.

The Phantom Stranger
DC Comics
Schedulevol. 1 & 2: Bi-monthly
vol. 3: Monthly
FormatAll: Standard U.S., 4 color.
vol. 1 & 2: When published, ongoing.
vol. 3: Limited series
vol. 4: 1-shot
Publication datesvol. 1: August/September 1952 - June/July 1953
vol. 2: May/June 1969 - February/March 1976
vol. 3: October 1987 - January 1988
Number of issuesvol. 1: 6
vol. 2: 41
vol. 3: 4
vol. 4: 1
Main character(s)The Phantom Stranger

Character biography

Origin

The most striking aspect of the Phantom Stranger is that his name, his true nature, and his origins have never been revealed. DC produced a special issue of Secret Origins that gave him four different possible origins:
  1. One tale postulated that the Stranger was a fallen angel who sided with neither Heaven nor Hell during Satan's rebellion and thus condemned to walk the Earth alone for all time. Alan Moore wrote and Joe Orlando illustrated this story. This is also backed by The Word who said that the Phantom Stranger was a fallen one.
  2. Another proposes the Stranger was originally a private citizen during biblical times and was spared God's wrath. An angel was sent to deliver him from divine wrath. After questioning God's actions, he commits suicide. The angel forbids his spirit from entering the afterlife, reanimates his body and condemns him to walk the world forever to be a part of humanity but also forever separated from it. He then discovered his divine charge, to turn humanity away from evil, one soul at a time.
  3. In a variation of the Wandering Jew story, he was an adult family man named Isaac with a wife (Rebecca) and boy at the time when Jesus was a small child. When King Herod sent his army to kill all small male children (in an effort to slay Jesus) the army slew his son and wife. Blind with anger, he spent the next 30 years in a rage against Jesus. As Jesus was being tortured, Isaac bribed a guard to assume his role in whipping Jesus. Jesus then sentenced him to walk away from his home and country; to be errant until Doomsday. Eventually, his misplaced rage expunged, he spent the rest of his time helping society, even declining God's offer to release him from his sentence.
  4. The last was a proposal that the stranger is a remnant of the previous universe. At the end of the universe the Phantom Stranger approaches a group of scientists studying the event, warning them not to interfere in the natural conclusion of the universe. The story concludes with the Phantom Stranger passing a portion of himself to a scientist, the universe is reborn, and the scientist from the previous universe is the Phantom Stranger in the new universe (a recursive origin?). This origin shares similarities with that of Galactus.


Three out of four of these origins rely specifically on Judeo-Christian concepts, which rarely figure into the origins of most comic book characters. In the comic book miniseries The Trenchcoat Brigade, John Constantine sees that the first origin story is essentially correct. Note however that the continuity between DC's mainstream books and Vertigo has never been very clear, and that the 1987 miniseries points to a different origin for the Stranger.

Another possible origin was hinted at in The Kingdom (the sequel to Kingdom Come) in which it was implied that Jonathan Kent, the future son of Superman and Wonder Woman, might grow up to be the Phantom Stranger. This also tied some of his abilities into the Hypertime concept, saying that he had the innate ability to enter other alternate timelines and to exist in the spaces between them. However, the story ultimately revealed this a red herring. The character in question had been deliberately drawn in shadows to suggest that he was the Stranger; but when Wonder Woman finally saw his face, she said that she now realized he was not the Stranger.

Yet another story, in the mini-series Conjurors, has him as the Father of Magic, the first human ever to wield arcane forces through his medallion stolen from extradimensionnal lovecraftian-type deities, arcane forces he then shares with humanity.

A stranger...

In his earliest appearances, the Phantom Stranger would prove supernatural events to be hoaxes. In later stories, the supernatural events were real and the Phantom Stranger was given unspecified superhuman powers to defeat them. He later appeared in various other DC Universe titles, sometimes as a major participant; in others, the Phantom Stranger just appears and gives advice or warning to the featured heroes. Occasionally he serves simply as narrator. In some stories, he seems to be answerable to a mysterious Voice, implied to be God. It should be noted though that within the DC Universe, stories commonly identify, either at the time or after the fact, mysterious, benign Voices as the Lords of Order. (An example of this is the origin of Hawk and Dove.)

The Phantom Stranger played a major part in Neil Gaiman's The Books of Magic, taking protagonist Tim Hunter through time to show him the history and nature of magic. He has assisted the Justice League on numerous occasions, even being formally elected to the group in Justice League of America #103 (although he did not acknowledge his membership until Justice League of America #143). The Stranger also had his own limited series, where lacking much of his power, he tries to foil Eclipso's plan to cause a nuclear war.

Enlarge picture
The Stranger in a typically cryptic pose. Art by Neal Adams.


He also, during Kevin Smith's relaunch of Green Arrow, attempted to prevent Hal Jordan from uniting the resurrected body of Oliver Queen with his soul in Heaven. This earned him Jordan's wrath; indeed, the Spectre threatened to judge the Stranger to see whether God had "punished" him properly by refusing him access to Heaven itself. Nonetheless, the Phantom Stranger has assisted Hal Jordan during his tenure as the Spectre on numerous occasions as well, most notably in a short stint babysitting Hal's niece, Helen.

In 2005's Day of Vengeance, the Stranger had been turned into a small rodent by the Spectre. He was still able to advise the Detective Chimp, who sheltered him in his hat while he recovered his powers. He changed back using recovered energies in Day of Vengeance #6 and aided the Shadowpact, allowing them to see the battle between the Spectre and Shazam. The series makes a point that the supernatural community generally regards the Phantom Stranger as invincible. The first reaction of some characters to the Spectre's assault on magic is simply to presume that the Stranger will take care of it. Other stories have shown the Stranger nearly as powerful as the Spectre. This however, is a recent interpretation. While others have never considered the Stranger as an easy foe to combat, given his unknown abilities, they also never considered him as invincible, though it's conceivable that fellow magic-weilders would have a better sense of his powers than "outsiders."

In the Day of Vengeance: Infinite Crisis Special, The Phantom Stranger worked with Nabu, Zatanna, the Shadowpact and other mystics to re-form the Rock of Eternity and help defeat the maddened Spectre.

The Phantom Stranger's relationships with the other mystic heroes are usually a bit tense. The Stranger has no qualms gathering various forces in order to combat a certain evil (the Sentinels of Magic, but also other loose outfits), often invading those people's personal lives. However, he does not usually extend them that same courtesy. The Phantom Stranger has resisted such people as Doctor Fate (notably Hector Hall) in this, although Fate is in almost any incarnation an ally of the Stranger. Despite this, he does get along well with Zatanna; in Justice League of America #6 he appeared by her side to help remove the influence of Faust on Red Tornado, and in the Justice series he seems to have a fatherly affection for her, calling her "my dear."

Since he is ultimately an unpredictable force, others often meet the Phantom Stranger's appearance with distrust. Nonetheless, most heroes will follow him, seeing not only his immense power, but also knowing that the Stranger is in the end, a force for good. Notable though is Madame Xanadu, who has refused to join the Stranger on a few occasions, although she is a member of his Sentinels of Magic.

The Stranger also holds a unique relationship with the Spectre, as the two forces often come into conflict. He was responsible for gathering a group of mystic heroes in order to combat the Spectre, when its human host Jim Corrigan seemingly lost control of the Spectre. (It was during this time that they destroyed the country of Vlatava.) The Phantom Stranger participated in Jim Corrigan's funeral, when Corrigan's soul finally earned its rest and left the Spectre. The Stranger subsequently became one of the forces that stood against the Spectre when it went on a rampage without its human host, until the soul of Hal Jordan bonded with it. The Stranger occasionally took on an advisory role for this new Spectre. In Infinite Crisis #6, aware that the Spectre now has yet another new host, the Phantom Stranger gathered a large group of magic wielders in an unsuccessful attempt to solicit the Spectre's assistance in the Crisis.

Powers and abilities

The natures of these are as mysterious as the Stranger himself, who seems to be effectively eternal, never aging. The Phantom Stranger has demonstrated enormous powers and capabilities, the exact origin of which is undetermined. He can travel enormous distances in a very short period of time, such as to the JLA Watchtower and Apokolips, as well as to mystical dimensions, such as Heaven, Hell and the realm occupied by the Quintessence. He can fire energy bolts of great force, travel through time, dispel magic, reveal illusions, and survive in space without earthly life-support systems. His power seems to have unspecified parameters limiting them. In many cases, despite his obvious capabilities, he claims he is not allowed to end a crisis directly, only to guide others to take the necessary actions. (This restriction allows the Stranger to guest-star in virtually any title without becoming a deus ex machina whose actions would immediately end the story.) He claims that "nothing remains hidden to him."

In Day of Vengeance #2, the Spectre transforms the Stranger into a rodent, rather than killing him outright, because even the Spectre's power would be insufficient to kill the Stranger.

Contrary to some trick-of-the-light impressions, the Phantom Stranger does not wear a mask; instead, the shadow of his hat almost constantly cloaks his eyes.

Other version

The Phantom Stranger appears in his animated form in the following comics:
  • Batman Gotham Adventures #33 (Wherein he shows Bruce how Gotham City would be without Batman.)
  • Justice League Adventures #31 (He shows three possible fates about a boy who is mourning his family.)
  • Justice League Unlimited #14 (Helps Deadman and some other leaguers against a magical threat.)
  • Justice League Unlimited #28 (Shows the Flash several Christmas days Batman experienced in the past, in order to give the Flash a deeper understanding of Batman's psyche)

References

Mike Mignola

Mike Mignola
Born September 16 1960 (1960--) (age 47)
Berkeley, California

Nationality American
Area(s) Penciller, Inker, Writer
..... Click the link for more information.
P. Craig Russell

Birth name Philip Craig Russell
Born

Nationality American
Area(s) Writer, Penciller

Philip Craig Russell, also known as P. Craig Russell, is an American comic book writer, artist, and illustrator.
..... Click the link for more information.
DC Comics

Subsidiary of Warner Bros. Entertainment, Inc.
Founded 1934, by Malcolm Wheeler-Nicholson (as National Allied Publications)
Headquarters 1700 Broadway, New York City, New York

Key people Paul Levitz (President and Publisher)
..... Click the link for more information.
Vertigo is an imprint of DC Comics and operates under the Vertigo name in order to separate itself from the more mainstream, family-friendly DC Comics. Vertigo publishes stories aimed at a more mature audience.
..... Click the link for more information.
In comic books, first appearance refers to the first comic book to feature a fictional character.

Monetary value of first appearance issues

First appearances of popular characters are among the most valuable comic books in existence.
..... Click the link for more information.
John Broome

Born 1913

Died March, 1999
Thailand
Nationality American

Pseudonym(s) John Osgood
Edgar Ray Meritt
Notable works Elongated Man

Awards Alley Award

..... Click the link for more information.
Carmine Infantino

Born May 24 1925 (1925--) (age 82)
Brooklyn, New York City

Nationality American
Area(s) Penciller, Editor


..... Click the link for more information.
Sy Barry

Sy Barry at the drawing table.
Birth name Seymour Barry
Born 1928

Nationality American
Area(s) Penciller, Inker

Notable works The Phantom

Seymour "Sy" Barry
..... Click the link for more information.
Justice League, sometimes called the Justice League of America or JLA for short, is a fictional DC Universe superhero team.

First appearing in The Brave and the Bold
..... Click the link for more information.
Trenchcoat Brigade is a four-issue mini-series of comic books that was published in 1999 by DC Comics' Vertigo imprint. The title references an offhand joke used by John Constantine in the earlier Books of Magic
..... Click the link for more information.
The Sentinels of Magic is a fictional group of magically powered heroes published by DC Comics. They first appeared in Day of Judgement #1 (November 1999), and were created by Geoff Johns and Matthew Dow Smith.
..... Click the link for more information.
Spectre is a fictional cosmic entity and superhero who has appeared in numerous comic books published by DC Comics. The character first appeared in a next issue ad in More Fun Comics
..... Click the link for more information.
fictional character is any person, persona, identity, or entity whose existence originates from a work of fiction. The process of creating and developing characters in a work of fiction is called characterization.
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Paranormal is an umbrella term used to describe a wide variety of reported anomalous phenomena. According to the Journal of Parapsychology, the term paranormal describes "any phenomenon that in one or more respects exceeds the limits of what is deemed physically possible according
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The word occult comes from the Latin occultus (clandestine, hidden, secret), referring to "knowledge of the hidden".[1] In the medical sense it is used commonly to refer to a structure or process that is hidden, e.g. an "occult bleed.
..... Click the link for more information.
DC Comics

Subsidiary of Warner Bros. Entertainment, Inc.
Founded 1934, by Malcolm Wheeler-Nicholson (as National Allied Publications)
Headquarters 1700 Broadway, New York City, New York

Key people Paul Levitz (President and Publisher)
..... Click the link for more information.
Vertigo is an imprint of DC Comics and operates under the Vertigo name in order to separate itself from the more mainstream, family-friendly DC Comics. Vertigo publishes stories aimed at a more mature audience.
..... Click the link for more information.
John Broome

Born 1913

Died March, 1999
Thailand
Nationality American

Pseudonym(s) John Osgood
Edgar Ray Meritt
Notable works Elongated Man

Awards Alley Award

..... Click the link for more information.
Carmine Infantino

Born May 24 1925 (1925--) (age 82)
Brooklyn, New York City

Nationality American
Area(s) Penciller, Editor


..... Click the link for more information.
Showcase has been the title of several anthology series published by DC Comics. The general theme of these series has been to feature new and minor characters as a way to gauge reader interest in them, without the difficulty and risk of featuring "untested"
..... Click the link for more information.
Len Wein

Len Wein (right), with fan dressed as Swamp Thing, at CONvergence 2005
Born May 12 1948 (1948--) (age 59)

Nationality American
Area(s)
..... Click the link for more information.
Jim Aparo

Jim Aparo
Birth name James N. Aparo
Born 1932

Died July 19 2005

Nationality American
Area(s) Penciller

Notable works Batman

Awards Shazam Award

..... Click the link for more information.
Neal Adams

Born May 6 1941 (1941--) (age 66)
Governors Island, Manhattan, New York City

Nationality American
Area(s)
..... Click the link for more information.
Psychic (sī'kĭk); from the Greek psychikos - "of the soul, mental". The term Psychic is commonly used in popular culture to refer to the ability to perceive things hidden from traditional senses through means of extra-sensory perception.
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The Dark Circle are a fictional criminal organization in DC Comics. They first appeared in Adventure Comics #367 as an insurgent group planning to conquer the United Planets in the 30th century.
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Tala is a fictional supervillainess in the DC Comics universe. She first appeared as an adversary of the Phantom Stranger, but she is also known for her appearances on Justice League Unlimited.

Tala is the mistress of her own part of Hell.
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Doctor Thirteen or Dr. 13, is a comic book character in the DC Universe. He first appeared in Star Spangled Comics #122, (November 1951).

Publication history


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Justice League, sometimes called the Justice League of America or JLA for short, is a fictional DC Universe superhero team.

First appearing in The Brave and the Bold
..... Click the link for more information.
    Wonder Woman is a fictional DC Comics superheroine created by William Moulton Marston. Two strong women, his wife Elizabeth Holloway Marston and Olive Byrne, a mutual lover,[1] served as exemplars for the character and greatly influenced her creation.
    ..... Click the link for more information.
    JLA/Avengers is a crossover limited series published by DC Comics and Marvel Comics, and features two teams of superheroes, DC Comics' Justice League of America and Marvel's Avengers.
    ..... Click the link for more information.


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