Artemis Crock

Artemis Crock
Publication information
Publisher DC Comics
First appearance Infinity Inc. #34 (Jan 1987)
Created by Roy Thomas
Todd McFarlane
In-story information
Alter ego Artemis
Team affiliations Injustice Society
Injustice League
Secret Society of Supervillains
Notable aliases Tigress
Abilities Olympic level athlete, speed, and agility with skills as a hunter and tracker

Artemis Crock is a fictional comic book character published by DC Comics. The character has appeared as both a villain and a superhero, usually using her first name as her alias. She is also one of many characters to use the name Tigress.

Publication history

Artemis Crock debuted in Infinity Inc. #34 and was created by Roy Thomas and Todd McFarlane.

Fictional character biography

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.

During the DC mini-series Legends, the people of America were turned against heroes, and law was made that no one could operate legally wearing a costume. This did not affect the villains much, as they were already breaking the law. For Artemis Crock it proved an opportune time to break her parents out of the Empire State Detention Center. Calling herself only Artemis she joined the Wizard in his new Injustice Society – which he called Injustice Unlimited. They overcame the security at the International Trade Conference in Calgary, Canada, namely Infinity, Inc. and a contingent of the Global Guardians and forced the heroes to help in some mayhem. For Artemis, she took Nuklon and Rising Sun to New York and, with their help, freed the elder felons. They all returned to Calgary to share in the stolen wealth but the plan went haywire when Hourman revived and freed himself, as well as when Solomon Grundy was brought in from the Arctic Circle. It was Solomon who incapacitated Artemis and her parents, but in the confusion they were able to escape.[1]

Only weeks later Artemis again joined with the Icicle and Hazard, as well as the new Harlequin, the Dummy and Solomon Grundy. The Dummy wanted to head a revived Injustice Unlimited and planned to murder the members of Infinity Inc. to make a name for themselves. Their first target - Skyman - was successfully killed by the Harlequin and then Artemis went after Jade. After believing her dead, Artemis returned to her cohorts. A plan was hatched to bring all the remaining Infinitors to Stellar Studios and kill them, a plan defeated only by the unwillingness of Hazard to cooperate, and the sudden reappearance of Jade and Brainwave Jr (both of whom had been thought dead). During the fight Artemis went one-on-one with Wildcat (Yolanda Montez) and lost. In the end Artemis was given over to law enforcement.[2]

Artemis later changed her codename to Tigress and became the on-again, off-again lovers with the second Icicle. He invited her back into the reformation of the Injustice Society. She helped him, Wizard, Solomon Grundy, Gentleman Ghost, Rag Doll and Thinker break into JSA headquarters and steal the Prometheus Key, a key that is used to open doors between reality and magic. This allowed Johnny Sorrow who had asked the Wizard to bring him back, to re-enter the earth.

During the Infinite Crisis storyline, Artemis appeared as a member of Alexander Luthor, Jr.'s Secret Society of Super Villains. She later appeared in the Justice League Wedding Special.

Icicle and Tigress later alternately work with and against Hourman and Liberty Belle in a quest to locate a magical artifact.[3] In 2010, Isabelle Rose Mahkent is born. She is the daughter of the Tigress and the Icicle.[4]

New 52

A new version of Artemis was introduced by DC following its The New 52 relaunch, in the "Culling" crossover in Teen Titans books. Here, she is a human with no powers, but has been trained to be a strong fighter. She helps the Teen Titans get their bearings before the Culling begins and introduces them to other meta-teens that Harvest has collected. After the Titans are taken, a member of Harvest's crew tries to put her in a state of rage. She fights back and refuses to kill other kids, but instead is killed. Her death helps motivate the Teen Titans and the Legion Lost to join together to take down Harvest.[5] At the end of the series, in Teen Titans Annual #3 the Titans discover that Artemis was healed by the Colonel of Harvest's facility, as part of a second phase of Harvest's plans.

Powers and abilities

Tigress/Artemis has superhuman fighting skills and is highly trained. She is an expert marksman with her crossbow (including her compact crossbow and quiver of arrows, knives, nets and bolas) and has an enhanced sense of smell that allows her to track her human prey.

In other media

Television

Artemis Crock as Artemis in Young Justice.

Film

The Young Justice version of Artemis makes a cameo appearance along with Wonder Girl, Zatanna and Miss Martian as home viewers in Scooby-Doo! WrestleMania Mystery.[7][8]

Video games

Artemis Crock is a playable character in the video game Young Justice: Legacy with Stephanie Lemelin reprising her role.

References

  1. Infinity, Inc. #35-37
  2. Infinity Inc 51-53
  3. Second Feature in JSA All Stars
  4. JSA All-Stars #11 (December, 2010)
  5. Teen Titans Annual #1 (May 2012)
  6. Prudom, Laura (June 21, 2016). "'Arrow' Adds Artemis for Season 5 (EXCLUSIVE)". Variety.
  7. "'Scooby Doo: Wrestlemania Mystery' Stuns Viewers With a 'Young Justice' Easter Egg". Theouthousers.com. 2014-03-13. Retrieved 2015-11-24.
  8. Albert Ching. "'Young Justice's' Brandon Vietti Pairs Scooby-Doo & WWE, Hints at DC Return - Spinoff Online - TV, Film, and Entertainment News DailySpinoff Online – TV, Film, and Entertainment News Daily". Spinoff.comicbookresources.com. Retrieved 2015-11-24.

External links

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