Quoting from
this interview with Dan Didio:
In addition to Batwoman, Apollo and Midnighter, you’re also introducing a female bisexual African American superhero in Voodoo. Was it a conscious decision to introduce characters from across the LGBT spectrum?Yes. What we really wanted to do was show the diversity of our audience across the line of our
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His name is Hadrian.
I could try and do the research and see if there's something I'm forgetting or if it's a more recent development as things go, but let's be honest; if Pris was bi from the get-go it sure as hell wasn't something being played on.
As for the African-American part, I also don't recall ever being explictly told her human genetic slushpile (the Kherubim/Daemonite hybrid part predictably gets the lion's share of the attention in the books) but given she's 1) obviously not pasty-pale Caucasian, 2) associated with New Orleans (though born elsewhere I believe) and 3) actually does use voudoun (granted this is Wildstorm, so it does involve zombies among other things) I think it's pretty safe to say that she's African-American or at least majority so as far as the human bits are concerned.
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There might be a throwaway comment someplace about Pris possibly being bi, and I wouldn't be surprised if, if it exists, it's somehow related to her Coda training, but honestly it's not something I'd ever connected to her character before.
Nrrg. Maybe I was thrown by the blue eyes, and the face that they really do (for obvious reasons) concentrate more on her various alien heritages.
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Yeh, I don't recall it either and I'd like to think I'd remember it if I came across it. I don't usually forget things like that.
*patpats* Black people can have blue eyes even without alien DNA --
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*receives own pats* X3 I know, but that combined with the fact that she's usually coloured no darker than my mom late summer (which, granted, is dark enough to be treated like shit by snooty white folks in Louisiana) is probably why it never occurred to me.
Still, that word "introducing" might mean it's a different character. (Or it might just be because this is her first in-DC's-continuity book. *sigh*)
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"Introducing" might. But I really do think it's just because she's "new" to the DCU.
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Probably. You would think I would be happy that a character I did like in WildCATs, for the most part, might become a representative of my letter of glbt, but I'm just... *grimace* They're changing her, and it makes me suspicious that it might not be for the best. What other ways might they change her?
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Given she looks to be losing her spine, it might be better not to ask how they might change her ...
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It's probably safest to assume none of the Wildstorm or Milestone characters are going to be much like their extant readers expect. And why not? You can say the same for most of the DC characters. (;_; Claaaaark)
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