(“Marvel’s Voices: Pride #1” artwork by Ted Brandt and Ro Stein, from Marvel.com)
Queer fans of Marvel Comics will have an additional reason to celebrate during Pride month. The publishing empire will introduce a transgender character named Shela Sexton, whose superhero incarnation is Escapade, in “Marvel’s Voices: Pride #1,” which will be available in June.
The jumpsuit-clad Escapade is a mutant with the ability to instantly switch locations and trade physical or abstract attributes with other people, including their possessions, powers and skills. Still, there are complications. She is able to maintain her powers for just a few hours and has to be within seven feet of her target. Plus, there’s every opportunity for things to go wrong.
Don’t worry that Sexton will be lonely. The character will also have a very close friend named Morgan Red, whose pronouns are they/them. Red is a fellow trans mutant, and the duo have a genetically engineered flying turtle Hibbert. Together, the three will embark on a mission that takes them from floating party barges to the mutant nation-state of Krakoa.
Writer Charlie Jane Anders, who co-created the new character with artists Ro Stein and Ted Brandt, gave an interview to Marvel, in which she describes Shela as someone she’d love to hang out with and “a total goofball” with “a super strong sense of justice” and “a profound loyalty to her friends.”
Anders also expressed the importance of Shela/Escapade’s chosen family.
“Plus, I wanted Shela to have a really strong relationship that she could be anchored to,” she says. “I spent a lot of time thinking about Morgan, and how they and Shela had grown up together. I eventually arrived at the thing where Morgan was there for Shela when she was first transitioning, and the two of them kind of supported each other through their transitions when they were kids.
The writer expounded on reasons the LGBTQ community will likely relate to the character.
“I think that Shela has experienced some rejection because of her transness, but she’s also found an amazing community that supports her and lifts her up, and this has changed how she thinks about being a hero for sure,” Anders shares. “She wants to be there for everybody who’s been left behind, and she wants to help people feel like they can belong and be seen and loved. That was something I really hope everyone reading this comic, especially young trans people, take away from it.”
Brandt notes that the arrival of Sexton/Escapade couldn’t be at a better time than Pride month in an age when basic civil rights are being stripped from Americans.
“Now more than ever, we need a hero like Shela Sexton for people to look up to,” he says. “It was a real honor and a privilege to be a part of her creation process!”
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