Hypnota

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Hypnota
Harry G. Peter
In-story information
Team affiliationsVillainy Inc.
Notable aliasesHypnota the Great
The Hypnotic Woman
AbilitiesMind control via hypnosis

Hypnota (also sometimes Hypnotic Woman) is a fictional character appearing in

Modern Age Hypnota has abandoned her false facial hair and is now depicted as a cisgender woman, albeit one who wears a somewhat masculine costume similar to her Golden Age look: a closed-front vest, salwar and a man's turban
.

Fictional character biography

Pre-Crisis

Harry G. Peter
.

A stage magician who conceals her gender via masculine costume and false facial hair, Hypnota was accidentally shot in the head during the rehearsal of one of her act's illusions. Experimental surgery saved her life, but it also released a "blue electric ray of dominance" from her "mid-brain", granting her the ability to mesmerize others with a glance.

Hypnota uses this new talent both in her stage act and in crime, including the selling of her mesmerized victims to slave merchants from the planet Saturn. Hypnota hypnotizes her twin sister, Serva, into becoming her assistant on stage and in crime.[2] When Saturn's slave trade in Earthlings is banned as part of a peace treaty with Earth, Hypnota, hoping to revitalize her source of revenue, steals America's contingency defense plans against the ringed world in order to foment hostility and break the treaty. Her warmongering efforts attract the attention of Wonder Woman. Hypnota battles Wonder Woman with the unwilling aid of Hypnota's twin sister Serva. Hypnota hypnotizes Wonder Woman a number of times, making her publicly humiliate herself and help her in her crimes and warmongering. Finally Wonder Woman breaks free of Hypnota's control and frees Serva from hypnosis, stopping Hypnota with the aid of a mirror that causes Hypnota to hypnotize herself.

Hypnota, like many of Wonder Woman's enemies, is sentenced to prison on the Amazon penal colony Transformation Island. She, Blue Snowman, and 6 other super-villains later escape and pool their talents as Villainy Inc. Led by the Saturnian slaver Eviless, they become the evil eight. Hypnota rehypnotizes Wonder Woman temporarily during a fight with her, but her control is broken once again. The evil eight are again defeated by Wonder Woman. Whether or not Hypnota's masculine garb, which concealed her true gender throughout most of her first appearance and which she retained in her second appearance, is to be taken as anything more than a stage affectation is unclear.[3]

Post-Crisis

In the

Post-Crisis, Hypnota is referred to as "the Hypnotic Woman".[4]

Future State

Hypnota, now calling herself again the Hypnotic Woman is a member of Amanda Waller's Justice Squad, using her powers of illusionism to disguise herself as Wonder Woman.[5]

DC Rebirth

After the events of DC Rebirth, Hypnota was briefly seen in a jailbreak with other members of the Suicide Squad from the Future State universe.[6]

Powers and abilities

Hypnota has the ability to project "blue hypnotic rays" from her eyes or hands, which can control the minds of anyone who fell under their influence. She has expertise in escapology and

prestidigitation.[7]

Other versions

Wonder Woman: Black and Gold

Hypnota appears in the anthology series Wonder Woman: Black & Gold. In the story "Love Failed" by Andrew MacLean, Hypnota is depicted as an elderly illusionist who forms a self-help cult known as the Guiding Light. After Wonder Woman's friend Theresa is inducted into the cult, she confronts Hypnota on the psychic plane. The battle results in Wonder Woman stripping Hypnota of her power and leaving her in her chamber.[8]

See also

References

  1. ^ Daniels, Les (2000). Wonder Woman: The Complete History. Chronicle Books LLC. p. 34.
  2. ^ Jacob M. Held (ed.), Wonder Woman and Philosophy: The Amazonian Mystique, Wiley-Blackwell, 2017, p. 185.
  3. ^ Wonder Woman #28. DC Comics.
  4. ^ Wonder Woman: Our Worlds at War #1. DC Comics.
  5. ^ Future State: Suicide Squad #1. DC Comics.
  6. ^ Suicide Squad (vol. 7) #4 (2021). DC Comics.
  7. ^ Wonder Woman Vol. 1 #11 (December 1944)
  8. ^ Wonder Woman: Black and Gold #4 (2021). DC Comics.

External links