Titania (DC Comics)
Titania | |
---|---|
Seelie Court | |
Notable aliases | Maryrose, Queen Mab |
Abilities | Vast magical abilities |
Titania is a fictional character, a
Publication history
As part of his comic
One ambiguous scene written by Gaiman was interpreted by some to suggest that Titania was the mother of protagonist Timothy Hunter, which ensured that the character would return when the mini-series became an ongoing series. Chosen as Gaiman's replacement, John Ney Rieber discovered that a gaming guide to the DC universe had made this assumption, and worried that a key part of the Tim Hunter character - that he was a normal teenage boy - might be lost if this was true. Instead of simply denying the possibility of Titania being Tim's mother Rieber decided to use the idea as one of his ongoing storylines, while gently debunking it.[7] This meant utilizing Titania and her husband Auberon as supporting characters for most of his run on the comic, which in turn meant frequent visits and explorations to Faerie.[8] Such was the importance of Titania to Rieber's version of The Books of Magic that when its popularity caused DC to release a spin-off miniseries, they decided that a three-issue miniseries about her rise to power would be most suitable - one that reignited the possibility of her being Tim's mother.[9]
The character later returned for brief appearances in
Appearance
In her first appearance, Titania was depicted as a regal woman who looked almost entirely human save for pointed ears.[3] While her physical appearance remained consistent regardless of the artist depicting her during her time in The Sandman, her skin color varied from green[10] back to normal human tones[11] and then back to a consistent green whenever she appeared in The Books of Magic.[5][12] The Books of Faerie established that Titania's true appearance was constantly hidden by a magical glamour, which may explain her changing skin tone.[9]
Fictional character biography
Titania was born a normal human girl called Maryrose living in poverty with her grandmother during the 11th century. When she was collecting wood in a nearby forest, she was tempted by a group of Flitlings to return with them to Faerie. Once there, she became a favorite of Queen Dymphna, earning the nickname Rosebud to protect her true name: she also caught the eye of King Obrey, who - spurred on by his jester, the manipulative Amadan - magically transformed his wife into a tree and took Maryrose as his second wife. Maryrose took a gemstone glamour from Dymphna and used it to appear a pure-blood faerie at her coronation, taking the name Queen Titania.[8][9]
Titania seemed truly flattered by the love and attention of the king, but this was short-lived: Obrey was killed in battle by the rightful King of Faerie,
Titania was shown to be a jealous lover, demanding unconditional adoration from her lovers even though she rarely returned the feelings herself: her affair with Tamlin ended when he realised what she was truly like[9] and she was noticeably annoyed when Dream sent no secret message for her with a servant who returned to Faerie from his realm.[11] She, however, has also shown genuine affection and emotion, even if she tries to hide it: when her affair with Tamlin leaves her with a human son, she is devastated to have to send him to Earth to keep the secret of her nature and her affair from the King[9] and risks sending her realm to war against Hell to protect her son with Auberon from being kept in Hell as payment of Faerie's tithe to the demons.[14]
Titania was acutely aware of her status as queen, and the respect and attention she felt she was due because of it. She nearly destroyed her entire realm by cursing Molly O'Reilly to turn into the "Burning Girl" for no other reason than her attendants' fascination with the girl's efforts to grow real vegetables,[17] and frequently grew enraged at Timothy Hunter's casual disregard for the possibility that she might be his mother.[12][18] Rarely, she can show something like humility, for example apologising to Molly for the trouble she caused the girl and acknowledging that she had done wrong.[17] Despite her faults, Titania was a strong and able queen, whether riding out to face down the forces of Hell at the head of her army[14] or subtly politicking to ensure that Faerie's best interests were met in the wider worlds.[10]
See also
- Titania (Fairy Queen)
References
- ISBN 1-85286-292-0
- ^ Gaiman, Neil (7 May 2004), Regaining My Marbles, retrieved 9 June 2008
- ^ ISBN 1-85286-441-9
- ^ Neil Gaimon Interview, Stardust, 2007, archived from the original on 2008-03-27, retrieved 2008-04-28
- ^ ISBN 1-56389-082-8
- OCLC 213309015
- ^ Interview with John Ney Rieber, 1 December 1995, archived from the original on 20 June 2008, retrieved 2008-04-28
- ^ OCLC 213309015
- ^ ISBN 1-85286-916-X
- ^ ISBN 1-56389-171-9
- ^ ISBN 1-56389-205-7
- ^ ISBN 1-56389-187-5
- ISBN 1-85286-807-4
- ^ ISBN 1-56389-619-2
- ^ Rieber, John Ney (November 1999), The Books of Faerie - Molly's Story Book 3: Tearing Off Their Wings, DC Comics
- ^ Gross, Peter (January 2000), The Books of Magic: Pentimento, DC Comics
- ^ ISBN 1-84023-102-5
- ^ Gross, Peter (August 1998), The Books of Magic: A Thousand Worlds of Tim, DC Comics