Mirage (DC Comics)

Mirage is the name of two DC Comics characters. The first was a minor villain of Batman. The second is a heroine who is affiliated with the Teen Titans.

Mirage
Publication information
PublisherDC Comics
First appearanceDetective Comics #511
(February 1982)
Created byGerry Conway (writer)
Don Newton (artist)
In-story information
Alter egoMike
AbilitiesCan create powerful illusions

Batman foe

The first Mirage was a man named Mike (also referred to as "Kerry Austin") and appeared in Detective Comics #511 (February 1982).[1] He uses a gem that causes people to see elaborate illusions. He commits crimes while his victims are occupied fighting against these illusions.[2] This crime wave brings him to the attention of Batman. Batman faces Mirage several times before coming up with a strategy to beat him. During the encounter, Mirage's gem is destroyed. Batman is able to defeat him and send him to jail. While in jail, Mirage manages to create contact lenses from fragments of his jewel. He proceeds to create the illusion of himself in jail and escapes to the circus he once worked for. Starting another crime wave, Batman is once again alerted to his actions. This time, Batman easily beats him and sends him back to prison. Mirage also fought Manhunter once using his illusions so successfully, he nearly killed the bounty hunter.

Following the Infinite Crisis, Mirage is freed from prison again. He is killed in 52 #25 (2006) by Bruno Mannheim. Mannheim bashes Mirage's head into the "Crime Bible" and sends his body to the kitchen to be prepared for Mannheim to eat, revealing Mannheim is a cannibal.

Powers and abilities

Mike can create believable illusions in the minds of the people around him by using a gem of unknown origin. The gem projects both optical and audio stimuli.

Miriam Delgado

Mirage
Mirage
Publication information
PublisherDC Comics
First appearanceThe New Titans #79 (1991)
Created byMarv Wolfman
In-story information
Alter egoMiriam Delgado
Team affiliationsTeam Titans
New Titans
Abilitiesable to project illusions, and use a wall of illusion to alter her appearance

Mirage (Miriam Delgado) is a fictional character owned by DC Comics. She is a former Teen Titan.

Fictional character biography

She was originally one of the Teen Titans who came from the future to kill Donna Troy before she could give birth to her son, who, in Mirage's future, became the evil dictator Lord Chaos.

After Donna sacrificed her powers to prevent that future from becoming real, Mirage and the other Team Titans relocated to Donna's farm in New Jersey. She had to deal with Killowat's intense crush on her and the more malicious intents of another man. Mirage was raped by her former lover Deathwing and became pregnant with his child. For a while she deceived her friends, using her powers to make it seem as if she had lost the child.[3]

Mirage is part of the honor guard that escorts Superman's body to his tomb.[4]

During the Zero Hour crisis, she found out she wasn't from an alternate timeline, but from this one. She was, in fact, a runaway street urchin from Brazil, whom the Time Trapper had kidnapped and implanted with false memories. Mirage remained a member of Arsenal's Titans team. During this time, her powers fluctuated. She experienced uncontrolled illusions. She found she could project an image to a spot where she was not and remain hidden all the same.

Eventually, she gave birth to a daughter, Julienne, and left the Titans to spend time with her.[5]

She helps the Titans to save former Titan Cyborg in the Technis Imperative storyline. During a confrontation with the Justice League during this incident, she tricks the Martian Manhunter with an image of his dead wife and is violently subdued. She reappears again, alongside other former Titans, to help the new incarnation of the Titans defeat Dr. Light in the 3-part Lights Out storyline. Mirage was one of the Titans that battled Superboy-Prime near Smallville, Kansas in Infinite Crisis #4 and Teen Titans vol. 3, #32. She also rejoined the Titans for a brief period during the "one year gap".

In Teen Titans #99, she was one of the former Titans that came to aid the Teen Titans in the battle between Superboy-Prime.

Other versions

  • Lord Chaos' rise to power soon resulted in Earth becoming a mobile battle platform. Miri became captain of a resistance ship, which Chaos took.[6]

In other media

Television

A different version of Mirage named Miranda appears in Static Shock animated series voiced by Gavin Turek. When she and her brother stepped into a spill from the Big Bang, Miranda gained the power to create illusions. She was forced by her brother Boom into a life of theft. When Mirage began to question her brother's actions, he would always use their aging grandmother as justification. After Static saved her life, Miranda explained that her brother was different and needed help. However, she eventually realized that her brother had gone insane from being a bang baby after he broke a promise that no one would get hurt during their final heist. Finally fed up with what her brother had become, she turned on him and helped Static defeat him. As she was taken by child services, she agreed to help Static fool his sister in order to protect his secret identity.

Miscellaneous

Teen Titans Go #48 features a version of Mirage (who resembles Raven) as a member of the Teen Titans in another reality.

gollark: Oh no.
gollark: You're the first person to bring this up, so I'm going to assume it's probably fine.
gollark: https://0t.lt/
gollark: Mine is shorterer.
gollark: 90% of crimes are committed by right-handed people.

See also

  • List of Batman Family enemies

References

  1. Greenberger, Robert (2008). The Essential Batman Encyclopedia. Del Rey. pp. 257–258. ISBN 9780345501066.
  2. Rovin, Jeff (1987). The Encyclopedia of Supervillains. New York: Facts on File. p. 221. ISBN 0-8160-1356-X.
  3. The DC Comics Encyclopedia. Dorling Kindersley Limited. 2004. p. 203. ISBN 0-7566-0592-X.
  4. SUPERMAN: THE MAN OF STEEL #20 (February 1993)
  5. New Titans #130 (February 1996)
  6. Team Titans Annual #2 (1994)
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