Nova (Frankie Raye)

Nova is a fictional character appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics.

Frankie Raye
Nova, in The New Avengers #40 (June 2008). Art by Jim Cheung.
Publication information
PublisherMarvel Comics
First appearanceFantastic Four #164 (November 1975)
Created byRoy Thomas (writer)
George Pérez (artist)
In-story information
Team affiliationsHeralds of Galactus
Fantastic Four
Supporting character ofSilver Surfer
Fantastic Four
AbilitiesUse of Power Cosmic

Publication history

The character first appeared as Frankie Raye in Fantastic Four #164 (November 1975) and was created by writer Roy Thomas and artist George Pérez. After several years as a minor supporting character, she became a herald of Galactus and assumed the name "Nova" in Fantastic Four #244 (July 1982) by John Byrne. The character was killed in Silver Surfer #75 (December 1992). Writer Kathryn Immonen and artist Tonči Zonjić revived Frankie Raye in the Heralds limited series in 2010.[1][2]

Fictional character biography

Frankie Raye worked for the United Nations as an interpreter. She met Johnny Storm[3] and became his girlfriend, despite her fear of fire.[4] The couple soon broke up,[5] despite an attempt at reconciliation by Johnny.[6] A brief encounter by the two some time later results in an unpleasant reaction by Frankie.[7] They eventually begin to see each other again.[8] Her fear was eventually explained to be the result of a mental block induced by her stepfather, Phineas Horton, after she was accidentally doused with the chemicals which caused the android original Human Torch (his creation) to burst into flame, in an attempt to prevent her from using the Torch-like powers granted to her by the accident.[9]

After breaking through the block, she regained her full memory and discovered her previously repressed superhuman powers.[9] She aided the Fantastic Four for a short time, until she volunteered to become the new herald of Galactus.[10] She took the name "Nova". Having previously demonstrated what the Fantastic Four deemed an alarming willingness to kill opponents, she claimed to have no compunction about leading him to sentient populated planets and proved that when she led the Devourer of Worlds to the Skrull home-world to consume it.[11] Nova later attended the trial of Reed Richards by the Shi'ar Empire.[12] When Richard Rider resumed his Nova identity alongside the New Warriors, he was briefly called "Kid Nova" to distinguish him from Raye.

Frankie Raye (as the Human Torch) joins the Fantastic Four in battle. Cover of Fantastic Four #239 (Feb. 1982). Art by John Byrne

Nova was later rescued from Skrull imprisonment by the Silver Surfer, whom she met for the first time.[13] She then battled the Elders of the Universe.[14] Galactus sent her to locate one of the Elders, the Contemplator, and she was joined in this quest by the Silver Surfer.[15] They journeyed to the Coal Sack Nebula where they were captured by Captain Reptyl.[16] After battling Captain Reptyl,[17] Nova battled Ronan the Accuser.[18] This was followed by a clash with a Skrull duplicate of the Silver Surfer and a romantic flirtation with the real Silver Surfer.[19] Nova and Galactus battled the In-Betweener.[20][21] Nova then turned her romantic interests toward Firelord.[22]

Nova later encountered an injured Elan. She battled the second Star-Stalker, and then met the Power Pack. A stimulator device temporarily rendered her evil, until she was subdued by Reed and Franklin Richards, and Power Pack.[23]

Frankie Raye was ultimately killed by the alien Morg, who had replaced her as Galactus' herald.[24] The demon Mephisto later made it appear that she had returned from the dead in a failed bid to steal the soul of the Silver Surfer.[25]

In the weekly mini-series Heralds, a character resembling Frankie Raye appears. Her named is Frances Hyatt and she's a waitress at Stu's Diner in Nevada. One night, while she was working, a strange explosion coming from space creates a chaotic situation when a S.W.O.R.D. facility is destroyed, and the sky on Earth is filled by a flash that seemed to enter Frances. When patrons came to her assistance, she lashed out, stabbing a customer. She ran out and began driving, only to crash and met a man who she called 'father'. This man was Professor Horton, long dead, who turned out to be an escaped clone from the S.W.O.R.D. facility. Upon hear him calling her 'Frakie', Frances burst into flames causing a massive explosion which kills the clone of Frankie's father."[26]

Frances awoke in a ditch, trying to muster the strength to get up. She was found by the female superheroes Emma Frost, Hellcat, Monica Rambeau, She-Hulk and Valkyrie who were trying to get to the bottom of the mystery. Frances went with them to the Baxter Building, home of the Fantastic Four, in the hopes of obtaining some answers. They were amazed by Frances' resemblance to their old friend Frankie Raye, the one who would become Nova: Herald of Galactus. Though Nova was long dead, somehow S.W.O.R.D. had a similar entity captured and Frances appeared to be almost the same girl who once hosted it. When the clones escaped the S.W.O.R.D. holding facility in Nevada, so did the Nova entity and it bonded with Johnny Storm while looking for Frankie.[27]

The Nova entity escaped Johnny but when it was unable to take Frances, it fled setting a trap at Frankie Raye's former apartment.[28] After relaying the story of the Silver Surfer, who at some point in time, approached a 14 year old Frances and placed a portion of Frankie Raye's essence into her hoping to later reunite it with the Nova essence, Frances went to Frankie's apartment in order to attempt to awaken more of Frankie's memories. There, the Nova entity kidnapped Valeria Richards, daughter of Mister Fantastic and the Invisible Woman, instead. Frances accompanied the team into space where they discovered Valeria and the Nova entity in the heart of a star. The Nova entity cocooned Valeria in a strange substance. That substance turned out to be the suit Professor Horton had made for Frankie Raye to suppress her powers long ago, somehow animated by the Power Cosmic becoming the "Nova entity" itself.[29]

Emma Frost sensed that both Valeria and the Nova entities minds were active in this cocoon. The Invisible Woman and She-Hulk managed to pull Valeria from the living suit while Frances looked on in horror. When the suit attempted to bond with the Invisible Woman, it spoke to Frances. It told her to save them, to be brave. Frances knew what she had to do, jumping in the way to become bonded with the being, just as the Silver Surfer had told her would happen. While she was bonding with the suit, she remembered the words of Hellcat and Silver Surfer, claiming to not be as strong as they said she was. It is unknown what exactly happened after she became 'Supernova', but she left the team abruptly, returning to Earth. Although Frances was unchanged on the inside, she now was confused and possessed great power. She returned to the diner where she worked, not knowing what she was looking for. Following a conversation with the new waitress, Frances flew away trying to figure out what she wanted with her new life.[30]

It was left ambiguous however if Frances Hyatt was actually a separate person that was randomly chosen by the Silver Surfer to be the one to bond with the remaining essence and powers of the slain Frankie or rather, she was actually a clone of Frankie Raye. Nevertheless Frances as Nova was later recruited by the Fearless Defenders to fight the Doom Maidens.[31]

Thor later summoned Nova along with other former Heralds of Galactus to Asgard after the Devourer of Worlds crash landed there following his confrontation with the Black Winter.[32]

Powers and abilities

Nova originally gained her superhuman powers as the result of a mutagenic reaction to an exposure to unknown chemicals. Originally, she had powers similar to that of the Human Torch: flame generation, projection, and flight.

Her powers were later enhanced exponentially by the infusion of cosmic energies by the world-devourer Galactus. She gained metahuman strength, stamina, durability, agility, and reflexes. She had the ability to manipulate cosmic energy in the form of stellar fire, and which allowed her to project any form of energy possessed by a star, including heat, light, gravity, radio waves and charged particles. She also had the ability to project streams of stellar fire for distances in the hundreds of miles, and to mentally control the flame she projects (for instance, to maintain a sustained ring around a person or object at a fixed distance). She also has the ability to fly at superluminal speeds through intergalactic space and traverse hyper-space. Finally, she possessed near-total physical invulnerability, as was evident when she was once punched by Phoenix III with such force that it launched her from Earth and slammed her into the moon's surface, forming an impact crater in the process.[33] She later expressed amazement that she was able to even survive such a blow, let alone withstand it completely uninjured.[33] Nova's entire body, particularly her head, is plumed with cosmic energy resembling flames.

Frankie Raye was fluent in more than one language besides English.

Other versions

An alternate universe version of Hercules encountered Nova in the 24th century in the first Hercules limited series by writer/artist Bob Layton.[34]

Writer-penciler John Byrne and inker Terry Austin produced a serialized story titled "The Last Galactus Story", which appeared in the anthology comics-magazine Epic Illustrated #26-34 (Oct. 1984 - Feb. 1986),[35] and detailed an all-new adventure for the character. The magazine published the first nine serialized installments of what was to be a 10-part tale. Each ran six pages, with the exception of part eight, which ran 12 pages. The magazine was cancelled as of February 1986, leaving the last chapter unpublished and the story unfinished. According to notes at Byrne's website, the conclusion of the story would see a dying Galactus releasing his power causing a new Big Bang and transforming his herald Nova into the Galactus for the new universe.[36]

During the Fantastic Four's fight with Abraxas, they were briefly allied with an alternate version of Nova. It was revealed at the conclusion that she was actually allied with Abraxas after her Galactus destroyed Earth even after accepting her as his herald. Nova transferred her anger for her failure to the Fantastic Four of the Earth-616 universe in the absence of her own. Abraxas subsequently drew in an army of Novas who had experienced similar traumas to keep the Fantastic Four occupied while he acquired the Ultimate Nullifier, the resulting army of Novas requiring the Fantastic Four to summon the assistance of an army of alternate Avengers just to keep the Novas occupied.[37]

In other media

Television

  • Nova appears in the Fantastic Four episode "When Calls Galactus", voiced by Leeza Miller McGee. She gets her powers when she is accidentally doused in the chemicals that gave the android Human Torch his powers. She is transformed into her herald form when joining Galactus, after giving him enough power to survive the effects of the poisoned planet he'd consumed earlier without the need to devour Earth.[38]
  • Nova appears in the Silver Surfer TV series, voiced by Tara Rosling. In this version, she is a mutant with clairvoyant powers. She is given her herald powers by Galactus when he chooses her as his herald in place of the Silver Surfer. She also mentions that her name is Frankie Raye.[39]
  • Frankie Raye appears in the Fantastic Four: World's Greatest Heroes episode "Zoned Out", voiced by Tabitha St. Germain. As Johnny's date he takes her to the Baxter Building and Reed Richards' lab. He claims that the lab is his own, when he lies to impress her by claiming to be a scientist himself. Frankie inadvertently activates Reed's Negative Zone gauntlet mistaking it for a toy, drawing herself into the Zone.[40]

Toys

Film

gollark: It is not passed the `self` argument and I don't think closure works with `eval`ed code.
gollark: `eval` is *not*, though.
gollark: Suuuuuure.
gollark: It doesn't have `self` because that's passed as a parameter to class functions.
gollark: So Piefon?

References

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  2. Richards, Dave (March 8, 2010). "Immonen Summons Her Heralds". Comic Book Resources. Archived from the original on February 3, 2013. Retrieved February 3, 2013.
  3. Thomas, Roy (w), Pérez, George (p), Sinnott, Joe (i). "The Crusader Syndrome!" Fantastic Four 164 (November 1975)
  4. Thomas, Roy (w), Buckler, Rich; Pérez, George (p), Sinnott, Joe (i). "Death Is a Golden Gorilla!" Fantastic Four 171 (June 1976)
  5. Thomas, Roy (w), Wilson, Ron (p), Sinnott, Joe (i). "Side by Side with... Annihilus?" Fantastic Four 181 (April 1977)
  6. Wein, Len (w), Pérez, George (p), Sinnott, Joe (i). "Four No More!" Fantastic Four 191 (February 1978)
  7. Wolfman, Marv (w), Pollard, Keith (p), Sinnott, Joe (i). "The Andromeda Attack!" Fantastic Four 204 (March 1979)
  8. Byrne, John (w), Byrne, John (p), Byrne, John (i). "Back to the Basics!" Fantastic Four 232 (July 1981)
  9. Byrne, John (w), Byrne, John (p), Byrne, John (i). "The Lady Is for Burning!" Fantastic Four 238 (January 1982)
  10. Byrne, John (w), Byrne, John (p), Byrne, John (i). "Beginnings and Endings" Fantastic Four 244 (July 1982)
  11. Byrne, John (w), Byrne, John (p), Byrne, John (i). "Fragments" Fantastic Four 257 (August 1983)
  12. Byrne, John (w), Byrne, John (p), Byrne, John (i). "The Trial of Reed Richards" Fantastic Four 262 (January 1984)
  13. Englehart, Steve (w), Rogers, Marshall (p), Rubinstein, Joe (i). "— Free--" Silver Surfer v3, 1 (July 1987)
  14. Englehart, Steve (w), Rogers, Marshall (p), Rubinstein, Joe (i). "Doomsday" Silver Surfer v3, 9 (March 1988)
  15. Englehart, Steve (w), Rogers, Marshall (p), Rubinstein, Joe (i). "Space Is... Eternity!" Silver Surfer v3, 10 (April 1988)
  16. Englehart, Steve (w), Staton, Joe (p), Rubinstein, Joe (i). "Nova" Silver Surfer v3, 11 (May 1988)
  17. Englehart, Steve (w), Rogers, Marshall (p), Rubinstein, Joe (i). "Sick!" Silver Surfer v3, 12 (June 1988)
  18. Englehart, Steve (w), Staton, Joe (p), Cockrum, Dave (i). "Masques!" Silver Surfer v3, 13 (July 1988)
  19. Englehart, Steve (w), Staton, Joe (p), Rubinstein, Joe; Marzan Jr., José (i). "Silver Mirrors!" Silver Surfer v3, 14 (August 1988)
  20. Englehart, Steve (w), Lim, Ron (p), Rubinstein, Joe (i). "Resurrection" Silver Surfer v3, 17 (November 1988)
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  32. Thor (Vol. 6) #1
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    Byrne, John (w), Byrne, John (p), Wiacek, Bob (i). "The Dweller in Darkness (Chapter Eight)" Epic Illustrated 33 (December 1985)
    Byrne, John (w), Byrne, John (p), Austin, Terry (i). "The Face of the Foe (Chapter Nine)" Epic Illustrated 34 (February 1986)
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  39. Brody, Larry and Gregory, Michael Steven (writers) (April 11, 1998). "Antibody". Silver Surfer. Season 1. Episode 8. Fox Kids.
  40. Forward, Bob, Kyle, Craig, and Yost, Christopher (writers); Ruiz, Luis (director) (October 28, 2006). "Zoned Out". Fantastic Four: World's Greatest Heroes. Season 1. Episode 6. Cartoon Network.
  41. Zach, DST (September 20, 2011). "Final Heralds of Galactus Minimates Box Set Line-Up Revealed!". ArtAsylum.com. Archived from the original on September 24, 2011. Retrieved February 3, 2013. A few months back, Toys "R" Us hosted a poll to choose who would be in their exclusive four-pack of Marvel Minimates spotlighting Galactus and his Heralds. And we are now pleased to reveal the lineup! Nova, Morg, Terrax and Galactus himself will be in the 4-pack, and each will be tricked out to the max. Nova will have a flaming flight base that connects to her fiery hair.
  42. "Beau Garrett on Playing Frankie Raye in Fantastic Four 2". MovieWeb. November 20, 2006. Archived from the original on April 20, 2019.
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