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Red Queen (Jean Grey), an evil version of Jean Grey from Earth-9575 who replaced Pryor and ruled Earth-998 [2] [3] Red Queen (Madelyne Pryor), the alias used since her return to Marvel Comics [4] The Red Queen, an alias used by Martha Kent to disrupt the Checkmate organization on the television series Smallville
Madelyne Pryor makes a non-speaking cameo appearance in the X-Men: The Animated Series episode "Time Fugitives". [120] Madelyne Pryor / Goblin Queen appears in X-Men '97, voiced by Jennifer Hale. [121] [122] [123] Initially believing herself to be Jean Grey, she assists Mister Sinister until Grey convinces her to turn against him.
With Magik overcome her demons and relieved from Limbo's influence, she chooses to depart Limbo from her past life and entrusted Madelyne Pryor to take over Limbo as its new regent allowing Pryor to regain her title as the Goblin Queen. A few months later, Chasm encounters and meets Goblin Queen, forms a partnership to restore Chasm's formative ...
Madelyne may refer to: Madelyne Delcroix (born 1946), French aviator; Madelyne Pryor, fictional character in the Marvel Comics universe; Madelyne Woods, American television personality; Carlo Resoort, Dutch DJ, remixer and producer who has released tracks under the Madelyne alias
Jennifer Lee Pryor — who was married to Pryor from 1981 to 1982, and remarried him in 2001 — was closely involved in curating Time Life's box set, and remembers being struck by how his vintage ...
Created by the writer Chris Claremont and artist Bob McLeod, Wolfsbane first appeared in The New Mutants (September 1982), part of the line Marvel Graphic Novel. [2] She starred as a founding member of the New Mutants and features nearly in the entire run of The New Mutants volume 1 (1983-1991), her last issue being #97, in which she decides to stay in Genosha at the end of the X-Tinction ...
In 1983, Maddy Prior became the namesake for Madelyne Pryor of the X-Men, created by Chris Claremont and Paul Smith. The band was directly referenced five years after Pryor's first appearance in the comics in Uncanny X-Men #238 with Pryor's child self singing a line from "Gone to America", one of Steeleye Span's biggest hits.
Shortly after Jean Grey (Phoenix) was believed dead, Cyclops (her longtime love interest, real name Scott Summers) met a woman who was almost her exact duplicate named Madelyne Pryor. Unbeknownst to either of them at the time, Madelyne Pryor was a clone of Jean Grey, created by Mister Sinister .