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Princess Projectra

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Princess Projectra
Princess Projectra as depicted in Legion of Super-Heroes (vol. 5) #6 (2005). Art by Barry Kitson.
Publication information
PublisherDC Comics
First appearanceAs Princess Projectra:
Adventure Comics #346 (July 1966)
As Sensor Girl:
Legion of Super-Heroes (vol. 3) #14 (September 1985)
Created byJim Shooter
In-story information
Full nameProjectra (pre-Zero Hour); Wilimena Morgana Daergina Annaxandra Projectra Velorya Vauxhall (Threeboot Legion)
SpeciesOrandan
Place of originOrando
Team affiliationsLegion of Super-Heroes
Notable aliasesQueen Projectra, Sensor Girl
Abilities
  • Illusion generation
  • Remote sensing

Princess Projectra (later Sensor Girl) is a fictional character, a superheroine in the DC Comics universe. Typically portrayed as a haughty member of an alien royal family, she is from the 30th and 31st centuries and is a member of the Legion of Super-Heroes.[1][2]

Projectra was one of Jim Shooter's early creations on Legion of Super Heroes that helped cement his place in history as one of the seminal creators for the Legion.[3] Shooter sold the original script in which Projectra debuted to DC Comics editor Mort Weisinger when Shooter was only 14 years old.[4]

Publication history

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In 1965, when he was just 13 years old, Jim Shooter submitted an unsolicited script to DC Comics editor Mort Weisinger. Weisinger was so impressed, he asked Shooter to send in another script.[5] Shooter created a short origin story for Princess Projectra and several other characters and sent it in. Weisinger purchased all of these, and immediately started giving him writing assignments.[4]

Shooter's Projectra story first appeared in Adventure Comics #346 (July 1966) ("One of Us Is a Traitor"), when Shooter was 14 years old.[1][4] The character later resigned from the Legion of Superheroes, and left the title, though later Legionnaire writer Paul Levitz had always intended to bring her back to the series in some form.[6]

In 1985, in the Who Is Sensor Girl? storyline, a new character "Sensor Girl" was introduced. This character was fully masked, and when eventually unmasked, turned out to have been Projectra the whole time.

Sensor Girl's true identity was unknown to the other characters in the story and even to some of the creators on the title. Penciller Steve Lightle, who created Sensor Girl's costume, had no idea the character was supposed to be Princess Projectra, and believed her to be Supergirl. It is believed Levitz came up with the idea that Sensor Girl was Projectra significantly far into the development process of the story.[6]

After this story line, she returned to her "Projectra" identity, but the character's most enduring association is arguably with this brief interlude as a mystery character.[7]

Starting in the July 2019 series Legion of Super Heroes: Millennium, the character received a significant visual re-design.[8]

Fictional character biography

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Projectra (often called by her nickname "Jeckie", a shortened form of her name) is a member of the royal family of the low-tech planet Orando, and possesses the superhuman ability to generate illusions affecting all five senses.[1] During her membership in the LSH, she met, fell in love with, and married the martial artist Karate Kid. After her father King Voxv died, she fought both her cousin Pharoxx and her grandmother and mentor, Hagga, who sought to usurp the throne. Afterward she became Queen Projectra of Orando, and she and Karate Kid became reserve members of the Legion of Super-Heroes. When the Legion of Super-Villains invaded Orando, Nemesis Kid defeated Karate Kid in personal combat. A dying Karate Kid used the last of his strength to destroy the Legion of Super-Villains machinery trying to move Orando to another dimension.[9] Projectra subsequently killed Nemesis Kid in revenge, claiming royal privilege to do so even though it violated the Legion's code against killing. She resigned from the Legion of Super-Heroes during Karate Kid's funeral and used the Legion of Super-Villains' warp devices to take Orando to another dimension to preserve them from 30th-century technology and dangers.[10][7][11]

Princess Projectra as Sensor Girl, drawn by Greg LaRocque and Mike DeCarlo in Legion of Super-Heroes #37 (Aug 1987).

Projectra was later ordered by her elders to pay penance for indirectly bringing the Legion of Super-Villains to Orando and returned to the Legion's dimension, using the pseudonym Sensor Girl.[1] Her powers were enhanced giving her the ability to see beyond the illusions of life (such as the "illusions" of distance and physical obstacles). Rather than create obvious illusions, she used her illusion-projection effects to partially or completely block her opponents' senses, project an illusion of darkness (similar to that of Shadow Lass), or disorient victims by making it appear that their skin had vanished. Projectra kept the basis of her sensory alterations secret since enemies familiar with her illusions might be able to ignore them. Initially, she kept her identity hidden even from her fellow Legionnaires except for Saturn Girl, who vouched for her. She also cloaked herself with an illusionary disguise that fully masked her face. Some Legionnaires (particularly Brainiac 5) believed that she was a clone of Supergirl, who had been murdered by the Anti-Monitor during the Crisis. Projectra was later unmasked by the Emerald Empress during a battle with the Fatal Five. Afterward, however, most individuals outside of the Legion continued to remain unaware of her true identity. Sensor Girl was at one point the Legion leader.[7] She came to renounce the Orando throne.[12]

Many years later, during the "Five Year Gap" following the Magic Wars, Earth falls under the control of the Dominators and withdraws from the United Planets. A few years later, the members of the Dominators' classified "Batch SW6" - temporal clones of the Legionnaires - escape captivity. After Earth is destroyed in a disaster reminiscent of Krypton's destruction over a millennium earlier, a few dozen surviving cities and their inhabitants reconstitute their world as New Earth. The SW6 incarnation of Projectra was killed in battle fighting Dominion troops.

Post-Zero Hour reboot

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The 1994 event known as Zero Hour removed Projectra/Sensor Girl from continuity. A new, non-humanoid Sensor character with similar powers was introduced in her place in the reboot continuity.[13]

Threeboot

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In 2004 continuity, Projectra is once again human. She is initially depicted as a spoiled child of the Orando royals and a non-powered but financially well-endowed supporter of the new Legion. Her demeanor changes when her homeworld is destroyed, leaving her without a family or any financial and social privileges. Projectra's attitude has become increasingly cold, detached, and almost selfish in nature. The tragic demise of her parents has also awakened her hereditary powers, the ability to generate illusions, based on a particular form of witchcraft.

She has since expressed some degree of interest in human history, especially the actions of the 21st-century heroes as detailed in comic books, often asking her friends to translate ancient comics from English to Interlac. She is in a relationship with Timber Wolf.

She has come to blame the Legion and the United Planets for the destruction of Orando, becoming increasingly colder and reclusive with the time passing. Upon meeting some Orando survivors, she plans her vengeance on the Legion, at first in a sneaky, covert way, then taking some vicious, proactive steps. These steps included having Nura Nal, at the time trapped in Brainiac 5's mind, blinded and stripped of her powers by the physical representations of Brainiac 5's inhibitions and urges[14] (she would have been killed, if not for his superior mental discipline); viciously beating up Phantom Girl; and hypnotically mindwiping Saturn Girl to prevent her from speaking the truth about her findings upon her.[15] Despite Timber Wolf discovering her treachery at the same time as Imra, and without being discovered, he deliberately hid the proof against her, activating Phantom Girl's Legion Ring Alarm only when he was sure Projectra was away, saving Tinya's life but granting his lover impunity.

Nearing the end of the current run of the Legion, Princess Projectra's power increased exponentially, granting her absolute mastery of the id of individuals. In addition to creating illusions, her witchcraft can now briefly alter the behavior of individuals, forcing them to act out of their basest emotions, like rage and lust,[15] and even grant a tangible form to inhibitions and the darkest corner of someone's psyche.[14] Her increased powers are now fueled by the desire for revenge and the lingering id of everyone who died on Orando.

Since her powers, fueled by magic, are able to prey on the subconscious and the most atavic part of the human brain, she's more powerful than a skilled telepath like Saturn Girl, since a telepath must always start from the higher, conscious brain functions: because of this difference, the Threeboot incarnation of Projectra, despite being unable to hide her anger from Saturn Girl, was able to mindwipe her, placing in Imra's mind convincing false memories so precise as to fool her.

Post-Infinite Crisis

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In the pages of Justice Society of America #6, the pre-Crisis Sensor Girl seemingly returns, and now the seventh pre-Crisis Legionnaire to arrive along with Dream Girl, Star Boy, Dawnstar, Wildfire, Timber Wolf, and Karate Kid. Writer Geoff Johns has indicated that this group is, for all intents and purposes, the original Legion, who have merely been "missing" from continuity since Crisis on Infinite Earths, possibly due to machinations by the Time Trapper. One difference in Sensor Girl's history is Superman's full knowledge of her true identity as Projectra before Crisis on Infinite Earths; in the original continuity, this revelation was made in the post-Crisis timeline.

Sensor Girl, after being sent into the past along with the six other Legionnaires, suffered a type of mental breakdown and hid in Slaughter Swamp until her presence was almost discovered by Damage, Liberty Belle, Wonder Woman, Hourman, and Black Lightning. She then created the illusion of an abandoned hideout of the Secret Society of Super Villains (visually resembling a run-down version of the Hall of Doom), along with illusions of Triplicate Girl and Computo to try to keep them distracted.

The Computo illusion attacked the heroes until the Legionnaires and the rest of the Justice League and Justice Society arrived. Dawnstar reawoke Sensor Girl using the "wake-up word" that was used on the others (Lightning Lad in Interlac). However, Superman remembered the original battle between Computo and the Legionnaires, when Computo killed one of Triplicate Girl's copies, thus turning her into Duo Damsel. He and Power Girl saw through the façade using their x-ray vision. However, all seven of the Legionnaires had already left by the time they noticed, with Sensor Girl still playing out the mock battle. Rejoining her team, Sensor Girl participated in a mysterious ritual using lightning rods created by Brainiac 5.

Sensor Girl returned to the future after the Legionnaires completed their mission in the 21st century. Some time later, when the Legion was discredited by Earth-Man and his "Justice League of Earth", she was counted among the missing Legionnaires who disappeared during the Legion's dispersal across the galaxy. It is revealed in Superman #692, that Sensor Girl is living in 21st-century Metropolis, going by the name of "Officer Wilcox" and working for the Science Police.

As revealed in Adventure Comics (vol. 2) #8, Sensor Girl is part of a secret team sent by the late R. J. Brande to the 21st century to save the future in the Last Stand of New Krypton storyline.[16]

In other media

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Princess Projectra appears as a character summon in Scribblenauts Unmasked: A DC Comics Adventure.[17]

References

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  1. ^ a b c d Knight, Gladys L. (2010). Female Action Heroes: A Guide to Women in Comics, Video Games, Film, and Television. ABC-CLIO. p. 248. ISBN 9780313376122. Retrieved 2019-09-22.
  2. ^ Misiroglu, Gina (2012). The Superhero Book: The Ultimate Encyclopedia of Comic-Book Icons and Hollywood Heroes. Visible Ink Press. p. 218. ISBN 9781578593972. Retrieved 2019-09-22.
  3. ^ Collins, Elle (2016-09-27). "The Kid Who Took Over: The Extraordinary Career of Jim Shooter". comicsalliance.com. ComicsAlliance. Retrieved 2019-09-22. Some of [Shooter's] earliest Legion stories loom especially large in that team's history.
  4. ^ a b c Sacks, Jason; Hoffman, Eric; Grace, Dominick, eds. (2017). Jim Shooter: Conversations. Conversations with Comic Artists Series. University Press of Mississippi. ISBN 9781496811806. Retrieved 2019-09-22.
  5. ^ Wells, John (2014). American Comic Book Chronicles: 1965-1969. TwoMorrows Publishing. pp. 109–110. ISBN 978-1605490557.
  6. ^ a b Cadigan, Glen (2003). The Legion Companion. TwoMorrows Publishing. ISBN 9781893905221. Retrieved 2019-09-22.
  7. ^ a b c "Hero History of Sensor Girl". majorspoilers.com. MajorSpoilers. 2007-06-17. Retrieved 2019-09-22. Originally, like [legionnaires] Blok and Dawnstar, [Projectra] used her real name as her alias, but paradoxically found her greatest fame under a mask.
  8. ^ Staley, Brandon (2019-08-14). "Legion of Super-Heroes Concept Art Names Two More Revamped Legionnaires". cbr.com. Comic Book Resources. Retrieved 2019-09-22.
  9. ^ Paul Levitz; Keith Giffen (w), Keith Giffen; Steve Lightle (p), Larry Mahlstedt (i). "Lest Villainy Triumph" Legion of Super-Heroes, vol. 2, no. 4 (Nov 1984). DC Comics.
  10. ^ Paul Levitz and Keith Giffen (w), Steve Lightle (p), Larry Mahlstedt (i). "An Eye for an Eye; a Villain for a Hero!" Legion of Super-Heroes, vol. 2, no. 5 (Dec 1984). DC Comics.
  11. ^ Sims, Chris (2015-04-28). "The Bottle City Travel Guide: Pre-Crisis 30th Century Metropolis". comicsalliance.com. ComicsAlliance. Retrieved 2019-09-22.
  12. ^ Paul Levitz (w). "Going Home" Legion of Super-Heroes, vol. 3, no. 27 (October 1986).
  13. ^ Legionnaires #43 (December 1996)
  14. ^ a b Legion of Super-Heroes (vol. 5) #47 (December 2008)
  15. ^ a b Legion of Super-Heroes (vol. 5) #49 (February 2009)
  16. ^ Sterling Gates (w), Travis Moore (p), Júlio Ferreira (i). "Superman: Last Stand of New Krypton Prologue Part One: The Future Is Prologue" Adventure Comics, vol. 2, no. 8 / 511 (Early May 2010).
  17. ^ Eisen, Andrew (October 2, 2013). "DC Characters and Objects - Scribblenauts Unmasked Guide". IGN. Retrieved July 30, 2024.
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