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{{Short description|DC Comics character}}
{{Infobox comics character<!--Wikipedia:WikiProject Comics-->
{{Infobox comics character<!--Wikipedia:WikiProject Comics-->
|image = Sue Dibny.png
|image = Sue Dibny.png
Line 7: Line 8:
|creators = [[John Broome (writer)|John Broome]]<br />(writer)<br />[[Carmine Infantino]] (artist)
|creators = [[John Broome (writer)|John Broome]]<br />(writer)<br />[[Carmine Infantino]] (artist)
|real_name = Susan Dearbon Dibny
|real_name = Susan Dearbon Dibny
|species = <!-- optional -->
|species = Human (formerly)<br/> [[Ghost]] (currently)
|homeworld = <!-- optional -->
|homeworld = <!-- optional -->
|alliances = [[Justice League]]<br />[[Super Buddies]]<br />[[Black Lantern Corps]]
|alliances = [[Justice League]]<br/>[[Super Buddies]]<br/>[[Black Lantern Corps]]<br/>[[Justice League Europe]]<br/>[[Justice League International]]
|aliases = <!-- optional: actual identities the character uses, not nicknames -->
|aliases = <!-- optional: actual identities the character uses, not nicknames -->
|partners = [[Elongated Man]]
|partners = [[Elongated Man]]
|supports = [[Flash (comics)|The Flash]]<br />[[Starman (comics)|Starman]]
|supports = [[Flash (comics)|Flash]]<br />[[Starman (comics)|Starman]]
|powers = <!-- optional -->
|powers = *Invisibility
*Intangibility
*Flight
*Possession
}}
}}
'''Susan Dibny''' (née '''Dearbon''') is a [[fictional character]] from [[DC Comics]] associated with the [[Elongated Man]]. Created by [[John Broome (writer)|John Broome]] and [[Carmine Infantino]], the character first appeared in ''[[Flash (comics)|Flash]]'' vol. 1 #119 (March 1961). In 2004, she became a flashpoint for discussions of women in comics when a highly controversial [[Identity Crisis (DC Comics)|storyline]] was published (set in the post-''[[Zero Hour: Crisis in Time|Zero Hour]]'' continuity) in which she is murdered and revealed to have been raped by [[Doctor Light (Arthur Light)|Doctor Light]] in the past.<ref>[http://www.sequentialtart.com/archive/nov05/tth_1105.shtml Women Out of Refrigerators]. Sequential Tart: Tart To Heart (November 2005). Vol. 8 No. 11.</ref><ref>[https://web.archive.org/web/20070611140621/http://www.thefourthrail.com/reviews/snapjudgments/071204/identitycrisis2.shtml TheFourthRail.com Snap Judgments]. Archived from the original on 2007-06-11.</ref>
'''Susan Dibny''' (née '''Dearbon''') is a fictional character from [[DC Comics]] associated with the [[Elongated Man]]. Created by [[John Broome (writer)|John Broome]] and [[Carmine Infantino]], the character first appeared in ''[[Flash (comics)|Flash]]'' vol. 1 #119 (March 1961). In 2004, she became a flashpoint for discussions of women in comics when a highly controversial [[Identity Crisis (DC Comics)|storyline]] was published (set in the post-''[[Zero Hour: Crisis in Time|Zero Hour]]'' continuity) in which she is murdered and revealed to have been raped by [[Doctor Light (Arthur Light)|Doctor Light]] in the past.<ref>{{cite journal| url= http://www.sequentialtart.com/archive/nov05/tth_1105.shtml |title= Women Out of Refrigerators| work= Sequential Tart: Tart To Heart |date= November 2005| volume= 8 |number= 11| access-date= }}</ref><ref>{{cite web| archiveurl= https://web.archive.org/web/20070611140621/http://www.thefourthrail.com/reviews/snapjudgments/071204/identitycrisis2.shtml |url= http://www.thefourthrail.com/reviews/snapjudgments/071204/identitycrisis2.shtml| website= TheFourthRail.com |title= Snap Judgments: Identity Crisis #2| date= |first=Randy |last= Lander |archivedate= 2007-06-11}}</ref>


Sue Dearbon appears in [[live action]] by [[Natalie Dreyfuss]] starting in the [[The Flash (season 6)|sixth season]] of the television series ''[[The Flash (2014 TV series)|The Flash]]''. This version is a former socialite who is now a thief.
Sue Dearbon appeared in the [[Arrowverse]] television series ''[[The Flash (2014 TV series)|The Flash]]'', portrayed by [[Natalie Dreyfuss]].


==Fictional character biography==
==Fictional character biography==
Sue is the wife of hero Ralph Dibny, the [[Elongated Man]].<ref>{{cite book |last1=Greenberger |first1=Robert |title=The Essential Batman Encyclopedia |date=2008 |publisher=Del Rey |isbn=9780345501066 |pages=112-113}}</ref> She is a [[brunette]] [[socialite]] from [[Westchester County, New York|Westchester County]], [[New York (state)|New York]], [[United States]]. She has at times worked for the [[Justice League]] as an administrator. Ralph and Sue share a very loving relationship. They met when Ralph crashed her debutante ball, using the pretense of jewel thieves to catch a glimpse of the lovely Sue. What followed was a whirlwind romance. Sue and Ralph married a short time later with [[Flash (comics)|Barry Allen]] serving as the best man. What followed was a life of adventures and super-heroics, as Sue stuck by Ralph's side as he traveled around the globe as part of the [[Justice League]]. This led to the various dangers associated with the lifestyle, including her near-death at the tentacles of an alien parasite and being kidnapped by a supervillain, [[Sonar (comics)|Sonar]] I, to become his consort. Through it all, Sue and Ralph stuck together, even when the going got tough, eventually settling in [[Opal City]].
Sue is the wife of hero Ralph Dibny, the [[Elongated Man]].<ref>{{cite book |last1=Greenberger |first1=Robert |title=The Essential Batman Encyclopedia |date=2008 |publisher=Del Rey |isbn=9780345501066 |pages=112–113}}</ref> She is a [[brunette]] [[socialite]] from [[Westchester County, New York|Westchester County]], [[New York (state)|New York]], [[United States]]. She has at times worked for the [[Justice League]] as an administrator. Ralph and Sue share a very loving relationship. They met when Ralph crashed her debutante ball, using the pretense of jewel thieves to catch a glimpse of the lovely Sue. What followed was a whirlwind romance. Sue and Ralph married a short time later with [[Flash (comics)|Barry Allen]] serving as the best man. What followed was a life of adventures and super-heroics, as Sue stuck by Ralph's side as he traveled around the globe as part of the Justice League. This led to the various dangers associated with the lifestyle, including her near-death at the tentacles of an alien parasite and being kidnapped by a supervillain, [[Sonar (comics)|Sonar]] I, to become his consort. Through it all, Sue and Ralph stuck together, even when the going got tough, eventually settling in [[Opal City]].


===Super Buddies===
===Super Buddies===
{{main|Super Buddies}}
{{main|Super Buddies}}
Sue is a member of the Super Buddies team made up of former members of the [[Justice League]]. As she has no superpowers herself, she spends most of the time at the Super Buddies headquarters, arguing with team founder [[Maxwell Lord]].
Sue is a member of the Super Buddies team made up of former members of the Justice League. As she has no superpowers herself, she spends most of the time at the Super Buddies headquarters, arguing with team founder [[Maxwell Lord]].


===Death===
===Death===
{{main|Identity Crisis (DC Comics)}}
{{main|Identity Crisis (DC Comics)}}
The 2004 DC murder mystery ''Identity Crisis'' begins with Sue's death at the hands of [[Jean Loring]] while she was expecting a child. Attempting to reunite with her husband [[Atom (Ray Palmer)|Ray Palmer]], Loring had used his equipment to try to create a threat to the families of other superheroes in an attempt to prompt Ray to come back to her. Although Loring hadn't intended for Sue to be seriously hurt, by traveling down the phone line to 'jump' into Sue's brain, she unintentionally caused an aneurysm that killed Sue, prompting Loring to start a fire to burn the body in a panic. Over the course of the series, it is revealed that in the past Sue was raped by [[Doctor Light (Arthur Light)|Doctor Light]]. In an attempt to prevent him from harming members of other superheroes' families, [[Justice League]] member [[Zatanna]] attempted to magically rehabilitate Doctor Light, which accidentally resulted in the villain becoming less intelligent and very incompetent. Batman, in fact, wanted another punishment for Dr. Light but his mind was also [[mindwipe]]d by [[Zatanna]], erasing his memory of his involvement in events. Light is the prime suspect until [[Doctor Mid-Nite]] and [[Mister Terrific (Michael Holt)|Mr. Terrific]] carried out an autopsy and confirmed that Sue had not been killed by anything that would constitute Light's standard M.O., with a casual comment Jean made to Ray prompting him to realize the truth, resulting in him sending Jean to Arkham and disappearing from the JLA. During a [[Sinestro Corps War]] one-shot, [[Superboy-Prime]] mentioned that his anger over what happened to Sue Dibny as one of his reasons for his actions during ''[[Infinite Crisis]]'', seeing it as further 'proof' of the failures of the new universe.
The 2004 DC murder mystery ''Identity Crisis'' begins with Sue's death at the hands of [[Jean Loring]] while she was expecting a child.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Cowsill |first1=Alan |last2=Irvine |first2=Alex |last3=Manning |first3=Matthew K. |last4=McAvennie |first4=Michael |last5=Wallace |first5=Daniel |title=DC Comics Year By Year: A Visual Chronicle |date=2019 |publisher=DK Publishing |isbn=978-1-4654-8578-6 |page=297}}</ref> Attempting to reunite with her husband [[Atom (Ray Palmer)|Ray Palmer]], Loring had used his equipment to try to create a threat to the families of other superheroes in an attempt to prompt Ray to come back to her. Although Loring hadn't intended for Sue to be seriously hurt, by traveling down the phone line to 'jump' into Sue's brain, she unintentionally caused an aneurysm that killed Sue. Loring then panicked and severely burned Sue's body to mask the true cause of her death. Over the course of the series, it is revealed that in the past Sue was raped by [[Doctor Light (Arthur Light)|Doctor Light]]. In an attempt to prevent him from harming members of other superheroes' families, Justice League member [[Zatanna]] attempted to magically rehabilitate Doctor Light, which accidentally resulted in the villain becoming less intelligent and very incompetent. [[Batman]], in fact, wanted another punishment for Dr. Light but his mind was also [[mindwipe]]d by Zatanna, erasing his memory of his involvement in events. Light is the prime suspect until [[Doctor Mid-Nite]] and [[Mister Terrific (Michael Holt)|Mr. Terrific]] carried out an autopsy and confirmed that Sue had not been killed by anything that would constitute Light's standard M.O., with a casual comment Jean made to Ray prompting him to realize the truth, resulting in him sending Jean to [[Arkham Asylum|Arkham]] and disappearing from the JLA. During a [[Sinestro Corps War]] one-shot, [[Superboy-Prime]] mentioned that his anger over what happened to Sue Dibny as one of his reasons for his actions during ''[[Infinite Crisis]]'', seeing it as further 'proof' of the failures of the new universe, not knowing that he is inadvertently responsible for causing the chain of events that led to her rape and death after he fractured the timeline ([[Hypertime]]).


===52===
===52===
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===Reign in Hell===
===Reign in Hell===
Sue and Ralph, in their ghostly forms, appear before [[Doctor Occult]] with news of the war brewing in Hell. Sent by [[Zatara|Giovanni Zatara]], who as a member of the Hell Resistance Movement hopes to take advantage of the war, they ask Doctor Occult to aid him in his plan. They then dissipate and leave him to make his decision.<ref>''Reign in Hell'' #1 (September, 2008)</ref>
Sue and Ralph, in their ghostly forms, appear before [[Doctor Occult]] with news of the war brewing in Hell. Sent by [[Zatara|Giovanni Zatara]], who as a member of the Hell Resistance Movement hopes to take advantage of the war, they ask Doctor Occult to aid him in his plan. They then dissipate and leave him to make his decision.<ref>''Reign in Hell'' #1 (September, 2008)</ref>


===Blackest Night===
===Blackest Night===
{{main|Blackest Night}}
{{main|Blackest Night}}
In ''Blackest Night'' #0, [[Black Hand (comics)|Black Hand]] is seen in a graveyard approaching the graves of Sue Dibny and her husband Ralph.<ref name="bn0">''Blackest Night'' #0 (June 2009)</ref> They are revealed as members of the [[Black Lantern Corps]] when they attack [[Hawkgirl]] and [[Hawkman (Carter Hall)|Hawkman]]; killing the two heroes by ripping their hearts out.<ref>''Blackest Night'' #1 (July 2009)</ref> Sue, Ralph and the Hawks later join [[Firestorm (comics)|Firestorm]] and [[Martian Manhunter]] in attacking the Flash and Green Lantern.<ref>''Blackest Night'' #2 (August 2009)</ref> The fight is interrupted by the arrival of the [[Indigo Tribe]], who use their powers to remove Sue and Ralph's rings and blast them to dust.<ref>''Blackest Night'' #3 (September 2009)</ref> After the "Blackest Night" crisis, the Flash looks around to see if Ralph and Sue were among those resurrected by the [[White Lantern Corps|White Entity]] only to be told by Green Lantern they were not coming back.<ref>''Blackest Night'' #8 (May 2010)</ref>
In ''Blackest Night'' #0, [[Black Hand (comics)|Black Hand]] is seen in a graveyard approaching the graves of Sue Dibny and her husband Ralph.<ref name="bn0">''Blackest Night'' #0 (June 2009)</ref> They are revealed as members of the [[Black Lantern Corps]] when they attack [[Hawkgirl]] and [[Hawkman (Carter Hall)|Hawkman]]; killing the two heroes by ripping their hearts out.<ref>''Blackest Night'' #1 (July 2009)</ref> Sue, Ralph and the Hawks later join [[Firestorm (comics)|Firestorm]] and [[Martian Manhunter]] in attacking the Flash and Green Lantern.<ref>''Blackest Night'' #2 (August 2009)</ref> The fight is interrupted by the arrival of the [[Indigo Tribe]], who use their powers to remove Sue and Ralph's rings and blast them to dust.<ref>''Blackest Night'' #3 (September 2009)</ref> After the "Blackest Night" crisis, the Flash looks around to see if Ralph and Sue were among those resurrected by the [[White Lantern Corps|White Entity]] only to be told by Green Lantern they were not coming back.<ref>''Blackest Night'' #8 (May 2010)</ref>

===New 52/Rebirth===
Ralph and Sue are eventually revealed to be alive in the ''[[New 52]]'' [[Secret Six (comics)|Secret Six]] series. As a major subplot of the first year, a disguised Ralph appears as a member of the team at the behest of the [[Riddler]], who is holding Sue Dibny hostage.


==Powers and abilities==
==Powers and abilities==
While alive, Sue Dibny possessed no superhuman abilities. However, she has shown herself to be a quick thinker, a decent detective (though not on her husband's level), and multi-lingual (native English, as well as French, Spanish, Italian, and Portuguese). Her appearances as a ghost have shown her with paranormal abilities.
While alive, Sue Dibny possessed no superhuman abilities. However, she showed herself to be a quick thinker, a decent detective (though not on her husband's level), and multi-lingual (native English, as well as French, Spanish, Italian, and Portuguese). Her appearances as a ghost have shown her with paranormal abilities.


==Other versions==
==Other versions==
Line 54: Line 61:


==In other media==
==In other media==
Sue Dearbon appears in ''[[The Flash (2014 TV series)|The Flash]]'', portrayed by [[Natalie Dreyfuss]].<ref>{{cite web|last=Mitovich|first=Matt Webb|title=The Flash's Sue Dearborn Is Found: Natalie Dreyfuss Lands Recurring Role|url=https://tvline.com/2019/11/15/the-flash-casts-sue-dearbon-season-6-natalie-dreyfuss/|work=[[TVLine]]|date=November 15, 2019}}</ref> She is initially alluded to in the [[The Flash (season 5)|fifth season]] finale<ref>{{Cite web|last=Damore|first=Meagan|title=The Flash S5 Finale Teases the Arrival of Iconic DC Character|url=https://www.cbr.com/flash-season-5-finale-sue-dibny/|work=[[Comic Book Resources|CBR]]|date=May 14, 2019|access-date=May 15, 2019}}</ref> before [[Ralph Dibny (Arrowverse)|Ralph Dibny]] works to find her in the [[The Flash (season 6)|sixth season]]. He eventually finds her in [[Central City (DC Comics)|Central City]], wherein she manipulates him into helping her seek revenge on the crime syndicate [[Black Hole (DC Comics)|Black Hole]] for extorting her parents. Upon realizing this, Dibny convinces Dearbon to give up her vendetta, only for the latter to be framed by [[Eva McCulloch]] for the death of Black Hole's leader, Joseph Carver. In the [[The Flash (season 7)|seventh season]], Dearbon and Dibny succeed in clearing her name before leaving to dismantle other Black Hole cells, though Dearbon would later return to help the [[Barry Allen (Arrowverse)|Flash]] and his allies.
The character is originally only mentioned in [[The CW]] television series ''[[The Flash (2014 TV series)|The Flash]]''<ref>{{Cite web|last=Damore|first=Meagan|title=The Flash S5 Finale Teases the Arrival of Iconic DC Character|url=https://www.cbr.com/flash-season-5-finale-sue-dibny/|work=[[Comic Book Resources|CBR]]|date=May 14, 2019|access-date=May 15, 2019}}</ref> In the closing moments of [[The Flash (season 5)|season five]]'s finale, private investigator [[Ralph Dibny (Arrowverse)|Ralph Dibny]] picks up a case file with the name "Dearborn" on the cover. In the [[The Flash (season 6)|season six]] premiere, Dibny returns to [[Central City (Arrowverse)|Central City]] from [[Opal City]], having been looking for the missing woman, who's first name is revealed to be Sue. In a later episode, "[[There Will Be Blood (The Flash)|There Will Be Blood]]", after learning that his friend [[Barry Allen (Arrowverse)|Barry Allen]] is going to die in a [[Crisis on Infinite Earths (Arrowverse)|crisis]] and there's nothing he can do to save him, he temporarily gives up on the case believing there's no point in finishing it if he can't save his friend. He's later reassured that just because he can't save everyone, he can still save someone (namely Sue) and resumes working on the case after getting a lead in Midway City. Sue debuts in the second half of season six portrayed by [[Natalie Dreyfuss]].<ref>{{cite web|last=Mitovich|first=Matt Webb|title=The Flash's Sue Dearborn Is Found: Natalie Dreyfuss Lands Recurring Role|url=https://tvline.com/2019/11/15/the-flash-casts-sue-dearbon-season-6-natalie-dreyfuss/|work=[[TVLine]]|date=November 15, 2019}}</ref> in the episode "A Girl Named Sue", after Dibny tracks her down to a seedy Central City apartment. She claims she can't go home as she's being targeted by her gangster ex-boyfriend, [[Jean Loring|John Loring]], so Ralph agrees to help her take him down, revealing his secret identity to her in the process. While retrieving evidence of Loring's crimes however, she double-crosses him to steal a diamond in Loring's possession. Even in spite of Loring catching her red-handed and metahuman assassin Ultraviolet arriving to kill her, Ralph saves her from the former while she tricks the latter into focusing on Ralph so she can escape. While investigating the diamond, Sue discovers [[Black Hole (DC Comics)|Black Hole]]'s symbol on it. In the episode "So Long and Goodnight," Ralph and Cisco encounter Sue while she's robbing banks used by Black Hole; claiming that the organization's extorting her parents. She returns the diamond to Ralph, as it contains information he needs before escaping once more.


==References==
==References==
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{{Flash}}
{{Flash}}
{{Justice League characters}}


{{DEFAULTSORT:Dibny, Sue}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Dibny, Sue}}
[[Category:DC Comics characters]]
[[Category:DC Comics female characters]]
[[Category:Characters created by Carmine Infantino]]
[[Category:Characters created by Carmine Infantino]]
[[Category:Characters created by John Broome]]
[[Category:Characters created by John Broome]]
[[Category:Fictional socialites]]
[[Category:Fictional socialites]]
[[Category:Fictional sexual assault victims]]
[[Category:Fictional murdered people in comics]]
[[Category:Comics characters introduced in 1961]]
[[Category:Comics characters introduced in 1961]]
[[Category:Female characters in comics]]
[[Category:Fictional ghosts]]
[[Category:Fictional ghosts]]

Latest revision as of 22:36, 23 May 2024

Sue Dibny
Sue Dibny.
Art by Carmine Infantino.
Publication information
PublisherDC Comics
First appearanceThe Flash #119 (March 1961)
Created byJohn Broome
(writer)
Carmine Infantino (artist)
In-story information
Alter egoSusan Dearbon Dibny
SpeciesHuman (formerly)
Ghost (currently)
Team affiliationsJustice League
Super Buddies
Black Lantern Corps
Justice League Europe
Justice League International
PartnershipsElongated Man
Supporting character ofFlash
Starman
Abilities
  • Invisibility
  • Intangibility
  • Flight
  • Possession

Susan Dibny (née Dearbon) is a fictional character from DC Comics associated with the Elongated Man. Created by John Broome and Carmine Infantino, the character first appeared in Flash vol. 1 #119 (March 1961). In 2004, she became a flashpoint for discussions of women in comics when a highly controversial storyline was published (set in the post-Zero Hour continuity) in which she is murdered and revealed to have been raped by Doctor Light in the past.[1][2]

Sue Dearbon appeared in the Arrowverse television series The Flash, portrayed by Natalie Dreyfuss.

Fictional character biography

[edit]

Sue is the wife of hero Ralph Dibny, the Elongated Man.[3] She is a brunette socialite from Westchester County, New York, United States. She has at times worked for the Justice League as an administrator. Ralph and Sue share a very loving relationship. They met when Ralph crashed her debutante ball, using the pretense of jewel thieves to catch a glimpse of the lovely Sue. What followed was a whirlwind romance. Sue and Ralph married a short time later with Barry Allen serving as the best man. What followed was a life of adventures and super-heroics, as Sue stuck by Ralph's side as he traveled around the globe as part of the Justice League. This led to the various dangers associated with the lifestyle, including her near-death at the tentacles of an alien parasite and being kidnapped by a supervillain, Sonar I, to become his consort. Through it all, Sue and Ralph stuck together, even when the going got tough, eventually settling in Opal City.

Super Buddies

[edit]

Sue is a member of the Super Buddies team made up of former members of the Justice League. As she has no superpowers herself, she spends most of the time at the Super Buddies headquarters, arguing with team founder Maxwell Lord.

Death

[edit]

The 2004 DC murder mystery Identity Crisis begins with Sue's death at the hands of Jean Loring while she was expecting a child.[4] Attempting to reunite with her husband Ray Palmer, Loring had used his equipment to try to create a threat to the families of other superheroes in an attempt to prompt Ray to come back to her. Although Loring hadn't intended for Sue to be seriously hurt, by traveling down the phone line to 'jump' into Sue's brain, she unintentionally caused an aneurysm that killed Sue. Loring then panicked and severely burned Sue's body to mask the true cause of her death. Over the course of the series, it is revealed that in the past Sue was raped by Doctor Light. In an attempt to prevent him from harming members of other superheroes' families, Justice League member Zatanna attempted to magically rehabilitate Doctor Light, which accidentally resulted in the villain becoming less intelligent and very incompetent. Batman, in fact, wanted another punishment for Dr. Light but his mind was also mindwiped by Zatanna, erasing his memory of his involvement in events. Light is the prime suspect until Doctor Mid-Nite and Mr. Terrific carried out an autopsy and confirmed that Sue had not been killed by anything that would constitute Light's standard M.O., with a casual comment Jean made to Ray prompting him to realize the truth, resulting in him sending Jean to Arkham and disappearing from the JLA. During a Sinestro Corps War one-shot, Superboy-Prime mentioned that his anger over what happened to Sue Dibny as one of his reasons for his actions during Infinite Crisis, seeing it as further 'proof' of the failures of the new universe, not knowing that he is inadvertently responsible for causing the chain of events that led to her rape and death after he fractured the timeline (Hypertime).

52

[edit]

During the 52 series, a Kryptonian cult attempts to revive Sue from the dead. They attract the attention of a now depowered Ralph Dibny by spray-painting the Kryptonian word for resurrection (the Superman symbol, inverted) on her tombstone. Ralph and a team of heroes infiltrate the resurrection ceremony. Convinced that the ceremony is a hoax, Ralph and the others attack the temple, which subsequently catches on fire. However, Ralph is convinced that the resurrection is not a hoax when a seemingly animated straw representation of Sue crawls towards Ralph uttering his name. Although this straw version of Sue Dibny is destroyed in the fire, Ralph survives and vows to complete Sue's resurrection. However, a later issue revealed that it was Felix Faust who animated the dummy with his powers, and Ralph was aware of Faust's deception but pretends to believe that it was really his wife in order to get close to the villain and his master, Neron.

In the final issue of 52, Sue reappeared alongside Ralph, both as ghosts (he had used a magic artifact to ensure that they would be together in the afterlife), inside of a school where a paranormal event has occurred. Her final line is "Honey, your nose is twitching".

One Year Later

[edit]

In Batman and the Outsiders #5, it is revealed (after appearing unknown in the previous two issues) that Ralph and Sue have gained or discovered the ability to possess human bodies, like the ability of Boston Brand, AKA Deadman.

Reign in Hell

[edit]

Sue and Ralph, in their ghostly forms, appear before Doctor Occult with news of the war brewing in Hell. Sent by Giovanni Zatara, who as a member of the Hell Resistance Movement hopes to take advantage of the war, they ask Doctor Occult to aid him in his plan. They then dissipate and leave him to make his decision.[5]

Blackest Night

[edit]

In Blackest Night #0, Black Hand is seen in a graveyard approaching the graves of Sue Dibny and her husband Ralph.[6] They are revealed as members of the Black Lantern Corps when they attack Hawkgirl and Hawkman; killing the two heroes by ripping their hearts out.[7] Sue, Ralph and the Hawks later join Firestorm and Martian Manhunter in attacking the Flash and Green Lantern.[8] The fight is interrupted by the arrival of the Indigo Tribe, who use their powers to remove Sue and Ralph's rings and blast them to dust.[9] After the "Blackest Night" crisis, the Flash looks around to see if Ralph and Sue were among those resurrected by the White Entity only to be told by Green Lantern they were not coming back.[10]

New 52/Rebirth

[edit]

Ralph and Sue are eventually revealed to be alive in the New 52 Secret Six series. As a major subplot of the first year, a disguised Ralph appears as a member of the team at the behest of the Riddler, who is holding Sue Dibny hostage.

Powers and abilities

[edit]

While alive, Sue Dibny possessed no superhuman abilities. However, she showed herself to be a quick thinker, a decent detective (though not on her husband's level), and multi-lingual (native English, as well as French, Spanish, Italian, and Portuguese). Her appearances as a ghost have shown her with paranormal abilities.

Other versions

[edit]
  • In the 1997 Tangent Comics one-shot The Flash, Sue Dearborn appeared as a minor character working as a reporter for All Access interviewing Lia Nelson on her arrival at her film premiere.
  • In Superman: American Alien, Sue Dearborn encounters a nineteen-year-old Clark Kent while with Oliver Queen, mistakenly believing that he is Bruce Wayne. She introduces him to Vic Zsasz and his unnamed wife.

In other media

[edit]

Sue Dearbon appears in The Flash, portrayed by Natalie Dreyfuss.[11] She is initially alluded to in the fifth season finale[12] before Ralph Dibny works to find her in the sixth season. He eventually finds her in Central City, wherein she manipulates him into helping her seek revenge on the crime syndicate Black Hole for extorting her parents. Upon realizing this, Dibny convinces Dearbon to give up her vendetta, only for the latter to be framed by Eva McCulloch for the death of Black Hole's leader, Joseph Carver. In the seventh season, Dearbon and Dibny succeed in clearing her name before leaving to dismantle other Black Hole cells, though Dearbon would later return to help the Flash and his allies.

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "Women Out of Refrigerators". Sequential Tart: Tart To Heart. 8 (11). November 2005.
  2. ^ Lander, Randy. "Snap Judgments: Identity Crisis #2". TheFourthRail.com. Archived from the original on 2007-06-11.
  3. ^ Greenberger, Robert (2008). The Essential Batman Encyclopedia. Del Rey. pp. 112–113. ISBN 9780345501066.
  4. ^ Cowsill, Alan; Irvine, Alex; Manning, Matthew K.; McAvennie, Michael; Wallace, Daniel (2019). DC Comics Year By Year: A Visual Chronicle. DK Publishing. p. 297. ISBN 978-1-4654-8578-6.
  5. ^ Reign in Hell #1 (September, 2008)
  6. ^ Blackest Night #0 (June 2009)
  7. ^ Blackest Night #1 (July 2009)
  8. ^ Blackest Night #2 (August 2009)
  9. ^ Blackest Night #3 (September 2009)
  10. ^ Blackest Night #8 (May 2010)
  11. ^ Mitovich, Matt Webb (November 15, 2019). "The Flash's Sue Dearborn Is Found: Natalie Dreyfuss Lands Recurring Role". TVLine.
  12. ^ Damore, Meagan (May 14, 2019). "The Flash S5 Finale Teases the Arrival of Iconic DC Character". CBR. Retrieved May 15, 2019.