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Durham Red

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Comics character
Durham Red
Illustration byCarlos Ezquerra from2000 AD No. 561 (1988)
Publication information
PublisherIPC Magazines /Rebellion Developments
First appearance2000 AD #505 (17 January 1987)
Created byJohn Wagner
Alan Grant
Carlos Ezquerra
In-story information
Full nameDurham Red
SpeciesHuman mutant
Place of originEarth
Team affiliationsStrontium Dogs
Notable aliasesEmpress Redwina
Saint Scarlet
Brite Red
AbilitiesSuper-strength
Super agility
Bloodlust
Regenerative powers
Long lifespan
Superhuman senses

Durham Red is a British comics character, originally created in 1987 as a femalesidekick and lover for Johnny Alpha in the long-runningcomic book seriesStrontium Dog in2000 AD. She is a bounty hunter with amutation that gives her avampiric lust for blood.

Publication history

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This sectionneeds expansion. You can help byadding missing information.(August 2010)

When the character was first devised, there was some debate overDurham Red orChelsea Blue as the character's name.[citation needed] The writers,John Wagner andAlan Grant, settled on Durham Red, and the character immediately proved popular from her first appearance. Following the death of Johnny Alpha, she was given a leading role in the spin-off seriesStrontium Dogs and in her own series,Durham Red. Following the departure of writerPeter Hogan, the series was handed toDan Abnett. Abnett's first action was to place Red in suspended animation and have her awake a thousand years afterStrontium Dog continuity, in a universe where she was worshipped as a mythicalsaint of mutants.

With art by several artists includingMark Harrison, the series has enjoyed a long run. Dan Abnett's final story was printed in 2004, envisioning Durham Red surviving another ten thousand years, watching over the end of the human race and the beginning of amutant-populated universe. Since then, the character has returned in stories set before Abnett's, in which she is still in the 22nd century.

Fictional character biography

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As a result of radioactive fallout (strontium-90) from a nuclear war in 2150, Durham Red was born with a mutation which made her resemble a vampire in appearance and behaviour, although she had no supernatural attributes. Shunned by other mutants, she joined the Search / Destroy agency at a young age and became a bounty hunter, or "strontium dog." While working for the agency she met Johnny Alpha (the lead character in theStrontium Dog series) and they were briefly romantically involved, but he was unable to trust her (and with good reason).[1]

At some unspecified time after Alpha's death, Red became tired of her life and enteredsuspended animation. She only intended to do this for a couple of years, but she was not awoken until 1,272 years later.[2] On her revival she discovered that the human race had spread throughout the galaxy but was still divided between pure-blood humans and mutants. As a mutant who drank the blood of normal humans, she had become a mythical figure to the mutants, who revered her as a saint ("Saint Scarlet"). Her efforts to end the conflict backfired and only made things much worse, costing the lives of billions. However she lived for another ten thousand years, and eventually witnessed a renaissance of human civilisation. In the last episode of Dan Abnett's stories, it is implied that she became an empress and was responsible for a new golden age of humanity, before faking her death and withdrawing from public life.[3] Stories published since then (2004) are set before she entered suspended animation.

Bibliography

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She has appeared in a number of strips and featured in her ownDurham Red title:

  • Strontium Dog:
    • "Bitch" (byAlan Grant andCarlos Ezquerra, in2000 AD #505–529, 1987)
    • "The Stone Killers" (by Alan Grant and Carlos Ezquerra, in2000 AD #560–572, 1988)
    • "The Final Solution" (one episode only) (by Alan Grant andColin MacNeil, in2000 AD #682, 1990)
  • Durham Red:
    • "Island of the Damned" (by Alan Grant and Carlos Ezquerra, in2000 AD #762–773, 1991)
    • "The Golden Mile" (by Alan Grant and Carlos Ezquerra, in2000AD Yearbook 1993)
    • "Mirrors" (byPeter Hogan andMark Harrison, in2000 AD #901–903, 1994)
    • "Ghosts" (by Peter Hogan and Mark Harrison, in2000 AD Winter Special, 1994)
  • Strontium Dogs: "High Moon" (Peter Hogan andMark Harrison,2000 AD #940–947, 1995)
  • Durham Red:
    • "Bloodlines" (text story by Peter Hogan, with illustrations by Mark Harrison, in2000 AD Alternity Winter Special, 1995)
    • "Deals" (by Peter Hogan and Mark Harrison, in2000 AD #960–963, 1995)
    • "Diners" (by Peter Hogan andPaul Marshall, in2000 AD Sci-Fi Special 1995)
    • "Night of the Hunters" (by Peter Hogan and Mark Harrison, in2000 AD #1000–1005, 1996)
    • "Epicedium" (byDan Abnett and Mark Harrison, in2000 AD #1006, 1996)
    • "The Scarlet Cantos" (by Dan Abnett and Mark Harrison, in2000 AD #1078–1083 and #1085–1089, 1998)
    • "Mask of the Red Death" (by Dan Abnett and Mark Harrison, in2000 AD #1111, 1998)
    • "The Vermin Stars" (by Dan Abnett and Mark Harrison, in2000 AD #1250–1261, 2001)
  • The Scarlet Apocrypha:[4]
    • "Necrocultura" (by Dan Abnett and John Burns, inJudge Dredd Megazine vol. 4 No. 12, 2002)
    • "Semblance" (by Dan Abnett and Steve Yeowell, inJudge Dredd Megazine vol. 4 No. 13, 2002)
    • "The Spirit and the Gaki" (by Dan Abnett and Frazer Irving, inJudge Dredd Megazine vol. 4 No. 14, 2002)
    • "Children of the Night" (by Dan Abnett and Enric Romero, inJudge Dredd Megazine vol. 4 No. 15, 2002)
    • "Genegun SD" (Dan Abnett and Steve Kyte, inJudge Dredd Megazine vol. 4 No. 16, 2002)
    • "Red Menace" (Dan Abnett and Carlos Ezquerra, inJudge Dredd Megazine vol. 4 No. 17, 2002)
    • "In the Flesh" (Dan Abnett and Mark Harrison, inJudge Dredd Megazine vol. 4 No. 18, 2002)
  • Durham Red:
    • "The Empty Suns Book I" (by Dan Abnett and Mark Harrison, in2000 AD #1362–1368, 2003)
    • "The Empty Suns Book II" (by Dan Abnett and Mark Harrison, in2000 AD #1382–1386, 2004)
    • "The 'Nobody Wants This Job' Job" (by Alan Grant and Carlos Ezquerra, in2000 AD #1785–1790, 2012)
    • "Running Out of Patients" (written by Leah Moore and John Reppion, art by Jan Duursema and Dylan Teague, in2000 AD Free Comic Book Day Prog 2014)
    • "The Calling" (written by Robert Murphy, art by Duane Redhead and Kirsty Swan, in2000 AD Sci-Fi Special 2014)
    • "The Judas Strain" (written byLauren Beukes andDale Halvorsen, art by Carlos Ezquerra, in2000 AD 40th Anniversary Special, 2017)
    • "Born Bad" (written byAlec Worley, art byBen Willsher (episodes 1–4) andLee Carter (episodes 5–8), in2000 AD #2082–2089, 2018)
    • "Three Gifts" (written by Alec Worley, art by Ben Willsher, in2000 AD #2111, 2018)
    • "Mistletoe Kiss" (written by Alec Worley, art by Ben Willsher, in2000 AD #2162, 2019)
    • "Served Cold" (written by Alec Worley, art by Ben Willsher, in2000 AD #2212–2219 and 2221–2223, 2021)
    • "Mad Dogs" (written by Alec Worley, art by Ben Willsher, in2000 AD #2326–2335 and 2337–2338, 2023)

Collected editions

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Some of the later stories have been collected into a number oftrade paperbacks:

  • The Scarlet Cantos (collects "The Scarlet Cantos" and "Mask of the Red Death", April 2006,ISBN 1-904265-86-3)
  • Vermin Stars (collects "Vermin Stars", April 2006,ISBN 1-904265-08-1)
  • Empty Suns (collectsDurham Red: "The Empty Suns Book I" and "The Empty Suns Book II", November 2007,ISBN 1-905437-45-5)

Other media

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Peter J. Evans has written a number of Durham Red novels that have been published byBlack Flame:

Similarity withBloodRayne

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Critics said thatRayne, from the videogame seriesBloodRayne shows a strong similarity to Durham Red, having the same weapons and distinctive red hair. The claim has been denied by the TRI representatives.[5] In a posting on the BloodRayne.co.uk forums Joe Wampole, a developer forBloodRayne declared:

Durham Red looks like a cool character but we've never heard of her. It is coincidence that her and BloodRayne look so similar.

The symbol on the hair is similar but looks more like a target, while Rayne's looks a little like Prince's symbol. Also, it looks like Durham is set in some alternate super sci-fi future.

I think it is just natural to put a vamp chick in black leather and either color her hair black or red."[6]

References

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  1. ^2000 AD #571–572
  2. ^2000 AD #1082
  3. ^2000 AD #1386
  4. ^"BARNEY - thrill zone". 2000ad.org. Retrieved3 October 2016.
  5. ^"AT's Top 10 Video Game Chicks". Actiontrip.com. 7 September 2007. Archived from the original on 22 August 2016. Retrieved2016-10-03.
  6. ^"Bloodrayne.co.uk". October 2002. Archived fromthe original on 25 November 2005. Retrieved11 December 2007.

External links

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Comics and
graphic novels
2000 AD
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DC Comics
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