Joshua Clay

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Tempest

Tempest in flight, art by James Fry
Publication information
Publisher DC Comics
First appearance Showcase #94 (August 1977)
Created by Paul Kupperberg (writer)
Joe Staton (artist)
In story information
Alter ego Joshua Clay
Team affiliations Doom Patrol
Notable aliases Jonathan Carmichael
Abilities kinetic energy blasts, flight

Joshua Clay (Tempest) is a fictional character, a member of the superhero team Doom Patrol in comic books published by DC Comics. Created by Paul Kupperberg and Joe Staton, he first appears as the hero Tempest in Showcase #94 (August 1977).

Contents

[edit] Fictional character biography

[edit] Early years

A member of the second Doom Patrol, Joshua Clay is the first DC Comics hero to use the name Tempest. Along with Captain Comet, he is one of the few DC Comics heroes initially identified as a mutant.

Joshua Clay was born in the Brownsville section of Brooklyn, New York, the youngest of five children. His parents struggled to keep their family together in the middle of what was at that time in the 1960s one of the worst slums in the country. Despite his parents' best efforts, sixteen-year-old Joshua joined a street gang called the Stompers.

[edit] Soldier

Due to fallout from his time in the Stompers, seventeen-year-old Joshua Clay was given a choice between prison and service in the United States military. Upon choosing, Joshua was trained as a combat medic and shipped off to Vietnam.

Less than a month before the end of his tour, Joshua witnessed the attempted massacre of an entire village of Vietnamese non-combatants by his sergeant. Horrified, Joshua unconsciously triggered his powers blasting the noncom into unconsciousness. The stress of this discovery led Clay to go AWOL and fled the country, eventually returning to the U.S. Clay spent the next ten years living as a fugitive.[1] The sergeant eventually becomes Reactron, a repeated foe of the Doom Patrol.

[edit] Hero

Arani Caulder tracks down Joshua Clay and enlists him as a member of the new Doom Patrol. Clay stays active within this incarnation of the Doom Patrol for a year before it disbands due to internal dissent. Swearing off superheroics, Clay uses his underworld connections secure a new identity for himself as Jonathan Carmichael, M.D. Due to years of private study and his previous military training, he easily passes his New York medical board examination. As Carmichael, using funds borrowed from a local loan shark, he purchases a small Park Avenue medical practice and lives a quiet, respectable life treating rich hypochondriacs. Robotman tracks Clay down. Due to Steele's threat to reveal Clay's true identity to the medical board, he reluctantly returns to superheroics. He again retires from active service during the Grant Morrison scripted period to become the team's physician.

Joshua Clay is murdered by a temporarily deranged Niles Caulder (The Chief) in Doom Patrol (vol. 2) #55 (May 1992).[2] Whether his death has been undone by the events of Infinite Crisis like the deaths of other Doom Patrol members[3] is unknown.

[edit] Note

  • Two years after Joshua Clay's death, a man named Martin Ellis, who looks like the Steve Lightle rendition of Joshua Clay, wakes from a seven year coma with an active metagene. In combat with Captain Atom, Ellis exhibits the same powers as Joshua Clay. Ellis reunites with his wife Yvonne at the end of the story. This was his only appearance [4].

[edit] Powers and abilities

Kinetic energy blast, art by James Fry
Kinetic energy blast, art by James Fry
  • Joshua Clay can generate and radiate powerful blasts from his hands, able to melt steel.
  • Tempest can control his blasts' volume and intensity to the extent that he can ignite the head of a match from twenty feet away.
  • Properly focused and controlled, his energies allow Tempest to propel himself through the air at 90 miles per hour [4].
  • Trained as a combat medic by the U.S. Army, he later becomes a licensed physician.

[edit] Bibliography

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ Secret Origins Annual #1
  2. ^ Review of Doom Patrol (vol. 2) #55
  3. ^ JLA #94-99 and Infinite Crisis Secret Files 2006 p. 17
  4. ^ a b Justice League Quarterly #17 (Winter 1994), "The Sleeper Awakens", written by Charlie Bracey, drawn by Carlos Franco

[edit] References

[edit] Resources