Tyroc

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Tyroc

Tyroc, artist James Sherman and Jack Abel
Publication information
Publisher DC Comics
First appearance Superboy and the Legion of Super-Heroes #216 (April 1976)
Created by Cary Bates (writer)
Mike Grell (artist)
In story information
Alter ego Troy Stewart
Place of origin Earth
Team affiliations Legion of Super-Heroes
Abilities Reality warping scream

Tyroc is a fictional superhero published by DC Comics. He first appeared in Superboy and the Legion of Super-Heroes #216, (April 1976), and was created by Cary Bates and Mike Grell.

Contents

[edit] Fictional character biography

[edit] Marzal

Tyroc was the only resident superhero of the island of Marzal, which usually existed in a different dimension. Like Brigadoon, Marzal Island would sometimes reappear on Earth. Unlike the legendary Scottish village, Marzal remained on Earth for several years at a time in a location near a coast of Africa. In the native language of Marzal, "Tyroc" means, "Scream of the Devil".

Tyroc and his people were descended from African slaves that revolted on a ship during middle passage in the 18th century. Once all the slavers were set adrift, the liberated Africans settled on their own island off the coast of Africa, and built a civilization. Much to their surprise, their island paradise had a "Brigadoon-like" existence and disappeared from this dimension on a regular schedule every 200 years.

Left on their own, the islanders developed an advanced, highly technological civilization, with extreme isolationist tendencies. Marzalians believed that the peoples of Earth had ignored their island. As a result, outsiders were not welcome on Marzal.

[edit] The Legion

Tyroc from Superboy and the Legion of Super-Heroes #216 artist Mike Grell.
Tyroc from Superboy and the Legion of Super-Heroes #216
artist Mike Grell.

The Legion of Super-Heroes first met Tyroc when several Legionnaires responded to an emergency on Marzal Island. At first, Tyroc attempted to stop the Legion from assisting. After patching up their differences and working together to save the island, Tyroc was offered Legion membership. He initially refused, although he had come to admire the tolerance and courage of the Legionnaires he had met.

In later encounters, Tyroc accepted the Legion's offer to join the team and thus became the Legion's first black member. Tyroc and Black Lightning were created to help DC attract new readers and to provide more opportunities for socially relevant stories.

Until Tyroc's addition to the Legion, almost every humanoid alien in Legion stories were drawn with Caucasian facial features, including the orange-skinned Chameleon Boy, the blue-skinned Shadow Lass, and the green-skinned, blonde haired Brainiac 5.

Tyroc later returned to Marzal Island to be with his people when it left the Earth reality. Shadow Lass, accompanying him, was almost trapped on the island as it shifted dimensions.

Some writers claimed that Tyroc's powers, based upon sound, made him too difficult a character to depict in a comic book (even though DC's Black Canary appeared in comics for years, as did Marvel Comics' Banshee). The only Legionnaire introduced prior to 1989 that never appeared during Paul Levitz' 15-year run on the Legion was Tyroc.[1] (even the deceased Ferro Lad, Invisible Kid, and Chemical King appeared in flashback stories)

[edit] President of New Earth

Marzal's destruction at the hands of the Dominion was documented during the fourth volume of the Legion of Super-Heroes series while Keith Giffen was the writer. The Dominators managed to destroy Marzal Island within its dimensional pocket. An Earth recovering from the Dominion takeover chose their war heroes to lead them. Jacques Foccart and Troy Stewart, who had proven themselves as effective leaders of the rebel forces, were rewarded with public offices by the people of Earth. Troy Stewart became the planet's vice president, and Jacques became president. Soon thereafter, Earth was destroyed in a disaster reminiscent of the destruction of Krypton over a millennium earlier.[2] A few dozen cities and their inhabitants survived, and the planet was reconstituted as New Earth. Eventually, Jacques resigned to rejoin the Legion, and Troy ascended to the presidency.

This reality was erased from continuity by the events of the Zero Hour miniseries.

[edit] Post-Zero Hour/"Threeboot"

Tyroc did not appear in the Legion's second major continuity, which ran from 1994 through the end of 2004. In the "Threeboot" continuity which began in 2005, Tyroc appears briefly (with several other Legionnaires from previous incarnations of the team such as Blok and Dawnstar) in Legion of Super-Heroes v5 #15, as a character in a 'campfire story' showing the Legion's influence, and the urban legends and myths that have sprung up around it. This appearance was a cameo, and does not seem to take place in the series' actual continuity.

[edit] Post-Infinite Crisis

The events of the Infinite Crisis miniseries have apparently restored a close analogue of the Pre-Crisis on Infinite Earths Legion to continuity, as seen in "The Lightning Saga" story arc in Justice League of America and Justice Society of America, and in the "Superman and the Legion of Super-Heroes" story arc in Action Comics. However, a series of Legionnaire statues shown in Justice Society of America (vol. 3) #5 did not include Tyroc, and his membership in this version of the team has yet to be confirmed.

[edit] Powers and abilities

  • Tyroc's only superpower was his reality warping screams, which he could use to create dimensional portals, force fields, transmute objects, freeze objects, burn objects or simply destroy them. He could also teleport himself, although the exact limits of this ability were unknown. The effects and range of his powers were consistent when he first appeared, but later seemed to vary with the writer. Later writers often treated his power as simply being a "sonic scream" similar to that of Black Canary.
  • Tyroc could fly using either his own inherent powers (as seen in his first appearance before joining the Legion) or using his Legion Flight ring.

[edit] Scream effects

Among the screams in Tyroc's arsenal:

[edit] Bibliography

  • Superboy vol. 1 #216, 218, 222
  • All-New Collectors' Edition #C-55 (1978)
  • Superboy and the Legion of Super-Heroes #250
  • Legion of Super-Heroes vol. 2 #263–265
  • Secrets of the Legion of Super-Heroes #1
  • Legion of Super-Heroes vol. 4 #16, 29 , 32, 34–36, 38, 40, 41, 50, 54, 59
  • Legionnaires #1, 9, 10, 12
  • Valor #22

[edit] Other media

Tyroc appeared several times in various episodes of the the Legion of Superheroes animated series in the series' two seasons:

  • Tyroc has a small cameo at the end of the first season "Timber Wolf" episode. His picture appears along with those of other Legionnaires as Timber Wolf recites the Legion oath. He later turned up in action during "The Substitutes" episode and has appeared sporadically in Season 2 background shots.
  • A young Tyroc appears in second season episode "In The Beginning", among a crowd of young Silver Age Legionnaires. He is sporting a huge Afro. In the series finale, "Dark Victory", Tyroc is seen in battle using an ultra-sonic howl against Brainiac's forces. The sound waves are rendered bright red, and they cause a piece of equipment to explode.

[edit] References

  1. ^ An alternate universe version of Tyroc appears, and dies, in Legion of Super-Heroes (vol. 2) #300 (June 1983).
  2. ^ Legion of Super-Heroes (vol. 4) #38 (Late December 1992).

[edit] External links