Sovereign Seven

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Sovereign Seven
Sovsev.jpg
Sovereign Seven #15 cover, artist Dwayne Turner. Clockwise from left: Network, Cascade, Indigo, Rampart, Reflex, Cruiser and Finale.
Publication information
Publisher DC Comics
First appearance Sovereign Seven #1 (April 1995)
Created by Chris Claremont (writer)
Dwayne Turner (artist)
In-story information
Member(s)Cascade
Indigo
Network
Finale
Rampart
Reflex
Cruiser
Power Girl

Sovereign Seven is a creator-owned American comic book series, created by Chris Claremont and Dwayne Turner, and published by DC Comics.

Contents

Publication history

Launched in April 1995, Sovereign Seven was created by writer Chris Claremont and artist Dwayne Turner, and was Claremont's first professional regular series work since his departure from Marvel Comics and the X-Men franchise in 1991. It was the first creator-owned title set in the DC Universe. [1]

The title met with middling success and was cancelled after 36 issues (three years), in June 1998, after which Claremont returned to Marvel.

Fictional team history

The Sovereign Seven are a group of royalty from planets that were destroyed by a Rapture. Each were saved by the leader of the team - Cascade. The original group consists of Cascade, Finale, Rampart, Reflex, Indigo, Network and Cruiser. Rampart is killed and replaced by the DC character Power Girl in #31.

For a time, the group operates out of a mysterious coffee house (the "Crossroads Coffee Bar") which is larger on the inside than it is on the outside. Time portals open inside doorways to areas unfamiliar or well-known to the Sovereigns, who work as employees to earn their keep. The coffee house is run by supporting characters Violet Smith and Pansy Jones, comic-book counterparts of the musical alter-egos of Emma Bull and Lorraine GarlandThe Flash Girls—of whom Claremont is a fan. [2]

The Sovereign Seven battle villians including Darkseid, Maitresse, and the Female Furies.

Membership

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References

  1. Cronin, Brian (2018-04-14). "Revisiting Chris Claremont's Sovereign Seven". CBR. Retrieved 2023-02-07.
  2. Review of The Flash Girls' debut CD The Return of Pansy Smith and Violet Jones (SteelDragon Press/Spin Art, 1993) Archived 2006-03-17 at the Wayback Machine . Accessed May 25, 2008