Montreal Gazette

Selina Kyle fleshed out without her Cat- suit

DC Comic digs into sex kitten’s motivation­s in six- issue series

- DAVID BETAN COURT

Rare is the comic book that can artfully tell its story by taking a half- year to unmask its protagonis­t. Writer Genevieve Valentine and artist Garry Brown, however, have accomplish­ed exactly that in their six- issue run on DC Comics’s Catwoman.

The creatively dynamic duo have taken Selina Kyle on a journey of discovery: She has tried to lead a crime family in a Gotham City mob war, forced to accept her family’s Mafia roots while leaving behind the mantle of Catwoman ( at least for now).

The cover of Catwoman No. 40, by June Chung and Jae Lee, shows Selina removing what has become her standard mob- boss wardrobe over the past six issues, to reveal the Cat- suit she hasn’t donned for quite some time.

“Selina Kyle is equally intelligen­t and resourcefu­l and tough whether she’s in the [ Cat] suit or slightly more civilian suits,” Valentine said, “and the idea that she’d be taking on the Gotham crime families was so immediatel­y interestin­g and compelling that I don’t think we worried about having her out of the suit for a little while.”

“The suit, and the Catwoman identity, became an object of lingering and complex feelings, like a friend who’s left town without any assurance they’ll be back,” Valentine continued. “It’s in a safe with her very personal treasures; her journey in coming back to it as a way to handle everything she’s been through always felt like a very natural one, and readers have been amazing in taking the journey with us.”

Valentine laughed at the notion that a similar costume- less approach to Batman might not be met with similar enthusiasm.

“Bruce Wayne and Batman are often so at odds that they can feel like two characters, and any time Bruce is out of the Batsuit, you’re learning what parts of him are inherently Batman and what he might be leaving behind.

“Selina’s a complex character with a long history, and her relationsh­ip to the Cat- suit has always been unique,” Valentine continued. “It’s a trademark of her impressive heists, and just as equally it’s a marker of her identity as occasional crimefight­er. Her conflict isn’t so much between who she is inside the suit versus outside it, but rather her purpose at the moment she puts it on. Even out of the suit, readers know she’ll be pulling from the same bag of tricks that made her both a master thief and a reluctant hero.”

The penultimat­e issue of Valentine and Brown’s run together ( June’s Catwoman No. 41 will be written by Valentine, while art duties will be inherited by David Messina) made headlines when Selina shared a kiss with a woman named Eiko, revealing a bisexualit­y that many weren’t surprised to see.

Selina’s “romantic life is only one aspect of her story,” Valentine said of the kiss. “Her exploring this relationsh­ip is part and parcel of who she is, and I was immensely pleased how much of the fan reaction to Issue 39 was the Internet equivalent of a knowing nod. It made sense for Selina, and it made sense in the moment.”

A run with no Cat- suit meant a new look was needed. Brown said that he enjoyed drawing designs for a new Selina Kyle — a character who now cracked more of a verbal whip while dressed to impress — and intimidate.

“Genevieve was great at describing what [ Selina] would be wearing. She’d give me lots of reference to work from,” Brown said. “We were definitely going for a sharp, all- contained, business look.”

 ?? D C C O MI C S ?? Catwoman will be revealed “as a complex character.”
D C C O MI C S Catwoman will be revealed “as a complex character.”

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