Brotherhood of Dada
The Brotherhood of Dada is a group of supervillains appearing in comic books published by DC Comics. Enemies of the Doom Patrol, the Brotherhood is devoted to all things absurd and bizarre, taking their name from the Dada art movement. Though they would be considered villains by most definitions, the group does not recognize concepts of good and evil (hence the decision to rename themselves from the Brotherhood of Evil), but simply aloof; they are perhaps best described as anarchic rogues. The group first appeared in the September 1989 issue of Doom Patrol, #26 of the second series. The Brotherhood of Dada was created by Grant Morrison.[1]
A gender-swapped version of the group called the Sisterhood of Dada appear in the third season of the HBO Max series Doom Patrol.
Fictional team history[]
Mister Morden was a former member of the Brotherhood of Evil who went into hiding after incurring their wrath. He underwent a series of experiments that turned him into Mr. Nobody, After his recent metamorphosis he then traveled far and wide, ultimately gathering together Sleepwalk, who had vast strength only when sleepwalking; Frenzy, a large, garishly-dressed dyslexic Jamaican man who could transform into a whirling cyclone; Fog, who could absorb humans into his being when in his gaseous form; and the Quiz, a Japanese woman who literally had "every superpower you haven't thought of yet" and who wore a hazmat suit at all times due to her pathological fear of dirt.[2]
The Brotherhood stole a magical painting and used it to transport Paris into another reality composed of realms based on philosophical concepts and schools of art. Their plan was foiled by the Doom Patrol, but they chose to remain in the strange alternate realm.[1]
Later, Mr. Nobody escaped from the painting with the help of four members of his new Brotherhood: Agent "!", who could blend into any crowd; Alias the Blur, the ghost of a mirror that can eat time; Number None, the abstract concept of everything that goes wrong in a person's day; and the Love Glove, whose power depends on what glove he wears. They stole the bicycle of Albert Hofmann, and used its lysergic resonance to power Mr Nobody's presidential campaign. However, the US Government sent another super-powered agent, Yankee Doodle Dandy, after them. Despite the best efforts of the Doom Patrol, the Brotherhood members were killed by Dandy and the Painting That Ate Paris almost entirely destroyed.[1] The only member left was the Toy, who was late for the meeting. This was not the end of the Painting, as a girl was later seen picking a piece of it and using it as a slingshot to hurl a rock to break a government window, as the fragment started regrowing. It was later revealed the fragment had grown to mural size and is now installed in Dayton Manor in Prague.
In Infinite Crisis, a member of H.I.V.E. mentioned seeing Punch and Jewelee at a "Save the Brotherhood of Dada" rally.[3]
Members[]
First Brotherhood[]
Brotherhood of Dada | |
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Publication information | |
Publisher | DC Comics |
First appearance | Doom Patrol, #26 |
Created by | Grant Morrison |
In-story information | |
Member(s) | The Fog, The Quiz, Frenzy, Sleepwalk, Mr. Nobody |
The Fog[]
Byron Shelley gained the ability to turn into a psychedelic death cloud capable of absorbing people. The people he absorbed could still communicate, and the voices started to drive him mad. After he absorbed Doom Patrol member Crazy Jane, she and her multiple personalities traumatized the people inside him and the Fog vomited her out. He was apparently named after Lord Byron and Percy Bysshe Shelley.
Frenzy[]
Lloyd Malcolm Jefferson was an illiterate man whose mother had abandoned him. He wore a garish outfit covered with symbols, a top hat with a green flower, and two bicycle wheels on his back. He could turn into a living cyclone.
Sleepwalk[]
Holly McKenzie was a British girl who had tremendous strength, but only when she was asleep. To avoid waking, she took sleeping pills and wore headphones that played Barry Manilow. She had the outlines of two faces painted around her eyes.
The Quiz[]
A Japanese woman with a fear of dirt, The Quiz had every power you hadn't thought of. To make her lose a power, you had to think it. Whether the power loss is permanent or how long it lasts is not revealed. Because of her fear of dirt, she wore a long gown/gas mask that was decorated with question marks similar to the Riddler's outfit. The powers she exhibited were: flight, mimicking appearances, turning people to glass, turning back time, dematerialization, making things large, turning people into toilets filled with flowers, and manifesting escape-proof spirit jars.
Second Brotherhood[]
Brotherhood of Dada | |
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Publication information | |
Publisher | Vertigo Comics |
First appearance | Doom Patrol #49 |
In-story information | |
Member(s) | Agent "!", Alias the Blur, Number None, Love Glove, Mr. Nobody |
Agent "!"[]
Known otherwise only as "Malcolm", a homeless man who dressed in a garish outfit decorated with exclamation marks (possibly referencing his predecessor, the Quiz) drawn back to reveal his chest is actually a gilded cage containing a miniature jet with bird-like feet. Despite his odd appearance, he "comes as no surprise" which allows him and anyone around him to be unnoticed or any attacks made by them to be seemingly out of nowhere. He mentions his desire to find the element of surprise, which may mean that his powers of "stealth" are not what he wants; Malcolm finds the element at last when dying during the final battle between the Brotherhood and the government.
Alias the Blur[]
Ilse Krauss, an actress, falls in love with her own reflection. As she gets older, the reflection changes and Ilse's madness drives her to believe that her reflective lover had been kidnapped and replaced; in retaliation, she scars the mirror with battery acid, before shooting herself. Ilse is left in a coma on life support in a Bremen hospital. The dead, destroyed mirror ends up in a junkyard before eventually it is awoken by the dream-vibrations of Mister Nobody; Alias the Blur awakens, a fractured monster-ghost with the ability to speed up the aging process of whoever looks in its mirror. Alias the Blur follows Mister Nobody on the campaign trail to win the presidency before the battle with John Dandy, when it was freed of its tortured existence and Ilse finally died.
Number None[]
Number None, also known as the Secret Identity, is neither a specific person or thing. Number None is anything or anyone that can get in your way. As Mister Nobody put it, "Everybody and everything, at some time or another, is Number None". It first appears as a door that Agent ! walks into, signaling its joining of the New Brotherhood of Dada. It is never officially killed, because it is unclear if it can be.
The Love Glove[]
Bobby Carmichael is obsessed with the Sixties, and spends much of his time hanging around in record shops or going out to clubs until one night, when he experiences a wet dream about the "Glove Tree", a mysterious tree with gloves instead of leaves. Upon waking from the dream, he finds his arms gone, but in place of his right hand is a hovering red glove with a gritty texture 'attached' to his shoulder by a collection of valentine shapes. It is the Love Glove from which he takes his name, and he can use it like a normal arm, but can also extend the distance beyond arm's length. The glove grants Bobby the ability to revisit the Glove Tree through a Day-Glo space vortex and use any of the left-handed gloves on it. Some of the other gloves used are the Shove Glove, which possesses enormous strength, and the Techno Glove, which grants him mechanical knowledge and expertise.
The Toy[]
The Toy is the only member of the Brotherhood of Dada left alive, unless you count Number None, although Number None can, by definition, be anyone or anything and is more of a concept than an actual person. She was late (as always) to the rally where her teammates were killed. Her origin and powers are unknown, but she has a distinctive look: the lower half of her face is locked behind something similar to Hannibal Lecter's mask, only combined with a Mister Potato Head. A set of plastic lips have been affixed to the mask, and a set of toothbrushes have been grafted on as ears. She wears a shirt that says "Play with Me" under a vest with pronounced shoulder pads.
The Toy reappears in Doom Patrol #10, once again late to a meeting with Thayer Jost. In the following issue, she is liked by Mr. Nobody, who was currently inhabiting Thayer Jost.
In other media[]
- The character of Byron Shelley, who was known as The Fog in the comics, appeared in two episodes of Superboy which were called "Young Dracula" and "Run, Dracula, Run". This version of the character was son of Dracula, making him a vampire.
- The character of Mister Nobody, played by Alan Tudyk, was the main antagonist of the first season of the Doom Patrol television series.
- The Brotherhood of Dada appears as the Sisterhood of Dada in the third season of Doom Patrol. Wynn Everett portrays a gender-swapped version of The Fog, renamed Shelley Byron. Additionally, Lloyd/Frenzy (Miles Mussenden), Holly/Sleepwalk (Anita Kalathara), and Malcolm/Agent "!" (Micah Joe Parker) appear, and Gina Hiraizumi plays Sachiko, a young Japanese woman who may be a version of The Quiz.
References[]
- ^ a b c Jimenez, Phil (2008), "Brotherhood of Dada", in Dougall, Alastair (ed.), The DC Comics Encyclopedia, London: Dorling Kindersley, p. 62, ISBN 978-0-7566-4119-1
- ^ Irvine, Alex (2008), "Doom Patrol", in Dougall, Alastair (ed.), The Vertigo Encyclopedia, New York: Dorling Kindersley, pp. 61–63, ISBN 978-0-7566-4122-1, OCLC 213309015
- ^ Teen Titans/Outsiders Secret Files
- DC Comics supervillain teams
- Comics characters introduced in 1989
- Doom Patrol