Shrike (identity) explained

Shrike is the name of multiple fictional characters appearing in American comic books published by DC Comics.

Fictional character biographies

Toros Tos

Character Name:The Shrike
Real Name:Toros Tos
Homeworld:Moronon
Publisher:DC Comics
Debut:Hawkman #11 (December 1965/January 1966)
Creators:Dave Cockrum, Gardner Fox, and Murphy Anderson
Aliases:The Demon-Bird
Powers:Flight, accelerated growth from infant to adulthood, as member of royal family possesses ability to understand all languages & to fire lightning, cyclonic winds & ice pellets from his "wonder wings"

Toros Tos was a super-powered orphan from the highly advanced planet Moronon in the distant Mizar system where everyone has wings.[1] He was raised on Earth by Comoc Indians who believed he was a divine messenger from their ancient god Kukulkán, sent to reclaim their stolen treasures from the white man. As the Shrike (in a long-beaked dark blue and gold "demon bird" costume design submitted by a teenage Dave Cockrum), he encountered Hawkman and Hawkgirl in Hawkman #11 where the Thanagarian police officers captured him after an international crime spree. They convinced him that he was not an avenging deity, but in fact a shipwrecked alien prince. They returned him to his homeworld and, after enduring time-distorting crystal spheres and attacks by flying soldiers and giant lizards, helped him reclaim his throne from the evil dictator Boras Boran who had usurped it from his late parents.

Vanessa Kingsbury

Vanessa Kingsbury was an escaped mental patient who was empowered by the Overmaster and joined his original Cadre. Shrike used her ability to fly and her powerful shriek in battle against the Justice League of America. Her childlike personality made her easily manipulated both by those that wished to use her power and those desiring her body, however her poor grasp of her own strength made her a lethal individual to those she meant no harm. After finding religion and embarking on a "spiritual quest" that left 33 men dead, Shrike was assigned to the Suicide Squad. She again tries to continue her religious education with the Squad's priest. She dies in battle against the Ogaden Military. During the events of Blackest Night, Shrike's corpse is reanimated as a member of the Black Lantern Corps alongside several other fallen Suicide Squad members.[2] A successor calling herself Starshrike joined the Cadre in her place.

Shrike III

Character Name:Shrike
Publisher:DC Comics
Debut:Robin: Year One #3 (December 2000)
Creators:Chuck Dixon, Scott Beatty, Javier Pulido, and Marcos Martin
Alliances:League of Assassins
Powers:Exceptional martial artist

The third Shrike is a martial artist created by writers Chuck Dixon and Scott Beatty and artists Javier Pulido and Marcos Martin as a villain to Dick Grayson (Robin) and he appeared in Robin Year One #3.

A member of Ra's al Ghul's League of Assassins, the master martial artist Shrike operated a school for killers which he called the Vengeance Academy, teaching young children how to be assassins. After a disastrous encounter with the villain Two-Face forced Dick Grayson to give up his Robin identity, Dick infiltrated Shrike's school, to earn back Batman's trust. Shrike was apparently the one to teach Dick the art of Escrima stick-fighting, as he was first seen using these weapons after training at the Vengeance Academy. When Shrike took out an assassination contract on Two-Face, he sent a number of his students to carry out the assassination, including Dick and Shrike's top student, a boy named Boone. Dick saved both Boone and Two-Face in the ensuing battle, confirming Shrike's suspicions that Dick was a spy. Batman arrived to save Dick, only to be badly wounded by Shrike. Two-Face himself arrived in the middle of this battle, wishing to kill his would-be assassins and accidentally killed Shrike just as the assassin was preparing to kill Dick. Two-Face escaped, and Shrike's school fled, with Boone greatly upset by the death of his master. Shrike's legacy was picked up by Boone - Shrike. Shrike's namesake, the bird of prey Shrike, is known for catching smaller animals and impaling them on spikes, thorns, barbed wire, etc. The assassin presumably took this name out of a preference for bladed and spiked weapons.

Shrike revealed that he had been so impressed with Dick's natural talents and martial arts prowess that he had intended to present the young teen to an "O-Sensei". It is unknown whether he referred to the League of Assassins' Sensei, the individual only known as the O-Sensei, Ra's al Ghul, or another individual entirely.

Boone

Character Name:Shrike
Real Name:Unknown
Publisher:DC Comics
Debut:Nightwing Secret Files & Origins #1 (October 1999)
Creators:Chuck Dixon (writer)
Scott McDaniel (artist)
Alliances:Vengeance Academy
League of Assassins
The Society
Suicide Squad
Aliases:Boone
Wayne Wilkins Jr.
Ruby Eyes
General War
Powers:Exceptional martial artist

As a teenager, the boy known only as Boone was a friend of Dick Grayson, who would grow up to become Nightwing. As Grayson was learning under the tutelage of the heroic Batman, Boone was traveling throughout the Pacific Rim, learning martial arts from a number of teachers, including several former members of Ra's al Ghul's League of Assassins. In Hong Kong Boone encountered Shrike, the "Master" that would turn him into a skilled and disciplined killing machine. Boone was part of the Vengeance Academy that Shrike operated in Gotham City, training young teens to become assassins. Dick Grayson, temporarily fired by Batman, infiltrated the school after an "audition" and formed a hesitant friendship with Boone. After Dick revealed the school to Batman following an abortive assassination attempt by the students on Two Face, leading to the death of Shrike by the villain (as mentioned above), Boone swore to avenge his master. After meeting with Talia al Ghul, Boone continued his education by members of the League of Assassins. Taking on his mentor's name, the new Shrike became one of the world's foremost assassins, killing throughout Asia and the former Soviet bloc, before returning to America to become the new chief enforcer of criminal kingpin Blockbuster in order to assassinate Nightwing. He twice failed in this regard. Shrike later appeared, after the death of Ra's al Ghul, as a member of Nyssa al Ghul's new League of Assassins. Like his mentor and their namesake, the Shrike, Shrike uses a number of bladed and spiked weapons, such as swords, bladed tonfa, nets with fishing hooks added to them, and various knives and shuriken.

In Infinite Crisis, Boone joined Alexander Luthor, Jr.'s Secret Society of Super Villains.[3]

In 2016, DC Comics implemented another relaunch of its books called "DC Rebirth" which restored its continuity to a form much as it was prior to "The New 52". Boone was seen in Zombalia partaking in a card game with Fiddler, Psych, and Vortex. After Psych admitted that he cheated, he used the projection of everyone that was killed by the three villains over the years to kill them.[4]

Following DC's "Infinite Frontier" relaunch, Boone turns up alive and appears as a member of the Suicide Squad under Peacemaker. After the deaths of Bolt and Film Freak, Boone is left to die by Joker's laughing gas.[5] His brother, code-named Blue Shrike, appears as well, battling Nightwing in honor of his brother on Lazarus Island.[6]

Queen Shrike

The notorious Queen Shrike, Khea Taramka, is the queen of Hawkworld for over two thousand years and returned during Brightest Day. She is allied with Hath-Set, and after capturing Hawkgirl, she reveals that she is the mother of Princess Chay-Ara of Egypt. She kills Hath-Set with her legs. The entity of The Star Sapphires, The Predator takes over the queen. It states to Hawkman and Hawkgirl that this is their last incarnation. The Hawks separate the queen from the entity, then the skeletons from their past incarnations come alive to take the queen to another dimension.

In other media

The Boone incarnation of Shrike makes a non-speaking cameo appearance in .

Notes and References

  1. Book: Greenberger . Robert . The Essential Batman Encyclopedia . 2008 . Del Rey . 9780345501066 . 324–325.
  2. Suicide Squad #67 (January 2010). DC Comics.
  3. Villains United: Infinite Crisis Special
  4. The Flash (vol. 5) #61. DC Comics.
  5. Suicide Squad (vol. 7) #1. DC Comics.
  6. Robin Versus the World! #1. DC Comics.