Comedian (character)

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The Comedian
Cover art of Watchmen (French Edition) #1 (1987).
Art by Dave Gibbons.
Publication information
PublisherDC Comics
First appearanceWatchmen #1 (September 1986)
Created by
In-story information
Alter egoEdward Morgan “Eddie” Blake
Team affiliationsFederal government of the United States
Crimebusters
Minutemen
Abilities

The Comedian (Edward Morgan Blake) is a fictional character who debuted in the graphic novel limited series Watchmen, published by DC Comics. The Comedian was created by writer Alan Moore with artist Dave Gibbons. As with most of the main characters in the series, he was an analogue for a Charlton Comics character, in this case the Peacemaker. Moore imagined the Comedian as a mix between the Peacemaker with "a little bit of Nick Fury" and "probably a bit of the standard Captain America patriotic hero-type".[1]

Character background[edit]

Events of Watchmen[edit]

The story of Watchmen starts with the aftermath of Edward Blake's murder in 1985. Fellow crimefighter Rorschach, independently investigating the murder, discovers that Blake was in fact the Comedian. The main plot of Watchmen initially involves Rorschach's suspicion of a plot to kill costumed heroes ("masks"); his continuing investigation into Blake's murder leads to a much larger, more horrifying secret. The Comedian's appearances in Watchmen consist of flashbacks of the other characters. He is also mentioned in Under the Hood, the fictional autobiography of Hollis Mason (Nite Owl I) that appears in Watchmen issues 1–3.

The Comedian was a cigar-chomping, gun-toting vigilante-turned-paramilitary agent. When he first became a costumed adventurer in 1939, he dressed in a clown-like costume with a simple domino mask. A brutal vigilante, Blake manages to expunge most organized crime from the New York harbor. He became the youngest member of The Minutemen, a prominent group of heroes. After a photography shoot, he attempts to rape fellow Minuteman Silk Spectre; she escapes only when another Minuteman, Hooded Justice, interrupted the assault and beat Blake, breaking his nose. The Comedian was expelled from the group—but Silk Spectre's agent persuaded her not to press charges against him for fear of what it would do to the group's image. Blake impregnated Silk Spectre with her daughter and successor, Laurie, during a secret, consensual encounter years later. In the 1940s, Blake updated his Comedian uniform, after being stabbed by a small-time hood. He adopted a leather outfit that served as light body armor, adorned with short star-and-stripe-themed sleeves and a small happy face button. He retained the small domino mask and began carrying a pistol. He fought in World War II, becoming a war hero in the Pacific theater. It is also implied, but not directly stated, that he murdered Hooded Justice in revenge for the beating he suffered.[2]

By the late 1960s, Blake had begun working as a covert government operative. Hollis Mason, the original Nite Owl, had published his autobiography Under the Hood by this point and in it disclosed the Comedian's sexual assault on Sally Jupiter/Silk Spectre. In 1966, he was invited to join the Crimebusters by Captain Metropolis, but he quickly ruined the older hero's hopes of a new team by mocking him, and pointing out that old fashioned crime fighting methods would not save the world from nuclear war.[3]

Alongside Doctor Manhattan, the Comedian played a major role in the United States' war with Vietnam. Shortly after Manhattan's godlike powers forced the North Vietnamese to surrender, Blake was confronted by his lover, a pregnant Vietnamese woman. He told her bluntly that he planned to leave the country immediately without her, and in a rage she slashed his face with a broken bottle. Blake shot and killed her, but the attack left his face permanently disfigured with a scar running from his right eye to the corner of his mouth. After this incident, he began wearing a leather gimp-style mask when dressed as the Comedian.[4]

The costumed adventurers faced massive backlash and rioting in 1977; in response, Congress passed the Keene Act, requiring all heroes to register with the government if they wished to remain active. The majority of them "retired" in anonymity; while others, such as Rorschach, continued their activities in open defiance of the law. Doctor Manhattan and the Comedian were two of the few who registered and were employed by the government. Blake enjoyed his new role in the government and the protection it offered, even going so far as to suggest to members of President Nixon's staff that he had killed Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein before they could reveal the details of the Watergate scandal, as well as being behind the assassination of John F. Kennedy (on Nixon's orders). The Iran hostage crisis in 1980 was resolved when Blake freed the captives after an assault.[5]

It was during his return from a government mission in 1984 that Blake discovered the island where Adrian Veidt (Ozymandias) was conducting his experiments that would ultimately destroy New York City. Shocked and appalled by what he finds, Blake realizes that no one will believe him if he reveals Veidt's plan. He drunkenly breaks into Edgar Jacobi's house and cryptically describes the plan, knowing Jacobi will not understand but not realizing Veidt has the bedroom bugged. Veidt, to ensure that Blake does not compromise his operation, confronts Blake in his high-rise apartment and throws Blake out of the window, killing him.[6][7]

Before Watchmen[edit]

Textless variant cover of Before Watchmen: Comedian #1 (June 2012). Art by Jim Lee.

In Before Watchmen: The Minutemen #1, additional details are revealed about the Comedian while material from the main story is somewhat retconned. It is revealed that the Comedian got his start as a costumed adventurer at the young age of sixteen and had a prior criminal record for assault. Unlike the rest of the costumed heroes of the Minutemen, he is shown to be driven by greed and an inherent love for violence. In particular, he assaults a bartender after breaking up a bar fight and steals liquor and money from the cash register. The issue also implies Blake may have been a victim of severe child abuse as he claims that a "caseworker" told him what he suffered was the cause of his violent outbursts, though Blake's status as an unreliable narrator makes the claim uncertain.[8]

Before Watchmen: Comedian #1 rewrites the character's back-story further. It is revealed that Blake was close personal friends with Robert F. Kennedy and John F. Kennedy as well as Jackie Kennedy. This contradicts the main Watchmen series, which cast Edward Blake as a close personal friend of Richard Nixon (for whom he had worked as an assassin). The mini-series reveals that Blake was responsible for the murder of Marilyn Monroe (ordered by Jackie Kennedy, behind her husband's back) as well as revealing that, despite strong innuendo from both Blake and Ozymandias,[9] that he did not kill John Kennedy and was attempting to confront Moloch when he found the villain watching the live coverage of the assassination, including Kennedy's death, which caused the two foes to commiserate in their grief.[10] It is implied that a former FBI agent with a resemblance to Blake may have been behind it.[11]

Events of Doomsday Clock[edit]

In the sequel comic book Doomsday Clock, the Comedian seemingly turns up alive when he confronts Ozymandias at the time when he was in the DC Universe meeting with Lex Luthor.[12] It is revealed that Doctor Manhattan has captured the Comedian from moments before his death, causing him to wash ashore outside the city of Metropolis and greeting him.[13] The Comedian continues on the trail of Mime and Marionette.[14] He catches up to Joker, Mime, and Marionette when they attend an underground villain meeting held by Riddler to discuss the Superman Theory. He makes himself known by shooting Typhoon in the face. While pursuing them, he evades Giganta's attacks, shoots Riddler in the leg, and uses a grenade to defeat the other villains present. When Mime and Marionette are in bed together the next morning, the Comedian catches up to them, planning to use them to find Ozymandias. Before the Comedian can do anything, Joker comes to Mime and Marionette's rescue where he uses a joy buzzer on the Comedian.[15] As Batman gets free and fights Joker, Mime and Marionette escape with the Comedian and the Lantern Battery.[16] Upon catching up with Ozymandias and shooting him, Lex Luthor shoots the Comedian with a device which returns him to the moment he was taken from, leaving him to die which horrified him and feeling denied of his revenge.[17]

Character inspiration and origin of name[edit]

Alan Moore has stated that the Comedian, besides his comic book inspirations, was also based on G. Gordon Liddy, a former FBI agent and a figure in the Watergate scandal as the chief operative in the White House Plumbers unit during the Nixon Administration.[18] Liddy was convicted of conspiracy, burglary, and illegal wiretapping for his role in the scandal.[19] Moore imagined the Comedian as Liddy with "comic book muscles".[20]

In the comic, Rorschach explains that Blake's moniker of "The Comedian" stems from his cynical and arguably selfish world perspective that "in an insane world", one can only laugh, as if everything is "a joke". Moore took the idea of the name from Graham Greene's novel The Comedians.[21]

Powers and abilities[edit]

The Comedian was a skilled hand-to-hand combatant in excellent physical condition, even at the time of his death at the age of 61. Blake was proficient with his M1911 .45 caliber pistol, MAC-10 submachine gun and pump-action shotgun and was shown using a variety of conventional weaponry in his adventures (flamethrowers, grenade launchers, etc.). His government-sanctioned activities suggest that he received training in covert operations and unconventional warfare.

The smiley face badge[edit]

Throughout the work, the Comedian is typically seen wearing or in close proximity to the "smiley face" button, which is closely associated with him, and has become the iconic symbol of the Watchmen series as a whole. At the beginning of the series, the button is stained with a single drop of blood which, if the button is viewed as a clock face, is at the position of the minute hand of the Doomsday Clock at the time of the series, five minutes to midnight.

In other media[edit]

Television[edit]

  • The Comedian appears in Watchmen: Motion Comic, where he, along with every other character in the series, is voiced by Tom Stechschulte.[22]
  • In Watchmen, supplementary materials reveal that the Comedian's official cause of death was listed as “suspected suicide”. Blake's murder would be exposed by Rorschach following the publication of his journal he sent to the newspaper New Frontiersman. However, the journal would be considered a hoax and just the ramblings of a madman; Adrian Veidt would shrug off the rumors as "fake news". Blake would become a polarizing symbol of American authoritarianism and imperialism and as such, he was simultaneously beloved and loathed. Blake's legacy lives on in his daughter Laurie Blake. Upon learning of her true parentage, she eventually adopted the moniker of "the Comedienne" and took up her father's violent and nihilistic ideology. She eventually took her father's last name and became a government agent as a member of the FBI's Anti-Vigilante Task Force. The Comedian also makes a brief appearance in a flashback as a background character in the episode "This Extraordinary Being" and was portrayed by an uncredited actor.

Film[edit]

Video games[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Cooke, Jon B. "Alan Moore discusses the Charlton-Watchmen Connection". Comic Book Artist #9
  2. ^ Watchmen #2. DC Comics.
  3. ^ Before Watchmen: Minuteman #2. DC Comics.
  4. ^ Before Watchmen: Comedian #2. DC Comics.
  5. ^ Watchmen #4. DC Comics.
  6. ^ Watchmen #1. DC Comics.
  7. ^ Watchmen #11. DC Comics.
  8. ^ Before Watchmen: The Minutemen #1. DC Comics.
  9. ^ Watchmen #10, 12
  10. ^ Before Watchmen: The Comedian #1. DC Comics.
  11. ^ Before Watchmen: Comedian #6. DC Comics.
  12. ^ Doomsday Clock #2 (December 2017). DC Comics.
  13. ^ Doomsday Clock #3 (January 2018). DC Comics.
  14. ^ Doomsday Clock #5 (May 2018). DC Comics.
  15. ^ Doomsday Clock #6 (July 2018). DC Comics.
  16. ^ Doomsday Clock #7 (September 2018). DC Comics.
  17. ^ Doomsday Clock #12 (December 2019). DC Comics.
  18. ^ The Story Behind The Watchmen, by Joshua McConnaughey Archived 2021-02-04 at the Wayback Machine 06-06-2011, Essential Webcomics
  19. ^ Michael Newton (2003). The FBI Encyclopedia. McFarland. p. 196. ISBN 978-0-7864-1718-6.
  20. ^ Cooke, Jon B. "Alan Moore discusses the Charlton-Watchmen Connection". Comic Book Artist #9
  21. ^ Cooke, Jon B. "Alan Moore discusses the Charlton-Watchmen Connection". Comic Book Artist #9
  22. ^ ""Watchmen" (2008) TV Series". Internet Movie Database. Retrieved March 25, 2009.
  23. ^ "Watchmen Cast Confirmed!" superherohype.com; The Hollywood Reporter; July 26, 2007