Graydon Creed is a fictional character appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. The character was created by writer Scott Lobdell and artist Brandon Peterson and first appeared in The Uncanny X-Men #299 (April 1993). He is the "baseline human" son of Sabretooth and Mystique.[1]
Graydon Creed | |
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Publication information | |
Publisher | Marvel Comics |
First appearance | The Uncanny X-Men #299 (April 1993) |
Created by | Scott Lobdell Brandon Peterson |
In-story information | |
Species | Human |
Team affiliations | Purifiers Upstarts Friends of Humanity |
Notable aliases | Tribune Bad Seed |
Abilities | None |
Fictional character biography
editPosing as German spy Leni Zauber, Mystique seduced freelance assassin Victor Creed (Sabretooth) while he was in Germany on a mission. Mystique later gave birth to a normal human child—Graydon—whom she gave up for adoption, although she kept an eye on him. When Graydon learned that he was the son of two mutants who had abandoned him as an inconvenience, he grew resentful of all mutants and that resentment colored his outlook for the rest of his life.[2]
In his adult years, Graydon formed a group called the Friends of Humanity, dedicated to opposing mutant civil rights by committing acts of terrorism against peaceful mutants and mutant sympathizers, and using the acts of violent mutants such as Magneto to rally support for their cause.
Upstarts
editCreed also came to join the Upstarts, a group of wealthy and powerful individuals who had been brought together by Selene and the enigmatic telepathic Gamesmaster with the sole purpose of killing mutants for points in a twisted game. After learning of his parents' identities, Creed sought to kill them as part of the Upstarts' game. Disguised as the armored Tribune, Creed hired assassins to kill his mother and had his father implanted with a bomb. His father managed to remove the device and confronted his son, who callously stabbed Sabretooth's assistant, Birdy, a mutant telepath whom Sabretooth employed to keep his homicidal rages in check.
During the Upstarts' self-professed "Younghunt", Creed was blackmailed into revealing the location of the Upstarts' prisoners by the New Warriors, who threatened to expose Creed as a mutant collaborator and the son of mutants.[3]
Death
editLater, using the resources he had gained through the Friends of Humanity, and with the support of the government-sponsored anti-mutant taskforce, Operation: Zero Tolerance, Creed nominated himself as a presidential candidate and ran on an anti-mutant platform.[4][5] Capitalizing on a near-hysterical fear of mutants in the general public (specially after the Onslaught debacle),[6] Creed's popularity surged, which led to the Daily Bugle newspaper launching an investigation into Creed's activities, on-principle.[7] When a reporter from the Bugle obtained information regarding Creed's parentage, Zero Tolerance's leader, Bastion, killed the journalist to prevent the news from leaking out.[8] Although they stopped the reporter, Creed did not manage to catch that the X-Men had also infiltrated his presidential campaign, by planting Bobby Drake (under the alias of "Drake Roberts") and Sam Guthrie (under the alias of "Samson Guthry") as Creed's assistants.[9][10]
On the eve of the election, Creed was assassinated during a campaign speech when a plasma beam completely disintegrated him.[11] Several years later, the miniseries, X-Men Forever, revealed that a future version of Mystique had fired the shot,[12] having sworn to kill Graydon for his part in the Friends of Humanity's brutal attack on Trevor Chase, the grandson of her lover, Destiny.[13]
Purifiers
editThe pages of X-Force show a group of Purifiers digging up the corpse of Graydon Creed, his body is then taken back to their base. It is re-animated by Bastion using the techno-organic virus taken from an "offspring" of Magus.[14] Creed later went public with his return, claiming that his death was faked all along to allow him to go underground and avoid persecution from mutants.
During the Second Coming storyline, Graydon Creed, alongside Steven Lang, is killed by Hope Summers.[15]
Hunt for Wolverine
editDuring the "Hunt for Wolverine" storyline, Sabretooth, Lady Deathstrike, and Daken fight their way past the zombies and soldiers from Soteira Killteam Nine in order to get to the power station where the glowing green box suspected of causing the zombie outbreak is located. Sabretooth discovers that one of the soldiers is a zombie version of his son Graydon. After Lady Deathstrike and Daken are stabbed by a zombie version of Lord Dark Wind, Sabretooth fights his zombified son who states that there is 10 minutes left before Maybelle is burned to the ground.[16] As Sabretooth continues his fight with Graydon, he tries to get answers on how Graydon came back from the dead. He doesn't get an answer. After slaying the zombie Lord Dark Wind, Lady Deathstrike stabs the zombie Graydon in the neck.[17]
Other versions
editAge of Apocalypse
editGraydon Creed goes by the name "Horror Show" in the Age of Apocalypse reality. He's a part of the X-Terminated team with a handful of other humans. He's wearing an armor and appears to have a flamethrower and other firearms.[18] He mentions that his father, Sabretooth, was apparently a brutal, abusive father.[19] During the X-Termination crossover, AoA Nightcrawler's trip home resulted in the release of three evil beings that destroy anyone they touch. Several casualties resulted, including the AoA's Sabretooth, Horror Show, and Fiend, as well as the X-Treme X-Men's Xavier and Hercules.[20]
Age of X
editIn the Age of X reality, Graydon Creed had led a strike force that put the mutant race on the verge of extinction.
House of M
editAfter Magneto's takeover of Genosha during the House of M, Graydon Creed rose to prominence as an anti-mutant activist, becoming friends with vice-president Bolivar Trask. His prominence was short-lived as Magneto (who compared Graydon Creed to Adolf Hitler) viewed it as his duty to rid the world of the man. Magneto sent his assassin Sabretooth to kill him. Graydon Creed's massacred body was found by government agents, and Trask ordered his death ruled an accident to prevent panic.[21]
Mutant X
editIn the Mutant X reality, Graydon Creed became President of the United States after Reed Richards' disappearance. He additionally reinstated S.H.I.E.L.D. and promoted Nick Fury to General.[22]
In other media
editGraydon Creed appears in X-Men: The Animated Series, voiced by John Stocker[citation needed]. In his most notable appearances in the episodes "Beauty and the Beast" and "Bloodlines", he is ousted from the Friends of Humanity after the X-Men expose his mutant heritage and unsuccessfully attempts to re-join them by killing Mystique and Nightcrawler.
References
edit- ^ DeFalco, Tom; Sanderson, Peter; Brevoort, Tom; Teitelbaum, Michael; Wallace, Daniel; Darling, Andrew; Forbeck, Matt; Cowsill, Alan; Bray, Adam (2019). The Marvel Encyclopedia. DK Publishing. p. 95. ISBN 978-1-4654-7890-0.
- ^ Sabretooth #1-4. Marvel Comics.
- ^ New Warriors #45 (March 1994). Marvel Comics.
- ^ Uncanny X-Men #323, #334.
- ^ X-Men (1991) #45, 51.
- ^ Uncanny X-Men #337.
- ^ Uncanny X-Men #337, X-Men (1991) #57.
- ^ Uncanny X-Men #339.
- ^ Uncanny X-Men #338, #340.
- ^ X-Men #58, 59.
- ^ X-Factor #130. Marvel Comics.
- ^ X-Men Forever (2001) #2.
- ^ X-Factor (1986) #127.
- ^ X-Force vol. 3 #3. Marvel Comics.
- ^ X-Force vol. 3 #28. Marvel Comics.
- ^ Hunt for Wolverine: Claws of a Killer #3. Marvel Comics.
- ^ Hunt for Wolverine: Claws of a Killer #4. Marvel Comics.
- ^ Age of Apocalypse #1. Marvel Comics.
- ^ Age of Apocalypse #3. Marvel Comics.
- ^ Astonishing X-Men #60. Marvel Comics.
- ^ Civil War: House of M #3 (2008). Marvel Comics.
- ^ Mutant X #18 (April 2000). Marvel Comics.