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#molly mayne
magenta-racer · 18 days
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AlMolly
Every time I see an underrated ship I love, I have the urge to draw them. :v
Art © Me. Green Lantern I (Alan Scott) and Harlequin I (Molly Scott) © DC Comics.
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dailydccomics · 8 months
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i love seeing old people in love Aquaman vol 5 #44
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inksilvery · 2 months
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I can’t call it a redesign, because in my opinion I don’t know anything about design. Just my visionof costume
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cantsayidont · 7 months
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November 1985 (albeit set in July 1985). As this issue finally reveals, Alan Scott, the Golden Age Green Lantern, was married very briefly in the mid-1960s to a woman named Alyx Florin, who was actually Rose Canton, a.k.a. The Thorn, a Golden Age Flash villain with a split personality. Alan had thought that Alyx died in a fire on their wedding night, but she actually fled and later had two children, who were raised by adoptive parents as Jennie-Lynn Hayden (Jade) and Todd Rice (Obsidian). The Thorn eventually reemerged and nearly killed both Alan and their kids before her Rose/Alyx personality briefly reasserted itself and she took her own life. Afterward, Green Lantern's old frenemy The Harlequin (Molly Maynne), who'd been following Rose in hopes of intervening, explained what she had pieced together about the whole sad story, and revealed for the first time that she was actually Alan's former secretary, who'd been in love with him since the 1940s. Alan then asked her to marry him.
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This wedding, incidentally, took place on July 23, 1985; this was the era where writer Roy Thomas was still trying to keep the JSA moored to real time.
Alan and Molly were still married as of the vile BLACKEST NIGHT crossover, but were both temporarily banished from continuity by the New 52 reboot. With the current revival of DC's Golden Age characters and the revelation that Alan is gay, I figure it's a coin flip whether Molly is simply ignored or killed off in some awful way.
(There's no particular reason Alan being gay would necessarily erase his past marriages — his decision to marry Molly in this story was the act of a lonely middle-aged man who'd just faced a series of upsetting events and revelations in the midst of a world-shattering crisis — but given how little use DC has for older female characters and how contemptuous fans are of female characters who stand in the way of their gay blorbos, I think the likelihood of Molly being treated with any respect (if she's mentioned at all) is probably low.)
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lonestarfangirl2014 · 4 months
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ALAN WELLINGTON LADD-SCOTT!!!!
I absolutely love the fact that DC keeps giving you kids to dad!
Lol
No but seriously yall
We all know about todd and Jennifer
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BUT
for those not keeping up with the latest justice society stuff.
WE GOT NEW POTENTIAL SCOTT KIDS!
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RUBY SOKOV AND MICHAEL MAYNE
Ruby's the daughter of red lantern vladimir sokov
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And
surprise surprise
The guy was Alan's sneaky link back during the war.
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Moving on!
Michael Mayne is the son of Molly Mayne who if you know your dc facts used to be married to alan back in the new earth era of comics. Said marriage was alluded to when Alan came out to his kids. The comics haven't dove into Alan's marriages in the prime earth continuity yet so alot of things are protentially up in the air regarding Michael himself. Could he be a previously unknown third scott kid? Just a ex step son? Idk guess if he ever gets any focus we will probably find out
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ufonaut · 8 days
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A compilation of Alan Scott's office (& sometimes penthouse) over the years, presented in chronological order by publication date rather than in-universe date. This compilation does not include sightings or mentions of the Gotham Broadcasting Company by itself (of which there are plenty more) but specifically of Alan's office.
Comic Cavalcade (1942) #18 -- earliest mention of Alan having a private office, at this point he's a producer and radio announcer at WXYZ Radio on top of his usual radio engineer/technician duties.
Green Lantern (1941) #38 -- the final issue of Alan's solo shows his office in closer detail, and also mentions he's now a "big-shot radio executive".
Green Lantern (1960) #45 -- Alan's first appearance back in GL #40 had established him as the president of the GBC but this issue offers a glimpse of his office.
All-Star Comics (1976) #60, #64 -- arguably one of the best arcs Alan's ever gotten and certainly the most famous one with the GBC at its centre, these issues offer a good look at his penthouse and office alike.
Justice Society of America (1991) #3 -- a flashback to 1951 during Alan's time as general manager of the Gotham Broadcasting Company.
Green Lantern Corps Quarterly (1992) #3 -- set soon after Alan's return from Ragnarok, the office (or the penthouse?) seemed to have change a little in his absence.
The Golden Age (1993) #1, #3 -- a look at one of the GBC's most troubled periods in the early 1950s also provides the most comprehensive look at Alan's office since the 1970s.
JLA (1997) #28 -- temporarily relocated after the Gotham earthquake, Alan's new GBC office appears to have a computer.
Detective Comics (1937) #784 -- a look at Alan's penthouse in GBC's New York location.
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dc-comics-fashion · 4 months
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Dress for Molly Mayne "Harlequin"
Peter Pilotto Fall 2016
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dailyjsa · 11 months
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Golden Age Secret Files and Origins #1
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earth489 · 1 year
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Alan Scott and Molly Mayne are both gay on Earth 489, and both married each other for the same reason (desperate attempt to reaffirm their heterosexuality). However, they both eventually come out to each other. They don't divorce though (too complicated to deal with on top of their already crazy lives, plus they platonically love each other too much to see a reason to do so).
I'd like to note that they only came out to each other long after having a total of 4 kids (Jennie and Todd from Rose Canton on Alan's side, Michael Mayne on Molly's side, and their youngest and only shared child, Jill).
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fancyfade · 11 months
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aldsfkj norda
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infinity inc #22
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magenta-racer · 3 days
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Commission Art - Embrace
WONDERFUL artwork made by @leanmeanannabean! Honestly I'm loving working with her, she's highly skilled and gets your idea perfectly, I couldn't be more satisfied with her great work. 🥰
Alan and Molly sharing some loving after the patrol hehe.
Art © @leanmeanannabean
Green Lantern (Alan Scott) and Harlequin (Molly Mayne-Scott) © DC Comics.
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thepjonerd · 17 days
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cantsayidont · 7 months
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September 1947. Alan Scott, the Golden Age Green Lantern, meets one of his most unusual enemies: The Harlequin, a mysterious (and silly-looking) villainess who could cast hypnotic illusions with her stylish glasses. Although Alan didn't know it until many years later, she was actually his devoted secretary, Molly Maynne (in modern stories sometimes spelled "Mayne"), who was enamored of Green Lantern and became a villain (albeit not a very evil one) in hopes of getting getting his attention. The Harlequin's bizarre costume was actually devised by radio sponsor J.Q. Lentil (probably intended as a parody of Lucky Strike tobacco president George Washington Hill, although he's described as the head of a department store chain rather than a tobacco company) for a proposed Green Lantern radio show, although neither Lentil, Alan, nor the WXYZ network for which Alan was program director knew Molly had taken on the role herself.
The Harlequin made eight Golden Age appearances in 1947–1948, and even briefly joined the Injustice Society of the World in ALL-STAR COMICS #41. Her final appearance in GREEN LANTERN #34 claimed, nonsensically, that the Harlequin had been working for the FBI the whole time, although neither she nor her FBI contact revealed her true identity to Green Lantern.
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lesbiandinin · 1 year
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Rose Canton & Molly Mayne circa. 1948
A big thank you to @neottia-orchids for an astonishingly soft piece. It really radiates love I think.
A romance started between two 'villains' Harlequin and the Thorn in the Golden Age.
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inhousearchive · 1 year
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House-ad for Green Lantern (1941) #31. Art by Irwin Hasen.
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ufonaut · 1 year
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Alan Scott in Justice Society of America (2022) #1
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