Nanny and Orphan-Maker

Nanny
Nanny as seen in Hellions #1. (Art by Stephen Segovia)
Publication information
PublisherMarvel Comics
First appearanceX-Factor #30 (July 1988)
Created byLouise Simonson
Walt Simonson
In-story information
Alter egoEleanor Murch
SpeciesHuman Mutant
Cyborg
Team affiliationsExiles
Hellions
Nanny's Lost Boys (and Girls)
Abilities
  • Telepathy, mind control
  • Scientific genius
  • Armor provides:
    Flight,
    Teleportation,
    Various gadgets and weaponry including rockets and pistol
Orphan-Maker
Orphan-Maker as seen on the cover of Hellions #17. (Art by Stephen Segovia)
Publication information
PublisherMarvel Comics
First appearanceX-Factor #31 (August 1988)
Created byLouise Simonson
Walt Simonson
In-story information
Alter egoPeter
SpeciesHuman Mutant
Team affiliationsExiles
Hellions
Nanny's Lost Boys (and Girls)
AbilitiesArmor provides:
Superhuman strength and resistance,
Wields energy weapons

Nanny and Orphan-Maker are fictional mutant characters appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. Their first appearances were in X-Factor vol. 1 #30 (Nanny) and #31 (Orphan-Maker).[1] The duo see themselves as "protectors" of mutant children, whom they abduct after murdering their parents. While intelligent, Nanny is highly irrational. Orphan-Maker, who is a young child encased in an adult-sized armor, behaves with the immaturity of his actual age.

Publication history

Nanny and Orphan-Maker first appeared as opponents of X-Factor, a super-team made up of the five original X-Men. Nanny first appeared in X-Factor #30 (August 1988), while Orphan-Maker was introduced in X-Factor #31 (September 1988). They were created by Louise Simonson and Walt Simonson.

They eventually became regular supporting characters in books featuring X-Men-related characters. Their appearances include X-Factor #35 (December 1988), #40 (May 1989), The Uncanny X-Men #247-248 (August–September 1989), #265-267 (August–September 1990), Generation X #2-4 (December 1994-February 1995), Generation X Holiday Special #1 (February 1998), Slingers #9 (August 1999), and Wolverine: Killing Made Simple #1 (October 2008).

They received an entry in the Official Handbook of the Marvel Universe Update '89 #5.

Fictional characters biography

First encounters

Eleanor Murch, the woman who would become known as Nanny, was a mutant with low-level telepathy and mind control powers. She was employed as a scientist by the organization known as the Right. When Murch discovered the Right's anti-mutant agenda, she tried to thwart their plans but was captured. To punish and enslave Murch, the Right turned her into a cyborg by sealing her body into an egg-shaped armored suit that she had designed. She managed to escape, driven insane by her experience.[2]

Now calling herself Nanny, Murch vowed to save mutant children, believing that their families were evil. She discovered the existence of a child called Peter, who was being held captive in Mister Sinister's "orphanage". Sinister had placed Peter in his orphanage as a small child in order to use him as a weapon once his X-Gene was activated but, upon realising Peter's powers were too dangerous, decided that the child should be executed. Nanny rescued Peter, who became the first of her "Lost Boys (and Girls)". Nanny fitted him with a suit of armor that would suppress his uncontrollable powers and give him the appearance of a large Man, christening him Orphan-Maker. Nanny and Orphan-Maker embarked on a crusade to "save" young mutant children by killing their parents of young mutants (and thus "orphaning" them) and abducting them.[3][4][5]

They would confront the X-Men operating out of a small, faux-town in the Australian outback. Dazzler and Havok are ambushed and stunned in a ship designed to look like a crash-landed artifact. The captured are physically converted into children. They are given battlesuits themselves and convinced to attack the other X-Men. Some assistance is given by Jubilee, whom the X-Men did not know of at the time. [volume & issue needed]

Orphan-Maker and Nanny are temporarily defeated after Colossus rescues Havok from his battlesuit. Confused and disoriented from his experience, Havok blasts Nanny's ship, causing much destruction and seemingly causing the apparent death of Storm.[6] However, Orphan-Maker and Nanny had left behind a dead body that looked like Storm, while de-aging and kidnapping her.[7]

Later appearances

During an incident where a mentally ill young mutant had taken hostages inside his school, Orphan-Maker was driven away partly because the mutant Skin managed to interfere with his suit's energy flow. He managed to escape pursuit in a technologically advanced vehicle disguised as an ice cream truck.[8]

Later on, he and Nanny battled with Wolverine after they tried to make an orphan out of Trance (a former X-student).[9]

Dawn of X

In the new status quo for mutants post House of X and Powers of X, Professor X and Magneto invite all mutants to live on Krakoa and welcome even former enemies into their fold.[10] Nanny and Orphan Maker join a loose group of outcast mutants, operating under Mister Sinister: the Hellions, which also comprise Havok, Kwannon, Empath, John Greycrow, and Wild Child.[11] Their first mission put them against Mister Sinister and Madelyne Pryor.[12]

Their second mission was to the Hell-like dimension of Amenth through Otherworld. Sinister had arranged this mission in order to steal the weapons of the Swordbearers of Arakko forcing them to forfeit Saturnyne's X of Swords challenge. When they got there Sinister betrayed them by revealing they were actually there to collect DNA samples from the mutants of Arakko and Nanny, Orphan-Maker and Wild Child were killed by the godlike Arakki mutant Tarn the Uncaring and his servants the Locus Vile.[13]

They were resurrected by the Five and as a result of dying in Amenth, came back different and stronger. Realizing how potentially dangerous Orphan-Maker would be if he came back the same way, the rest of the team had to team had to reclaim Nanny's ship from The Right so she could build a new suit of armor to contain his powers.[14]

On his return, Orphan-Maker became more physically mature, though still mentally and emotionally stunted, he developed a rebellious streak and began trying to be more independent from Nanny.[15] This did not last long however, and he soon went back to craving Nanny's attention. However, due to his earlier behavior, she neglected him and began caring for an orphaned A.I. baby that she'd taken, unbeknownst to the rest of the team..[16] Orphan-Maker eventually discovered the baby in Nanny's room, when she found him holding it, she became furious and kicked him out, threatening him if he ever told anyone, causing him to break down in tears.[17]

After the Hellions' final mission, a re-match with Tarn and the Locus Vile, which ended with the destruction of Sinister's secret clone farm (and the death of the Sinister/Tarn the Uncaring Chimera he had been working on), Nanny's ship was hijacked by the Right and her husband Dr. Harold Murch. She escaped but her robot "child" was stolen.[18]

Desperate to prove himself to Nanny, Orphan-Maker stormed the Right's base to retrieve his "baby brother". The rest of the Hellions (minus Nanny, Sinister and Empath) reformed to pursue him and give him aid. He managed to single-handedly fight his way into the heart of the compound and find the robot, only for Nanny to immediately storm in after and take it from him. In spite of his heroism she continued to ignore him and pay attention to the robot, only for its mutant-hating A.I. to kick-in, causing it to kill her. Distraught over her death, Peter went on a rampage and killed everyone he came across.[19]

Peter was put on trial by the Quiet Council of Krakoa for killing two innocent humans, with the Hellions as character references. In spite of their pleas and Nightcrawler's defense, a terrified Orphan-Maker was sentenced to exile within Krakoa's Pit of Exile. Just as he was about to be swallowed into the depths of the island, a returned Nanny intervened, demanding to be exiled with him. After threatening the Council members and their families, the two were both found guilty. They were swallowed up by the island together as Nanny sang him a nursery rhyme.[20] After spending some time in The Pit, they were eventually freed by Cypher along with the other exiles: Third-Eye, Nekra, Oya, Madison Jeffries, Melter and Toad. They were then sent from Krakoa with the mission to hunt down Sabretooth.[21]

Tracking Peter to an Orchis facility on Noble Island, Nanny became jealous of the friendships he was developing with the rest of the team and guilted him into staying on the boat. However they were attacked by a super-powered Orchis member named "The Creation" who kidnapped Orphan-Maker for experimentation because of how destructive his powers were. Nanny assured the rest of the team that if they separated Orphan-Maker from his armour no one on earth would survive.[22] At Orchis's second base for Mutant experimentation, Peter was taken care of by Dr Barrington who, after finding out only he could remove his suit, manipulated him into removing his mask. Without his mask, Peter's X-Gene finally activated and his face glowed with energy, apparently killing Dr. Barrington. Peter was later reunited with Nanny and the rest of the Exiles who had come to rescue him, he apologised to Nanny for breaking his promise to her never to remove her armor and tried to put his helmet back on, but the damage was done and his powers were about to destroy the whole base. Sabretooth suggested throwing him in a volcano to rest of the groups anger. Third-Eye then put into motion another plan that involved taking them back to the Astral Plane.[23] Initially in shock over Barrington's death, Peter was given a new suit, built for him by Nanny and Jeffries.[24]

Powers and abilities

Nanny is a mutant with low-level telepathic and mind control abilities. She is also a genius-level cyberneticist. She is able to can regress the bodies of adult mutants to those of children, presumably through technological means. Her telepathic powers allow her to regress the adults to the mindset of a child. Her body is encased within her armor, which allows her to fly and teleport.

Orphan-Maker is a mutant, he possesses an unknown but potentially world-ending power. Everyone aware of how it works is afraid of what will happen if his X-Gene becomes active, including Professor X, Nanny, and Mister Sinister.[25][26][27] He wears a battle suit that gives him certain abilities but also suppresses his natural ones.[28] If any part of his body spends too much time outside the armor, the armor will no longer be able to contain it.[29]

Orphan-Maker's armor is highly resistant to most forms of attack, and has certain reflective properties that enhances his strength and allows him to deflect energy attacks such as Cyclops' optic blasts. Orphan-Maker is equipped with large guns that fire destructive energies. When he was outfitted with his new armor, the suit had the capability of forming guns out of its hands.

His armor being breached in a fight with the Marauders, caused him to begin spewing an acid-like substance that melted Scrambler's face.[30] When he took his helmet off on his own volition, his head glowed with ethereal white energy, and the person closest to him was apparently killed instantly. Super powered beings seem to be able to stand close to him in this state slightly longer.[31]

After dying in Amenth, his physique, personality and powers were all enhanced to an unknown degree. Although this effect may have only been temporary.[32] Also, he remains intellectually a child.

Footnotes

  1. ^ 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. 263. ISBN 978-1-4654-7890-0.
  2. ^ X-Factor #40. Marvel Comics.
  3. ^ X-Factor #31-33. Marvel Comics.
  4. ^ Hellions #7. Marvel Comics.
  5. ^ Sabretooth & the Exiles #2. Marvel Comics.
  6. ^ Uncanny X-Men #248. Marvel Comics.
  7. ^ The Uncanny X-Men #253–257 (November 1989 – January 1990) Marvel Comics
  8. ^ Generation X #4
  9. ^ Wolverine: Killing Made Simple (one-shot) #1.
  10. ^ House of X #5. Marvel Comics.
  11. ^ Hellions #1-. Marvel Comics.
  12. ^ Hellions #1-4. Marvel Comics.
  13. ^ Hellions #5-6. Marvel Comics.
  14. ^ Hellions #7-8. Marvel Comics.
  15. ^ Hellions #9. Marvel Comics.
  16. ^ Hellions #8-13. Marvel Comics.
  17. ^ Hellions #13. Marvel Comics.
  18. ^ Hellions #16. Marvel Comics.
  19. ^ Hellions #17. Marvel Comics.
  20. ^ Hellions #18. Marvel Comics.
  21. ^ Sabretooth Vol 4 #5. Marvel Comics.
  22. ^ Sabretooth & the Exiles #1. Marvel Comics.
  23. ^ Sabretooth & the Exiles #2. Marvel Comics.
  24. ^ Sabretooth & the Exiles #3. Marvel Comics.
  25. ^ X-Factor #31-33. Marvel Comics.
  26. ^ Hellions #7. Marvel Comics.
  27. ^ Sabretooth & the Exiles #1-2. Marvel Comics.
  28. ^ Hellions #7. Marvel Comics.
  29. ^ Sabretooth & the Exiles #2. Marvel Comics.
  30. ^ Hellions #4. Marvel Comics.
  31. ^ Sabretooth & the Exiles #2. Marvel Comics.
  32. ^ Hellions #9. Marvel Comics.
  • Nanny at The Appendix to the Handbook of the Marvel Universe
  • Orphan-Maker at The Appendix to the Handbook of the Marvel Universe