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Lillian Rose (WFC -252)

Image from World's Finest, Vol. 1 #252 (September 1978).[4]

Poison Ivy was an enemy of Batman and his allies, including the Justice League. A former botanist, she was transformed into a plant-human hybrid.

She and her sidekick Honeysuckle were former members of the Super Foes.


Background Information[]

In the parallel-universe of Earth-One, Dr. Lillian Rose, PhD[5] was born in Washington, and the daughter of a wealthy family.

While attending college in Seattle she becomes a promising botanist. She falls in love with one of her teachers, Marc LeGrande who persuades her into assisting him with the theft of an Egyptian artifact containing ancient herbs. Fearing she would implicate him in the theft, he betrays her and attempts to poison her with the herbs - which are deadly and untraceable. She survives this murder attempt and discovers she has acquired an immunity to all natural toxins and diseases. Born in Washington, she is the daughter of a wealthy family. She attended college in Seattle, where she studied botany.[6]

Turning to crime, Lillian adopted the alias of Poison Ivy and appeared in public for the first time in Gotham City in order to challenge the most renowned criminals for the title of Public Enemy No. 1.[7]


Lilly Rose (WFC -252)

Lilly Rose from World's Finest, Vol. 1 #252 (September 1978)

Poison Ivy (comic book)

Powers and Abilities[]

Super Powers[]

Abilities[]


Appearances[]

Poison Ivy did not appear in any episode of the Superfriends TV Show.

Earth-One Appearances:

  • Justice League of America, #111 (May/June 1974)
  • JLA 80-Page Giant, #2/2 (November 1999) -- post-crisis retconned appearance
  • Justice League of America, #143 (June 1977)
  • Justice League of America, #158 (September 1978)

Earth-1A Appearances:


Notes[]

  • Poison Ivy first appeared in Batman, Vol. 1 #181 (June, 1966). (June 1966).[8]


External Links[]


References[]

  1. 'Lillian Rose' was Poison Ivy's name as conceived by Gerry Conway in the pages of World's Finest, Vol. 1 #252 (September 1978). It's not certain why or if he had simply forgotten that she was referred to by the name "Pamela Isley" four years earlier in Justice League of America Vol. 1 # 111 (June 1974). Following this however, Pamela Isley was once again the name commonly used. In 1989, it was explained that her Lillian Rose alias came from a falsified file in the FBI archives. It was Neil Gaiman who wrote that in Secret Origins, Vol. 2 #36 (January, 1989). Go to the DC Database for more on World's Finest, Vol. 1 #252 (September 1978) and Secret Origins, Vol. 2 #36 (January, 1989).
  2. Fryda Wolff provided the voice of the Earth-508 version of Poison Ivy.
  3. Clare Grant provided the voice of a parody version of Poison Ivy in Robot Chicken DC Comics Special II: Villains in Paradise.
  4. This image was reprinted in SuperAmigos, #11 (1979)
  5. The DC Database states that the FBI wrongly recorded Poison Ivy's name as Lillian Rose. This is conjecture because in her prior appearance in Justice League of America, #111 (June, 1974) she was referred to as Pamela Isley.
  6. As revealed in World's Finest, Vol. 1 #252 (September 1978).
  7. As revealed in Batman, Vol. 1 #181 (June, 1966).
  8. Go to the DC Database for more on Batman, Vol. 1 #181 (June, 1966).
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