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Original X-Men character Iceman outed as gay

Bobby Drake gets more than he bargained for in meeting with mind-reading mutant

Matilda Battersby
Wednesday 22 April 2015 07:26 EDT
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X-2: X-men 2 (X2) Patrick Stewart, Xavier (Character) Anna Paquin, Rogue (Character) James Marsden, Cyclops (Character) Shawn Ashmore, Iceman (Character) Famke Janssen, Jean Grey (Character) Halle Berry, Storm (Character) Hugh Jackman, Wolverine (Characte
X-2: X-men 2 (X2) Patrick Stewart, Xavier (Character) Anna Paquin, Rogue (Character) James Marsden, Cyclops (Character) Shawn Ashmore, Iceman (Character) Famke Janssen, Jean Grey (Character) Halle Berry, Storm (Character) Hugh Jackman, Wolverine (Characte (Rex Features)

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One of Marvel’s original X-Men is gay according to a leak of pages from this week’s issue of the All New X-Men comic book.

Bobby Drake/Iceman, who has the ability of cryokinesis, is told by a mind-reading mutant called Jean Grey that he prefers men in the four-page sequence written by Brian Michael Bendis and Mahmud Asrar.

Initially the character, who is played by Shawn Ashmore in the X-Men films, denies he is gay, but later admits it, saying: “I don’t know what I want to do with all this yet.”

Fans have been debating the news on social media with a lot of people pointing out the fact that Bobby appears to have been “outed” without his consent.

Also under discussion was the fact that the “future” version of the character of Iceman is presented as straight and has had several relationships with women.

Bobby Drake/Iceman meets Jean Grey
Bobby Drake/Iceman meets Jean Grey

Some have also suggested that Jean is dismissing the possibility that Bobby might be bisexual: “Maybe I'm bi," he says. "They say everybody is," she responds.

"There are thousands if not millions of stories of people who, for many different reasons, felt the need to hide their sexuality," writer Bendis said in a statement.

"The X-Men, with the conceit of time travel, give us a fascinating platform in which to examine such personal journeys. This is just the first little chapter of a much larger story that will be told."

Bendis also revealed that the leaked scene "is just the first little chapter of a much larger story that will be told.”

Shawn Ashmore as Iceman with Anna Paquin as Rogue in X-2: X-men 2
Shawn Ashmore as Iceman with Anna Paquin as Rogue in X-2: X-men 2 (Rex Features)

Despite the boundless imaginative potential of the Marvel Universe it has had a very poor record for LGBT representation until recent times.

But in 2012 Marvel’s first openly gay superhero, Jean-Paul Beaubier, aka Northstar, proposed to his boyfriend Kyle Jinadu and went onto have the first same-sex marriage in comic book history.

DC Comics and Hollywood studios have also been behind in terms of presenting superheroes who aren’t just heterosexual.

However, DC’s Batwoman is currently the only gay comic book character with her own ongoing title.

No flash in the pan: Ezra Miller
No flash in the pan: Ezra Miller (Photo by Didier Messens/WireImage)

Despite recent spate of superhero films from Hollywood there has only been one LGBT character – a cameo appearance from msnbc’s real-life anchorman Thomas Roberts in Iron Man 3.

Last year Ezra Miller made history when he became the first openly LGBT actor to be cast as a superhero in a major Hollywood film.

There has also recently been more major female characters in comic books (Mighty Thor, played by Chris Hemsworth in the movies, was last year revealed to be a woman) as well as more racial diversity (Ms Marvel was rebooted as a Pakistani-American Muslim).

"You can be cynical about it," Chris Thompson at London's Orbital Comics shop told The Independent last year. "But, in reality, these changes are more about redressing the balance. Up until now, superheroes have been straight white males, so by introducing gay characters, varying their ages, and putting in more women, they're just reflecting the diversity of the readership. This way, anyone who walks into a comic shop can find a character they relate to."

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