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Jean Grey
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Jean Grey

1,572 appearances · Silver Age · 1963–2026 · 97 key issues
Who is Jean Grey?

Born a mutant, Jean Grey manifested powerful telepathic and telekinetic abilities as a teenager and was recruited by Professor Charles Xavier to join his original team of X-Men, where she served as Marvel Girl — one of the five founding members of the iconic squad.

Few characters in Marvel history have left as indelible a mark as Jean Grey, who burst onto the Silver Age scene in the landmark The X-Men #1 (1963), conjured into existence by the legendary duo of Stan Lee and Jack Kirby. A founding X-Men member from the very beginning, she has shared decades of adventures alongside iconic figures like Cyclops, Beast, and the broader mutant family across the pages of The Uncanny X-Men, The X-Men, and X-Men. With over 1,500 catalogued appearances and an extraordinary 97 key issues to her name, Jean's story spans an unbroken 63 years — a testament to how deeply she resonates with readers generation after generation. Whether you're a longtime collector or just discovering the X-Men, Jean Grey is absolutely essential reading: a character whose presence has helped define what Marvel mutant storytelling can be at its very best.

Identity

Real name. Jean Elaine Grey

Powers. Omega-level telepathy and telekinesis; later host of the cosmic Phoenix Force (resurrection, energy manipulation, flight).

Teams & affiliations
X-MenX-Factor
★ First appearance
The X-Men #1
Sep 1963

Part of the Marvel Girl legacy

Jean Grey is one of 2 heroes to carry the Marvel Girl mantle. See the whole Marvel Girl family ▸

Trivia

  • Jean Grey's resurrection hinged on one of Marvel's cleverest retcons — the woman readers watched burn out as Dark Phoenix was retroactively revealed to be the Phoenix Force wearing her face, allowing the genuine article to be pulled back into continuity in Fantastic Four #286.en.wikipedia.org
  • For a character of her stature, Jean Grey's post-Dark Phoenix death was a remarkably stubborn one, stretching across years of publication and making her eventual return a genuine event rather than a routine revolving-door revival.en.wikipedia.org
  • Chris Claremont has written more of Jean Grey's comics than any other writer in our catalog — 142 issues.

Top series

Covers through the years — 1963–2023

The X-Men #1 1963
The X-Men #1
The X-Men #40 1968
The X-Men #40
Giant-Size X-Men #1 1975
Giant-Size X-Men #1
The X-Men #104 1977
The X-Men #104
The Uncanny X-Men #153 1982
The Uncanny X-Men #153
Fantastic Four #286 1986
Fantastic Four #286
X-Men Annual #14 1990
X-Men Annual #14
The Uncanny X-Men #325 1995
The Uncanny X-Men #325
X-Men: Children of the Atom #4 2000
X-Men: Children of the Atom #4
New X-Men #6 2004
New X-Men #6
Avengers vs. X-Men: It's Coming #[nn] 2012
Avengers vs. X-Men: It's Coming #[nn]
Marvel Now! Omnibus #[nn] 2013
Marvel Now! Omnibus #[nn]
Jessica Jones #7 2017
Jessica Jones #7
X-Men #24 2023
X-Men #24

Appearances (1–150 of 1,572, oldest first)

The Avengers (1963)
Tales of Suspense (1959)
#49
Strange Tales (1951)
Fantastic Four (1961)
The Amazing Spider-Man Annual (1964)
#1
Journey into Mystery (1952)
Fantastic Four Annual (1963)
#3
Tales to Astonish (1959)
#97
Fantastic! (1967)
Nick Fury, Agent of SHIELD (1968)
#12
Sub-Mariner (1968)
#14
X-Men Annual (1970)
Secrets of the Unknown (1962)
Amazing Adventures (1970)
Marvel Team-Up (1972)
Fear (1970)
#20
The Incredible Hulk (1968)
Giant-Size Fantastic Four (1974)
#4
The Super-Heroes (1975)
Giant-Size X-Men (1975)
#1
Marvel Treasury Edition (1974)
Rampaging Hulk (1977)
#2
Crazy Magazine (1973)
#28
The Incredible Hulk Annual (1976)
#7
The Comics Journal (1977)
Marvel Triple Action (1972)
Hembeck 1980 [Hembeck Series] (1980)
#2
Marvel Superheroes [Marvel Super-Heroes] (1979)
Marvel Super Action (1977)
#21