Venus
Originally believed to be the Olympian goddess of love herself, this immortal beauty eventually revealed a more complex truth: she is a siren who took on the identity of Venus/Aphrodite. Possessing an enchanting voice and supernatural allure, she later joined Jimmy Woo's covert team, the Agents of Atlas.
Few Golden Age Marvel characters carry the sheer mythic weight of Venus, who made her debut in 1948 courtesy of creator George Klein and has been captivating readers ever since. Emerging from the postwar era of wonder and imagination, she's one of those rare figures whose story stretches across an astonishing 75 years of comics history β from her own self-titled series through the swashbuckling pages of Atlas and into the Olympian grandeur of Incredible Hercules. Along the way she's shared adventures with a remarkable roster of characters including Namora, Jimmy Woo, Ken Hale, and Bob Grayson, placing her at the heart of some of Marvel's most beloved cult-favorite corners. With two key-issue appearances to her name and nearly seven decades of publication history, Venus is exactly the kind of deep-cut Golden Age gem that rewards the curious collector willing to look beyond the familiar faces.
Real name. Victoria Nutley Starr (alias "Vicki Starr"); originally written as the Olympian goddess Venus/Aphrodite
Powers. Siren physiology: superhuman beauty/allure that magically enchants and pacifies others, empathic emotional manipulation, hypnotic singing voice, longevity; later magically perfected into a fully-souled being.
Affiliations. Agents of Atlas; G-Men/G.I. era FBI team led by Jimmy Woo; Olympians (originally claimed)

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Covers through the years β 1948β2019
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1948
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1972
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2019