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Spider-Girl is the code name of several fictional characters in comic books published by Marvel Comics.The most prominent version and first to receive an ongoing series is Mayday Parker from the MC2 universe, the second version is Anya Corazon, and the third version is Gwen Warren, the latter two from the Earth-616 universe.
The title was relaunched as The Amazing Spider-Girl, and later The Spectacular Spider-Girl. The character made her cinematic debut in the 2023 feature film Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse , with an infant Mayday depicted as the daughter of Peter B. Parker and his universe's Mary Jane Watson.
A very young Jorōgumo child is the focus of a one-episode OVA made in 2012 by Toshihisa Kaiya and Daishirou Tanimura, titled Wasurenagumo (Li'l Spider-Girl). Many years ago she was sealed away in the book by her own caretaker – the priest who defeated her monstrous mother but had no heart to kill the yokai child.
The first portrayed Spider-Girl, Mayday Parker, first appeared in a one-shot story in the ongoing series What If.Following positive fan response to the concept, Spider-Girl and two other series (A-Next and J2) set in the same alternate future universe were launched under the MC2 imprint.
As the new Spider-Girl, she starred in a monthly Spider-Girl comic that debuted on November 17, 2010 [3] as a tie-in to the "Big Time" storyline in The Amazing Spider-Man. [4] With the change of moniker to Spider-Girl, she's the second published character to adopt the "Spider-Girl" alter-ego, but she actually comes prior to the first character ...
The character appears in the "Spider-Verse" and Spider-Geddon storylines, now referred with her father's surname as Ashley Barton, and alternately referred to as "Spider-Girl" and "Spider-Woman" due to the family-friendly nature of the narrative, and is among the spider-powered characters who are recruited by Superior Spider-Man (Doctor Octopus ...
Spider Girl (Sussa Paka) is a supervillain appearing in books published by DC Comics. The character was first mentioned, in 1963, as a concept in the letters page of Adventure Comics when a fan suggested a character with the power of super-strong prehensile hair.
The Legend of the Blue Lotus. The following is a list of female superheroes in comic books, television, film, and other media. Each character's name is followed by the publisher's name in parentheses; those from television or movies have their program listed in square brackets, and those in both comic books and other media appear in parentheses.