Adrienne Frost is a supervillain appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. Created by Jay Faerber and Terry Dodson, Adrienne Frost first appeared in Generation X #48 (February 1999). The character appeared in stories set in the Marvel Universe, commonly in association with the X-Men. She is the older sister of Emma Frost, Christian Frost, and Cordelia Frost.

Adrienne Frost
Adrienne Frost as the White Queen of the Hellfire Club
Publication information
PublisherMarvel Comics
First appearanceGeneration X #48 (Feb. 1999)
Created byJay Faerber (writer)
Terry Dodson (artist)
In-story information
SpeciesHuman Mutant
Team affiliationsGeneration X
Hellfire Club
Notable aliasesWhite Queen
AbilitiesPsychometry

Publication history

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Adrienne Frost made her debut in Generation X Vol 1 #48 (Feb. 1999).[1] The issue's scripts were written by Jay Faerber and its comics were drawn by Terry Dodson.

Fictional character biography

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Early years

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Adrienne was the first-born child to Hazel and Winston Frost.[2] Her siblings, Christian, Emma, and Cordelia (who was the last), came after. The Frost family was one of the homes where the parents were not loving and kind, but rather manipulative and controlling. Adrienne established herself as the "perfect child" and was the favorite of their father, with her hoping to gain his favor and inherit the Frost family fortune.

Adrienne was a power monger and showed little remorse or emotion when hurting her siblings, both emotionally and physically. At an early age, Adrienne discovered her mutant ability of psychometry: the ability to touch an object and instantly know the object's history in terms of events surrounding its past, present, and future owners.[3] Her power revealed to her what she had always known: Winston, her father, had little intention of dividing his fortune among all of his children. Instead, he planned to pick the child whom he perceived as being able to guide his company into a state of growth and prosperity.

This simply reinforced her original beliefs, and she became cold and distant from the world. Those who were worth anything were the ones she could manipulate in her chess game of power. Her power allowed her to become a top 'A' student and excel in all her endeavors, and continuing to earn her father's favor. However, Emma's rebellion against their father leads to Winston developing a profound new interest in her. To demoralize her, Adrienne outed Christian, to whom Emma was closest,[4] and set in motion the events that led to his attempted suicide.[5][6][7] She also exposed Emma's kiss with her teacher Ian Kendall, which resulted in him being fired.[8] In retaliation, Emma shocked her sister by exposing Adrienne's secret modeling career,[9] of which their father disapproved.[4]

Despite her plans, Adrienne had no control over the fact that her father saw Emma as akin to him when he was young. Confident, Adrienne gathered with her siblings for her father to reveal who would guide his finances into the next millennium. She thought she was going to be the prime candidate, but was left in shock when their father chose Emma as his heir. However Emma was sick of her father's manipulations, and chose to leave to succeed on her own, leaving Adrienne as the second choice.

Adrienne continued living under her father, at times even enduring his physical abuse. She continued to resent Emma and their father, as she leaked a ransom video to the media of Emma that had been sent to her father. Winston, having become estranged from Emma wished to ignore the video, but was placed in the public eye by Adrienne's actions.

After this, it is unknown what happened to her parents. Adrienne assumed control of Frost Enterprises, using her powers to increase her wealth and influence. She eventually married but she frequently clashed with her husband Steven. Surprisedly Adrienne killed him, using a katana because he had crossed her.[10]

Headmistress of Generation X and Revenge

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Emma approached Adrienne seeking to borrow money after her Massachusetts Academy had fallen into debt. Initially turning Emma down because of their history, Adrienne accepted her offer after using her powers to learn that the academy was secretly the home of Generation X.[2] She became co-headmistress of the Massachusetts Academy and convinced her sister to re-open the school to the public to raise the funds necessary to keep the school open.[11] As a result of the new human student body, Generation-X was forced to wear uniforms that hid their identities. She also gave Generation X new and sometimes questionable assignments, intentionally putting them in harm's way.[12] The first of these assignments was to retrieve from Madripoor, the katana that she had used to kill her husband. Her real intentions for accepting Emma's offer then surfaced. Using a combination of her powers and the Danger Room, she trapped Generation X in a simulation recreating Emma's earlier students The Hellions' demise at the hands of Trevor Fitzroy.[13] She had hoped to drive Emma insane by watching another group of her students die. While Emma and Generation X were able to escape this illusion, Adrienne, now calling herself the new White Queen, escaped by using a teleportation device concealed as a necklace around her neck.[14][15]

Adrienne went to London where she successfully embezzled millions from the London branch of the Hellfire Club.[16] She then began to plot her revenge on Emma by returning to the school, demanding that she be reinstated as headmistress, or she would expose the school as a mutant sanctuary. She revealed the school's mutant students regardless, starting riots among human students, and later planted bombs at the school aimed at killing a maximum number of students - a plot that was only foiled by the sacrifice of Synch, who died containing the blasts.[17][18][19]

Emma later confronted Adrienne, who made it clear that she intended to escalate the violence and endanger more students. Recognizing that her powers did not work on Adrienne, Emma shot her in the chest.[20][15] Emma then hid Adrienne's death from her students, going so far as to mindwipe an investigating policeman.[21] Emma then inherited Adrienne's fortune and Frost Enterprises. Their discovery of Adrienne's murder at Emma's hands caused Generation X to no longer trust Emma.

Posthumous

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Adrienne appeared once more—as that of a mental illusion to her sister Emma, who was having conflicting emotions about having killed her. In the end, however, Emma realized she was not sorry that she had killed Adrienne, only that she did not kill her before she endangered her students.[22]

Powers and abilities

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Adrienne had the mutant ability of psychometry. She was able to touch an object and instantly know a history of many events concerning the object, such as all of its previous owners, events that took place around the object, and the possible future of the object and its future owners.[3] It allowed Adrienne to gather otherwise private information which she turned towards investigation, extortion, and espionage. Emma could not user her powers on Adrienne as the two were sisters, cancelling each other's powers.

Adrienne was also an exceptionally skilled and intelligent businesswoman and expert manipulator.

Footnotes

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  1. ^ Guy, Daniel (2020-12-05). "X-Men: How Marvel's OTHER White Queen Ended a Mutant Generation". CBR. Retrieved 2022-10-11.
  2. ^ a b Generation X #49
  3. ^ a b C. B. R. Staff (2018-07-08). "The 20 Most Powerful Families In Marvel Comics, Officially Ranked". CBR. Retrieved 2022-10-11.
  4. ^ a b Emma Frost #4
  5. ^ Emma Frost #5
  6. ^ Guy, Daniel (2020-12-05). "X-Men: How Marvel's OTHER White Queen Ended a Mutant Generation". CBR. Retrieved 2022-10-11.
  7. ^ Schlesinger, Alex (2022-02-03). "X-Men's Iceman Makes History With The Prom Date His Fans Dreamed Of". ScreenRant. Retrieved 2022-10-11.
  8. ^ Santilli, Morgana (2020-07-10). "Tragic Backstories Of Your Favorite X-Men - Looper". Looper.com. Retrieved 2022-10-11.
  9. ^ Plummer, Jessica (2019-10-04). "The Most Unexpected Superhero Day Jobs". BOOK RIOT. Retrieved 2022-10-11.
  10. ^ Generation X #54
  11. ^ Generation X #49-50
  12. ^ Generation X #51
  13. ^ The Uncanny X-Men #281
  14. ^ Generation X #56
  15. ^ a b Witiw, John (2022-08-10). "10 Worst Sisters In Comics". CBR. Retrieved 2022-10-11.
  16. ^ Generation X #55-56
  17. ^ Guy, Daniel (2020-12-05). "X-Men: How Marvel's OTHER White Queen Ended a Mutant Generation". CBR. Retrieved 2022-10-11.
  18. ^ "For Some X-Men, Death Still Matters". Gizmodo. Retrieved 2022-10-11.
  19. ^ Zender, AJ (June 9, 2017). "GENERATION X: A History of Misfits". ComicsVerse.
  20. ^ Generation X #75
  21. ^ Generation X #67-70
  22. ^ X-Men Unlimited #34
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