Friday (comics)

Friday
Character information
First appearance 2000 AD #650 (October 1989) (1989)
Created by Dave Gibbons
Publication information
Publisher Fleetway
Schedule Weekly
Title(s) Numerous
Formats Original material for the series has been published as a strip in the comics anthology(s) 2000 AD.
Genre
Publication date 1989 1996
Main character(s) Friday
Venus Bluegenes
Creative team
Writer(s) Dave Gibbons
Michael Fleisher
Steve White
Mark Millar
Dan Abnett
Artist(s) Will Simpson
Ron Smith
Simon Coleby
Chris Weston
Henry Flint
Steve Tappin
Creator(s) Dave Gibbons

Friday is a comics character appearing in the British anthology 2000 AD. Like Rogue Trooper, he is a Genetic Infantryman fighting on the planet Nu-Earth, although the connection between the two characters were initially unclear. At one point he also teamed up with Venus Bluegenes.

Publication history

On the strength of the success of Watchmen, the editorial staff of 2000 AD asked Dave Gibbons if he would be interested in redesigning the Rogue Trooper character. Gibbons accepted and proposed also writing it, which was greenlit by Richard Burton. However, time commitments would not allow him to both write it and provide the stories art and Will Simpson was brought in to cover the art duties.[1] Gibbons says the redesign "was my chance to put everything into Rogue Trooper I wanted and take out all the crap, like the bio-chips"[2]

The fourteen-part story was hit by scheduling problems due to the lateness of the art. Gibbons said "I'm still quite happy with the story, although the way it was serialised was erratic - in for two issues, then out again. I was trying to have something that was quite cumulative."[2] Michael Fleisher took over the writing of the series with artists Ron Smith, Simon Coleby and Chris Weston. Editor Alan McKenzie has declared about the new writer: "on paper Fleisher was a good bet. ... But his work on 2000 AD was embarrassing. I did my best to save it, but you can't polish a turd."[3]

After five stories Steve White was brought in to help address some problems. According to editor John Tomlinson "Ever since "War Machine" in 1989, readers had been confused as hell about who is Friday and whether he was the original Rogue. I told Steve to figure that out and explain it"[4] This led to a two-year-long run on the series for the writer, although there was a move to hand the series to Mark Millar which only resulted in a three-part story.[4] During this period Friday met both Judge Dredd, in an issue-length story,[5] and the Rogue Trooper,[6] the latter being designed to settle the issue of their origins and connections. Unfortunately, according to Tomlinson "Steve came up with a fairly watertight explanation, but it was enormously complicated and probably confused far more people than it enlightened."[7] That story also brought in Venus Bluegenes, a G.I. Doll, who would appear in one more story[8] before her appearance in the final story to feature Friday. Dan Abnett, co-author for that story, was complimentary of White's work, "Steve had such a great feel for military goings on," however, this couldn't overcome intrinsic problems with the story as "he was absolutely hamstrung by the weight of continuity."[9] The two characters disappeared into a black hole and have not reappeared since.

Plot

Friday's adventures are a retcon of the Rogue Trooper storyline. Since all the G.I.s were identical and had serial numbers instead of names, they gave each other descriptive nicknames to tell each other apart.

Bibliography

He has appeared under his own spin-off Rogue Trooper title as well as appearing in Judge Dredd. His appearances include:

See also

Other Genetic Infantrymen (and women) with prominent roles:

Notes

  1. Bishop (2007) page 130-131
  2. 1 2 Bishop (2007) page 131
  3. Bishop (2007) page 141
  4. 1 2 Bishop (2007) page 168
  5. Judge Dredd: "Casualties Of War" (by John Wagner and John Higgins, in 2000 AD #900, 1994)
  6. "Blue on Blue" (by Steve White and Henry Flint, in 2000 AD #928-931, 1995)
  7. Bishop (2007) page 179
  8. "Hot Metal" (by Steve White and Steve Tappin, in 2000 AD #983-986, 1996)
  9. Bishop (2007) page 188-189

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Friday, April 08, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.