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Death |
The character is a mixture of many different impulses as well as my everlasting preoccupation with death itself. Still, it was not a long-cherished wish of mine to make a cartoon about just another allegory of the Grim Reaper, it simply came in handy since my former cartoon series was reaching to its end. The original concept was not very elaborated. I wanted Death to have a pseudo-medieval look (which, in fact, isn't medieval at all but came up only in the baroque, but that's a different story), but I didn't want to give him a skull or any face at all. However, I do have a weakness for challenging mimics. Death has only his eyes and occasional eyebrows to express himself, as well as the shape of his hood. The look that finally made it is still very opulent, though. My original sketches wanted him to express his mood only by the shape of his hood and not even grant him eyes. In contrast to some embodiments that picture Death as some romantic lad ("last lover"), I prefer to see him as a cynic. A little bit arrogant, stubborn nagger, very tangible and sometimes even ridiculous. Death as I show him is not an epic figure, he is more like some narcissistic hothead who is a bit too preoccupied with his own greatness and the power he was given. Death, as I show him, is mostly adressed as a male character. This does not mean that he IS male. As a matter of fact, he is a sexless, genderless entity, as well as all the other allegories that we'll meet on the way. |
The Maiden |
Designing the Maiden was an even harder task. While I knew how to characterize Death from the beginning, I didn't have a clear vision of his opponent. Amongst many, many sketches appeared one day the one that had to be her. The only thing I knew right from the beginning was that she should not be your average "beauty". I personally like the way she looks, I find her cute, but she's definitely not the big-boobed hot-sexy type that one usually finds as comic heroines. She's average looking, and that's just what I wanted her to be. I also wanted to give her a personal history - e.g. a job, family & friends - right from the beginning. I dropped those plans, thinking it better for the reader to get to know her step by step, just like Death vice versa, which turned out as a good idea, I think, because it left more room for drama. Her hair is dyed, but her eyes are genuine green.
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Little Death |
I know that this character might be a little problematic to the readers who are not familiar with la petite mort. It obviously doesn't exist in the USA, I don't know about Britain or other countries. As far as I know, the term 'little death' originates in France. In a common way, it describes the sexual climax, the orgasm. At least this is the best known meaning of what is indicated by saying someone just experienced a little death (a rather poetic circumscription, as you might have guessed). There are, however, other meanings of the word. Some equalize it with sleep, yet the most popular name for Morpheus had always been Brother of Death (vice versa, Death has been described as Brother of Sleep), so I didn't take this into my own definition of Little Death. It is fast and it is strong, and it feels as if one's heart was ready to jump out of the throat. I am sure that everyone has experienced that kind of feeling in some way. Well, yes, and that's it - or rather him. Little D. Also: Here's what Wikipedia has to say about it.
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Time |
Time is the only member of the High Council of Fate that wanders around outside and even among the living, and he also has a personal connection with Death, to whom he acts as friend and adviser. Fitted with a shear endless amount of patience, he constantly keeps an eye on him and occasionally even interferes, in order to minimize the damage of Death's sometimes rash actions. As with all my allegorical characters, Time has no sex nor gender, despite being depicted as male and addressed as "he".
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The High Council of Fate |
All members of the High Council have a specified position and power, which will only be revealed at the end of part 2 of D&M.
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This nameless guy ... (inofficially named "wisecracker") |
This character is older than any of the others, despite not even having a name of his own. Here's how he came to be. During a time in my life that was particularly ripe with absurd events, I, in desperation, declared to be victim of some nasty case worker of Fate, one with a mischievous attitude. He enjoys getting those mortals, whom he is responsible for, in trouble, plays tricks on them, pranks them, and leads them up. Because he keeps laughing his head off over his practical jokes, I gave him a German moniker that best translates as "wisecracker". This is not his official name, just something to call im by due to the lack of a real denomination. I never intended to include him in my comic, for the longest time, he didn't even have a particular look. Only after I had added Fate as an institution into my story, it was somehow inevitable to also have a go at my dearly behated wisecracker, and to my own surprise it wasn't that hard to give him a face. His position in fate is quite similar to how it all started: He is a back office case worker who pulls the strings from behind, without having direct contact to his clientele. As it happens, I'm not the first one to come up with that sort of mischievous prankster, in fact, it is a trope that has been omnipresent all over the world, in all cultures and times. If you look at deities like Hermes, Loki, Anansi or Coyote, you'll see what I mean. Almost every culture, at some point, added "the trickster" to their pantheon. I thought for quite some time of giving him a name, but since none of my indoor workers in Fate have a name, I decided against it. Also, I find it a bit satisfying to leave the one entity that pesters humanity since forever nameless.
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