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* ActionGirl: One of the earliest examples in comics, although she was preceded by, to name eight, Sheena, Fantomah, the Woman in Red, Lady Luck, the Golden Age Red Tornado, Bulletgirl, Miss Fury, and Hawkwoman. Phantom Lady in most versions is pretty good at throwing a punch.

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%% * ActionGirl: One of the earliest examples in comics, although she was preceded by, to name eight, Sheena, Fantomah, the Woman in Red, Lady Luck, the Golden Age Red Tornado, Bulletgirl, Miss Fury, and Hawkwoman. Phantom Lady in most versions is pretty good at throwing a punch.



* AlternateCompanyEquivalent: Nightveil is the AC comics version, Shadow Lady is Big Bang's. Silk Spectre is [[Creator/DCComics DC's]].
* AlternateContinuity: The Phantom Lady has appeared in a lot of comics over the years, not all of them published by DC.

to:

%% * AlternateCompanyEquivalent: Nightveil is the AC comics version, Shadow Lady is Big Bang's. Silk Spectre is [[Creator/DCComics DC's]].
%% * AlternateContinuity: The Phantom Lady has appeared in a lot of comics over the years, not all of them published by DC.



* AntiHeroSubstitute: Stormy Knight is rather ruthless in battle and much less friendly than her predecessors.
* BadassCape: All versions have them. They never make much sense.
* BadassBookworm: The Stormy Knight version. She has a degree in quantum physics and helped create her Black Light Ray wristbands unlike other versions of Phantom Lady whose technology was created entirely by others parties.

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%% * AntiHeroSubstitute: Stormy Knight is rather ruthless in battle and much less friendly than her predecessors.
%% * BadassCape: All versions have them. They never make much sense.
%% * BadassBookworm: The Stormy Knight version. She has a degree in quantum physics and helped create her Black Light Ray wristbands unlike other versions of Phantom Lady whose technology was created entirely by others parties.



* BareYourMidriff: The 2006 version does this.
* BathtubScene: The original comic had a few of these.

to:

%% * BareYourMidriff: The 2006 version does this.
%% * BathtubScene: The original comic had a few of these.



* BuildingSwing: The '40s and '50s version did this on occasion.
* CListFodder: Dee Tyler in Infinite Crisis.
* CastingAShadow: Her primary superpower from the '40s onward. Not always very useful, and pretty easy to get around. The Jennifer Knight and Stormy Knight versions however were much more dangerous.
* ChestInsignia: The 2006 version features this.

to:

%% * BuildingSwing: The '40s and '50s version did this on occasion.
%% * CListFodder: Dee Tyler in Infinite Crisis.
%% * CastingAShadow: Her primary superpower from the '40s onward. Not always very useful, and pretty easy to get around. The Jennifer Knight and Stormy Knight versions however were much more dangerous.
%% * ChestInsignia: The 2006 version features this.



* ClarkKenting: Notably subverted in the '40s version where a frequent challenge was the fact that her costume featured no mask of any kind, leading to her having to disguise her face using various methods from people who would recognize her.
* CleavageWindow: The '50s version is arguably the original TropeCodifier.
* CoolCar: Well, considering it's the '40s, pretty cool.
* TheCowl: The original Lady was very much of one of these. The ComicBook/{{Freedom Fighters|DC}} and modern day flashback to the '40s mostly depicted her as TheCape. The 2006 version is back to the cowl.
* CrimeFightingWithCash: Not above doing this on occasion.
* DamselInDistress: Notably subverted in her original run, where she was never saved by outside forces, and got out of all her jams by herself.

to:

%% * ClarkKenting: Notably subverted in the '40s version where a frequent challenge was the fact that her costume featured no mask of any kind, leading to her having to disguise her face using various methods from people who would recognize her.
%% * CleavageWindow: The '50s version is arguably the original TropeCodifier.
%% * CoolCar: Well, considering it's the '40s, pretty cool.
%% * TheCowl: The original Lady was very much of one of these. The ComicBook/{{Freedom Fighters|DC}} and modern day flashback to the '40s mostly depicted her as TheCape. The 2006 version is back to the cowl.
%% * CrimeFightingWithCash: Not above doing this on occasion.
%% * DamselInDistress: Notably subverted in her original run, where she was never saved by outside forces, and got out of all her jams by herself.



* DominoMask: The '40s version wore one on occasion.

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%% * DominoMask: The '40s version wore one on occasion.



* FanService: Yep.
* FanServiceCover: That quite nearly ended the entire comic book industry.
** Some of her Late '40s Books had her on the cover while being mostly 'true' crime stories.
* FormFittingWardrobe: Usually present but occasionally subverted. Despite wearing a bathing suit in all her appearances, her post-Baker costume was somewhat loose.
* GenerationXerox: Dee and Stormy are daughters of politicians just like Sandra.
* GogglesDoSomethingUnusual: Namely allowing her to see in the dark and thus making her immune to her Black Light Ray's effects.
* HandBlast: The Dee Tyler version had a wrist-mounted laser gun.

to:

%% * FanService: Yep.
%% * FanServiceCover: That quite nearly ended the entire comic book industry.
%% ** Some of her Late '40s Books had her on the cover while being mostly 'true' crime stories.
%% * FormFittingWardrobe: Usually present but occasionally subverted. Despite wearing a bathing suit in all her appearances, her post-Baker costume was somewhat loose.
%% * GenerationXerox: Dee and Stormy are daughters of politicians just like Sandra.
%% * GogglesDoSomethingUnusual: Namely allowing her to see in the dark and thus making her immune to her Black Light Ray's effects.
%% * HandBlast: The Dee Tyler version had a wrist-mounted laser gun.



* MeaningfulName: "Knight" in general; Stormy Knight in particular.
* MostCommonSuperPower: What people tend to remember.
* MsFanservice: One of first superheroine example.

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%% * MeaningfulName: "Knight" in general; Stormy Knight in particular.
%% * MostCommonSuperPower: What people tend to remember.
%% * MsFanservice: One of first superheroine example.



* PrimaryColorChampion: When her book was published by Fox Feature Syndicate, her costume was chnaged from a yellow one piece and green cape to a blue one piece and red cape.

to:

* PrimaryColorChampion: When her book was published by Fox Feature Syndicate, her costume was chnaged changed from a yellow one piece and green cape to a blue one piece and red cape.
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Moving wicks to a new namespace per hard-split.


Even though DC acquired the rights to Quality's heroes in 1957, the Phantom Lady had to sit out UsefulNotes/{{the Silver Age|of Comic Books}}, not coming back until 1973 in DC's [[ComicBook/FreedomFighters Freedom Fighters]], where she had joined TheResistance to fight back against the Nazi overlords of the series. She gained the powers of full invisibility and teleportation, but was largely relegated to a support role.

to:

Even though DC acquired the rights to Quality's heroes in 1957, the Phantom Lady had to sit out UsefulNotes/{{the Silver Age|of Comic Books}}, not coming back until 1973 in DC's [[ComicBook/FreedomFighters Freedom Fighters]], ComicBook/{{Freedom Fighters|DC}}, where she had joined TheResistance to fight back against the Nazi overlords of the series. She gained the powers of full invisibility and teleportation, but was largely relegated to a support role.



* TheCowl: The original Lady was very much of one of these. The [[Comicbook/FreedomFighters Freedom Fighters]] and modern day flashback to the '40s mostly depicted her as TheCape. The 2006 version is back to the cowl.

to:

* TheCowl: The original Lady was very much of one of these. The [[Comicbook/FreedomFighters Freedom Fighters]] ComicBook/{{Freedom Fighters|DC}} and modern day flashback to the '40s mostly depicted her as TheCape. The 2006 version is back to the cowl.



* {{Teleportation}}: When in the [[Comicbook/FreedomFighters Freedom Fighters]].

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* {{Teleportation}}: When in the [[Comicbook/FreedomFighters Freedom Fighters]].ComicBook/{{Freedom Fighters|DC}}.
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* RomanticInterest: Originally Don Borden, though all iterations of the original character have flirted with other guys.

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* RomanticInterest: {{Love Interest|s}}: Originally Don Borden, though all iterations of the original character have flirted with other guys.
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* RetCon: The DC version has retconned a lot of stuff from the '40s version. Notably Don Borden went from her fiancé to her intelligence agency handler, posing as her fiancé, and the original ComicBook/{{Starman}} became her cousin (since they already had the same last name).

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* RetCon: {{Retcon}}: The DC version has retconned a lot of stuff from the '40s version. Notably Don Borden went from her fiancé to her intelligence agency handler, posing as her fiancé, and the original ComicBook/{{Starman}} became her cousin (since they already had the same last name).



* SameSurnameMeansRelated: Notably an {{Aversion}}. Despite three of the four Phantom Ladies sharing the same surname, none have been revealed to be related to each other. That said, the original was made into the cousin of the original Starman ComicBook/PostCrisis.

to:

* SameSurnameMeansRelated: Notably an {{Aversion}}.{{Aversion}} with the {{Legacy Character}}s. Despite three of the four Phantom Ladies sharing the same surname, none have been revealed to be related to each other. That said, the original was made into the cousin of the original Starman ComicBook/PostCrisis.



* SuperHeroSchool: Sandra Knight eventually became the dean of the Université Notre Dame des Ombres were Dee Tyler, her first successor was educated.

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* SuperHeroSchool: Sandra Knight eventually became the dean of the Université Notre Dame des Ombres were where Dee Tyler, her first successor successor, was educated.

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Removed: 317

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* BondageIsBad: Despite Wertham's comments, Phantom Lady was rarely captured or tied up by her enemies. Well, no more then any superhero in the '50s.
** However, she appears on what are arguably the two most iconic "bondage" covers of the Golden Age.

to:

* BondageIsBad: Despite Wertham's comments, Phantom Lady was rarely captured or tied up by her enemies. Well, no more then any superhero in the '50s.
**
'50s. However, she appears on what are arguably the two most iconic "bondage" covers of the Golden Age.



* TheCowl: The original Lady was very much of one of these. The [[Comicbook/FreedomFighters Freedom Fighters]] and modern day flashback to the '40s mostly depicted her as TheCape. The 2006 version is back to the cowl.



* SameSurnameMeansRelated: Notably an {{Aversion}}. Despite three of the four Phantom Ladies sharing the same surname, none have been revealed to be related to each other.

to:

* SameSurnameMeansRelated: Notably an {{Aversion}}. Despite three of the four Phantom Ladies sharing the same surname, none have been revealed to be related to each other. That said, the original was made into the cousin of the original Starman ComicBook/PostCrisis.



* TheCowl: The original Lady was very much of one of these. The [[Comicbook/FreedomFighters Freedom Fighters]] and modern day flashback to the '40s mostly depicted her as TheCape. The 2006 version is back to the cowl.

Added: 89

Changed: 126

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* {{Hologram}}: The Dee Tyler version used a powerful holographic projector.

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* {{Hologram}}: The Dee Tyler version used Dee’s costume sported a powerful medallion that could cast an endless variety of holographic projector.illusions.



* MasterOfIllusion: The Dee Tyler version had this ability via a medallion on her costume



** Sandra Knight had a wrist-mounted black light ray to blind her enemies.
** Dee Tyler's black light ray could do the same as Sandra's and also had a laser blast function.

to:

** Sandra Knight had a wrist-mounted black light ray to blind her enemies.
enemies or make her invisible.
** Dee Tyler's black light ray could do the same things as Sandra's and also had a laser blast function.
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* EmpoweredBadassNormal: The Sandra Knight Phantom lady gained invisibility and intangibility powers when she crossed over to the main DC Earth.
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* PrimaryColorChampion: When her book was published by Fox Feature Syndicate, her costume was chnaged from a yellow one piece and green cape to a blue one piece and red cape.
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None


* GogglesDoSomething: Namely allowing her to see in the dark and thus making her immune to her Black Light Ray's effects.

to:

* GogglesDoSomething: GogglesDoSomethingUnusual: Namely allowing her to see in the dark and thus making her immune to her Black Light Ray's effects.
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* EightiesHair: Dee wore her hair in a 'frizzy' rocker style popularized in the 1980s. This was pretty much the only way to tell her apart from the young image of her predecessor Sandra.


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* GenerationXerox: Dee and Stormy are daughters of politicians just like Sandra.


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* IntrepidReporter: Jennifer Knight who is dedicated to bringing down the Bender crime family.

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Changed: 149

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* AntiHeroSubstitute: Stormy Knight is rather ruthless in battle and far less friendly than her predecessors.

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* AwesomeMcCoolName: Stormy Knight. Also doubles as a MeaningfulName reflecting Stormy's darker and more ruthless personality.
* AntiHeroSubstitute: Stormy Knight is rather ruthless in battle and far much less friendly than her predecessors.
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Added DiffLines:

* GogglesDoSomething: Namely allowing her to see in the dark and thus making her immune to her Black Light Ray's effects.

Added: 1044

Changed: 242

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* AntiHeroSubstitute: Stormy Knight is rather ruthless in battle and far less friendly than her predecessors.



* HardDrinkingPartyGirl: Stormy. This becomes rather tragic after her father is killed and it results in her killing a super villain on live television.



* SuperHeroSchool: Sandra Knight eventually became the dean of the Université Notre Dame des Ombres.

to:

* SuperHeroSchool: Sandra Knight eventually became the dean of the Université Notre Dame des Ombres.Ombres were Dee Tyler, her first successor was educated.



* SuperWristGadget: All of the Phantom Ladies have used this with the versatility increasing with each successor.
** Sandra Knight had a wrist-mounted black light ray to blind her enemies.
** Dee Tyler's black light ray could do the same as Sandra's and also had a laser blast function.
** Stormy Knight's wristbands granted her invisibility, intangibility, teleportation and darkness generation.
** Jennifer Knight's wristbands can do the same as Stormy's while ''also'' granting her the ability to make black light constructs. She can also pull pull people and objects into a completely dark extra-dimensional void called the Shadow Zone. People trapped in the Shadow Zone quickly experience overwhelming fear and isolation, and if left there too long, can lose their minds entirely.



* Weaponi

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* WeaponiWeaponizedTeleportation: Stormy's teleportation is so precise that she can remove body parts and internal organs if she pleases. She threatens to do this to Major Force if he continued antagonizing her.

Added: 691

Changed: 129

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* BadassBookworm: The Stormy Knight version. She has a degree in quantum physics and helped create her Black Light Ray wristbands unlike other versions of Phantom Lady whose technology was created entirely by others parties.



* CastingAShadow: Her primary superpower from the '40s onward. Not always very useful, and pretty easy to get around.

to:

* CListFodder: Dee Tyler in Infinite Crisis.
* CastingAShadow: Her primary superpower from the '40s onward. Not always very useful, and pretty easy to get around. The Jennifer Knight and Stormy Knight versions however were much more dangerous.


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* HandBlast: The Dee Tyler version had a wrist-mounted laser gun.
* {{Hologram}}: The Dee Tyler version used a powerful holographic projector.
* HotScientist: Stormy Knight. See BadassBookworm above.


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* {{Socialite}}: The Sandra Knight and Stormy Knight versions.


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* Weaponi
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* AdaptationalModesty: The Jennifer Knight iteration of the character had the least skimpy costume. Rather ironic that she was created during the New 52 which saw a number of female characters become HotterAndSexier in design.
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The Phantom Lady comics have often been accused of being little more than excuses for fan service and GoodGirlArt. However, while her image was sexualized, the stories were for the most part not. Her foes did not much care that they were fighting a woman. In an era when most female supers were often treated as inferior to their male peers, the Phantom Lady simply was.

to:

The Phantom Lady comics have often been accused of being little more than excuses for fan service and GoodGirlArt.art of a skimpily-dressed girl in dangerous situations. However, while her image was sexualized, the stories were for the most part not. Her foes did not much care that they were fighting a woman. In an era when most female supers were often treated as inferior to their male peers, the Phantom Lady simply was.
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No longer a trope.


* ThighHighBoots: Stormy Knight
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* SameSurnameMeansRelated: Notably an {{Aversion}}. Despite three of the four Phantom Ladies sharing the same surname, none have been revealed to be related to each other.
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* InvisibilityCloak: Typically what is the source of her invisibility.
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* DependingOnTheWriter: Since coming back in the '70s the WW2 version is either a bored senator's daughter or a secret agent trained since birth.

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* DependingOnTheWriter: Since coming back in the '70s the WW2 [=WW2=] version is either a bored senator's daughter or a secret agent trained since birth.
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Created by the [[WillEisner Eisner & Iger Studio]], the Phantom Lady - [[SecretIdentity civilian name Sandra Knight]] - debuted in August 1941 in ''ComicBook/PoliceComics'' #1 (alongside ComicBook/PlasticMan, Firebrand and The Human Bomb). To the world, she was the rich socialite daughter of Maryland senator Henry Knight; in her spare time she fought crime and war saboteurs with the aid of a flashlight that could shoot darkness, a car that could do the same, and the occasional right hook.

to:

Created by the [[WillEisner [[Creator/WillEisner Eisner & Iger Studio]], the Phantom Lady - [[SecretIdentity civilian name Sandra Knight]] - debuted in August 1941 in ''ComicBook/PoliceComics'' #1 (alongside ComicBook/PlasticMan, Firebrand and The Human Bomb). To the world, she was the rich socialite daughter of Maryland senator Henry Knight; in her spare time she fought crime and war saboteurs with the aid of a flashlight that could shoot darkness, a car that could do the same, and the occasional right hook.
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Quality upgrade.


[[quoteright:300:http://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/Phantom_Lady_17_4569.jpg]]
[[caption-width-right:300:One of the most important covers of comic book history.]]

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[[quoteright:300:http://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/Phantom_Lady_17_4569.jpg]]
org/pmwiki/pub/images/phantomlady17.png]]
[[caption-width-right:300:One of the most important covers of comic book history.]]
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* ImperialJapan: Some of the earliest stories feature her fighting expy versions of the Japanese. Technically before World War II started.
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* ImperialJapan: Some of the earliest stories feature her fighting expy versions of the Japanese. Technically before World War 2 started.

to:

* ImperialJapan: Some of the earliest stories feature her fighting expy versions of the Japanese. Technically before World War 2 II started.

Added: 137

Changed: 129

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* ImperialJapan: Some of the earliest stories feature her fighting expy versions of the Japanese. Technically before World War 2 started.



* ImperialJapan: Some of the earliest stories feature her fighting expy versions of the Japanese. Technically before World War 2 started.

to:

* ImperialJapan: Some MsFanservice: One of the earliest stories feature her fighting expy versions of the Japanese. Technically before World War 2 started.first superheroine example.
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* ThighHighBoots: Stormy Knight
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* MaleGaze: Especially the Dee Tyler version.
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Even though DC acquired the rights to Quality's heroes in 1957, the Phantom Lady had to sit out the SilverAge, not coming back until 1973 in DC's [[ComicBook/FreedomFighters Freedom Fighters]], where she had joined TheResistance to fight back against the Nazi overlords of the series. She gained the powers of full invisibility and teleportation, but was largely relegated to a support role.

to:

Even though DC acquired the rights to Quality's heroes in 1957, the Phantom Lady had to sit out the SilverAge, UsefulNotes/{{the Silver Age|of Comic Books}}, not coming back until 1973 in DC's [[ComicBook/FreedomFighters Freedom Fighters]], where she had joined TheResistance to fight back against the Nazi overlords of the series. She gained the powers of full invisibility and teleportation, but was largely relegated to a support role.
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Added DiffLines:

* PerpetuallyShinyBodies: She, alone of all the characters, was depicted as this in the 2006 ''Uncle Sam and the Freedom Fighters''. It was so extreme that there was a fan theory that it might be revealed at some point that she was, in fact, made of plastic.
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moving page to correct namespace

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[[quoteright:300:http://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/Phantom_Lady_17_4569.jpg]]
[[caption-width-right:300:One of the most important covers of comic book history.]]

-> ''"Sexual stimulation by combining 'headlights' with the sadist's dream of tying up a woman."''
-->--''Fredric Wertham'', ''[[Literature/SeductionOfTheInnocent Seduction of the Innocent]]''

Created by the [[WillEisner Eisner & Iger Studio]], the Phantom Lady - [[SecretIdentity civilian name Sandra Knight]] - debuted in August 1941 in ''ComicBook/PoliceComics'' #1 (alongside ComicBook/PlasticMan, Firebrand and The Human Bomb). To the world, she was the rich socialite daughter of Maryland senator Henry Knight; in her spare time she fought crime and war saboteurs with the aid of a flashlight that could shoot darkness, a car that could do the same, and the occasional right hook.

One of the earliest female superheroes, the Phantom Lady was very much an early distaff {{expy}} of Franchise/{{Batman}}. The stories were set in a somewhat realistically depicted Washington, DC as opposed to New York or a fictitious equivalent, which lent the stories the atmosphere of a [[SpyFiction spy thriller]]. However, as the artists drawing Phantom Lady were lost to the draft one after the other, the feature was discontinued with ''ComicBook/PoliceComics'' #23 (October 1943).

In 1947, Fox Features took over publication of the title until 1949. These stories were much more in the traditional comic book style, and introduced a RoguesGallery including nefarious evil-doers such as Firefiend and Red Horn. More prominently Matthew Baker took over drawing, changing her costume from a fairly modest swimsuit to something considerably more emphasizing.

Fredric Wertham made her one of the most prominent cases in his 1954 ''[[SeductionOfTheInnocent Seduction of the Innocent]]''. The cover image shown to the right was used extensively to discuss the sexualization and degradation of women in comics. This was one of rallying cries that lead to the creation of UsefulNotes/TheComicsCode Authority. Her costume was redesigned to be much more modest when a third company, Ajax-Farrel, briefly revived the character in 1954-1955.

Even though DC acquired the rights to Quality's heroes in 1957, the Phantom Lady had to sit out the SilverAge, not coming back until 1973 in DC's [[ComicBook/FreedomFighters Freedom Fighters]], where she had joined TheResistance to fight back against the Nazi overlords of the series. She gained the powers of full invisibility and teleportation, but was largely relegated to a support role.

A year earlier, Bill Black had brought back his version of the now-orphaned Fox and Ajax Phantom Lady for Paragon[=/AC=] Comics as the Blue Bulletteer, who was later transformed into the sorceress Nightveil to avoid trademark conflicts.

In 1988, the Phantom Lady became a backup character in ''ComicBook/ActionComics Weekly'', now a LegacyCharacter, with Dee Tyler, the niece of the original, having taken up the mantle. After dying in 2005's ''ComicBook/InfiniteCrisis'', the title passed to Stormy Knight in 2006's ''[[ComicBook/CrisisAftermathTheBattleForBludhaven The Battle for Blüdhaven]]''. Stormy Knight has since flirted with a number of DC superhero teams as a [[TheAce secret agent/quantum physicist/socialite/actress]].

In [[ComicBook/{{New52}} 2012]], Phantom Lady gained her own 4-issue miniseries named ''Phantom Lady and Doll Man''. Set on a path of vengeance by the murder of her parents when she was just a child, Jennifer Knight (Phantom Lady) now gets a shot to take down the family responsible. When she goes deep undercover to investigate, what she gets instead is something neither she nor her pint-size pal (Dane Maxwell) could expect.

The Phantom Lady comics have often been accused of being little more than excuses for fan service and GoodGirlArt. However, while her image was sexualized, the stories were for the most part not. Her foes did not much care that they were fighting a woman. In an era when most female supers were often treated as inferior to their male peers, the Phantom Lady simply was.

!!Tropes Associated with the Comic Character:
* ActionGirl: One of the earliest examples in comics, although she was preceded by, to name eight, Sheena, Fantomah, the Woman in Red, Lady Luck, the Golden Age Red Tornado, Bulletgirl, Miss Fury, and Hawkwoman. Phantom Lady in most versions is pretty good at throwing a punch.
* AlternateCompanyEquivalent: Nightveil is the AC comics version, Shadow Lady is Big Bang's. Silk Spectre is [[Creator/DCComics DC's]].
* AlternateContinuity: The Phantom Lady has appeared in a lot of comics over the years, not all of them published by DC.
* BadassCape: All versions have them. They never make much sense.
* BadassNormal: Originally had no real power. However, she was pretty damn tough for a 120 pound 18 year old.
* BareYourMidriff: The 2006 version does this.
* BathtubScene: The original comic had a few of these.
* BondageIsBad: Despite Wertham's comments, Phantom Lady was rarely captured or tied up by her enemies. Well, no more then any superhero in the '50s.
** However, she appears on what are arguably the two most iconic "bondage" covers of the Golden Age.
* BuildingSwing: The '40s and '50s version did this on occasion.
* CastingAShadow: Her primary superpower from the '40s onward. Not always very useful, and pretty easy to get around.
* ChestInsignia: The 2006 version features this.
* ClothesMakeTheLegend: Though DC and other publishers have tried giving her more conservative costumes or body suits, she inevitably goes back to wearing a bathing suit and cape.
* ClarkKenting: Notably subverted in the '40s version where a frequent challenge was the fact that her costume featured no mask of any kind, leading to her having to disguise her face using various methods from people who would recognize her.
* CleavageWindow: The '50s version is arguably the original TropeCodifier.
* CoolCar: Well, considering it's the '40s, pretty cool.
* CrimeFightingWithCash: Not above doing this on occasion.
* DamselInDistress: Notably subverted in her original run, where she was never saved by outside forces, and got out of all her jams by herself.
* DependingOnTheArtist: The post Matthew Baker/Farrel books where notorious for having poor internal continuity. Sometimes in the same story she would be a brunette and a blond.
* DependingOnTheWriter: Since coming back in the '70s the WW2 version is either a bored senator's daughter or a secret agent trained since birth.
* DominoMask: The '40s version wore one on occasion.
* FanService: Yep.
* FanServiceCover: That quite nearly ended the entire comic book industry.
** Some of her Late '40s Books had her on the cover while being mostly 'true' crime stories.
* FormFittingWardrobe: Usually present but occasionally subverted. Despite wearing a bathing suit in all her appearances, her post-Baker costume was somewhat loose.
* ImaginationBasedSuperpower: The ComicBook/{{New 52}}'s Phantom Lady has [[TrickedOutGloves black light gloves]] that can manifest darkness into black fog, blacklight objects (like razors and shields), [[LivingShadow living shadows]], and can turn her intangible.
* InTheHood: The ComicBook/{{New 52}} version's costume has a hood with a neural interface woven into it that allows her to manipulate backlight into anything she can think of.
* {{Invisibility}}: Since the '70s she can do this. Whether she's intangible while doing so depends on the version.
* LawyerFriendlyCameo: The '40s version would occasionally feature this from a political character.
* LegacyCharacter: Dee Tyler in the '80s and Stormy Knight since 2006.
* LeotardOfPower: The TropeFounder of this, though the 2006 version is only technically one piece. The 40s stories featured fairly practical version of this.
* LovesMyAlterEgo: Don Borden was in a bit of a love triangle with both Phantom Lady and his fiancé Sandra. Somewhat subverted by the fact that Sandra never seemed all that interested in Don in either version.
* MadScientist: The '40s version fought more then her share.
* MeaningfulName: "Knight" in general; Stormy Knight in particular.
* MostCommonSuperPower: What people tend to remember.
* ImperialJapan: Some of the earliest stories feature her fighting expy versions of the Japanese. Technically before World War 2 started.
* OddShapedPanel: As befitting a character created by Creator/WillEisner, a lot of her early stories featured this.
* PowerCreepPowerSeep: The Freedom Force version of her powers; especially her teleportation, which tended to fluctuate in strength based on the needs of the story.
* RequiredSecondaryPowers: As a character whose primary power is to create darkness she has need of her special glasses, with which she can see in the dark. Oddly, they only made their first appearance in the '70s.
* RetCon: The DC version has retconned a lot of stuff from the '40s version. Notably Don Borden went from her fiancé to her intelligence agency handler, posing as her fiancé, and the original ComicBook/{{Starman}} became her cousin (since they already had the same last name).
* RichIdiotWithNoDayJob: Possibly justified by the fact that well she was a rich woman in the '40s. A day job would be suspicious.
* RomanticInterest: Originally Don Borden, though all iterations of the original character have flirted with other guys.
* SecretIdentity: Only the '40s version made much of this, but all of them had one.
* ShesGotLegs: If Matt Baker's art wasn't emphasizing her chest, it was emphasizing her legs. Sometimes it was both.
* SinglePowerSuperheroes: The Phantom Lady could originally only shoot a ray of darkness at people. By her third issue people learned they could duck underneath it and see fine.
* SomethingPerson: The ''Phantom Lady''.
* StealthExpert: Beyond her ability to create shadows, Phantom Lady was always good at being places where she wasn't allowed and observing things she shouldn't.
* {{Stripperific}}: Her costumes have moved back and forth on this. Usually forth.
* SuperHeroSchool: Sandra Knight eventually became the dean of the Université Notre Dame des Ombres.
* SuperHeroesWearCapes: Yep.
* {{Teleportation}}: When in the [[Comicbook/FreedomFighters Freedom Fighters]].
* TheCowl: The original Lady was very much of one of these. The [[Comicbook/FreedomFighters Freedom Fighters]] and modern day flashback to the '40s mostly depicted her as TheCape. The 2006 version is back to the cowl.
* ThouShaltNotKill: Though the 2006 version does.
* UtilityBelt: Sandra Knight usually had one of these. The post-Baker iterations were particularly notable.
* Creator/WillEisner: It is disputed whether he created her or not. No one is listed as writer of any of the books and he created most of the characters for the Eisner & Iger Syndicate at the time, though he did not necessarily write them.
* WhereDoesHeGetAllThoseWonderfulToys?: The '40s version apparently found a top secret government blacklight device lying around the house.

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