Here’s a sketch I drew of Matrix, the sole survivor of the Byrne “pocket universe” conclusion. Matrix eventually became Supergirl, before and after the Death of Superman storyline. I had hoped she could become her own character at the time.
It was my design, but then the character took a turn, adopting Clark Kent’s look in Exile in Space. Then Roger Stern kind of adopted her in Action Comics, so I never pushed that idea. Roger did a nice job writing her. I always regretted passing on writing the Supergirl comic.
No, I felt like she was a blank slate, reborn on Superman’s earth. Clark leaves her with Ma and Pa Kent because he knows they will nurture her, and love her.
Pretty wild that Ordway wanted to basically think of her as a new character, no S-shield, and hanging out with the Kents. I suppose ideas like this get pitched and pushed aside a whole bunch. But it is interesting to me that everything that happened to that Supergirl, from Brainiac dupe to Earth Angel, might not have happened if DC okay'd this.
I asked about how his pic looked more like Lana than the classic Kara look she ultimately took. Here was his response.
Yes, I was thinking she would revert to Lana since that’s who she was modeled after when Lex built her. It was a long time ago, but I have a vague memory of mentioning to Byrne that it’d be cool if she was the only survivor of the Pocket Universe. And yeah, I did want to develop her, but plans change. I think what Roger Stern did with the character later was interesting too.
I love Jerry Ordway, but this could easily be a fan fiction character in the Star Wars universe, just as Peter David's Earth Angel could have just as easily been Batgirl, Lady Blackhawk, Hawkgirl or any other DCU Heroine with a vague flight motif. Which goes to the heart of DC's super-cognitive dissonance, they didn't want to give up the trademark to Supergirl for licensing purposes but they insisted that any evocation of the character be revamped to the point of being unrecognizable...
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