Madame Web | |
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![]() From Sensational Spider-Man (vol. 2) #26. Art by Clayton Crain. | |
Publication information | |
Publisher | Marvel Comics |
First appearance | The Amazing Spider-Man #210 (November 1980) |
Created by | Denny O'Neil (writer) John Romita Jr. (artist) |
In-story information | |
Alter ego | Cassandra Webb |
Species | Human Mutant |
Abilities | Gifted intellect Telepathy Clairvoyance Precognition |
Madame Web (Cassandra Webb) is a fictional character appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. Madame Web first appeared in The Amazing Spider-Man #210, published November 1980, and was created by writer Denny O'Neil and artist John Romita Jr. She is usually depicted as a supporting character in the Spider-Man comic book series. She is depicted as an elderly woman with myasthenia gravis and thus was connected to a life support system that looked like a spider web. Due to her age and medical condition Madame Web never actively fought any villains.
Madame Web was a clairvoyant, and precognitive mutant who first showed up to help Spider-Man find a kidnap victim. Madame Web was not one of the mutants that lost their power during the Decimation storyline. She was attacked by Sarah and Ana Kravinoff, who killed her, but not before she was able to pass her powers of precognition as well as her blindness on to Julia Carpenter, who became the next Madame Web. Webb is the grandmother of the fourth Spider-Woman, Charlotte Witter.
Publication history[]
![]() | This section needs expansion. You can help by adding to it. (June 2013) |
Madame Web was created by writer Dennis O'Neil and artist John Romita Jr., and first appeared in The Amazing Spider-Man #210 (November 1980).[1]
Fictional character biography[]
Cassandra Webb was born in Salem, Oregon. She is a paralyzed, blind, telepathic, clairvoyant, and precognitive mutant, allowing her to work as a professional medium. She was originally stricken with myasthenia gravis and was connected to a life support system designed by her husband Jonathan Webb, which included a series of tubes shaped like a spider-web.
When Spider-Man approached her to help find kidnapped Daily Globe publisher K.J. Clayton (actually an impersonator), Madame Web used her powers to help him locate and rescue both the real and the fake Clayton, but disclosed to him that she had divined his secret identity.[2] In the "Nothing Can Stop the Juggernaut!" story arc, she contacts Spider-Man for assistance when Black Tom Cassidy dispatches the Juggernaut to capture her in the hope that her psychic powers would help them defeat the X-Men, only for her to nearly die after Juggernaut separated her from her life-support system. This triggered a vicious fight between Spider-Man and the Juggernaut, who was subsequently trapped in a construction site's wet cement foundation.[3] From the shock to her system, however, Madame Web apparently lost her memory of Spider-Man's secret identity.[4]
Webb is the grandmother of the fourth Spider-Woman, Charlotte Witter. She participates in an arcane ritual known as the "Gathering of the Five", gaining immortality; she is restored to youth and her myasthenia gravis is cured.[5] Webb serves as a mentor of sorts to the third Spider-Woman, the young Mattie Franklin.[6]
Madame Web resurfaced,[7] and her psychic powers are intact after Decimation. However, since House of M (in which she did appear young) she seems to have regained her aged appearance, though the myasthenia gravis remains gone;[volume & issue needed] this could indeed be taken as an effect of Decimation.[volume & issue needed]
Madame Web again returns in a back-up feature in The Amazing Spider-Man #600. She looks into the future, showing what are apparently quick looks into Spider-Man's future, only to see someone "unravelling the web of fate", and fearfully exclaiming "They're hunting spiders." After that, she is attacked by Ana Kravinoff and her mother, Sasha. The pair incapacitate her and then claim "we now have our eyes".[8] She is seen still captured by Ana and her mother, as they inspect their new quarry, Mattie Franklin. While still bound in a chair, she apologizes to a then-unconscious Mattie,[9] who is later killed by Sasha Kravinoff.[10]
At the conclusion of "Grim Hunt", Madame Web has her throat slashed by Sasha Kravinoff in retaliation, as Sasha believed that Madame Web was deceiving her and knew the outcome of the events that transpired. Before dying, she reveals she is no longer blind, and passes her psychic powers over to Julia Carpenter.[11]
During the Dead No More: The Clone Conspiracy storyline, Madame Web was cloned by the Jackal. She tipped off Prowler about a bank robbery vision she had which he managed to stop the bank robbery. When Prowler goes to get more information on the hacker from Madame Web, she tells him that she sees buildings filled with agony that cannot escape.[12] When the villains at New U Technologies are getting out of control, Jackal sends Electro to find Prowler to put them under check again. Electro goes to Madame Web's room and tortures the telepath into giving her Prowler's location with the intent to kill him. Julia Carpenter senses that Madame Web is alive from telepathic feedback resulting from Electro's attack.[13] Julia infiltrates New U Technologies and uses the opportunity to investigate the near-abandoned facility. During this time, Julia is led to Madame Web who refuses to take her medication to aid her in healing from Electro's attack. Madame Web has seen the future and refuses to be a part of it. Before dying from clone degeneration, Madame Web tells Julia to save Prowler.[14]
Powers and abilities[]
Madame Web is a mutant who possesses psychic sensory powers including telepathy, clairvoyance, prescience, and the ability to sense the presence of psionic powers in others. She can also perform psychic surgery and appear to others in spirit (astral) form. She has a gifted intellect.
When dying, she displayed the ability to transfer her mutation to another individual, Julia Carpenter, as well as her blindness.[volume & issue needed]
Madame Web was a victim of myasthenia gravis, a disorder of neuromuscular junction transmission. As a result, she was an invalid, entirely dependent on external, life support for survival. This is no longer the case as she was cured of the condition some time ago. She is also blind. Madame Web is cybernetically linked to a spider-web-like life-support chair which attends to all of her bodily needs.
Other versions[]
- A version of Madame Web makes a brief appearance in the heroic fantasy world of Avataars: Covenant of the Shield as "the Widow of the Web", a spider-goddess who grants Webswinger (the Spider-Man parallel) his powers.[15]
- Webb also appeared during the "House of M" storyline as a therapist employed by S.H.I.E.L.D.[16]
- Madame Web died in the MC2 universe, but her reputation has inspired an entire temple of prophetic acolytes.[volume & issue needed]
- Madame Web appeared in Ultimate Spider-Man. In issue #102, she is part of the psych team that plans to change Ultimate Spider-Woman's memories.[17] She appears in a wheelchair (implying paralysis) and blind, similar to the classic version. However, she is younger than that version of the character.
In other media[]
Television[]

Animated Madame Web, as she appeared in the 1990s animated series.
- Madame Web appeared in the Spider-Man animated series voiced by Joan B. Lee.[18] Here she is reimagined as an ally of the Beyonder, with similar powers over reality. She was tasked with testing Spider-Men from alternate realities for the task of stopping Spider-Carnage from destroying the multiverse. With Spider-Man succeeding in his mission, she takes him to find his lost wife Mary Jane Parker as his reward.
- Madame Web appears in Ultimate Spider-Man vs. Sinister 6,[19] voiced by Cree Summer.[20] This version of the character is a young redheaded girl named Julia Carpenter, and she does not suffer from either blindness or paralysis. She and Doctor Strange work together to get Spider-Man and Kid Arachnid to the other Spiderverses to search for the pieces of the Siege Perilous.
Video games[]
- Madame Web appears in Spider-Man's Questprobe game.
- In the video game Ultimate Spider-Man, the Human Torch may mock Spider-Man during the game's races by saying, "Madame Web is faster than you, and I don't even get the reference!", an allusion to the fact that Madame Web did not exist in the Ultimate universe at that point.
- Madame Web appears in the video game Spider-Man: Shattered Dimensions, voiced by Susanne Blakeslee. She tells Spider-Man about the Tablet of Order and Chaos, and orders him and three other dimension counterparts to retrieve each of its pieces in their respective universes and repair the damage Mysterio has done.[21] She provides instructions to the Spider-Men about their powers, including new ones given by her such as Amazing Spider-Man's spider sense upgrade which allows him to see through objects, Spider-Man 2099's spider-sense, Spider-Man Noir's web-swinging, and uses her telepathic powers to keep Ultimate Spider-Man's symbiote from overwhelming him (although he still has outbursts of rage now and then). When only a few fragments of the Tablet remain to be collected, Madame Web is discovered and taken hostage by Mysterio, who threatens her life in order to make Spider-Man collect the remaining tablet fragments for him. With the tablet reassembled, Mysterio nearly tears down reality, but Madame Web is able to use the last of her powers to draw the four Spider-Men into the distorted dimension Mysterio has created, allowing them to band together and separate him from the Tablet. After Mysterio is defeated, Madame Web thanked the Spider-Men for saving the Tablet of Order and Chaos. During the credits, Madame Web is visited by Spider-Ham who quotes to her "So, what'd I miss" as Madame Web is surprised at Spider-Ham's unannounced arrival.
References[]
- ↑ Manning, Matthew K.; Gilbert, Laura, ed. (2012). "1980s". Spider-Man Chronicle Celebrating 50 Years of Web-Slinging. Dorling Kindersley. p. 116. ISBN 978-0756692360. "Writer Denny O'Neil's newest contribution to the Spider-Man mythos would come in the form of psychic Madame Web, a character introduced with the help of artist John Romita, Jr."
- ↑ The Amazing Spider-Man #210
- ↑ The Amazing Spider-Man #229
- ↑ The Amazing Spider-Man #230
- ↑ The Amazing Spider-Man #441
- ↑ Spider-Woman Vol. 3 #1-11, 14, Alias #17
- ↑ as of Sensational Spider-Man #26 (Part 4 of "Feral")
- ↑ The Amazing Spider-Man #600
- ↑ The Amazing Spider-Man #611
- ↑ The Amazing Spider-Man #634
- ↑ The Amazing Spider-Man #637
- ↑ Prowler vol. 2 #1
- ↑ Prowler vol. 2 #2
- ↑ Prowler vol. 2 #4
- ↑ Avataars: Covenant of the Shield #1-3 (2000)
- ↑ House of M: Masters of Evil #2
- ↑ Ultimate Spider-Man #102
- ↑ "Voice of Madame Web (Spider-Man)". Behind the Voice Actors. Retrieved June 5, 2018.
{{cite web}}
: - ↑ ""ULTIMATE SPIDER-MAN'S" SINISTER 6-DRIVEN NEW SEASON TURNS THE THREATS PERSONAL". ComicBookResources. Retrieved 2016-02-19.
{{cite web}}
: - ↑ "Voice of Madame Web (Ultimate Spider-Man)". Behind the Voice Actors. Retrieved June 5, 2018.
{{cite web}}
: - ↑ "Spider-Man: Shattered Dimensions Video - SDCC 10: Opening Cinematic (Cam)". GameTrailers. Retrieved 2013-11-14.
{{cite web}}
:
External links[]
- Madame Web at the Marvel Universe wiki
- Madame Web's Profile at Spiderfan.org
- Madame Web's Profile at the Women of Marvel Comics
Spider-Woman | ||
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Creators | Archie Goodwin • Marie Severin | |
Characters | Jessica Drew • Julia Carpenter • Mattie Franklin • Veranke | |
Supporting characters | Anya Corazon • Ben Urich • Carol Danvers • Madame Web • Roger Gocking • Scotty McDowell • Shroud • Silk • Spider-Man | |
Enemies | Brothers Grimm • Death Web • Enforcer • Flying Tiger • Hobgoblin • HYDRA • Karl Malus • Gypsy Moth • Morgan le Fay • Needle • Nekra • Turner D. Century • Venom • Viper | |
Alternative versions | Spider-Girl • Spider-Gwen • Spider-MJ • Spider-Woman (Ultimate Marvel character) | |
See also | Spider-Gwen • Spider-Woman 2009 comic series • Spider-Woman TV series |
Spider-Man characters | ||
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Spider-Man family | By secret identity | Spider-Man • Spider-Woman • Scarlet Spider • Spider-Girl |
By public identity | Peter Parker • Ben Reilly • Jessica Drew • Julia Carpenter • Miguel O'Hara • Kaine Parker • Mattie Franklin • Anya Corazon • Mac Gargan • Miles Morales • Otto Octavius (Superior Spider-Man) • Cindy Moon • Gwen Stacy | |
Supporting characters |
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Other | Sally Avril • Martha Connors • Billy Connors • Cloak and Dagger • Jefferson Davis • Ezekiel • Vanessa Fisk • Vin Gonzales • Walter Hardy • Ashley Kafka • Anna Maria Marconi • Kenny McFarlane • Max Modell • Normie Osborn • Gwen Poole • Solo • Sarah Stacy • Steel Spider • Venom symbiote • Debra Whitman • Wraith/Yuri Watanabe | |
Neutral characters | Anti-Venom Black Cat • Cardiac • Deadpool Gibbon • Green Goblin • Harry Osborn • Lizard • Morbius, the Living Vampire • Prowler • Puma • Punisher • Razorback • Rocket Racer • Sandman • Silver Sable • Toxin • Venom (Eddie Brock) • Will o' the Wisp | |
Shared universe allies | Ant-Man (Hank Pym • Scott Lang) • Avengers • Black Panther • Black Widow • Blade • Captain America • [[Carol Danvers|Captain Marvel] • Daredevil • Deadpool • Defenders • Doctor Strange • Fantastic Four (Mister Fantastic • Invisible Woman • Human Torch • Thing) • Firestar • Future Foundation • Ghost Rider ( Johnny Blaze • Danny Ketch) • Guardians of the Galaxy (Star-Lord • Gamora • Drax the Destroyer • Rocket Raccoon • Groot • Mantis • Nebula) • Hawkeye • Hulk • Iron Fist • Iron Man • Jessica Jones • Luke Cage • Moon Knight • New Avengers • Nick Fury • Nightwatch • Punisher • S.H.I.E.L.D. • Spider-Army/Web-Warriors • Thor • Wasp • Wolverine • X-Men (Professor X • Cyclops • Iceman • Jean Grey/Phoenix • Storm • Beast • Angel • Nightcrawler • Colossus • Gambit • Rogue • Psylocke • Kitty Pryde • Jubilee • Emma Frost • Havok • Polaris • Banshee | |
Antagonists | Central rogues gallery |
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Crime lords and mobsters | Big Man (Frederick Foswell) • Burglar • Crime Master • Enforcers (Fancy Dan • Montana • Ox) • Man Mountain Marko • Rose (Richard Fisk) • Silvermane | |
Scientists / inventors | Jonas Harrow • Spencer Smythe • Mendel Stromm | |
Other supervillains |
Arcade • Beetle (Leila Davis) • Beetle (Janice Lincoln) • Big Wheel • Black Tarantula • Bloodshed • Bushwacker • Calypso • Carrion • Clash • Cyclone • Demogoblin • Doctor Doom • Doppelganger • Dracula • Elementals • Foreigner• Gladiator • Gog • Grey Goblin • Grim Hunter • Grizzly • Hippo • Hood • Human Fly • Humbug • Hypno-Hustler • Jack O' Lantern (Jason Macendale) • Jester • Juggernaut • Kangaroo • Kraven the Hunter (Ana Kravinoff) • Kraven the Hunter (Alyosha Kravinoff) • Living Brain • Lobo Brothers • Looter • Lady Octopus • Leap-Frog • Man-Bull • Man-Wolf • Masked Marauder • Massacre • Mephisto • Menace • Mister Hyde • Morlun • Overdrive • Owl • Ringer • Scarecrow • Scorcher • Scream • Shathra • Shriek • [[Sin-Eater (comics)|Sin-Eater] • Slyde • Speed Demon • Spot • Stegron • Stilt-Man • Swarm • Tarantula • Taskmaster • Trapster • Typhoid Mary • Phil Urich • Vermin • Walrus • White Rabbit | |
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Team affiliations | Avengers • Defenders • Fantastic Four • Future Foundation • Heroes for Hire • New Avengers • S.H.I.E.L.D. • X-Men | |
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