Episode 13

full
Published on:

17th Jun 2023

Nicola Scott - Celebrating Wonder Woman and Making Historia

Welcome to Mythic, where we explore meaningful living through the power of myth, including topics that span ancient lore, modern popular culture, and depth psychology. I'm your host, Boston Blake.

Nicola Scott - Celebrating Wonder Woman and Making Historia

https://bostonblake.com/mythic-podcast/making-historia-with-wonder-woman-artist-nicola-scott

About Nicola Scott

Nicola Scott is an Australian comic book artist working primarily in the American industry.

With a history in theatre and in costume design Nicola started pursuing a comics career in 2001 and by 2004 was the first Australian to become a staple of the U.S. mainstream. 

She quickly became a fan-favourite working exclusively for DC Comics on iconic characters such as Superman, Batman and Wonder Woman and team titles “Birds Of Prey”, “Secret Six”, “Teen Titans” and New York Times Bestseller “Earth 2”.

2016 saw the launch of her critically acclaimed creator-owned Image Comics maxi-series ‘Black Magick’ and DC’s ‘Wonder Woman: Year One’ to celebrate the characters 75th anniversary, both in collaboration with writer Greg Rucka.

Also in 2016 Nicola partnered with DC Comics and The United Nations to create the key art for Wonder Woman’s Honorary Ambassadorship For Women and Girls. In 2022 she worked with Kelly Sue DeConnick on Vol.3 of the Eisner Awarding winning series Wonder Woman HISTORIA.

Currently she’s working with Tom Taylor on TITANS.

She’s appeared in W Magazine, Vogue Australia, Frankie Magazine, The New York Times art section, written for The Guardian, and guest judged on both Australian and U.S. reality shows. She’s given talks at Graphic Festival, ACAF, Araza Women Presents and gave a keynote at the 2018 Adobe Max Creative Conference.

She lives in the Blue Mountains with her husband and their cat.

Meaningful Moments

02:40 - The Origin of Nicola Scott

16:31 - Discovering the mythology-steeped George Perez era

22:36 - Wonder Woman and the waves of feminism

29:03 - Wonder Woman's stint as Honorary Ambassador to the United Nations for Women and Girls (Yeah, we're still mad, too.)

34:26 - Teaming up with Greg Rucka for Rebirth and Year One for new take on the Origin of Wonder Woman

43:16 - Love, Sex, and Steve Trevor

57:12 - Wonder Woman: Historia with Kelly Sue DeConnick

01:17:12 - Transgender Amazons and Dionysus, the nonbinary theatre god

01:23:05 - Recommended reading for mythology lovers: Madeline Miller's Circe and The Song of Achilles, and Colin McCullum's The Song of Troy

01:29:58 - On Manifesting

Helpful Links

Music composed by Kevin MacLeod

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Thank you again for listening. You can find more information about the podcast at https://mythicpodcast.com.

To learn about Mythic Coaching, visit https://bostonblake.com.

Journey on!

Transcript
Boston:

Hello and welcome to Mythic.

Boston:

This episode of Mythic is a Wonder Woman Love Fest because my guest today

Boston:

is one of the greatest artists ever to draw Wonder Woman, Nicola Scott.

Boston:

This year saw the release of Wonder Woman Historia, the Amazons from DC Comics.

Boston:

It's a history of the Amazons, about their time before they arrived

Boston:

on Themyscira or Paradise Island.

Boston:

It was written by Kelly Sue Deconnick, and last week, the three issue series

Boston:

has been collected as a hard cover.

Boston:

It is unquestionably Nicola Scott's best work to date, and

Boston:

it's the best comic I've ever read.

Boston:

Hands down.

Boston:

In the last third of this episode, Nicola and I dissect scenes and

Boston:

explore mythic themes from the book.

Boston:

That part is loaded with spoilers, so heads up.

Boston:

But before we get to that point, Nicola shares her own origin story,

Boston:

which is amazing-- how she rose from a Wonder Woman and mythology fan

Boston:

who had never read a comic book to eventually teaming up with Greg Rucka

Boston:

to celebrate Wonder Woman's 75th Anniversary with Wonder Woman Rebirth.

Boston:

She also shares stories from the time that Wonder Woman was a real world

Boston:

honorary ambassador to the United Nations.

Boston:

I've written a little bit about that myself, and it's an interesting story.

Boston:

Nicola did the artwork for that campaign, and her frontline

Boston:

insights are really interesting.

Boston:

ready to dive in?

Boston:

Let's go.

Boston:

Nicola Scott, thank you so much for being on the Mythic podcast.

Boston:

I am delighted to have you.

Boston:

I am admittedly fanboying a little bit right now.

Boston:

you, You drew the third issue of Wonder Woman Historia, the Amazons that has come

Boston:

out, and it is absolutely breathtaking.

Boston:

I know you're seeing the reviews that are singing your praises, and

Boston:

it's, it really is a master work.

Boston:

It uses mythology in such beautiful and interesting ways, and I am, I'm so excited

Boston:

to discuss myth and comics with you today.

Boston:

Can we start with your origin story?

Nicola:

Oh gosh.

Nicola:

My origin story in general is very related to Wonder Woman.

Nicola:

and not just comic specific, she's seeped into my d n a when I was young, right

Nicola:

at that early becoming a person point.

Nicola:

I think I was about four when the Lynda Carter TV series started

Nicola:

playing out on television here.

Nicola:

And it just hit me in a way that nothing previously had seeped into my psyche.

Nicola:

She was my introduction to superheroes.

Nicola:

She was my, introduction to the idea of mythology, even though the TV show

Nicola:

doesn't really go into it terribly much, it laid a little bit of groundwork for me.

Nicola:

So that, I did find myself along with my discovery of superheroes,

Nicola:

found myself sort of also discovering, the ancient Greek tales.

Nicola:

And that opened up a new world for me and in my early teen years, I

Nicola:

think I was in year seven, when I did a school paper on witches.

Nicola:

that evolved my sense of, mythology and magic and how all of these things related.

Nicola:

And I think I understood that there were, there was a bit of a crossover.

Nicola:

I don't know that I really fully played with the idea in my head,

Nicola:

but this idea of oracles and, and how they related to a woman with a

Nicola:

crystal ball or someone looking into tea leaves or, all of those things,

Nicola:

they all felt a little similar to me.

Nicola:

and as I learned more of this stuff, I started to realize how much of it related

Nicola:

to Wonder Woman in my own personal way.

Nicola:

I wasn't really a comic book reader as a kid.

Nicola:

but there was this point where I think I was in my late teens and

Nicola:

I had a weekend job and one of the guys that I worked with, he was

Boston:

had hold up.

Boston:

You had a wiccan job.

Nicola:

Weekend,

Boston:

A weekend

Nicola:

weekend.

Nicola:

I wish it was a wiccan weekend

Boston:

Like I was like, I need more context.

Boston:

Got it Got it.

Nicola:

Oh my God.

Nicola:

No, I wish there was one of those jobs for me in my past.

Nicola:

he was a big comic book fan and he introduced me to what was

Nicola:

happening in that mid to late eighties era, the post-crisis era.

Nicola:

And I got to read George Perez's Wonder Woman run, and that solidified

Nicola:

the connection of mythology and Wonder Woman together for me.

Nicola:

That was me realizing that it wasn't just me connecting some dots, that it

Nicola:

was built into the character and this was the first retelling that was really

Nicola:

diving into that and celebrating it.

Nicola:

and from somewhere in there, whenever I would draw Wonder Woman

Nicola:

for myself, cuz I still didn't see myself as comic book artist.

Nicola:

but I was always drawing Wonder Woman as I grew up and always drawing superheroes.

Nicola:

But from that point on, when I was drawing Wonder Woman, I draw a little

Nicola:

circle around the star on her tiara.

Nicola:

So it was like a pentagram.

Boston:

Oh, that is too cool.

Nicola:

Yeah.

Nicola:

I thought, because I knew pentagram was A protection spell, and I just

Nicola:

thought, I'm just going to do that.

Nicola:

So for like up until I started at DC Comics, every time I drew Wonder Woman,

Nicola:

she had a circle around her star.

Nicola:

And and I wasn't able to continue that once I started at the company.

Nicola:

And I did play with the idea of reintroducing it at some point.

Nicola:

But by the time I was actually getting the chance to do my version of Wonder

Nicola:

Woman, we'd already started Greg Rucka and I had already started Black Magic

Nicola:

and I didn't want to be that overt, with the same writer artist team.

Nicola:

I'd already made Rowan purposefully look quite a lot like Diana or

Nicola:

really quite a lot like Lynda Carter

Boston:

I wondered about that.

Boston:

She does.

Nicola:

From the very beginning I, when I was designing Rowan, I was thinking, I wa

Nicola:

I have to draw this face all day, all day, every day for as long as the series runs.

Nicola:

What do I want her to look like?

Nicola:

And somewhere I was just like, I wish I could just draw her as Lynda Carter.

Nicola:

And I was like, I'm totally gonna draw as Lynda Carter, cuz Lynda's got

Nicola:

those really beautiful, soulful eyes.

Nicola:

And I was like, that'd be perfect.

Nicola:

I just need to jazz her up a bit.

Boston:

Oh, it is so cool to hear that through line that the Chi the Chira and

Boston:

that Lynda Carter has been cast as Rowan in these, in the Black Magic comics.

Boston:

That's

Nicola:

head.

Nicola:

Absolutely.

Boston:

makes perfect sense.

Boston:

It, and if I, so if we back up a moment,

Boston:

I am intrigued because first of all, astonished at how parallel

Boston:

our journey is with Wonder Woman.

Boston:

I was about the same age, similar experience with George Perez and

Boston:

seeing, oh, this is a mythological world that she inhabits.

Boston:

This is her religion, her spirituality, her roots.

Boston:

she's a product

Boston:

of the gods in this way.

Boston:

as you were really weaving these things together, like how, what was the

Boston:

importance of the connection between mythology and Wonder Woman for you?

Nicola:

I think it just it elevated her away from.

Nicola:

the Superman su, Superman is in himself, the archetype of a superhero.

Nicola:

And there's something really profound about his story.

Nicola:

The same goes with Batman, and I feel like they, they have had their

Nicola:

stories, particularly their origin stories reexamined over and over again

Nicola:

with people adding, not necessarily different story beats, but certainly

Nicola:

flavor and perspective and context that have enriched those stories.

Nicola:

And I always felt like Wonder Woman's story just never really got that

Nicola:

kind of, constant reexamination.

Nicola:

And so for me, understanding those, connections really cemented her as

Nicola:

something very different to them, that she wasn't just a female Superman,

Nicola:

and she wasn't just a DC Captain America, that she was this wholly,

Nicola:

unique person and the fact of her, Amazon origin and the mythology behind.

Nicola:

The even back then the idea of the concept of how the DC Amazons were

Nicola:

created and the hints of Amazon's within, the Odyssey and the Iliad.

Nicola:

those things really felt like it really expansive world building that she might

Nicola:

be connected in some of these ways.

Nicola:

And because they're magic related and because they're, historically related,

Nicola:

it really enriched my sense of her and coming from a family which is reasonably

Nicola:

large and almost entirely female, added to my sense of relating to this character.

Nicola:

I'm the youngest of three girls and we grew up with our cousins

Nicola:

who are also three girls.

Nicola:

And, I, it's our mothers who are connected and really the only men in the family

Nicola:

that I, we didn't spend time with like my father's, fa side of the family or

Nicola:

my cousin's dad's side of the family.

Nicola:

It was all this maternal mix of like loud, bossy, As I saw powerful women,

Nicola:

being the youngest, they all seemed really powerful and impressive to me.

Nicola:

And

Boston:

up in an Amazon nation.

Nicola:

100%.

Nicola:

And as Diana is the child of that nation, and I was by father, the youngest,

Nicola:

like my five sisters and cousins, there's about four years in between

Nicola:

the five of them, age bracket wise.

Nicola:

And then there's six years bef until me, so I'm quite a

Nicola:

bit younger than the others.

Nicola:

And so I got to grow up being their toy essentially, their sidekick and

Nicola:

their toy I got to be that the baby in the world of all these women.

Nicola:

And that helped me relate to Diana as well.

Nicola:

So there were all of these things that just solidified and, added

Nicola:

so much flavor to my understanding of who this character is.

Boston:

One way I work with mythology in my coaching practice

Boston:

is I operate under the assumption that we are all living out a myth.

Boston:

the reason these stories transcend generations and centuries and millennia

Boston:

is because we are living the same stories over and over again in a million

Boston:

different shapes, an infinite number of different shapes, and what you're

Boston:

describing like that something about your life, this resonance with Wonder

Boston:

Woman, and if you, whether you're, whether it's, I don't know, whether it's

Boston:

destiny or resonance or just something that draws you forward, you became

Boston:

one of the number of PE of people who have drawn Wonder Woman in the main

Boston:

title is what, probably under 50

Nicola:

However.

Boston:

ever in 80 years.

Boston:

I dunno.

Boston:

The main, on the main title,

Nicola:

really thought about it like that.

Nicola:

Yeah, maybe.

Boston:

maybe definitely under a hundred.

Boston:

And you have, so of all the people and all the jobs on the planet, you

Boston:

found this

Nicola:

one of those people

Boston:

And that it's something.

Boston:

And your love of Diana is so clear in your work.

Boston:

And so what, so how did you get there?

Boston:

How did you thread that needle from I love Wonder Woman comics.

Boston:

Mythology's really cool and I wanna draw Wonder Woman.

Nicola:

Well, I pursued it, but it, there was a delay in my pursuit of it.

Nicola:

like I said, I didn't grow up with comic books, but I did grow up with superheroes

Nicola:

because, in the seventies there were a lot of superhero, either reruns or

Nicola:

cartoons or TV shows or movies happening.

Nicola:

And a lot of them were DC related.

Nicola:

So Lynda Carter was my first, but it opened the door to me discovering

Nicola:

like the Batman reruns, the Superman fifties TV show reruns.

Nicola:

There was a sixties Superman cartoon.

Nicola:

There was the Super Friends, which was invaluable cuz it taught me that

Nicola:

these characters knew each other.

Nicola:

that two man Batman and Wonderful woman and Aquaman and Robin and all

Nicola:

these characters that they related to each other in one way or another.

Nicola:

And that was very interesting to me.

Nicola:

But there are also things like the Shazam and Isis hour,

Nicola:

Electra Woman and Dyna Girl,

Boston:

yeah.

Nicola:

all of these things that just really solidified my love of superheroes.

Nicola:

But I was also always deeply, all of the superheroines were the ones

Nicola:

that I absolutely, deeply related to.

Nicola:

Like Batman and Robin were great fun.

Nicola:

But an episode with Catwoman in was so much better as soon as Batgirl started.

Nicola:

I know the show now as an adult it isn't quite as good.

Nicola:

It isn't quite as exciting.

Nicola:

But her arrival for me as a kid was mind splitting.

Nicola:

That outfit was to die for.

Nicola:

Her little back girl closet with the spinning wall was like blowing my mind.

Nicola:

It was like, how do I get that in my life?

Nicola:

I was making out of cardboard like, back girl secret closet

Nicola:

style things with spinning walls out of cardboard for my dolls.

Nicola:

just absolutely li living for it.

Nicola:

And so I drew superheroes a lot, but I didn't really connect with comic

Nicola:

books cuz even when I would see them on the newsstand, this is pre

Nicola:

specialty stores when I was little, when I'd see them on the newsstand,

Nicola:

I would more likely see like a Marvel Hulk or Thor or something like that.

Nicola:

And it would be very Kirby esque art.

Nicola:

And that all looked very foreign to me, very brutal, very

Nicola:

masculine, very unappealing, to my young and uneducated eyes.

Nicola:

but on the very rare occasion I would see, like Superman or Wonder Woman on

Nicola:

the cover or I remember seeing a Justice League comic and thinking Justice

Nicola:

League that's like the Super Friends weren't, they call the Super Friends.

Nicola:

What, who were the Justice League and flipping through and seeing Green

Nicola:

Arrow and Black Canarian thinking, who the fuck are these people?

Nicola:

I dunno who these people are.

Nicola:

And so I just, it didn't feel like it was for me.

Nicola:

And even when I would see Wonder Woman in there, and I remember once seeing

Nicola:

a Wonder Woman comic and flipping through it and there was some Amazon

Nicola:

stuff in there, which was the most interesting to me but because it didn't

Nicola:

feel like the TV show and it didn't look like the TV show and the costume

Nicola:

wasn't as precious about the details as I was about the TV show details.

Nicola:

I didn't understand that the comics were the source material.

Nicola:

it was just another medium in which this character that I had this

Nicola:

affinity for was taking place.

Nicola:

And so it just wasn't for me.

Nicola:

And it wasn't until those late eighties comics that I got to read

Nicola:

through that I felt like, oh this George Perez story, this is for me.

Nicola:

And I did read all of that.

Nicola:

And then when he left, I read a little bit of when Jill

Nicola:

Thompson took over on the art.

Nicola:

And I think I read a little bit beyond that.

Nicola:

But then I just opted out.

Nicola:

I was just oh, it's, it's feeling very superhero.

Nicola:

We now, it's blending into the world that's full of all these

Nicola:

characters that I don't know.

Nicola:

I'm less interested than I had been, and so I just stopped reading

Boston:

you're speaking to that I think is really interesting because

Boston:

Wonder Woman, I don't know if this is true of all superheroes, but Wonder

Boston:

Woman seems to work best when she is not part of the greater DCU in my

Boston:

humble but accurate opinion.

Boston:

the, that era that George Perez era, and I'm gonna, summarize here for some

Boston:

people who may not be reading comics.

Boston:

George Perez reinvented Wonder Woman after, after she was killed in The

Boston:

Crisis on Infinite Earths, this, DC wide reboot that happened in the mid eighties.

Boston:

And when.

Boston:

George Perez, who we, who sadly passed away last year, retooled Wonder Woman.

Boston:

He really rooted her in classical mythology.

Boston:

The original stories from the 1940s, Aphrodite and Athena

Boston:

were the Amazon religion.

Boston:

But now you had Zeus and Hera and Aphrodite and the whole Pantheon

Boston:

and Wonder woman was steeped in this Greek mythological world.

Boston:

And the DC and the other, the super friends were nowhere to be seen.

Boston:

She had her own supporting cast.

Boston:

She was part of a family system in the United States, and she had

Boston:

her sister, Amazon's back home.

Boston:

And it was a really unique time.

Boston:

So now with that context, so something in that story spoke to you and I,

Boston:

this is another place that I relate.

Boston:

I remember seeing the DC the Wonder Woman number one on the spindle rack.

Boston:

in my, the first time I had been to a proper comic shop.

Boston:

And I, and I wonder woman number one, what's happening?

Boston:

How can it be starting over?

Boston:

And I remember there was no magic lasso in the first issue,

Boston:

and I was ridiculously upset.

Boston:

There was, I was like, whatever, 10, there needs to be a magic lasso.

Boston:

And I was worried they weren't going to introduce it.

Boston:

But I remember I, that was holy scripture for me.

Boston:

I read those comics with this intensity, and I'm wondering what

Boston:

it was that captured you to dive in and then to leave when it went.

Boston:

Superhero E.

Nicola:

The first issue of that run that I saw, because I just was, I

Nicola:

think I was just having lunch with this guy and a few other people, but

Nicola:

he was pulling out his comics that he'd just picked up that morning.

Nicola:

And the first issue that I saw of that run, I think it was issue seven, it was.

Nicola:

The aftermath of her defeating Ares.

Nicola:

And it started with her in a very damaged situation.

Nicola:

And the healing waters of, Themyscira are doing their magic on her.

Nicola:

And the cover of that issue is Diana in her Wonder Woman suit in this mythical

Nicola:

bubble of water, all of this water surrounded by the full pan of the gods

Nicola:

on this very Escher like, Olympus.

Nicola:

And just seeing all of these characters with Wonder Woman in the middle was just

Nicola:

like, what the fuck is happening here?

Nicola:

It was so much, It was so beyond any version of Wonder

Nicola:

Woman that I had seen before.

Nicola:

But because it was surrounded by all of these characters that I also knew,

Nicola:

I just hadn't put together that all of these characters were relevant

Nicola:

some way or another could be relevant.

Nicola:

And there they all were.

Nicola:

And I was like, how, what is happening?

Nicola:

How is this happening?

Nicola:

And he was like, oh, this is the aftermath of the first story.

Nicola:

And I'm like, I need to track down that first story.

Nicola:

And so I did slowly but surely, find the back issues.

Nicola:

of course I didn't know how to find back issues, but, it, it took me a

Nicola:

little bit, but I found the issues and then I started buying it monthly.

Nicola:

and it was that mythology.

Nicola:

It was that really non superhero storytelling.

Nicola:

her life in America was very non superhero.

Nicola:

the idea of Steve and Etta being in the story was really fascinating to me.

Nicola:

Cause I remembered Etta from the first season of the TV show and just how I,

Nicola:

I did feel that there was a difference whenever Wonder Woman was introduced

Nicola:

to other superheroes that like, there was a particular issue where she's

Nicola:

meeting everybody and it's that didn't feel right that she should be the new

Nicola:

girl in town when there's all of these characters because she feels too deeply

Nicola:

unique and original, that she should have been around long before all of these

Nicola:

other people who were inspired by her.

Nicola:

And from that moment, I knew intrinsically this is an immortal character.

Nicola:

Why hasn't her story started so much earlier?

Nicola:

she could have been Wonder Woman at the Trojan War.

Nicola:

I came up with this origin story in my head that maybe the reason why the Amazons

Nicola:

had left the mainland and gone to the island was how gross and brutal the Trojan

Nicola:

War was and how that had affected them.

Nicola:

And that was that Diana competing in the contest to represent the Amazons

Nicola:

as, part of her traditional origin story was her representing the Amazons to

Nicola:

com to participate in the Trojan War.

Nicola:

and that it was the violence and brutality of that just made the Amazons go, oh, fuck

Nicola:

all you guys, we need to get out of here.

Nicola:

Sorry, I keep swearing a lot.

Nicola:

I'm Australian.

Nicola:

Am I allowed to swear on

Boston:

bring it.

Boston:

Oh, absolutely.

Boston:

I'm oddly not so far, but.

Boston:

It's

Boston:

normal for the podcast.

Nicola:

pH.

Nicola:

Alright.

Nicola:

and so that, that to me felt like a really plausible origin.

Nicola:

I liked the idea that she was probably thousands of years old.

Nicola:

I liked the idea that she might have come out for World War ii, like her

Nicola:

original origin, that might have been her first venture back into,

Nicola:

the outside world and participated in the war, helped win the war.

Nicola:

And then once again, when it went nuclear, right at the end of the war

Nicola:

was like, Oh God, you people are awful.

Boston:

Yeah.

Boston:

I'm outta

Nicola:

I helped this and now I need to get outta here again cuz I

Nicola:

just dunno how to deal with this.

Boston:

there's something interesting because Wonder Woman is

Boston:

this, I mean, she's 80 years old.

Boston:

She's been,

Boston:

she has been around since World War II, and there was this emergence,

Boston:

she pop, she pops into the scene at this moment in world history, but in

Boston:

American history where there's all of this agitation and there's this moment

Boston:

where the role of women needs to change for global and national interest.

Boston:

And I maintained that Wonder Woman who only worked because, or was

Boston:

only able to grow as famous as she was, she outsold Superman because.

Boston:

America needed her.

Boston:

Like they needed her juice

Boston:

so that

Nicola:

100%.

Boston:

had a model.

Boston:

We can leave our island home to go into the workforce and we can go

Boston:

like, this is our role in the war.

Boston:

And then the men come back, they go back to their jobs.

Boston:

Most women also go back into the home and we get that creepy

Boston:

1950s Stepford Wives thing.

Boston:

but then you fast forward about 40 years and we get to the 1970s, and

Boston:

once again, women are exploding.

Boston:

Another generation of women is exploding in their quest for liberation and

Boston:

freedom.

Boston:

Wonder Woman is there and immediately jumps to the front of the pack

Boston:

with Lynda Carter, and again, she's this icon for a movement

Nicola:

Even pre that with Gloria Steinems, putting Wonder Woman

Nicola:

on the cover of issue one of Ms.

Nicola:

Magazine at a time when Wonder Woman had been completely de

Nicola:

powered, wasn't in costume.

Nicola:

she was like a generic ninja lady,

Boston:

Who owned a boutique?

Boston:

It was weird.

Nicola:

oh God, save us all.

Nicola:

You know?

Nicola:

I'm sure it was a lot of fun, but it didn't at all speak to the character.

Nicola:

It was just somebody else.

Nicola:

And it was under the pressure from Gloria Steinem wanting to put Wonder Woman back

Nicola:

on the cover, that the comics repowered her and put her back in the outfit.

Nicola:

And on the power of that, that the Lynda Carter series was green lit.

Boston:

Yeah, and then Wonder Woman enjoys three years of massive popularity.

Boston:

Again, the eighties happened, massive consumerism.

Boston:

Wonder Woman, once again, along with superheroes in general like that,

Boston:

the interest goes away and you fast forward again.

Boston:

And so when I started doing my more intense Wonder Woman work in 2011, nobody

Boston:

knew or cared anything about Wonder Woman.

Boston:

It was nothing.

Nicola:

did a, I did a panel at San Diego Comic-Con in 2016.

Nicola:

And it was the 75th anniversary of the character.

Nicola:

it was a 75th anniversary panel and I had been asked to do it like two days earlier.

Nicola:

because at the time I was working on the Wonder Woman

Nicola:

Year one series with Greg Rucka.

Nicola:

And as a female creator working on the character in that anniversary

Nicola:

year, it felt really appropriate.

Nicola:

And then I was told like the day before, so you're gonna be doing the

Nicola:

panel with Patty Jenkins and Gal Gadot.

Nicola:

And I'm like, what blow my mind?

Nicola:

And one of the things that Patty and I discussed on the panel, I

Nicola:

brought it up as a feeling that I had been having that Patty was like,

Nicola:

yes, I'm recognizing that as well.

Nicola:

Is that only a couple of years earlier, Wonder Woman had felt like this

Nicola:

incredibly old fashioned, irrelevant character that I still loved, but

Nicola:

the world just had moved on from, that she just wasn't there anymore.

Nicola:

But I think part of that building momentum of the re commercialization

Nicola:

of superheroes, and this concept that Wonder Woman was coming to the

Nicola:

cinema was starting to remind people that Wonder Woman's the origin point.

Nicola:

She's like the epicenter of you know, of superheroines.

Nicola:

But also that she is this character that, apart from the original, suffragette

Nicola:

movement, she has been one of the primary representatives of every wave of feminism

Nicola:

since, that World War II wave of feminism, that second wave, seventies feminism, and

Nicola:

here we were on our third wave of feminism that had really already kicked into gear.

Nicola:

Slowly but surely with the internet and social media galvanizing women's speech

Nicola:

and women's groups and women's voices.

Nicola:

and absolutely Wonder Woman should be re representing us because she

Nicola:

stands for all of those things.

Nicola:

And so I brought this up in the panel and Patty was like, absolutely.

Nicola:

And we felt like we were riding this wave of our favorite

Nicola:

character rising to the top again.

Nicola:

And I feel the release of that first Wonder Woman movie was where

Nicola:

Crescendoed, she was suddenly, the whole world was like, oh my God.

Nicola:

That's right.

Nicola:

That character is amazing and this is why.

Boston:

Yes.

Boston:

And that moment, that g that galvanizing moment, so in, in the United States,

Boston:

Voldemort is elected president, we were ready for the year of women.

Boston:

We all thought Hillary Clinton was gonna be president.

Boston:

There was this movement of enthusiasm around this rise in power of women.

Boston:

And then we get this, everything just goes batshit crazy

Boston:

and people are traumatized and confused.

Boston:

And I remember when Wonder Woman came out was their opening night, of course.

Boston:

And Yeah.

Boston:

where else would

Nicola:

you there at the premier?

Nicola:

I was

Boston:

Oh God.

Boston:

No.

Boston:

No.

Boston:

Oh I was not at the premier.

Boston:

no.

Boston:

I don't

Nicola:

went to opening night as well, but because I was in the States for the

Nicola:

premier, so I got to go to opening because I wanted to see it again straight away.

Nicola:

the, yeah, you go

Boston:

Oh, just the, just

Boston:

when, no, the no, man's land scene happens.

Boston:

The audience loses their

Boston:

minds.

Boston:

I'm sobbing like a child.

Boston:

I look around a little embarrassed.

Boston:

Everyone else is too.

Boston:

something happened and it became this catharsis.

Boston:

I watched that movie a dozen times in the theater.

Boston:

And so Wonder Woman, this time is not just the wave of women, but the resistance.

Boston:

This is when hashtag Me Too comes in.

Boston:

This is, oh, and I wanna make a side trip here because you did artwork for

Boston:

one of the most amazing things that never happened, which is Wonder Woman as the

Boston:

honorary ambassador to the United Nations.

Nicola:

Yeah.

Boston:

And that art was so beautiful

Nicola:

Thank you.

Boston:

and I was it made such sense.

Boston:

What a perfect representative.

Boston:

Representative for the empowerment of women and girls around the world.

Boston:

And then it went sideways because self-proclaimed, self-described feminists

Boston:

inside the UN didn't like her costume.

Boston:

Is that what happened?

Nicola:

From what I understood and from the perspective that I

Nicola:

have now, it feels like it was a propaganda against the idea of having

Nicola:

a representative for women and girls.

Boston:

Oh,

Nicola:

it was a bit broader than that because that shut the whole program down.

Nicola:

It wasn't as though they replaced Wonder Woman with somebody else.

Nicola:

The whole program disappeared, which was a deep shame, which was a deep shame.

Nicola:

But the argument that they were using was, wonder Woman

Nicola:

is an old-fashioned, irrelevant character who's deeply sexualized.

Nicola:

And the reason, their reasoning for how she was a sexualized character was using

Nicola:

Lynda Carter's seventies, outfit not her, in 19 42, 43 version of the outfit.

Nicola:

But her seventies character, outfit, which was higher cut in the pants and

Nicola:

a little lower cut in the, breastplate.

Nicola:

And obviously it's the seventies and the seventies, even though

Nicola:

it was a wave of feminism, this was the post bra burning moment.

Nicola:

And feminism was incredibly glamorous.

Nicola:

we had the bionic woman and Charlie's Angels as our heroes.

Nicola:

They were all beautiful and glamorous.

Nicola:

That was just what, that was part of the ingredients of feminine power.

Boston:

Was owning an AW wielding beauty and sexuality?

Nicola:

100% that was part of the power.

Nicola:

And the argument was just that she shouldn't be representing women.

Nicola:

And I was like, oh, okay.

Nicola:

So if, I reckon if the initiative had happened six months later when the

Nicola:

movie had come out, everybody would've been behind it because the girls, I

Nicola:

didn't get to go to the event at the UN because I was deep in a project.

Nicola:

I was invited to go and I couldn't go cuz I had deadlines

Nicola:

cuz comic books are unrelenting.

Nicola:

Which is so disappointing cuz I knew Gal Gadot was gonna be there.

Nicola:

I knew Patty Jenkins was gonna be there, both of who I had

Nicola:

just met at San Diego ComicCon.

Nicola:

but I also knew Lynda Cartera was gonna be there and I'd never met Lynda before.

Nicola:

And so I, I watched the whole thing on the live stream and just seeing like

Nicola:

these hundreds of girls, like school girls that had been invited to attend

Nicola:

this event, all wearing these beautiful cardboard tiaras, Wonder Woman tiaras.

Nicola:

Now it's just this is so special and moving cuz this is what it's for.

Nicola:

And y we had addressed, when I was first approached to do this piece of key art,

Nicola:

DC had asked me about it at that San Diego Comic-Con, they'd said, we wanna have a

Nicola:

meeting with you about a special project.

Nicola:

And they gave me the idea of the pitch and I just started talking

Nicola:

back to them immediately in terms of why and how this is such a

Nicola:

perfect union, and fully understood.

Nicola:

And I said, look, straight off the bat, I understand that we're going to have to

Nicola:

de Americanize her outfit quite a lot.

Nicola:

it's been happening in the comic books a little bit anyway,

Nicola:

but we need to step that up.

Nicola:

also, I understand that we probably need to cover her up a little bit

Nicola:

more if she's going to be there for women and girls everywhere.

Nicola:

she can't be so skin exposed.

Nicola:

I was talking about putting her in a cape and a big swath across her decolletage

Nicola:

making her skirt quite a bit longer.

Nicola:

Like just subtle, making sure she still represented herself, but that

Nicola:

she was more universally accessible.

Nicola:

And the first piece of art that I produced is almost exactly

Nicola:

the piece of art that was used.

Nicola:

But I gave her a really big smile, a really big toothy smile cuz I thought,

Nicola:

that is her warmth and her openness and what I hadn't considered, but

Nicola:

that this is a UN note, not a DC note.

Nicola:

You need to close her mouth with her smile because a big, broad

Nicola:

open smile is very American.

Nicola:

And I was like, oh my gosh, I hadn't thought about it.

Nicola:

That there's that it's a bit too in your face.

Nicola:

Yeah.

Nicola:

That it's a little bit too Hollywood.

Nicola:

And I was like, oh gosh.

Nicola:

Okay.

Nicola:

I hadn't even considered that a little more subtlety.

Nicola:

So I needed to keep the smile in the eyes and keep the smile on the

Nicola:

lips, but just close the mouth.

Nicola:

And I just thought that was a really interesting note and a really interesting

Nicola:

perspective that I deeply respected.

Nicola:

So I was like, yep, absolutely.

Nicola:

I fully understand now that it's been explained to me.

Boston:

So if we follow that thread into your work on Wonder Woman Year One with

Boston:

Greg Rucka and up and prior to year one, I can barely remember what was going on,

Boston:

but Wonder Woman had become this kind of dower character, like a lot of sadness,

Boston:

a lot of grief, she didn't smile much.

Boston:

And one of the things that I remember noting when Rebirth and Year One

Boston:

came out was that the colors were so bright and there was a lot of smiles,

Boston:

and it was this breath of fresh air.

Boston:

I, a bunch of comics, friends super geeked out on this feeling like

Boston:

we saw our friend happy again.

Boston:

Like

Boston:

this character that we love, who's very real to us.

Boston:

Wonder Woman fans are a little strange about Wonder Woman.

Boston:

She is like a friend.

Boston:

We have, we're protective of her

Nicola:

Yeah.

Nicola:

Very

Boston:

and rebirth.

Boston:

What.

Boston:

What was the conversation like as you were creating Wonder Woman, as you're

Boston:

reintroducing, and as you said, this was one of the first times her origin had been

Boston:

retooled in a very long time, decades.

Boston:

What did you bring to it?

Boston:

What was important about it?

Boston:

How did you craft this?

Nicola:

Luckily Greg and I, Greg Rucker and I had been great mates for about 10

Nicola:

years by this point, and our friendship had happened because of Wonder Woman.

Nicola:

he had been working on Wonder Woman in the early two thousands, and I was

Nicola:

in the process of hustling into the industry and Wonder Woman being like my

Nicola:

goalpost of where I was aiming myself.

Nicola:

I had redrawn, a few pages of one of his scripts, to put in my portfolio.

Nicola:

And under encouragement from a mate of mine, I had put them online

Nicola:

on a particular website had, I had been told was where a lot

Nicola:

of industry professionals look.

Nicola:

And I with an introduction of saying that, I'm a semiprofessional working

Nicola:

in this industry already, I understand there are some Wonder Woman fans here.

Nicola:

I posted these Wonder Woman pages and within hours I had, Gail Simone, Greg

Nicola:

Rucka, mark Andreyko and oh look, a couple of other people, saying, oh,

Nicola:

what, who are you, where are you?

Nicola:

What, what's happening?

Nicola:

And almost immediately Greg was like, I want you on this book with me.

Nicola:

Because you seem to understand the character.

Nicola:

And so he started hassling with DC and his editors.

Nicola:

and it didn't happen, but it started that conversation, with Greg and I,

Nicola:

and at one point Greg and I were going to do, a new arc of Queen and Country.

Nicola:

He was like, this is how we'll get you into dc, come into an arc of this with me.

Nicola:

And we were just in the process of gearing that up when I did get my job

Nicola:

at DC during Birds of Prey with Gail.

Nicola:

but it initiated our friendship and it initiated this conversation about Diana

Nicola:

that continued for a decade leading up to us actually getting this gig.

Nicola:

And the gig itself came out of nowhere because, up until Greg leaving the company

Nicola:

full-time, in the late two thousands, early teens, early 2010s, he was leaving

Nicola:

the company because they reneged and burnt him on a bunch of Wonder Woman

Nicola:

projects, all of which I knew about, all of which I might have been one

Nicola:

of the artists in consideration for.

Nicola:

But, he was meant to do Wonder Woman All Stars.

Nicola:

And then he was meant to do Wonder Woman, Earth One.

Nicola:

And, he was in the conversation for a lot of these Wonder Woman projects that

Nicola:

ended up going to other people and.

Nicola:

So he left the company, burning all of his bridges happily on his way out

Nicola:

the door, because of Wonder Woman.

Nicola:

Yeah, exactly.

Nicola:

He's very quirky person.

Nicola:

and, he would be burning all these bridges and that was it.

Nicola:

He was done.

Nicola:

But as the 75th anniversary was approaching and this Rebirth, rejig,

Nicola:

to not fix, but just bounce back after the new 52, which had been

Nicola:

its own very particular agenda, they needed to reset back to not square

Nicola:

one for everybody, but they needed to reset back to what everybody

Nicola:

actually wanted from their characters.

Nicola:

Not this really Elseworlds kind of take on these characters, which in

Nicola:

some cases was very fun and in some cases was incredibly frustrating.

Nicola:

so this Rebirth idea is already on the table.

Nicola:

They're seeing that it's wonderful and 75th anniversary, they can

Nicola:

see that the movie is going to come out in a year's time.

Nicola:

And it is this opportunity to do something with the character.

Nicola:

they understand how important she is, but they don't necessarily

Nicola:

understand what to do with her and how to elevate her, to give her the

Nicola:

respect that they know she deserves.

Nicola:

And they they kind of came knocking on Greg's door saying, hi, we know

Nicola:

that you know what you are doing with this character, and this is

Nicola:

one of those opportunities where we really can't afford to fuck it up.

Nicola:

We can't afford to go in an interesting direction because we don't know what

Nicola:

else to do, which is essentially what had happened with all of these other projects.

Nicola:

It was like they would reject Greg's solid idea for a more interesting idea that

Nicola:

took the character in another direction.

Nicola:

And this was their opportunity to say, okay, we can't afford another direction.

Nicola:

We need a solid take.

Nicola:

And by this stage, I had also left DC and Greg and I were working on Black Magic.

Nicola:

We'd finished our first arc and we were working into our second

Nicola:

arc, and they approached him and said, we, we can't fuck this up.

Nicola:

We need you to do this, please, to which Greg set all these boundaries

Nicola:

and rules for which they 100% agreed.

Nicola:

And then when they felt like they were reasonably confident about his

Nicola:

position, they were like, and do you think you can bring Nicola with you?

Nicola:

And he was like, I'm sure I can.

Nicola:

And so he called me immediately afterwards to say, Hey, guess what, kid?

Nicola:

we might be doing a Wonder Woman origin story at dc to which I was like, I'm

Nicola:

in the middle of a page of Black Magic.

Nicola:

What are you talking about?

Nicola:

And he was like, do you wanna do this?

Nicola:

I'm like, of course I fucking wanna do this.

Nicola:

Because my whole goal, even though Wonder Woman had guest starred in

Nicola:

pretty much every book I had done to that point, because every writer

Nicola:

that I worked with knew how much I loved the character and knew how

Nicola:

much I was bringing to the character.

Nicola:

So I had drawn her a lot.

Nicola:

But you know that, that question that everybody else, what's your dream project?

Nicola:

My dream project from the very beginning had been to draw Wonder Woman.

Nicola:

but the further my career got and the more opportunities I got to draw Wonder

Nicola:

Woman, that answer got refined to, in a perfect world, I wish I could do an origin

Nicola:

story of Wonder Woman with Greg Rucka, and suddenly there it was on the table.

Nicola:

And so what we were then faced with, because I think we were offered

Nicola:

this in It was happening like around Easter, so let's say April.

Nicola:

They were going to announce it in two weeks and our first issue

Nicola:

was gonna be coming out in a few months and it was like, holy shit.

Nicola:

Which is a lot, which is a lot to suddenly have to jump ship from what

Nicola:

you are doing and turn something around.

Nicola:

So suddenly Greg and I are in this position where we had a decade's

Nicola:

worth of understanding between us.

Nicola:

We knew that we were on the same page regarding her character and

Nicola:

who she is and what she means and all of the broad a amoebous things.

Nicola:

But suddenly it was like, okay, it was the maths.

Nicola:

It was like, okay, what we're gonna do is an origin story for six issues.

Nicola:

We only get 20 pages an issue.

Nicola:

It's not 22 pages anymore.

Nicola:

So this means we have 120 pages to tell this story.

Nicola:

How do we wanna do this?

Nicola:

What is our breakdown?

Nicola:

What are the things that are important to us?

Nicola:

What do we need?

Nicola:

All of these things, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah.

Boston:

And what were some of those things?

Boston:

What was it you wanted to squeeze into those 120 pages?

Boston:

this is Wonder Woman, we want you to get who she is,

Boston:

what's important.

Nicola:

We needed to bring, like you said before, we needed to bring the light back.

Nicola:

She's meant to be an incredibly optimistic, warm,

Nicola:

and approachable character.

Nicola:

So that was deeply important to us, that she was accessible, which

Nicola:

influenced what my art would be.

Nicola:

Cuz I had gone from doing Earth two, which was very gritty and

Nicola:

testosterone and lots of shadows and lots of textural, line work.

Nicola:

And for this, I wanted to be cleaner and brighter and a lot less shadow and a

Nicola:

lot just as open and bright as possible.

Nicola:

we also knew that we didn't want her to be stuck in this virginal loop

Nicola:

because one of what I consider, one of the mistakes of the Perez era was

Nicola:

removing Steve Trevor as a love interest.

Nicola:

I understand the reason for it because we didn't wanna bog her

Nicola:

down in a love interest story,

Boston:

Mm-hmm.

Nicola:

but it did leave her without a suitable suitor because no one else

Nicola:

was going to fill those, even though plenty of writers tried, there was

Nicola:

just never anyone who was appropriate hated the idea of it's Steve.

Nicola:

Trevor hated the idea of it.

Nicola:

It has to be.

Nicola:

It has to be.

Nicola:

In the more recent versions of Steve Trevor, like the animated Wonder Woman

Nicola:

movie, Steve Trevor was a bit of a ladies man, a bit of a dick, and.

Nicola:

I enjoyed that take.

Nicola:

I had also had the idea that he should be, a bit of a superficially, a bit of

Nicola:

a dick that doesn't quite know how to engage with his emotions, but suddenly

Nicola:

he's around this woman who's like all exposed and understood emotions and

Nicola:

he just can't help but be a better person around her, but in, in talking

Nicola:

with Greg, it was like, no, this is someone that has to be worthy of her.

Nicola:

She has to not, he can't be a fixer upper for her because, and she

Nicola:

can't be a virgin when he arrives.

Nicola:

So we needed to establish that this is a community of women that have

Nicola:

been around for thousands of years, and no one is chaste necessarily.

Nicola:

people might choose it for themselves.

Nicola:

Some of the race might choose it for themselves, but there has to be love.

Nicola:

There has to be affection, there has to be the foundations of human need.

Nicola:

And so therefore, 100% she's had girlfriends before.

Boston:

I loved something that Greg wrote into that first issue was,

Boston:

Diana's seems to be going through a slutty face like she was with

Nicola:

a little bit.

Boston:

and then another.

Boston:

So she is not chaste,

Nicola:

Well, we don't even know if it was a slutty phase, because it might

Nicola:

have been like all of these ladies that she's had relationships with over

Boston:

centuries,

Nicola:

Yes.

Boston:

She's had more experience, not just a girlfriend, but she is

Boston:

a sexual being, a romantic being,

Boston:

and then there's the first man she meets.

Boston:

It's not like he turns on her sexuality just

Nicola:

Exactly.

Nicola:

And it, it couldn't be a turn on of sexuality and it couldn't be

Nicola:

that she was just smitten with the first dick that arrived.

Nicola:

It couldn't be that basic.

Nicola:

So that informed who he had to be.

Nicola:

He had to be worthy of her.

Nicola:

And so we had to make him this really good guy.

Nicola:

that, and I loved that it was reflected in the Patty Jenkins

Nicola:

version as well, that we wanted Steve to be backing her up all the time.

Nicola:

That any time she went into action, he was there.

Nicola:

And you see that play out in the 2017 movie as well, that every time she

Nicola:

goes into action, she turns around and he's right there behind her.

Nicola:

Like just not being shielded by her, but backing her up.

Nicola:

And so that was nice to know that we had moved in parallel there, that,

Nicola:

because our book was coming out a year before the movie came out, we didn't

Nicola:

know what they were doing in the movie.

Boston:

That is such synchronicity that you all are so aligned with

Boston:

these stories that are moving into the culture simultaneously.

Boston:

I remember reading something that, I don't remember where, but you had been

Boston:

interviewed, but that you didn't know what was happening with the movie.

Boston:

It seemed to me that there was coordination, there was so much

Boston:

similarity, but not at all.

Nicola:

No, we didn't know.

Nicola:

It wasn't until, it wasn't until we saw the movie that I remember turning to

Nicola:

my mate who I went to the premier with.

Nicola:

Like, this is just like the book.

Nicola:

like Patty was seeing the book as it was coming out, but she

Nicola:

was already in the editing suite.

Nicola:

So they had made the movie and it was this really interesting thing

Nicola:

of h how are we on the same page?

Nicola:

Because we're not sharing notes.

Nicola:

We're not sharing notes.

Nicola:

But this is because Patty's understanding of the character is like Greg's and

Nicola:

my understanding of the character.

Nicola:

Cuz she's the same age as we are.

Nicola:

And therefore her early influence was Lynda Carter and Lynda understood

Nicola:

the character in a way that I don't think a lot of women would

Nicola:

as really soft, she's a pacifist.

Nicola:

She's constantly trying to stop action from happening.

Nicola:

and when she does, she's not beating the shit out of somebody.

Nicola:

She's just throwing them around to just Take them out a

Boston:

like getting the kids to stop fighting.

Boston:

She just throws them into their corners.

Nicola:

Yeah, exactly.

Nicola:

So that was key to us.

Nicola:

I knew that I wanted the competition, in the book.

Nicola:

That's part of the history that means something to me.

Nicola:

But we also understood that if she is during the competition, she's cheating.

Nicola:

And we didn't want her to cheat.

Nicola:

She had to earn her spot as an equal, a as a possible equal, she had to win.

Nicola:

So that was why we didn't give her powers until she was already in Man's Land.

Boston:

I loved that.

Boston:

That's always been a problem with the history of the origin is if you go back

Boston:

to the Marston comics, all of the Amazons are capable of what Diana is capable of.

Boston:

but then you get to Wonder Woman with a sleeping beauty origin where she has these

Boston:

get her powers are gifts from the gods.

Boston:

Now the tournament comes around and she's cheating.

Boston:

So you manage to get the best of both worlds She's still the

Boston:

most skilled of her island.

Boston:

But if she's gonna fight at superhero level, she needs a power up.

Boston:

And gods show up and give her gifts.

Nicola:

Give her the gifts.

Nicola:

Yeah.

Nicola:

And I thought it was really lovely that Greg's, representation of that was that

Nicola:

at the end of the competition, there are three Amazon standing, that there are

Nicola:

three who have managed to really be the top of the food chain in terms of skill.

Nicola:

And really it was the bullets and bracelets that cemented Diana

Nicola:

as the one to represent them.

Nicola:

And that the gun was a gun that Steve had brought with him that, was, it was

Nicola:

like, here is a weapon from his people.

Boston:

Whoever's

Nicola:

going out there needs to face whatever this is.

Nicola:

So let's go.

Nicola:

and Diana is the last one standing.

Nicola:

And I love that about her a and about how Greg faced that conundrum.

Nicola:

And I had said early on, like before we started, and even though we only had a

Nicola:

very short turnaround, I had, because he always says, what do you want?

Nicola:

What do what do you wanna get in there?

Nicola:

And I was like, look, I know you think this is the most stupid idea

Nicola:

ever, but I love the Invisible Jet.

Nicola:

I just need it in there.

Nicola:

And he was like, oh, I thought it doesn't make any sense.

Nicola:

It's so stupid.

Nicola:

And I was like, no, I'm gonna sell you on it.

Nicola:

This is what, it's Steve trevor arrives there in a plane.

Nicola:

It's the same plane.

Nicola:

They just put it back together.

Nicola:

But they don't necessarily understand the mechanics.

Nicola:

Cuz even though there is incredible science and technology on this island,

Nicola:

they're not a male driven, rocket driven, phallic representation driven society.

Nicola:

They're more of a nature-based science.

Nicola:

And there's a little bit of magic.

Nicola:

This island is invisible to the outside eye.

Nicola:

So somewhere in there, there is either science or magic or

Nicola:

somewhere in the middle that has made that island invisible.

Nicola:

Why don't they have access to that?

Nicola:

And they just put that plane back together.

Nicola:

They make it invisible by patching it together.

Nicola:

And they don't need to know how to fly it.

Nicola:

They're magic.

Nicola:

They just send the plane back to where it

Boston:

They just send it home.

Boston:

They just tell it to go home.

Nicola:

Essentially.

Nicola:

and I just, he just thought that was so silly and so beautiful.

Nicola:

so in keeping with the story that we were telling, if we were telling a

Nicola:

more realistic, wonder Woman story.

Nicola:

We might not have done something so delightful, but I felt like

Nicola:

that was really important.

Nicola:

I also, when Steve crashes, he doesn't crash alone.

Nicola:

He crashes with a number of other people and they don't make it, and he

Nicola:

barely makes it, but they heal him.

Nicola:

And I was like, I know we can't do something crazy science, like the purple

Nicola:

healing ray, but we can do something that's like the purple healing ray

Nicola:

in that, maybe there's a particular kind of crystal, like a, a rock on

Nicola:

the island, a particularly kind of crystal they've polished the crap out

Nicola:

of so that it can r refract the sun's light into a bath full of, plasma.

Nicola:

if I, if it's like a stem cell kind of, whatever science they've found important

Nicola:

to keep themselves well and healthy for thousands of years.

Nicola:

They're not aging, but they can still ale.

Nicola:

that they've created a mud bath or whatever the fuck, and just shining

Nicola:

the light through this lens is what will heal him one way or another.

Nicola:

And so you, we only get one panel of that.

Nicola:

We don't get to describe it, but there's one panel where

Nicola:

you can see that happening.

Nicola:

And Steve is a wreck before he goes in and he is clean as a baby when he comes out.

Nicola:

yeah.

Boston:

I wanna talk about the the, um, what's the female gaze, which is

Boston:

very much like the gay gaze

Boston:

on, on Steve Trevor and some other characters you've drawn, you

Boston:

have highlighted, Dick Grayson, Nightwing's assets most impressively.

Boston:

What we're talking about earlier.

Boston:

There's a criticism of Wonder Woman being sexualized.

Boston:

and if you look at the nineties Deodato butt floss era, it's

Boston:

just, I embarrassing to look at

Nicola:

It's a lot.

Boston:

but your view of Steve Trevor, he doesn't wear a lot of clothes a lot of

Boston:

the time.

Nicola:

That was definitely on purpose, in that opening issue cuz most of our

Nicola:

Year one takes place in the first issue.

Nicola:

Like.

Nicola:

issue one is maybe 11 and a half months

Boston:

Oh,

Nicola:

The rest of the story takes place in a couple of weeks, if that.

Nicola:

So what Greg had said to really solidify the importance of their

Nicola:

meeting is that Year One story is the two of them over a period of time.

Nicola:

So we're seeing his story and we're seeing her story and it's not until

Nicola:

the end of that first issue when he crashes onto the island that they meet.

Nicola:

And in doing that it was like, so we're going to show Steve in his

Nicola:

life, show Diana and hers, how they reflect, how they mirror each other.

Nicola:

And at one point in just like a montage of, doing things.

Nicola:

Greg had said something about the SEAL training, water sports kind

Nicola:

of thing so that we can show Diana swimming with the other Amazons.

Nicola:

And nothing about what Greg had written was meant to be sexualized in any nature,

Nicola:

but I was just like, these are two young, beautiful hot people who are going to meet

Nicola:

each other and immediately fall in love.

Nicola:

We need to love them too.

Nicola:

And we had already had that discussion of Diana isn't a

Nicola:

virgin, she needs to be sexualized.

Nicola:

And isn't that in that panel that, the other girls around her are talking about.

Nicola:

You know who Diana might be looking up with these days.

Nicola:

And there she's in the distance, she's naked, she's in the water.

Nicola:

And I was like, I'm putting Steve Trevor right up front in his short short because

Nicola:

when I did the Google search for what are these guys wear when they're doing their

Nicola:

swim stuff and saw their shorts are tiny.

Nicola:

And I was like, oh my God, that's hilarious.

Nicola:

I'm leaning into that.

Nicola:

And put Steve Trevor front and center so that I'm constantly going

Nicola:

backwards and forwards between them.

Nicola:

if Steve is in the f foreground, then Diana's in the background and vice versa.

Nicola:

Because you wanna have that visual dynamic of constantly doing

Nicola:

this between the two characters.

Nicola:

And because I knew I wanted Diana naked, I needed to put her in the background,

Nicola:

but Steve's wearing shorts, he's not quite naked so I can put him in the foreground.

Nicola:

And then after that I said to Greg, I think it was in the second issue

Nicola:

where he has been healed and he's in like a recovery balcony, you know,

Nicola:

it's very, it's very glamorous.

Nicola:

but he's the only one there.

Nicola:

And it was like, there is no way he would have clothes on cuz

Nicola:

there would be absolutely no need.

Nicola:

and Diana goes to visit him there and is completely comfortable with his nakedness

Nicola:

even though he doesn't expose himself.

Nicola:

But.

Nicola:

He feels naked and she's oblivious.

Nicola:

She couldn't give a shit.

Nicola:

That felt like really important storytelling.

Nicola:

and it was in that moment that I was like, this is the second issue that I'm

Nicola:

getting Steve pretty close to naked.

Nicola:

And I said to Greg, I'm gonna make Steve naked in every issue.

Nicola:

How are we gonna do this?

Nicola:

And he laughed and laughed because it was Like, Wonder Woman is always

Nicola:

being accused of showing too much skin.

Nicola:

Cause she's in a bikini and it's we just equal it out.

Nicola:

We just, Steve is gonna be showing as much skin as she is and it's

Nicola:

just going to be incidental.

Nicola:

Cuz that's how it always happened.

Nicola:

It was incidental cuz he's in a recovery hospital room.

Nicola:

In the next issue, he's getting his checkups at the doctor because

Nicola:

this is, he's arrived back fully healed with all of his, dead mates.

Nicola:

And he has to explain all of this to, his military superiors

Boston:

And how his appendix had grown back.

Nicola:

yeah.

Nicola:

How he's in one piece.

Nicola:

And I said, I'm gonna fold his uniform neatly as it would

Nicola:

be by a salter next to him.

Nicola:

And he's just naked on the seat.

Nicola:

We're not seeing anything, but we can see that he's naked and ag.

Nicola:

And again, it was like in the next issue, Greg was like, and Steve takes

Nicola:

his shirt off so that he can use it as a bandage to help some, it's just

Nicola:

all organic, absolutely by design.

Boston:

We haven't even touched on your most recent work, and as you

Boston:

have done so much magnificent art.

Boston:

Your Wonder Woman is so filled with love, but Historia is next level.

Boston:

this is capital A art that you have created.

Nicola:

Thank you.

Boston:

How did this happen?

Boston:

how did you do this?

Nicola:

And some of them, I wonder how I did it too.

Nicola:

it came about because, I remember when these Black Label books were

Nicola:

being announced and one of the early announcements was Kelly Sue

Nicola:

Deconnick, and Phil Jimenez working on Historia and how it was this

Nicola:

history of the Amazons and such.

Nicola:

And that just looked extraordinary and interesting and I was really

Nicola:

interested to see Kelly Sue's take.

Nicola:

Phil coming back to the character cuz like me, he's one of those

Nicola:

artists that is deeply invested in the character and has spent quite

Nicola:

a lot of time with her as well.

Nicola:

So that felt incredibly organic and very exciting cuz this would be Phil

Nicola:

returning after quite a long time.

Nicola:

And the format of this Black Label prestige line, is not only practically

Nicola:

different because the format of the release book is different, but the

Nicola:

pages are twice the size so you can put in so much more detail because

Nicola:

it's gonna get shrunk down still.

Nicola:

And that felt very exciting.

Nicola:

And a long time after that was announced, I got an email from DC saying, okay,

Nicola:

so this is gonna be three volumes, possibly si six or nine in the long run.

Nicola:

But certainly we're committed to three volumes.

Nicola:

but Phil is not going to be doing every issue cuz it's too much.

Boston:

because his hand would falls off and his eyes would bleed.

Boston:

Yeah.

Nicola:

your brain would explode.

Nicola:

It is so much, there's so many characters.

Nicola:

it's not like a Batman Black Label where it's still the same group of characters.

Nicola:

You just have more space to be more detailed and, you hope

Nicola:

for a sophisticated story.

Nicola:

This is all of the Amazons and all of the gods and all of the everything.

Nicola:

And even though I didn't know the story and I hadn't yet seen much of

Nicola:

Phil's art, I'd seen little bits and pieces that he had shared in the early

Nicola:

days, which were super nons spoilery.

Nicola:

it, it seemed like a very interesting idea that a long form version of the

Nicola:

Amazon's origin was gonna be told because it hadn't been done before.

Nicola:

Every origin of the Amazons had been a shorthand to get to Diana or to get to

Nicola:

Wonder Woman as quickly as possible.

Nicola:

But this was gonna be a long form story.

Nicola:

And I knew from the very beginning that Diana wouldn't even be born

Nicola:

until the end of issue three.

Nicola:

So it was like, oh, okay, so you're really investing in this?

Nicola:

And they were like, yes.

Nicola:

So would you be interested in doing volume two?

Nicola:

And I was like, actually, as tempting as that is, and as terrified as I

Nicola:

would be to follow Phil, I actually can't do it at the moment because I

Nicola:

can't remember what I was doing at the time, but I couldn't take it on.

Nicola:

I think I was working on Black, Black Magic.

Nicola:

I think I'd finally got back to Black Magic, Greg and I's schedule had aligned.

Nicola:

And so I said no.

Nicola:

And six months later, editorial came back to me and they said, okay, we've

Nicola:

got someone working on volume two.

Nicola:

Is there any possibility that you would be able to do volume three?

Nicola:

And I was like, now doing something else.

Nicola:

again, super tempted.

Nicola:

I wish I could, but I can't, schedule doesn't permit.

Nicola:

And so they're like, okay, fine.

Nicola:

And another, like six months later and the editor contacts me again and says,

Nicola:

look, I know you're gonna say no, I know, but just on the off chance, do you

Nicola:

think you could fit us into our schedule?

Nicola:

And I was like, it depends on your schedule, because it

Nicola:

was like February last year.

Nicola:

I was like, I'm, deep in this at the moment, but I can see that come August,

Nicola:

I'm gonna have some opening time.

Nicola:

If you can wait until August, then I can do it.

Nicola:

But if you need me to start now, I can't.

Nicola:

And they were like, August is perfect timing.

Nicola:

And I'm like, okay, I'm in.

Nicola:

And that was how the, me being involved in the project came about.

Nicola:

I eventually got to have a really long, chat with Kelly Sue as we broke it down.

Nicola:

She told me what was happening in Phil's.

Nicola:

Phil's hadn't yet come out, but I had a digital copy of it.

Nicola:

Gene had been working on volume two for a while, and I think it was about 75% done.

Nicola:

So I got to see how Gene was approaching the story and I could see how each volume

Nicola:

of the story was very different to each other, which was in itself a little

Nicola:

bit reassuring because Phil's style and Gene's style is so different, but also

Nicola:

the story in each volume is so different.

Nicola:

Phil's is very god space and epic and broad, like it's all double page spreads

Nicola:

until suddenly you meet Hippolyta in the last third to a quarter of the book.

Nicola:

Suddenly we become earthbound and we are introduced to this character, and her

Nicola:

journey is set in motion Then, Gene Ha's volume is almost entirely earthbound

Nicola:

and it is very human following a human character as she has a very human

Nicola:

experience of pursuing these god created Amazons and by chance, ephemerally,

Nicola:

encountering a goddess, and how all of that plays out and the the turn

Nicola:

of the story being sort really human moment that changes and exposes them.

Nicola:

And that made it clear that mine was gonna be somewhere in the

Nicola:

middle, that it needed to fill both.

Nicola:

it needed to go very big and very small constantly, because we were

Nicola:

bringing all of those elements together.

Boston:

There's an image near in the middle of the book, where everything

Boston:

turns, and it's the, the part, the Wonder Woman lore has always included the

Boston:

battle between Hippolyta and Heracles.

Boston:

that's canon, quote, unquote.

Boston:

And, I love how feminism, this wave of feminism, the thing that I think

Boston:

is important about the philosophy of feminism is that it is about what the

Boston:

group can do when they come together.

Boston:

It's not ego versus ego.

Boston:

You have this giant Harleys who is going to, you see the size difference.

Boston:

This is a demigod.

Boston:

This is not big dude.

Boston:

This is a demigod.

Boston:

The Amazons are fucked.

Boston:

none of them can do it alone.

Boston:

And so with all of their differences, all of their, their complex

Boston:

structure, the queens come together.

Boston:

and the way you drew this, like this beautiful metaphor of the

Boston:

ants taking down the praying mantis

Boston:

and the Amazon's.

Boston:

It's so brutal.

Boston:

It is so brutal.

Boston:

I had noticed the first three times I read it that there are

Boston:

pieces of Heracles lying around

Boston:

After this battle, that he's being castrated

Boston:

in the center of that panel.

Boston:

And then the what's happening in the art, while Hyppolyta is saying,

Boston:

we are rendering him back unto Zeus so that he can be buried.

Boston:

This is a show of respect.

Boston:

We would not do this for the slavers.

Boston:

We do this out of respect for the son of Zeus.

Boston:

They're loading pieces of Heracles onto a cart.

Nicola:

Yeah, he's in four bags.

Boston:

in four bags.

Boston:

It is wicked

Boston:

and brilliant and sad.

Boston:

But you turn the page and the next thing is a thunderstorm screaming.

Boston:

She's

Nicola:

Yeah,

Boston:

story that you told visually her dot, her narration does one thing.

Boston:

You are doing something in parallel, and both of them are elevating

Boston:

each other during those pages.

Boston:

What is the impact on you?

Boston:

Like as you bring these thi these images through you onto the

Boston:

paper, what happens inside you?

Boston:

How does it affect you?

Nicola:

there are certain moments in any story that are the key moments.

Nicola:

they're doing a lot of the work.

Nicola:

there, there's lots of connective tissue that holds that all together.

Nicola:

That's what makes it a proper narrative.

Nicola:

But there are certain moments that are the impact moments.

Nicola:

And to me, they're not always the action moments.

Nicola:

Sometimes they're the really quiet moments.

Nicola:

And you can see it in a scene.

Nicola:

You can see it in an issue that there are always these key moments.

Nicola:

And it's often, whatever the biggest panel is.

Nicola:

Certainly when I'm drawing, I'm always looking for what is the moment here.

Nicola:

And I don't always wanna make it the action scene, cuz sometimes I

Nicola:

feel like the action is incidental to what the scene is about.

Nicola:

What is happening here isn't about the kicking and the punching,

Nicola:

it's about the something else.

Nicola:

and so recognizing those moments and elevating them, one of the

Nicola:

ways that you elevate them is to give them more real estate.

Nicola:

and for that scene in particular, I knew that this was a moment, this was a

Nicola:

turning point because this is the first time that they're being confronted for

Nicola:

existing and that the gods are saying, absolutely not, we're sending our best

Nicola:

and brightest, goodbye kind of thing.

Nicola:

And this is their moment inspired by Hippolyta.

Nicola:

All of them work as a unit because at up until that moment, there have

Nicola:

been these six goddess created tribes off doing their own thing that will

Nicola:

sometimes mingle to do bits and pieces.

Nicola:

And then there's this seventh tribe of Hippolyta's.

Nicola:

She's trailing behind all of these goddess created Amazons who keep saving

Nicola:

all these slave women, but then riding off into the sunset without them.

Nicola:

And apologies like, you can't just abandon us once you save us cause we're

Nicola:

gonna be fucked again any second now.

Nicola:

The only way we're going to be safe is together.

Nicola:

And so I'm going to start collecting all of these people that you saved

Nicola:

and giving them a safe space where our numbers is what will keep us together.

Nicola:

And if you guys can just, lower yourselves to train us, you won't

Nicola:

have to keep saving us, essentially.

Nicola:

And in that moment of Heracles arriving and Antiope not necessarily being

Nicola:

the senior Amazon, but certainly the ballsiest, stepping out of

Nicola:

the shadows and going, yep, okay, let's go, Heracles, let's do this.

Nicola:

And.

Nicola:

Hippolyta, just recognizing, oh, we need to do this together,

Boston:

he'll slaughter us one at a time, but together.

Nicola:

Yeah.

Nicola:

Antiope is in all of this armor that she was born in.

Nicola:

She's born fully formed and fully armored.

Nicola:

She's got bracelets, she's got, her lasso, she's got horns, she's got

Nicola:

all of the things, and Hippolyta is like in rags and she's just picked up

Nicola:

an ax and she's like, let's do this.

Nicola:

And that inspires the queens to come out and go, yep, okay.

Nicola:

We're all here, we're all doing this.

Nicola:

And then all the queens are backed up by all of their tribes.

Nicola:

And the slaughter of Heracles was a double page spread.

Nicola:

And it read in the script that it's three panels.

Nicola:

It's like a panel of the, of all of the Amazons coming out, all of

Nicola:

the goddess created Amazons, but also a lot of the seventh tribe of

Nicola:

Hippolyta's tribe surrounding Heracles

Nicola:

. Then the slaughter of Heracles,

Nicola:

destroying the praying mantis.

Nicola:

And in advance, as soon as I read that in the script, I'm like,

Nicola:

okay, that's a really big moment.

Nicola:

How do I give it its due?

Nicola:

And really mulling over the idea as I'm working towards it.

Nicola:

cuz I'm doing other pages as I build myself up, a lot of regular paneled,

Nicola:

comic book panel storytelling precedes it.

Nicola:

But how do I build to this moment?

Nicola:

And then how do I sell this moment?

Nicola:

How do I make best use of these three panels?

Nicola:

as it says in the script, I need to do something a bit more

Nicola:

interesting than three panels, because do I do them vertically?

Nicola:

Do I do them?

Nicola:

And it came to me in the middle of the night.

Nicola:

I should do it in circles because they're surrounding him and I

Nicola:

don't want to do just a line cuz that's a front line rather than, a

Nicola:

surrounding, how do I surround him?

Nicola:

And that's where it came into idea that they are surrounding him in a circle.

Nicola:

The slaughter is happening in the circle where we zoom right

Nicola:

into him just absolutely getting massacred in, seconds by all of

Nicola:

these incredibly skilled warriors.

Nicola:

And then the metaphor in the center, which can cover the fact that he's

Nicola:

getting castrated, even though I'm clearly indicating that he's getting castrated.

Nicola:

And, and then in the practical sense of doing it, it's okay, how do I.

Nicola:

How do I now execute this idea?

Nicola:

And I started with the middle panel and mapping out Heracles across the

Nicola:

spread because he's so much bigger.

Nicola:

I knew that one of the tricks would be getting the scale of him right, and

Nicola:

then all of the characters around him.

Nicola:

And how packed do I make this, are people gonna be able to swing their

Nicola:

thoughts and axes and arrows and stuff if I pack it too much, but I

Nicola:

feel like I really need to pack it.

Nicola:

Like everyone is just getting right in there and it is their skill that

Nicola:

prevents them hurting each other.

Nicola:

and so I started with him.

Nicola:

I think I added Antiope and Hippolyta because I knew I needed

Nicola:

them at the top of the panel or I wanted them at the top of panel.

Nicola:

And then once I got a map of where they were, I then started drawing

Nicola:

all the characters on the outside and filling them in, making sure that the

Nicola:

front line of these circles was the goddess-created Amazons, and then beyond

Nicola:

them, whatever goddess created Amazons were left and lots of seventh tribes.

Nicola:

So that there was like a real crowd of people, lining up to take their piece.

Nicola:

And then once it came to filling that circle of the slaughter, just getting

Nicola:

more and more characters in there and finding ways to u use the height.

Nicola:

Like Heracles is no longer standing.

Nicola:

He's kind of on a lean as he's being taken off his feet.

Nicola:

So towards his head, you know, he's higher up.

Nicola:

The Amazons by his feet, he's lower down.

Nicola:

and you know what I, what is everybody doing?

Nicola:

what weapons do they have?

Nicola:

who has a big sword?

Nicola:

You know, I saw that, um, I've forgotten what her name is.

Nicola:

She's a character that's got this sort of big, horned helmet on, like

Nicola:

horns going all over the place.

Nicola:

It says in the description that she's the biggest of the Amazons and I'm just like,

Nicola:

she's just gonna ram him with her helmet.

Nicola:

So she's going right into the chest.

Nicola:

Who else is around?

Nicola:

How do I get in representations from all of the tribes, just show

Nicola:

them all, getting their piece.

Nicola:

and that was essentially how that came about.

Nicola:

But it took me over a week and I did feel a bit like a zombie at the end

Nicola:

of it because drawing all of those tiny characters around the side

Nicola:

in that sharp perspective, took, quite a few days in and of itself.

Nicola:

And then drawing the interior of the slaughter took quite a while.

Nicola:

And then once I'd drawn it all, I then needed to paint it

Boston:

Oh

Nicola:

because I was painting the book.

Nicola:

But it's the painting where the depth and the texture and the real

Nicola:

life comes into the line work, cuz I was doing very simple line work.

Nicola:

but that was the fun.

Boston:

Wow.

Boston:

Just

Nicola:

me, but it was fun.

Boston:

There's something about, every woman doing, like using what

Boston:

she has to face, this obstacle that they're all facing together

Boston:

that threatens all of them.

Boston:

Whatever you've got.

Boston:

Ama an accent that it's the way you described it, I wasn't thinking

Boston:

about the power dynamics of the God created Amazons, and then the

Boston:

mortal, Amazons the seventh tribe.

Boston:

Those are the echoes of Diana who leaves paradise not to save

Boston:

women, but to empower them,

Nicola:

Yeah.

Boston:

so that they can save themselves, come down from your high horse,

Boston:

and then you won't have to train us and you won't have, you

Boston:

won't have to save us anymore.

Boston:

And that's such the, a lesson of Wonder Woman not here to rest.

Boston:

I'm not here to res well, I'm here to rescue you.

Boston:

You're in trouble.

Boston:

I'll rescue you, but long term, I'm here to tell you, make yourself stronger,

Boston:

work together, take responsibility.

Boston:

She's

Nicola:

100%.

Nicola:

Like after that slaughter, there are two battles, that take place afterwards.

Nicola:

And you may notice that the seventh tribe, they have weapons, but they

Nicola:

don't have armor in the first one.

Nicola:

they've accumulated some extra weapons from all the slaves that they've

Nicola:

defeated, but they don't have armor.

Nicola:

So they're going into battle with, just their togas and their sandals

Nicola:

and, maybe a bit of armor that they've picked up along the way.

Nicola:

But for the most part, they've just got like a sword or an ax but they're

Nicola:

charging in with all of these goddess created, semi super beings that are

Nicola:

fully armed up, fully weaponed up and, ready for battle at any moment.

Nicola:

And all of these human Amazons, or, all they've got are their slavers' bracelets,

Nicola:

that is what distinguishes them.

Nicola:

And in the second battle, What they're wearing is the armor of

Nicola:

the first battle that, of the first army that they defeated.

Boston:

I didn't notice that.

Boston:

Ooh.

Nicola:

in the second battle where they finally lose because they're up

Nicola:

against more than just a army of men, they've taken the helmets, from the

Nicola:

soldiers that they defeated in the first one, and they've cut ridges into

Nicola:

the, the plume on top so that, through, through a dusty battlefield, you'll

Nicola:

be able to distinguish them in terms of their silhouette from a distance.

Nicola:

But they're wearing, some of them have taken some shoulder bits, some of

Nicola:

them have taken some shin gauntlets.

Nicola:

Some of them have taken like a full, torso armor.

Nicola:

But most of them have taken a helmet and stuck it on their head, as

Nicola:

they go into their second battle.

Boston:

You are blowing my mind with the level of detail and thought and

Boston:

consideration that went into that.

Boston:

I didn't notice, and now I, I can't wait to read this again.

Boston:

What else have I missed in there?

Boston:

Um, oh, I, I so hope we get another three and that you draw

Boston:

at at least, at least one more.

Boston:

I, I, I don't really read comics to be honest, very often anymore.

Boston:

I don't subscribe to Wonder Woman anymore.

Boston:

it's boring to me at the moment.

Boston:

Historia is the only comic I have read, really in ages.

Boston:

I've now read the first two issues a number of times, and the third one

Boston:

twice that I am reread a, a comic is, and, and being affected by it.

Boston:

Each time just hasn't happened in a while.

Boston:

And now I'm starting to hear.

Boston:

o other levels, there's a heartbreak in this.

Boston:

And the courage of the unarmed Amazons, I just wasn't tuning in

Boston:

to the vulnerability that they were coming in with.

Nicola:

The scene in the morning between battles.

Nicola:

So they've had their, funerial service of, sending their, fallen, to the well

Nicola:

of the gods, to the well of souls.

Nicola:

and the next morning when the male army is charging towards them is

Nicola:

marching their way towards them, the Amazons are sitting around and having

Nicola:

breakfast and laughing at some theater.

Nicola:

because they understand that they need to feel their humanity again.

Nicola:

And those two, people performing the play, they're trans

Nicola:

actors they're trans Amazons.

Nicola:

yeah.

Nicola:

because women, again, it's only an, an insinuation in the script.

Nicola:

it's there in the script.

Nicola:

But if, you know, women weren't allowed to perform theater, let alone

Nicola:

see theater, so this is their first opportunity to see an art like a play.

Nicola:

so they're being deeply entertained.

Nicola:

and the two actors performing it are the reason why they know these

Nicola:

plays, the reason why they've been able to perform these plays.

Nicola:

The reason why Kareti, who's the one, taken the lead, it's because she got

Nicola:

to grow up in the theater before she,

Boston:

man.

Nicola:

and essentially yes, it was like, how do I represent a trans woman without

Nicola:

the opportunity for, hormones or surgery?

Nicola:

How would a trans woman survive?

Nicola:

And theater is probably a safe space, for the most part.

Nicola:

And, and this is how she will be, this is how she can explore her femininity.

Nicola:

And of course, at some point because actors are worth nothing.

Nicola:

and here is a trans actor and she's been saved from slavers

Nicola:

because of course she, find herself being at the mercy of, assholes.

Nicola:

And that of course, she's completely welcomed into the society of the Amazons

Nicola:

and Hippolyta is even saying to her, you have something to live for because

Nicola:

if we make it through this, you can teach all of us what theater is about.

Nicola:

We will build you a theater and you can continue with your passion and your

Nicola:

life, but in the space that we create for you, rather than, you and your little

Nicola:

box of tricks, it's just it's really potent and meaningful that these moments

Nicola:

along the way speak to how big and broad this society of women really is.

Boston:

That adds so much texture to the appearance of Dionysus in there as well.

Boston:

as he's the non-binary God and a protector of women in some stories.

Boston:

But he was the place for his tribe was the place for people

Boston:

who didn't fit, who didn't

Boston:

fit under the, Zeus style, uh, leadership.

Boston:

And so then if you, now if you have this trans actor there,

Boston:

that connection between them,

Nicola:

That's why Hera can go to him and say, you're responsible

Nicola:

for this one.

Nicola:

Look after her, with her gone, which is absolutely gonna happen

Nicola:

without your interference.

Nicola:

With her gone, that's a whole stream of worshipers, absolutely annihilated.

Nicola:

But with her supported and flourishing, you will be, at

Nicola:

their, worship indefinitely.

Boston:

And that, that foreshadow is what I hope is going to come in a future book,

Boston:

is the culture that the Amazons create.

Boston:

And it hasn't come up in this conversation, but I happen to

Boston:

know that you were an actor.

Boston:

I am an actor or was an actor.

Boston:

And theater in my mind is the pinnacle of culture.

Boston:

It's, it is absolutely my favorite art.

Boston:

And it's a place where humanity gets to be expressed in its

Boston:

fullness, in theater and in dance.

Boston:

And so if Theymscira is established, Paradise Island is established.

Boston:

One of the things that makes it paradise what she will create.

Boston:

What, what is the character's name ca

Nicola:

Kallikrates.

Boston:

Kallikrates.

Boston:

what she will create is something so magnificent

Boston:

and that's a, an expression of Paradise Island and a the, and

Boston:

theater on Paradise Island.

Boston:

Cuz that's what Hera can see.

Nicola:

Yeah.

Boston:

if this path goes that culture can be transformed and transformative.

Nicola:

the culture that she's setting up for this island, like part of the

Nicola:

judgment, one of the things that we had to sell was the idea that the island was not

Nicola:

a gift from the gods, but a punishment.

Nicola:

It's a gilded cage.

Nicola:

And in order to sell this, I think it was Kelly Sue and Phil that came

Nicola:

up with the idea that essentially Apollo would be the warden.

Nicola:

That it would never be nighttime.

Nicola:

So that, that the island will be in full daylight all the time.

Nicola:

And it is, Artemis saying, I want one night a month.

Nicola:

Give me one night a month.

Nicola:

And.

Nicola:

What that will do to the culture, like the culture of being under

Nicola:

the eye of the sun at all times.

Nicola:

and how they deal with that.

Nicola:

But also, what does that one night mean?

Nicola:

What do

Boston:

Yeah.

Nicola:

in that one night?

Nicola:

That one night is gonna be really significant.

Nicola:

I can't wait to see stuff like that.

Boston:

Yes.

Boston:

This feels like the beginning of a conversation as much as at

Boston:

the end of one the book and this conversation between you and me.

Boston:

one thing I like to do with my guests, I have these five questions I'd like

Boston:

to pose and, yeah, are you game?

Nicola:

Yeah, sure.

Nicola:

Bring it on.

Boston:

cool.

Boston:

The first one is when you were growing up, what were your favorite stories,

Boston:

your favorite nursery, rhymes, cartoons, children's books, comics, anything?

Nicola:

obviously Wonder Woman, anything with a costume superhero

Nicola:

woman, was deeply interesting to me.

Nicola:

but I also love Josie and the Pussycats.

Nicola:

It started my girl band love.

Nicola:

Never been into boy bands, couldn't give a shit, but God

Nicola:

bless me with a girl band anytime.

Nicola:

I was really into Greek mythology and I.

Nicola:

Read and reread different tellings of, the Iliad in particular

Nicola:

because it fascinates me.

Nicola:

I, one of my favorite new versions, newer versions, is by a writer called Madeline

Nicola:

Miller, who wrote the Song of Achilles, which is just the most beautiful story.

Nicola:

And then of course, Circe that came out a couple years later, a couple years ago

Boston:

Those

Nicola:

because, it's deeply witchy.

Boston:

20 years.

Boston:

Yeah.

Boston:

Ugh.

Nicola:

they are.

Nicola:

Yeah, cuz I love the Retellings.

Nicola:

There was a great, version, I think it was called The Song of Troy by Colin

Nicola:

McCullum, which is, quite a decent size volume and each chapter is told in

Nicola:

first person by a different character.

Nicola:

So you get all of these different perspectives and one of the most

Nicola:

hilarious perspectives is Helen, when you finally get Helen's perspective,

Nicola:

she's such an asshole, it's so funny.

Nicola:

But just everyone's motivations are properly fleshed out and everyone's

Nicola:

perspective on everyone else's motivations reveal themselves as well.

Nicola:

It's a really brilliant read, I think that came out in the

Nicola:

nineties, but I've read it a few

Boston:

That sounds like something I would really enjoy.

Nicola:

It's great.

Nicola:

It's great.

Boston:

The Story of Troy and The Iliad, which is just one

Boston:

part of the story of Troy.

Boston:

That story, it is just such, it is such a cluster fuck.

Boston:

Like the stakes of that story are so high, and I think it gets missed by modern eyes

Nicola:

Yeah.

Boston:

because civilization is at risk anyway, and everyone

Boston:

is behaving in horrific ways.

Boston:

But they

Boston:

all have a point of view and

Boston:

the actor in me is what's going on there?

Boston:

Why?

Nicola:

100%.

Nicola:

Yeah.

Nicola:

I like, when the movie came out, I was just like, oh, it looks beautiful,

Nicola:

but it feels really one dimensional and certainly deeply abbreviated.

Nicola:

this is a war that it's meant to go for 10 years, and it looks

Nicola:

like it happened in 10 days.

Nicola:

So yeah, it's a really, book that I highly recommend.

Nicola:

But I, I feel like the the poetic language of Madeline Miller's

Nicola:

retellings are just transportative.

Nicola:

If you've only read them, like in traditional book form, I would also

Nicola:

suggest getting the Audible version of them, because the performers are

Nicola:

who read each book are perfectly cast to just send you over the moon.

Nicola:

They've just got beautiful voices.

Boston:

I fully agree.

Boston:

I, I did both.

Boston:

I read the

Nicola:

Oh, you did,

Boston:

and the audio because I, I wanted to hear it while I was in the car--

Boston:

and this, and this, and this, It just, it re, it breaks my heart every time.

Boston:

And those performances, usually I feel like I'm settling for an Audiobook.

Boston:

I think in these cases it improves it.

Nicola:

Yeah, same.

Nicola:

Absolutely.

Nicola:

I agree.

Boston:

next question.

Boston:

What is something that you believe to be true that you cannot prove or that

Nicola:

Oh gosh.

Nicola:

Yep.

Nicola:

I believe in, something beyond, I'm not a religious person.

Nicola:

I don't come from a religious background, so I don't have any religious

Nicola:

discipline, in place in my life.

Nicola:

But, I feel a little bit pagan, you know, I kind of like that idea of

Nicola:

giving a spiritual, name and respect to pretty much everything in nature,

Nicola:

because I feel like it is all related.

Nicola:

And I, when I'm talking about magic and how I talked about magic with Greg Rucka

Nicola:

when we were developing Black Magic is this sense of energy and just, you

Nicola:

know, it's that skill of being able to manipulate it and, and that magic is

Nicola:

just science that we haven't discovered yet because we're so fixated on a

Nicola:

particular point of view with science.

Nicola:

I believe in a, in a beyond.

Nicola:

and I have a slightly ephemeral, but reasonably sure idea of

Nicola:

the shape of it kind of thing.

Boston:

Could you give me a piece of that shape?

Boston:

I realized that describing your entire cosmology might be a tall

Boston:

order, but is there something that's.

Nicola:

I subscribe to that thing of we are celestial beings

Nicola:

having a human experience, that we are all, that everything in

Nicola:

the universe is of the universe.

Nicola:

And so we are all connected.

Nicola:

So I don't, I, it, it informs my politics obviously, because I feel like

Nicola:

we're all very symbiotic and of a one.

Nicola:

you see it play out, now that we have social media that's teaching us

Nicola:

about the, the emotional complexity of animals and this, that and the

Nicola:

other, it's like, yeah, of course.

Nicola:

and we are all related.

Nicola:

And I feel like if there is you know, intelligent life on other planets,

Nicola:

which I feel is kind of inevitable, you know, I'm not a big science space

Nicola:

junkie, but I feel like it's inevitable that those same instincts that make us

Nicola:

human are universal because you see it in animals, you see it in everything.

Nicola:

there, there are instincts that are protect us, but there are

Nicola:

also instincts that bind us.

Nicola:

and they are the things that, we're all made of.

Nicola:

So I feel very strongly about that.

Nicola:

So yes, my spiritual side takes the form of a witchiness.

Nicola:

But, again, I'm not feeling dogmatic about, a pagan slash

Nicola:

Wiccan slash whatever practice.

Nicola:

I feel it's very organic, I can feel as spiritual being in a church which

Nicola:

is constructed for a spiritual feeling as I can standing in my garden.

Boston:

Beautifully said.

Boston:

Yeah.

Boston:

That there's something more.

Boston:

What that looks like is not, I don't know.

Boston:

It's there, there are a lot of ways it can, there doesn't

Boston:

need to be a dogma attached

Nicola:

Yeah.

Nicola:

You just have to in.

Nicola:

You just gotta feel it, I feel like it's that thing of, what your instincts

Nicola:

are, being able to trust your instincts.

Nicola:

It's all the same thing.

Nicola:

It's just being able to, feel like you can understand the ebb and flow of

Nicola:

energy and, here are some good years.

Nicola:

Here are some bad years that everything is cyclical, that, I never feel worried

Nicola:

when things are shit cuz it's okay, so I'm going through a shit phase, if

Nicola:

everything's really great, I'm like, this is great, let's enjoy it because it won't

Nicola:

necessarily be this great in a year.

Nicola:

it doesn't mean it'll be shit in a year, but, you know, everything

Nicola:

is, it's waves of whatever,

Boston:

Thank you.

Boston:

And this next question builds on that.

Boston:

Have you ever encountered a phenomenon that you just cannot explain?

Boston:

And whether you have or haven't, how has that affected your worldview?

Nicola:

Look, without getting The Secret about things, because I find that kind of

Nicola:

commercialization of a theory a bit gross.

Boston:

Yeah.

Nicola:

I do feel like, you know, you, you are really capable of manifesting.

Nicola:

And I believe that because I have done it myself, I have manifested, in my own

Nicola:

life the things that are important to me.

Nicola:

And, I obviously, reality and context and circumstances that are beyond your

Nicola:

control do limit, your sense of inability to do a thing and they can 100% restrict

Nicola:

you from the practical side of being able to do a thing, but given enough time and

Nicola:

enough concentration on a thing, I've managed to manifest pretty much what I

Nicola:

hoped my life would be and sometimes it's just spinning enough plates that you're

Nicola:

already got some sense of momentum and some sense of direction so that when

Nicola:

opportunity arrives, when a a door is open or a piece of luck happens your

Nicola:

way, you're ready for it because you're already actively working towards a thing.

Nicola:

And I feel like that is where we're best serving ourselves and best serving each

Nicola:

other is when we have a clear idea of where we wanna go and who we wanna be

Nicola:

and then doing what we can to manifest it.

Nicola:

Cuz I do think we're all capable of manifesting something big.

Nicola:

requires a lot of you.

Boston:

I com I completely agree with that assessment.

Boston:

And I, I just wanna, highlight what you said at the beginning because I

Boston:

think The Secret and that whole Law of Attraction, capitalist version

Boston:

of this has created some really good reasons to turn away from that.

Boston:

without saying it, you started, you acknowledged, privilege and things

Boston:

that make it easier or harder.

Nicola:

100%.

Boston:

but all of that doesn't actually make it less true.

Boston:

and there's another important piece.

Boston:

You're not sitting there just journaling about it.

Boston:

You're actually, you are moving with all of yourself in that direction.

Boston:

It takes, it's not just words, it's everything.

Boston:

And then the Cosmos has the opportunity to meet you halfway, so you notice

Nicola:

100%.

Nicola:

Yeah.

Nicola:

Yeah.

Nicola:

I feel quite strongly about that, and I understand that, sometimes the

Nicola:

barriers that people have are just mental health, un understanding how

Nicola:

sophisticated and complex and the full spectrum of fucking everything,

Nicola:

everything is a goddamn spectrum.

Nicola:

and I believe that, that I know that for me, I've been very lucky to have

Nicola:

fallen into the, eternally optimistic, reasonably self-assured headspace.

Nicola:

So that has given me a certain advantage in being able to feel

Nicola:

like I can manifest a thing.

Nicola:

But it wasn't really until I was in my late twenties and early thirties

Nicola:

that I felt confident that I could.

Nicola:

up until then, I just felt suspicious that I might be able to,

Boston:

last question.

Boston:

When in your life have you experienced ecstasy?

Nicola:

Oh gosh.

Nicola:

Being on ectasy in the nineties a couple of

Boston:

I love when people give that answer.

Boston:

Yeah.

Boston:

Good memories.

Nicola:

Couple of times, yeah.

Nicola:

Felt like an angel.

Nicola:

It was great.

Nicola:

but beyond that, I feel it in my bones when I'm with my family.

Nicola:

my family's a very complex organism, and I know not everyone

Nicola:

in my family feels the same way.

Nicola:

Relationships are complicated.

Nicola:

but as the youngest, I feel very grounded and present around my family.

Nicola:

being on stage, there's something a little bit, you're performing magic

Nicola:

because you are creating a magic space, and you are, you are making

Nicola:

your audience participate and believe in the space that you're creating.

Nicola:

that to me feels like a real, not a magic trick, but actually conjuring magic.

Nicola:

There's an energy.

Nicola:

You change the energy, and you sweep an audience along with you who, just

Nicola:

five minutes ago were, looking at their watch or doing something outside, but

Nicola:

suddenly they're in this magic space.

Boston:

It's

Boston:

a ritual.

Boston:

Yeah.

Nicola:

Yeah.

Nicola:

that's somewhere where I felt ecstasy.

Nicola:

and I think I, I'm someone who in really quiet little moments, like just lying in

Nicola:

bed in the morning with my husband and my cat, And just that bliss of just calm and

Nicola:

comfort, if there's something in that, that there's no stakes at play, that is an

Nicola:

ecstasy that I feel really conscious of.

Nicola:

And pretty much anytime I see a full note, moon, I can be going about my

Nicola:

night and it's oh my God, there's a full moon, and it really does overwhelm me.

Nicola:

It's, it feels deeply magical to catch it in that moment because I don't super

Nicola:

pay attention to the, I'm just noticing that I actually have a moonshot behind me.

Nicola:

But, I like it because of the aesthetic and because every now and then I do wanna

Nicola:

know, but for the most part, I don't actually pay that much attention to it.

Nicola:

I just like to feel the vibe of it.

Nicola:

but every now and then you just catch in.

Nicola:

It's oh my God, there you are.

Nicola:

And it's that, that to me is a little bit, a little bit special.

Boston:

That's today's episode.

Boston:

Thank you again to Nicola Scott for calling in all the way from Australia.

Boston:

and a huge thank you to our listeners.

Boston:

If you enjoyed the podcast, we hope you'll share it with your friends and leave us

Boston:

a review wherever you get your podcasts.

Boston:

For show notes, more information and mythic resources, visit us

Boston:

on the web at mythicpodcast.com.

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About the Podcast

Mythic
Meaningful living through the power of myth.
A mythological lens can reveal layers of meaning that usually remain obscured or hidden. In the Mythic podcast, host Boston Blake explores archetypal themes in ancient legends and modern media,

myth and folklore
superheroes
sci-fi
pop culture
history
current events
your personal issues

Nothing is off-limits!

The Mythic perspective may forever change the way you think about your favorite stories--and yourself.

Caution: Listening to this podcast may contribute to increased synchronicity.
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About your host

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Boston Blake

Boston Blake is the host of the Mythic podcast. He does all the other things too--writing, producing, editing, and promotion. This is a one-man operation, folks!

As a counselor, coach, and instructor, Boston helps clients and students discover greater meaning and depth in their lives.

Over the past 20 years, he's been a professional actor, writer, and massage therapist. And like any legit actor, he has worked in nearly every area of service and hospitality. (He'd like you to know he loved it. Well, most of it.)

This varied background has led him to an understanding of a fundamental paradox: We all share a common human experience, but every human's experience is totally unique. He'd like to be "a bridge to a greater understanding." You know, like Wonder Woman. But he'll settle for course instructor.

Boston holds a B.A. in Interdisciplinary Studies from C.I.I.S. and is a Certified Trainer for Everything DiSC®. He enjoys creative swearing, Wonder Woman comics, and writing about himself in the third person.