Table of Contents

Publication history
Fictional character biography
Characteristics
Powers and abilities
Condition
Reception
Accolades
Other versions
In other media
Television
Film
Video games
Notes
References
External links

Madame Web

Character NameMadame Web
Image
CaptionArtwork from The Sensational Spider-Man #26 (July 2006).
Art by Clayton Crain.
Real NameCassandra Webb
HomeworldSalem, Oregon
SpeciesHuman mutant
PublisherMarvel Comics
DebutThe Amazing Spider-Man #210 (November 1980)
CreatorsDennis O'Neil
John Romita Jr.
Powers* Clairvoyance * Precognition * Telepathy * Gifted intellect

Madame Web (Cassandra Webb) is a character appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. She first appeared in The Amazing Spider-Man No. 210, published November 1980, and was created by writer Dennis O'Neil and artist John Romita Jr. She is usually depicted as a supporting character in the Spider-Man comic book series, where she appears as an elderly woman with myasthenia gravis, connected to a life support system resembling a spiderweb.

Madame Web is a clairvoyant and precognitive mutant who first appears to help Spider-Man find a kidnapping victim. She is one of the mutants who did not lose their powers during the "Decimation" storyline. In "Grim Hunt", she is attacked by Ana Kravinoff and her mother Sasha, who kills her, but before she dies she is able to pass her powers of precognition as well as her blindness on to Julia Carpenter, who becomes the next Madame Web. Webb is subsequently resurrected by Ben Reilly before succumbing to the Carrion Virus. Webb is the grandmother of the fourth Spider-Woman, Charlotte Witter.

Madame Web has appeared in or served as inspiration for several Spider-Man related media. Dakota Johnson portrayed Cassie Webb in the eponymous 2024 film.

Publication history

Madame Web was created by writer Dennis O'Neil and artist John Romita Jr., and first appeared in The Amazing Spider-Man No. 210 (November 1980).

Fictional character biography

Born in Salem, Oregon, Cassandra Webb is a paralyzed, blind, telepathic, clairvoyant, and precognitive mutant who works as a professional medium. After being stricken with myasthenia gravis, she is connected to a life support system designed by her husband Jonathan Webb, which includes a series of tubes shaped like a spider-web.

Spider-Man approaches her while looking for kidnapped Daily Globe publisher K.J. Clayton (actually an impersonator fronting for Clayton's circulation manager Rupert Dockery, the kidnapping's mastermind). Madame Web uses her powers to help him locate and rescue both the real and the fake Clayton. She later discloses to him that she already knows his secret identity.

In the "Nothing Can Stop the Juggernaut!" story arc, she contacts Spider-Man for assistance when Black Tom Cassidy dispatches the Juggernaut to capture her, hoping to exploit her psychic abilities against the X-Men. She nearly dies after Juggernaut separates her from her life-support system. This triggers a fight between Spider-Man and the Juggernaut, who is subsequently trapped in a construction site's wet cement foundation. The resulting mental trauma, however, means that Madame Web apparently loses her memory of Spider-Man's secret identity.

Webb is the grandmother of the fourth Spider-Woman, Charlotte Witter. She participates in an arcane ritual known as the "Gathering of the Five" to gain both immortality and eternal youth. Restored to her physical prime, Webb serves as a mentor of sorts to the third Spider-Woman, the young Mattie Franklin.

Madame Web resurfaces, with her psychic powers intact, after Decimation. However, since House of M (in which she appears young), Cassandra seemingly loses her mystical enhancements and reverts to her aged self, though her myasthenia gravis remains gone.

Madame Web again returns in a back-up feature in The Amazing Spider-Man #600. She looks into the future, showing what are apparently quick looks into Spider-Man's future, only to see someone "unravelling the web of fate," and fearfully exclaiming "They're hunting spiders." After that, she is attacked by Ana Kravinoff and her mother Sasha. The pair incapacitate her and then claim "we now have our eyes." She is seen still held captive by Ana and her mother, as they inspect their new quarry, Mattie Franklin. While still bound in a chair, she apologizes to a then-unconscious Mattie, who is later killed by Sasha Kravinoff as part of a sacrificial ritual that revives Grim Hunter.

In "Grim Hunt", Sasha kills Madame Web out of a belief that she is deceiving her. Before dying, Cassandra gives her psychic powers to Julia Carpenter. In "Dead No More: The Clone Conspiracy", Ben Reilly resurrects Web in a clone body, but she later dies from the Carrion virus.

Characteristics

Powers and abilities

Madame Web is a mutant who possesses several psychic abilities. She can use telepathy to read the minds of others. She has the ability to see the future. Madame Web can project an astral form of herself away from her physical body. She can perform psychic surgery on the minds of others. She is sensitive to psychic energies, allowing her to sense the presence of psionic powers in others, to see the area surrounding her, and events which take place far away from her. Additionally, Madame Web has a gifted intellect.

Condition

When dying, she displayed the ability to transfer her mutation to another individual, such as Julia Carpenter. Madame Web was a victim of myasthenia gravis, a disorder of neuromuscular junction transmission. As a result, she became entirely dependent on external life support for survival. This is no longer the case as she was cured of the condition some time ago. She is also blind and relies on her powers to compensate. Madame Web is cybernetically linked to a spider-web-like life-support chair which attends to all of her bodily needs.

Reception

Accolades


Other versions


In other media

Julia Carpenter#In other media

Television

Madame Web as depicted in Spider-Man: The Animated Series


Film

Dakota Johnson, who portrays Madame Web in her self-titled film


Video games


Notes

References


External links



Category:Characters created by Dennis O'Neil
Category:Characters created by John Romita Jr.
Category:Comics characters introduced in 1980
Category:Fictional blind characters
Category:Fictional characters from New York City
Category:Fictional characters from Oregon
Category:Fictional characters with precognition
Category:Fictional spiritual mediums
Category:Marvel Comics female characters
Category:Marvel Comics mutants
Category:Marvel Comics psychics
Category:Marvel Comics telepaths
Category:Spider-Man characters