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List of The Sandman characters

This is a list of characters appearing in The Sandman comic book, published by DC Comics' Vertigo imprint. This page discusses not only events which occur in The Sandman (1989–1994), but also some occurring in spinoffs of The Sandman, such as The Dreaming (1996–2001) and Lucifer (1999–2007), as well as characters from earlier stories which The Sandman was based on. These stories occur in the DC Universe, but are generally tangential to the mainstream DC stories.

The Endless

The Endless are a family of seven anthropomorphic personifications of universal concepts, around whom much of the series revolves. From eldest to youngest, they are:

All debuted in the Sandman series, except Destiny, who was created by Marv Wolfman and Berni Wrightson in Weird Mystery Tales #1 (1972).[1] Constantine first appeared in The Saga of Swamp Thing #37 (June 1985), and was created by Alan Moore, Rick Veitch, Steve Bissette, and John Totleben.

Dreams and nightmares

These inhabitants of the Dreaming are often gods, myths, and even ordinary human beings who later became dreams.

Cain and Abel

Cain and Abel are based on the Biblical Cain and Abel, adapted by editor Joe Orlando with Bob Haney (writer) and Jack Sparling (artist) (Cain), and Mark Hannerfeld (writer) and Bill Draut (artist) (Abel). They were depicted together in Abel's first appearance, and parted to their respective Houses at the end of the story. Although Cain would abuse Abel, he was not shown killing him until Swamp Thing vol. 2 #33. In Elvira's House of Mystery #11, Cain expresses shock at having killed his brother in recent times. In the same issue, a contest-winning letter establishes that Cain and the House exist both in the dream world and the real world, and that only in the dream world does Cain continue to harm Abel. In The Sandman, Cain is shown to kill Abel quite often. In issue #2, Lucien calls this unusual, and recent.

Before The Sandman

Originally they were the respective "hosts" of the EC-style horror comic anthologies House of Mystery and House of Secrets, which ran from the 1950s through 1983—Cain debuting in House of Mystery #175 (1968) and Abel in DC Special #4 and House of Secrets #81 (both 1969). During the 1970s, they also co-hosted the horror/humor anthology Plop!. They were also both recurring characters in DC's Elvira's House of Mystery (1986–88).

In 1985, the characters were revived by writer Alan Moore, who introduced them into his Swamp Thing series in issue #33, retelling the Swamp Thing's original origin story from a 1971 issue of House of Secrets. Gary Cohn and Dan Mishkin included them in the pages of Blue Devil in 1986. Jamie Delano also occasionally used them in a cameo role in his title Hellblazer.

In The Sandman

In Gaiman's Sandman universe, the biblical Cain and Abel live in the Dreaming at Dream's invitation. This is based on the verse in the Bible which says that Cain was sent to live in the Land of Nod. They live as neighbors in two houses near a graveyard: Cain in the broad House of Mystery and Abel in the tall House of Secrets. According to their appearance in Swamp Thing, the difference is that 'a mystery may be shared, but a secret must be forgotten if one tries to tell it'.

Gaiman's Cain is an aggressive, overbearing character. He is a thin, long-limbed man with an angular, drawn face, glasses, a tufty beard, and hair drawn into two points above his ears. He has been described by other characters as sounding "just like Vincent Price".[2]

Gaiman's Abel is a nervous but kind-hearted man. He also has a stammer. He is somewhat similar in appearance to Cain, with a tufty beard and hair that comes to points above his ears, though his hair is black rather than brown. He is shorter and fatter than Cain, with a more open face. It is eventually learned that the only time he does not stutter is when he is telling a story or when he is dead.

Cain kills Abel frequently and in many brutal ways, whereupon Abel later returns to life. He often expresses hope for a more harmonious relationship with his brother.

Cain and Abel own a large green draconic gargoyle named Gregory, who also made his debut in House of Mystery #175. In the first appearance of the characters in Sandman, issue #2, Cain gives Abel an egg that soon hatches into another gargoyle, a small golden one. Abel names the gargoyle "Irving". but Cain insists that the names of gargoyles must always begin with a "G.", and Abel (after another death and resurrection) renames the gargoyle "Goldie", after an invisible/imaginary friend to whom Abel told his early House of Secrets stories. A letter in issue #91 was attributed to Goldie, who claimed that it was herself depicted on the cover of issue #88.

They shelter Dream until his strength is restored following his 72-year-long imprisonment. In the fourth story arc, Season of Mists, Cain is sent to Hell to give a message to Lucifer because Cain is protected by a curse that would deter Lucifer from harming him. Cain and Abel also aid The Corinthian with the child Daniel during The Kindly Ones, the penultimate story arc of the series. Abel is one of the victims of the Furies in this series, and is brought back to life by the new Dream.

Corinthian

The Corinthian is a nightmare created by Dream, of human appearance but with two small additional mouths in place of his eyes. He enjoys eating the eyeballs of people he kills. The first version of the Corinthian is destroyed by Dream for spending several unsupervised decades on Earth as a serial killer (in Dream's view, a waste of his potential), and it is shown in The Sandman: Overture (2013) that Dream intended to do this before his imprisonment. Near the end of the series Dream creates a second Corinthian, altering his personality to be obedient and useful rather than homicidal. In a later story in The Dreaming, the second Corinthian is haunted by the actions of the first.

Eve

Fiddler's Green

Fiddler's Green is a place in the Dreaming which all travellers (specifically sailors) dream of someday finding, which sometimes assumes human form and goes wandering, under the alias Gilbert; a kindly, portly man who, in appearance and behavior, resembles G(ilbert) K. Chesterton. As 'Gilbert', Fiddler's Green accompanied Rose Walker to find her brother Jed, and gave her the means by which to summon Dream to rescue her from danger; and thereafter returned to the Dreaming. He was killed by the Three in The Kindly Ones, and refused to be resurrected by the new Dream. Here, it is implied that he was "in love, a little" with Rose.

Stephen Fry portrays the character in the television series The Sandman on Netflix.[3][4]

Gate Keepers

A wyvern, a griffin and a hippogriff are the guardians of Dream's castle. The hippogriff has a horse's head instead of the traditional eagle's head. They derive all their power and authority from Dream, so when Dream was captured and lost his power, they could no longer guard or protect the Dreaming.

After the griffin was destroyed by the Furies, the new Dream did not remake him, but asked the gryphons of Greek myth to send one of their own. (#71)

Gregory

Goldie

Goldie is a fictional character in The Sandman comic book series by Neil Gaiman.

Goldie is a pet baby gargoyle, given to Abel by his brother Cain in Preludes and Nocturnes. Abel originally intends to name him Irving, but Cain insists that gargoyle names must all begin with a "G". Cain then proceeded to murder Abel over this. Abel soon returns, as he is murdered by Cain all the time. He then agrees to name the gargoyle Goldie, after "an old friend", though he tells Goldie in private that he will continue to think of him as Irving.

Goldie appears for a short scene in The Doll's House in which he is sitting upon Abel's shoulder as Lucien asks Abel about the inhabitants of the house. He later appears throughout the "Parliament of Rooks" story in Fables and Reflections, and briefly at the beginning of Brief Lives. He also accompanies Abel in The Kindly Ones and is with him when he gets murdered by the Furies, crying when his master is killed. He is later seen playing with Daniel Hall.

Goldie later takes on a pivotal role as the guardian of the tree of life in the Sandman spin-off series The Dreaming. On his/her quest to the tree, a search party forms. He was retconned into a female gargoyle for the new series.[5]

Goldie is named after the "'imaginary' friend" to whom Abel would tell his early stories in the pages of House of Secrets.

In issue 39 of the 2008 reboot of the House of Mystery comic series, it is revealed that Goldie is "Gigi", a waitress at the House of Mystery and a bit player in the series. Goldie was transformed by Lotus Blossom, another character in the series, at Goldie's request in exchange for a book of magic spells. Goldie was not enthralled with the idea of growing up to be a gargoyle, and instead wanted to be a human girl. The newly reborn Gigi joined Lotus Blossom on her exploits in the series, often serving as an enforcer for her. It is revealed that Abel knows Gigi's true history, but if his brother Cain knew, it was not shown.

Lucien

Lucien is the chief librarian in The Dreaming, and is a tall thin, bookish man. He first appeared in Weird Mystery Tales #18 (May 1975) and was apparently killed in Secrets of Haunted House #44 (January 1982).[6]

Like Cain and Abel, Lucien, created by Paul Levitz, Nestor Redondo, and Joe Orlando, was originally the host of a 1970s "weird tales" comic, specifically the three-issue Tales of Ghost Castle (May/June–October 1975). In that series, he is portrayed as the guardian of a castle in Transylvania abandoned by both sides during World War II,[7] watching over its forgotten library with his companion, a werewolf named Rover. In his first appearance in Preludes and Nocturnes (issue #2) this is retroactively revealed to be Dream's castle.

Lucien is the effective keeper of the Dreaming in Dream's absence, and becomes one of Dream's most faithful and trusted servants after proving his loyalty by never abandoning his post during that period. His primary function is to protect the Library, wherein are contained all the books that have ever been dreamed of, including the ones that have never been written. The titles of some of these books, many of which are sequels to real works, are visible. He is, despite his frail appearance, apparently quite capable in combat, "[dealing] with" several unpleasant creatures who escape imprisonment during the events of The Kindly Ones.

In issue #68, it is revealed that Lucien's existence in the Dreaming began as serving the role of Dream's first raven. When writing The Sandman Companion, author Hy Bender interpreted this as meaning that Lucien was also the first man. An allusion to "Mr. Raven", the ghostly librarian in George MacDonald's novel Lilith, may be intended.

Lucienne

In January 2021, Vivienne Acheampong was announced to star in The Sandman TV series from Netflix portraying Lucienne, a gender-reversed version of Lucien.[8]

Matthew

Matthew is the raven companion of Dream of the Endless.

Matthew was originally Matthew Cable, a long-time supporting character in the Swamp Thing series, but because he died while asleep in the Dreaming, he was offered the chance to become a dream raven and serve Dream if he wished, and he accepted.

Matthew is not the first of Morpheus' ravens. Former ravens include Aristeas of Marmora, who returned to his life as a man for one year at one point, and Lucien, the first of the ravens. Morpheus seems to keep the ravens around out of some sort of unspoken need for companionship, though he also sends them on occasional missions.

Matthew's word balloons and font style are scratchy and uneven, probably to represent a hoarse, cawing voice, and perhaps as an indicator of his crude, smart-aleck personality. Underneath his frequently irreverent manner, Matthew is actually very loyal to Dream, and he is one of the characters who takes it the hardest when Dream perishes, initially seeking release from his service, but eventually coming to terms with his loss and choosing to remain as Daniel's raven.

Mervyn Pumpkinhead

Mervyn "Merv" Pumpkinhead is Dream's cantankerous, cigar-smoking janitor: an animated scarecrow whose head is a jack-o'-lantern. He resembles Jack Pumpkinhead of L. Frank Baum's Oz books.

Mervyn is first seen in Preludes and Nocturnes, driving a bus on which Dream travels. Thereafter Merv is in charge of the construction, maintenance, and demolition work in the Dreaming, though he sometimes complains that his job is superfluous because Dream can change any of the Dreaming at will. One issue of the Dreaming spin-off comic focuses on a dreamer who enjoys working under Merv's supervision.

Mervyn was one of the few who took arms against the Furies in The Kindly Ones, but was easily killed. He is returned to life by the new Dream in The Wake.

In a past incarnation shown in The Wake, Mervyn was seen to have had a turnip for a head instead of a pumpkin, as pumpkins were not then known in Europe.

Kevin Smith voices Mervyn in the Audible adaptation. In the Netflix series, he is voiced by Mark Hamill.[9]

Minor dreams

  • Brute and Glob: Two troublemaking nightmares who try to gain power during Dream's absence. They originally appeared in Jack Kirby's 1974 Sandman series, as sidekicks to the title character, and continued as such when Hector Hall became the Sandman in Infinity Inc.. In the original comics, Brute was similar to The Thing, shouted "It's clobberin' time!" and often referred to his Uncle Harry. In The Doll's House, it is revealed that they controlled the Sandmen in secret; whereupon Dream exiled them to "the darkness" (a place of imprisonment and, presumably, torture, within the Dreaming). Near the end of The Kindly Ones, the Furies tell Dream that they have released his prisoners from the darkness, but Brute and Glob are neither mentioned nor seen in this volume or in The Wake. They next appear in The Dreaming #57–60, The Sandman Presents: Everything You Always Wanted To Know About Dreams...But Were Afraid to Ask, and Lucifer #15, where they attempt to kidnap Elaine Belloc. They subsequently reappear in JSA #64, again trying to manipulate a human connected to the Dreaming (Sandy Hawkins) into their own "Sandman"; but Daniel, Dream's heir, returns them to the darkness. The two entities claim this area of darkness is filled with pleasing childhood dreams, which they despise. First appearance: The Sandman vol. 1, #1.
  • The Cuckoo: A parasitic dream who has conquered Barbie's dreamworld in A Game of You. She assumes the form of a childhood version of Barbie and uses her self proclaimed "adorableness" to escape from Barbie's dream world, at which point she transforms into a bird.
  • The Fashion Thing: A minor character whose form changes based on popular fads. She is based on The Mad Mod Witch, created by Dave Wood and Jack Sparling as the host of The Unexpected, another DC horror title. At the time of her first appearance in Sandman, she is a "Mad Yuppie Witch". First appearance: The Unexpected #108. Most of her appearances are relegated to a few panels. She is shown flying on her broom as a Yuppie briefly in issue #2, shown riding her broom in a top hat and tails with bare legs and feet in issue #22, and shown topless serving a meal to Delirium and Dream in issue #42. She also appears in The Kindly Ones.
  • Judge Gallows appears in several issues of The Dreaming including the Special, "Trial and Error". Introduced in The Unexpected #113 (June–July 1969), he is one of the few DC "mystery" hosts not used by Gaiman.
  • Gault: appears in the Sandman Netflix series. A nightmare who fled the Dreaming in the wake of Morpheus's imprisonment and hides away in the mind of Jed Walker. She created a fantasy world for the boy where he is a hero known as the "Sandman" as an escape from his abuse in the waking world. She is eventually tracked down and, when confronted reveals her desire to be a dream, wishing to inspire rather than frighten.

Gods, demigods, and major personifications

Bast

Bast, in Neil Gaiman's comic book series The Sandman, is the DC Universe version of the goddess Bast of Egyptian mythology. She was once a major goddess, but the loss of her believers over time has significantly reduced her powers. She is often coquettish toward Dream, who sometimes goes to her for advice or companionship; but she has often claimed never to have been his lover. Bast has also appeared in issues of Wonder Woman and Hawkgirl, wherein she is one of the chief goddesses worshiped by the Amazons of Bana-Mighdall. She appears in Sandman Presents: Bast: Eternity Game (2003), where she attempts to regain her lost power.

The Presence/The Creator

The Presence is the Sandman universe's equivalent of a Supreme Being, and he shares many characteristics with the standard Abrahamic God, such as almost never taking a physical form, being a Creator deity, and having unmatched power. Nevertheless, Gaiman has on several occasions stated that he never intended the Creator to be any specific religion's god, just as he makes it clear in the first appearance of the abode of the angels, the Silver City, that it "is not Paradise. It is not Heaven. It is the Silver City, that is not part of the order of created things", although the Silver City is often identified as "Heaven" in the Lucifer comic book series.

In that series, one of the critical turning points is the Presence's abandonment of his Creation, which leads to a large number of problems, including struggles to claim the power that the Creator has abandoned, to make the destruction of the universe inevitable and to the slow unraveling of the universe due to the disappearance of the Name of the Creator written on every atom in existence. This is an ongoing storyline in Lucifer.

Loki

Loki is a trickster god seen in Season of Mists; based on the Norse god Loki. In his own form, Loki is a tall, thin man with yellow eyes and long red hair that resembles flames; but he is capable of assuming any appearance at will. He is sometimes nicknamed 'Lie-Smith' and 'Sky-walker' by other characters.

In The Sandman

He is temporarily freed from his punishment by Odin to accompany his negotiations for the rulership of Hell; whereafter he deceives Odin and Thor into imprisoning another god in his place, but fails to fool Dream, who frees the other god and sends a simulacrum of Loki to take his punishment, in exchange for Loki's debt to himself. Loki returns in The Kindly Ones, wherein he works with Puck to kidnap Daniel, a child under Dream's protection. The Corinthian and Matthew eventually find Daniel, and Loki attempts to fool them by taking the form of Dream; but the Corinthian strangles Loki and consumes his eyes. Loki, now blind, is taken by Odin and Thor back to his punishment.

After The Sandman

Loki reappears in Lucifer, wherein Lucifer comes to Loki to take his ship for his own universe, and destroys the snake that tortures Loki, who therefore allows him the ship.

Odin

Odin, as based on the Norse God Odin, appears as an old man wearing a wide-brimmed hat and cloak and carrying a staff. He is usually depicted as a dark, mysterious figure, missing one eye and accompanied by two ravens, Hugin and Munin ("thought" and "memory"), and two wolves, Geri and Freki.

Three

The Three appear in the form of any group of three women; usually the Mother, the Maiden and the Crone, the three aspects of the Triple Goddess in many mythologies. Sometimes they appear in the form of the three witches from DC's horror anthology, The Witching Hour: Mildred, Mordred, and Cynthia. As these witches, they also appeared in a prestige format limited series of the same title, and two standard limited series, Witchcraft and Witchcraft: Le Terreur.

In The Sandman

The Three repeatedly appear throughout The Sandman, fulfilling different functions at different points in the story. Their first appearance is in The Sandman #2, where they appear as the three witches, Mildred (mother), Mordred (crone), and Cynthia (maiden) from the DC horror anthology The Witching Hour. They later take many different forms over the course of the series, and the "three women" symbol remains an extremely common one, often blurring the lines between when characters are supposed to be merely themselves and when they are supposed to be representations of the Three. The Three represent the female principle, prophecy, and mystery, and they are often a vaguely menacing and enigmatic presence in the series. Incarnations of the Three include the Erinyes (Furies) in their vengeful aspect and the Moirai (Fates) or Weird Sisters in their divinatory aspect. They also sometimes subtly appear in the form of other characters (such as Eve) or groups of characters.

After The Sandman

The Three later appeared in a graphic novel named WitchCraft, in which one of their priestesses in ancient Rome, Ursula, is raped by barbarians. She is then reincarnated three times, followed by the witches, and wronged again by reincarnations of the barbarian leader until the modern age, when she comes back as his elderly mother-in-law and manages to defeat him.

The Three then assure that he would be reincarnated as each of the priestesses he had raped, in order, with the exception of Ursula. He would never know what was happening until the moment of death, at which point it would start all over again.

The Three are satisfied, and in the end decide that Ursula will live another twenty years and become an accomplished and respected witch in her twilight years, and her grandchild will be beautiful.

Other gods

  • Ishtar: The goddess Ishtar, disguised as an exotic dancer; a former lover of Destruction.
  • Pharamond: a former god, last of his pantheon, and friend of Dream. At Dream's suggestion that he change with the times or fade like many other gods, Pharamond now runs a travel agency in Dublin, under the alias 'Mr Farrell'. He helps Dream and Delirium find the missing Destruction, and later provides assistance to Lucifer in his own series.
  • Thor: The Norse god Thor first appeared in DC Comics in Tales of the Unexpected #16 (August 1957), "The Magic Hammer," illustrated by Jack Kirby. In another story attributed to Kirby and George Papp, "The Magic Stick" in House of Mystery #68 (November 1957), he looked like a traditional Viking with red hair, and his hammer looked identical to the way Kirby would draw it for Marvel Comics. That story was reprinted in DC Special #4 (July 1969), which also contains Abel's debut.[10] Kirby also pitted Wesley Dodds against someone claiming to be Thor in Adventure Comics #75 (June 1942). Later, a museum worker handled Thor's hammer and briefly became Thor in Batman #127 (October 1959). Thor also appears in War of the Gods and Jack Kirby's Fourth World. (The Thor seen in The Sandman does not resemble the one seen in the other DC comics.)

Angels, fallen angels, and devils

Azazel

Azazel is a former ruler of Hell, reigning for a time alongside Lucifer and Beelzebub. Based on a statement from Agony and Ecstasy in Hellblazer #12, he may have usurped his position from Belial (described at the time was the third member of the triumvirate). He appears as a ragged opening into darkness, full of disembodied eyes and mouths. He was cast out after Lucifer abandoned Hell, and later imprisoned by Dream in a glass jar. He reappears, still in Dream's glass jar, in Lucifer Volume 2 (2015).

He is based on the demon Azazel.

Azazel first appeared in DC Comics battling Madame Xanadu in the story intended for Doorway to Nightmare #6 (it was cancelled after #5) that was eventually published in Cancelled Comic Cavalcade #2 and The Unexpected #190. As with Lucifer's appearance in The Brave and the Bold, he looked more like a traditional devil, but was identified as an incubus: here, a creature who steals people's dreams and imprints them upon tapestries that give him power, and cannot be destroyed without killing the victims.

Beelzebub

Along with Lucifer and Azazel, Beelzebub was the third King of Hell. He often appears as either a gigantic green fly, or a fly's head on two short human legs. Sometimes a human face can be seen between the fly's eyes. His constant buzzing slurs his speech (for example, 'Bbbbut nooo. Itzzz a Triummmvirate.') He is based on the demon Beelzebub.

Choronzon

Choronzon is a former duke of Hell who served under Beelzebub. He has pink skin and two mouths, one under the other.

He had possession of Dream's helm, but lost it in a challenge. He later reappeared briefly as one of Azazel's tactics to gain ownership of Hell.

He is based on the demon Choronzon.

Choronzon appears in 52 #25 (Late October 2006).

Duma

Duma is a fallen angel from the DC Vertigo series The Sandman. Duma's name means "silence", and he is based on the angel Duma from Jewish mythology. In Season of Mists, Lucifer abdicates Hell and gives the key to Dream until God assigns Duma and Remiel to control of Hell. Remiel and Duma lose ownership of Hell in the Lucifer spin-off series. Duma eventually allies with Lucifer and Elaine Belloc to save creation, and persuades Hell's new ruler Christopher Rudd to bring his army to Heaven's aid at the Battle of Armageddon.

Lucifer

Lucifer is the sometime ruler of Hell, and a fallen angel. He is based on the fallen angel Lucifer, whose story was created by John Milton in his epic poem Paradise Lost.[11] Neil Gaiman also used the character Lucifer in his short story 'Murder Mysteries', wherein he was a captain in the Silver City, with Azazel as his protégé.

In the book "Hanging out with the Dream King" (a book consisting of interviews with Gaiman's collaborators), one of Gaiman's artists, Kelley Jones, states that Lucifer's appearance is based on that of David Bowie:

"...Neil was adamant that the Devil was David Bowie. He just said, 'He is. You must draw David Bowie. Find David Bowie, or I'll send you David Bowie. Because if it isn't David Bowie, you're going to have to redo it until it is David Bowie.' So I said, 'Okay, it's David Bowie.'..."

Lucifer made at least three previous appearances in DC Comics (Superman's Pal Jimmy Olsen #65, Weird Mystery Tales #4, and DC Special Series #8, a.k.a. The Brave and the Bold Special), but his appearance was more traditional. Lucifer as he appeared in The Sandman also appeared in issues of the series The Demon (vol. 3) and The Spectre (vol. 2) and in the miniseries Stanley and His Monster (vol. 2).

Mazikeen

Mazikeen is a fictional character from Neil Gaiman's Sandman mythos. The name "Mazikeen" comes from that of a shapeshifting demon of Jewish mythology.

In The Sandman

Mazikeen first appeared in The Sandman, where she was Lucifer's consort while he reigned in Hell. At the time, half of her face was normal, but the other half was horribly misshapen and skeletal, causing her speech to be nearly unintelligible. (Gaiman wrote Mazikeen's dialogue by trying to speak using only half of his mouth, and writing down phonetically what came out.)

When Lucifer resigned, Mazikeen left Hell and ended up following her master, becoming part of the staff at the "Lux" (Latin for light, and the first root word in "Lucifer"), an elite Los Angeles bar that Lucifer had opened and played piano at. To conceal her demonic nature, she covered the deformed half of her face with a white mask and rarely spoke.

After The Sandman

In the ongoing comic book series Lucifer, Mazikeen is a devoted ally of Lucifer Morningstar and the war leader of the Lilin, a race descended from Lilith. A fearsome warrior and a respected leader, Mazikeen is a prominent character in the Lucifer comics. She has the appearance of a human female with long black hair.

In Lucifer, Mazikeen's face was turned fully human when she was resuscitated by the Basanos following the destruction of the Lux in a fire. This was because the vessel of the Basanos, Jill Presto, did not realize that Mazikeen's face was naturally deformed, and assumed that it was burned in the fire.

When Lucifer refused to assist her in restoring her face to its former state, she defected to her family, the Lilim-in-Exile. As their war leader, she led their army against Lucifer's cosmos, allying herself briefly with the Basanos. However, this was a ruse; after a desperate gamble, she bought Lucifer enough time to destroy the Basanos and regain control of his creation. Lucifer then accepted her into his service once more and made the Lilim-in-Exile the standing army of his universe.

Lucifer ultimately restores Mazikeen's half-skeletal face shortly before departing the known universes.

Remiel

Remiel is an angel in the comic book series The Sandman; based on the angel Remiel. He first appears in Season of Mists. In Biblical and Judaic traditions, Remiel is an Archangel and a Grigori; a Choir/Hierarchy of angels, whose role is to observe humanity, lending a helping hand when necessary but not interfere.

In The Sandman

Remiel, along with Duma, is sent to observe when Dream is given the key to Hell. Dream finally gives the key to Remiel and Duma, and the two angels descend to Hell to rule over the countless sinners and demons there.

After The Sandman

Following the end of the Sandman series, Remiel and Duma lose ownership of Hell in the Lucifer spin-off series. At the end of the series, Remiel tries to rebel against Elaine Belloc, refusing to accept her as God's successor. When he tries to kill Gaudium and Spera, friends of Elaine's, she puts him in his own Hell until he reforms.

Minor angels and demons

  • Merkin, Mother of Spiders: First appeared in Season of Mists, as an envoy with Azazel. A lumpen, hideous, vaguely feminine figure, whose womb produces spiders. The Merkin's facial form was almost certainly based upon a photograph by the artist Joel-Peter Witkin entitled "Amour, New Mexico, 1987", showing a naked female figure wearing a spider-like horned mask.

Fair Folk

Inhabitants of Faerie.

Cluracan

The Cluracan is a courtier of the Queen of Faerie and the brother to Nuala, the Dream King's fairy servant. An amoral, merry, capricious, homosexual rogue, Cluracan features in Season of Mists, Worlds' End, The Kindly Ones, and The Wake. He is strongly reminiscent of the "trickster" archetype also associated with Loki. Following the events of The Kindly Ones, Cluracan offends his queen so badly that she sends him to the court of Llinor, where tradition demands that he marry a lady of the royal house; whereupon Cluracan's nemesis – identical to him in every way except his sexual orientation – takes Cluracan's place.[12]

The Cluracan is named after a drunken leprechaun of Irish mythology, the Cluricaun.

Nuala

Nuala is a faerie given to Dream at the end of Season of Mists, who takes on the housekeeping duties of the Dreaming, only stopping when her brother Cluracan takes her back to Faerie in The Kindly Ones. When she leaves, Dream grants her permission to summon him at need; and when she asks to become his paramour, he refuses.

She subsequently appears in the Sandman spinoff series, The Dreaming.

Auberon

Auberon is a character in the comic book series The Sandman and The Books of Magic. He is seen for the first time in Sandman#19 as Auberon of Dom-Daniel, and again in several issues of The Books of Magic and in the Books of Faerie miniseries.

The character was inspired by Oberon of Shakespeare's A Midsummer Night's Dream.

Titania

Titania is a character in Neil Gaiman's comic book series The Sandman.

In The Sandman

Titania is the queen of the fay; she first appears in issue#19. The character was inspired by Shakespeare's Titania (Fairy Queen) in the play A Midsummer Night's Dream. There is implication that she in the past was a lover of Dream's, although this is never confirmed.

After The Sandman

Titania is also a major character in the comic book The Books of Magic, of which the first four issues were written by Gaiman, and its spin-off series The Books of Faerie. In the latter series, it is revealed that she was a human girl who crossed over into the fay realm and was then adopted by the previous queen of the fay, and received her faerie powers from a circlet seized by her from that queen. Despite this power, it was revealed that she is illiterate, and so regularly uses Dream's library because its special properties allow its users to read books in any language, including those they cannot speak. There are suggestions that she may be the mother of the series' protagonist, Timothy Hunter.[13]

Puck

Puck is a brown-furred trickster and hobgoblin, who appears several times in The Sandman. Puck aids the Norse God Loki in kidnapping Daniel, playing a small role in the death of the Sandman and Daniel's subsequent assuming of the title. Puck later appeared in an issue of The Books of Magic, hiding as a gangster called Mr. Robbins in Brighton whose true nature is discovered—but not exposed—by Timothy Hunter.[14] The character was inspired by Puck of Shakespeare's A Midsummer Night's Dream.

Immortals, witches, and long-lived humans

Hob Gadling

Robert "Hob" Gadling is a human granted immortality, who meets with Dream once every hundred years.

Hob was granted immortality in a pub named the White Horse in 1389 when he simply declared that he "had decided never to die"; whereupon Death agrees, at Dream's request, to forgo him. Hob thereupon takes to a variety of occupations over the centuries, including slaving, and periodically reinvents himself as a descendant of his previous persona. Gradually, he acquires a conscience, and by the 20th Century has become full of remorse at his past deeds. Dream converses with Gadling once per century, of Gadling's latest occupations. At their 20th Century meeting, Dream admits that the purpose of the exercise was simply for him to have a friend. In The Wake, Death offers to end his six-hundred-year life; but Gadling declines.

Orpheus

Orpheus is the son of Dream and the muse Calliope. He is based on Orpheus of Greek mythology.

In "The Song of Orpheus", the Endless attend Orpheus's wedding to Eurydice. Eurydice dies on the same night, and Orpheus asks his father to retrieve her from Hades. Dream refuses, but Orpheus gets help from Destruction and Death. As in the legend, Orpheus travels to Hades, plays his sad music, loses Eurydice again, and gets torn apart by the Bacchanae (the beloved madwomen of Dionysus) but because of his immortality survives as a disembodied head. Dream establishes a priesthood to take care of his son, saying that they will never meet again.

In "Thermidor", Johanna Constantine is asked by Dream to rescue Orpheus from Revolutionary France. Orpheus's singing stuns Robespierre and Louis de Saint-Just, leading to the Thermidorian Reaction. Orpheus misses his father, who still has not visited him.

In Brief Lives, Dream has to talk to Orpheus in order to find Destruction. In return, Orpheus is granted his wish of death.

Thessaly

Thessaly is the last of the millennia-old witches of Thessaly. She makes her first appearance in A Game of You. She has a bookish appearance with straight hair and thick glasses that belie her personality: amoral, cold-blooded, proud, and ruthless, though not malicious. She will kill people who are potential threats with no hesitation or remorse.

Neil Gaiman named this character after the land of witches, Thessaly, in Greece. In one of Plato's dialogues, the Gorgias, Socrates states "I would not have us risk that which is dearest on the acquisition of this power, like the Thessalian enchantresses, who, as they say, bring down the moon from heaven at the risk of their own perdition." In the series, Thessaly does exactly that, with deadly consequences, just as Socrates predicts. Later in the series, Thessaly changes her name to Larissa, which is the capital of Thessaly. Larissa was actually the local fountain nymph, after whom the town was named. It is suggested however that Thessaly is even older than this civilization and may date from Neolithic times.

Thessaly returns in the later volumes, where she is Dream's lover for a time, but this relationship ends unhappily for both and is never actually shown in the series. When it is alluded to in Brief Lives Thessaly is never mentioned by name, so only in The Kindly Ones is this romance revealed. Also in The Kindly Ones, Thessaly provides Lyta Hall with protection and sanctuary from Dream while he is being targeted for death by the Furies, who are using Hall as a vessel.

In The Wake she attends Dream's wake and funeral. She speaks with two of Dream's lovers and recalls her relationship with Dream. She remarks that part of his attraction to her was that she was not intimidated by him. To her surprise she later would dream of Morpheus, and the two kindled a romance, with Dream madly in love with Thessaly (though this affection was not mutual). When Morpheus ended his courtship and resumed working Thessaly realized she did not love Morpheus and left the Dreaming.

When Lyta wakes up after Dream's death, Thessaly calmly advises her to leave. Thessaly suggests that many people, including herself, would be more than happy to murder Lyta for her part in Morpheus' destruction.

Thessaly also is the star of two spin-off comic series, The Thessaliad and Thessaly, Witch for Hire written by Bill Willingham. In the spin-offs, Thessaly (under that name) and her companion, a ghost named Fetch, first set out to tackle various gods of the underworld who want her dead. Later she is unwillingly pressured into a monster-killing contract.

She is alluded to in the Faction Paradox series, in the character Thessalia and her protégé Larissa.

Mad Hettie

A London tramp born in 1741. At the time of Sandman #3, she was 247 years old. She appears frequently in other DC comics such as Hellblazer, first appearing in #9. She also had a large role in Death: The High Cost of Living, where she is shown to be rude, miserly and constantly complains about the lack of knowledge that present day youths have. She has been accused of being a witch, and also appears to have abilities as a haruspex, however she merely states that "you don't get to your two hundred and fiftieth without learning a few tricks".[15]

Later, Hettie worked in the series The Dreaming, in which it was discovered that she had dealings with Destiny, Johanna Constantine and President Thomas Jefferson.

In The Sandman: Overture, it is revealed that she had stolen a magical timepiece in her youth, which remained hidden in her memories until Daniel retrieved it.

The Silk Man

Appearing for the first time in Lucifer: Nirvana, The Silk Man is an immortal sorcerer, described by Lucifer as "..a fossil remnant from an earlier, cruder creation. His body is a weaving that has to be renewed constantly. His spirit too, come to that. A messy form of immortality, but it seems to do the job." In earlier days he was the leader of the Arao Jinn. He appears as a mercenary, hired by the angel Perdissa to kill Lucifer. He seems to need to consume living things to stay alive, weaving them into himself. He is severely damaged by Perdissa and eventually killed by Lucifer.

Vassily

In The Hunt, Vassily appears as an old man telling his teen-aged granddaughter a tale from "the old country", medieval Russia. A youth raised in a remote forest has a series of adventures, including meeting with Lucien (to whom he gives a book) and Baba Yaga, and marrying a fellow shape-changing wolf. At the end of the story, it is revealed that the grandfather is the youth in his own story.

Mortals

Alex Burgess

Alex Burgess is the son of Roderick Burgess, mother unknown (but probably Ethel Cripps, and therefore half-brother of Doctor Destiny). He is taught by his father, and takes part in his rituals. Upon Roderick Burgess' death, Alex inherits his estate, including his magical order. He keeps Dream imprisoned, as his father did, trying to bargain for power and immortality in exchange for Dream's release.

The Order of the Ancient Mysteries enjoys a resurgence in popularity in the 1960s, but by the 1970s it is in decline again. Alex passes ownership of the Order on to his boyfriend, Paul McGuire, and becomes obsessed with his prisoner and with his father. Finally, in 1988, Dream escapes and puts Alex into a nightmare of "eternal waking," in which he is forever dreaming he is waking up, and each waking degenerates into another horrible nightmare. This nightmare lasts for years, ending only with Dream's death in The Kindly Ones.

Alex is quite tall and near-sighted. He has brown hair which he wears in a variety of styles throughout his life, but by old age he is bald and has come to resemble his father very closely. His relationship with McGuire is deep and heartfelt, but his obsessions with his father and with Dream eventually come to rule his life. In The Wake, he appears again as the child that we see in his first appearance.

Alex is in many ways a tragic figure, perhaps the first statement of the theme that Desire explores in The Wake : "The bonds of family bind both ways". Had Alex not been born the son of his father, inheriting the imprisoned Dream, his life might have been much happier. However, he is finally able to find some measure of fulfillment in his old age, following Dream's death.

His name almost certainly derives from Anthony Burgess's A Clockwork Orange, the protagonist of which is named Alex, but could also be a nod to Aleister Crowley, whose original middle name was Alexander and who was mentioned in the first issue.

Roderick Burgess

Roderick Burgess (1863–1947), born Morris Burgess Brocklesby and known also as The Daemon King, was the Lord Magus of The Order of the Ancient Mysteries. His magical fraternity was based in "Fawney Rig" in Sussex, and was initially funded by his inherited industrial wealth. Burgess is a magician rather in the vein of the real Aleister Crowley, and within the DC world is Crowley's rival.

The series begins with Burgess' attempt to capture and bind Death, which fails, capturing Dream instead. Burgess keeps Dream trapped in a glass globe for the rest of his (Burgess') life, attempting to bargain with Dream, but Dream remains silent. Burgess dies from a heart attack still attempting to get a response out of Dream. His order passes the globe and Dream to his son Alex.

Burgess is a bald-headed, slightly pot-bellied man with a large hook nose. He is ultimately self-centred; his sole purpose for the Order is to bring money and power to himself, and he is consumed by his desire to achieve immortality. His relationship with his son is only briefly touched on, though it is implied that it is unhealthy, with Burgess pushing his son to spend his life pursuing his father's dreams.

Charles Dance portrays the character in the television series The Sandman on Netflix.[16] This version of the character dies of a brain haemorrhage instead of a heart attack.

Johanna Constantine

Lady Johanna Constantine is an 18th-century supernatural adventuress. Dream encounters her several times, once to ask her to recover the head of his son, Orpheus – a mission she performed so successfully that part of its aftereffects was the ending of the French Revolution's Reign of Terror.[17]

After The Sandman

In the Hellblazer Special: Lady Constantine graphic novel, an ancient evil refers to Johanna Constantine as 'the Constantine', the 'laughing magician', and the 'constant one', all titles that have been used (usually by other ancient evils) to describe John Constantine. The evil taunts her, saying "did you think to trick us with a new form?" There is the implication that throughout all times there have been recurring incarnations of Constantine who contain the spark of magic.[18] In the story Johanna Constantine learns that "the Devil and the Wandering Jew" meet once every hundred years in a London pub; this meeting is actually between Dream and Hob Gadling, as she discovers when she interrupts the meeting.[19] The story's conclusion shows Johanna Constantine inheriting a property she calls "Fawney Rig", after the con job wherein a gilded ring is sold as though it were solid gold, the implication being that she attained the property through trickery. This property was later owned by Roderick Burgess, the mage who captured Dream in the beginning of The Sandman story.

In her middle age, Johanna Constantine is charged by persons unknown with the key to a box containing the sigil of America, allegedly created by Destiny.[20] This is stolen and hidden in the future by the wanderer, Mad Hettie. Hettie both blackmails ('I knows about you and the little Corsican') and bribes Johanna for her silence, promising her that she would live to age 99. This promise proves true, with Johanna dying at age 99 while getting out of her wheelchair when she hears the song of her old companion, Orpheus.

Johanna is an ancestor of John Constantine, as revealed in the miniseries The Sandman Presents: Love Street.

She is also mentioned in the Doctor Who novel The Man in the Velvet Mask, set in an alternate post-Revolutionary France.

Jenna Coleman was cast as two versions of Johanna, one in the eighteenth-century and another in the present day in the TV adaptation of The Sandman where she's a occult detective just like John.[21][22][23]

John Constantine

John Constantine is a con man and magician who accompanies Dream on a quest to find his pouch of sand.

John Constantine has his own series, John Constantine: Hellblazer, which occasionally has guest appearances by Cain and Abel. He is also prominently featured in another series, Swamp Thing, from which he originated.

Ethel Cripps

Ethel Cripps, also known as Ethel Dee, is the mother of John Dee. She was the mistress of Roderick Burgess until she fled with Ruthven Sykes.

Her last joy was her son, John Dee, whom she sought for 10 years. She discovered that he had become a living corpse, which happened because of his use of the Sandman's Ruby.

At this time, she was 90 years old, and it was alluded that she had been kept alive by an amulet in the shape of an eye which granted its user protection, the amulet that Ruthven Sykes had been given by the demon Choronzon in exchange for Dream's helmet. Sykes, who had been second in command in The Order of Ancient Mysteries, needed protection from Roderick Burgess who was seeking retribution for Sykes' treachery of the theft of the £200,000 and Dream's magical items, which were in possession of the Order at the time he fled with Ethel Cripps to San Francisco in 1930. "Magical War" was declared upon them, and Ruthven knew he would need a way to protect himself from the hexes Burgess sought to put upon him.

In 1936, Ethel walked out on Ruthven, taking with her the amulet of protection and Dream's Ruby. While in his possession, the amulet protected Sykes from Burgess' hexes, but without it, he died a messy and painful death, with his insides exploding out of him. The amulet continued to protect Ethel while Choronzon was still in possession of Dream's helmet.

After Dream escaped and sought to regain his items, he descended to Hell to find his helmet. He had to battle Choronzon to regain it, and after his victory, the compact was withdrawn and the power of protection the amulet possessed ended, which also ended the life of Ethel Dee.

Doctor Dee

John Dee, also known as Doctor Destiny, is a DC Comics villain whose powers were derived from his use of Dream's Ruby. His name is almost certainly a reference to the real-life John Dee. He was incarcerated in Arkham Asylum, with other Batman villains such as The Scarecrow and The Joker, until freed by the amulet given to him by his mother, Ethel Dee, former mistress to Roderick Burgess. He had previously fought the Sandman (Garrett Sanford) alongside the Justice League.

John originally named himself 'Doctor Destiny' to protect his mother's surname, but after her death changed it back. The Ruby had drained away his mental and physical state until he was no longer able to sleep or dream without it. This had the unpleasant effect of turning him into a browned, living corpse.

Being able to control dreams, he used the ruby to bring out the 'darkness' and 'bestiality' of many people across the world. He originally sought power, money and mostly the restoration of his human body, but the madness brought about by overuse of the relic drove him to savage, monstruous acts of depravity using the ruby. To quote: 'I think I'll dismember the world and then I'll dance in the wreckage.'

While doing this, over a period of 24 hours he focused the energy of the ruby on several people in a cafe, one of them a friend of Rose Walker and an ex-lover of Foxglove. He used them as puppets, horribly having them murder and degrade each other as if they were toys, until all were dead.

Dream double-bluffed him into destroying the ruby, which Dee believed to be Dream's life. It actually only stored some of his energy, and with it released Dream instead became even more powerful than before. Easily overpowering Dee, Dream decided not to destroy him, and instead returned him to Arkham. Dee was finally able to sleep, and his sadism and depravity faded as he now could again dream.

He has since appeared in Justice League and Justice Society stories, having retained some residual power from the ruby. Even worse, since he has managed to replicate its power perfectly, the second ruby is now out of his grasp. However, since the new ruby is attuned to him, he has since not regressed to his previous vicious persona, mostly seeking the dominion of dreams or the waking world through dreams.

Wesley Dodds

Wesley Dodds, also known as Sandman, is the original costumed crimefighter who used the name. According to Gaiman, he was merely filling a hole in the universe in a similar way to a process of evolution, in which animals fill up a niche—for instance, what should fly. He is first seen in The Sandman series in a two-panel cameo in issue #1, and another cameo in issue #26. Dream occasionally appeared in dream sequences in Dodds's own series, Sandman Mystery Theatre. The two finally met for real in Gaiman's Sandman Midnight Theatre. Dodds appeared out of costume during The Sandman: The Wake (#72). The reason for his prophetic visions is explained as him being embodied with a small portion of Dream's essence. His reasoning for assuming his role as The Sandman is given as nightmares of Dream in his helmet that plague him, until he begins his career as a crimefighter, after which "Wesley Dodds sleeps the sleep of the Just."

Foxglove

Foxglove (Donna Cavanagh) is a writer and musician who first appears in A Game of You.

She is mentioned in Preludes and Nocturnes as the girlfriend of Judy, one of the patrons at the diner who dies in the story concerning John Dee, titled "24 Hours." In A Game of You, she lives with her partner Hazel and the two help Thessaly rescue Barbie.

After The Sandman

In Death: The Time of Your Life, Foxglove has become a pop superstar after being seen by a promoter in Death: The High Cost of Living. She is raising a child with Hazel named Alvie. Alvie dies of cot death, leading Hazel to make a deal with Death. However, even in the world of the Endless there is no such thing as a free lunch, and another character's life has to be sacrificed for the child's.

Daniel Hall

Daniel Hall is the son of Lyta Hall, and the successor to the role of Dream of the Endless.

Lyta Hall

Hippolyta "Lyta" Hall is a major character, the mother of Daniel. During Dream's captivity, pregnant Lyta and her husband were held captive in a dream-realm controlled by Brute and Glob, two of Dream's minions. In this pocket realm, Lyta remained pregnant for two years, giving birth to her son Daniel only after Dream destroys the pocket realm (and Lyta's husband) and frees her. When Dream tells Lyta that the child she gestated in dreams will one day belong to him, Lyta swears she will protect Daniel at all costs. When Daniel goes missing, Lyta is convinced that Dream has stolen him and seeks revenge, unwittingly setting into motion the events of Dream's death.

John Hathaway

John Hathaway is the senior curator of the Royal Museum. He steals the Magdalene Grimoire from the museum's collection to aid Roderick Burgess in his attempt to gain immortality after his son, Edmund, dies. He commits suicide in 1920 using a dagger from the museum after a stock taking reveals his theft. His suicide note, implicating Roderick Burgess in a multitude of crimes, is never found.

Hazel McNamara

Hazel McNamara is Foxglove's lover. She appears in A Game of You and Death: The High Cost of Living.

She has a son, Alvie, from her one heterosexual encounter. It is likely that Alvie is named after Wanda (see below). In Death: The Time of Your Life Alvie dies of cot death and Hazel makes a deal with Death to bring him back.[15]

Unity Kinkaid

Unity Kinkaid first appears as one of the victims of the sleepy sickness that follows Dream's capture in the first collection of issues in the series, Preludes and Nocturnes. Following his capture, she sleeps until he escapes. While asleep, she gives birth to a daughter, Miranda Walker. It is later shown that the father of this child was Desire. Unity is later identified as a "vortex of Dream": a rare entity with the ability to telepathically combine the dreams of other beings, and who can thus cause the destruction of The Dreaming. The only time Dream is allowed to take a human life is to kill a vortex. Desire's intervention transfers the vortex to Unity's granddaughter, Rose Walker, in the hope that Dream will kill one of their relatives, and thus incur the vengeance of the Furies. Before Dream can kill Rose, Unity reclaims the vortex and dies in her stead.

Unity is of medium height, with reddish-brown hair that she wears long and loose, in the final dream-meeting between herself, Rose, and Dream; as the old woman of waking life, she has grey hair and wears a curiously old-fashioned dress.

Prez Rickard

Prez Rickard is a fictional character who first appeared in Prez #1 (December 1973). He is the subject of the story "The Golden Boy", in Sandman #54, where he is the first 19-year-old to be elected President of the United States.

Ruthven Sykes

Ruthven Sykes is a bespectacled Afro-Caribbean man with short hair.

He is Roderick Burgess' second-in-command of the Order of the Ancient Mysteries until November 1930, when he steals a number of treasures (including Dream's helmet, ruby and pouch of sand) and £200,000 in cash from the order and flees to San Francisco with Roderick's mistress, Ethel Cripps. In December 1930, he trades the helmet to the demon Choronzon for an amulet that looks like an eyeball on a chain. This amulet protects him from the magics of Burgess until 1936, when Ethel Cripps leaves him, taking the amulet with her. He is then killed.

Jed Walker

Jed Walker, created by Joe Simon and Jack Kirby, first appeared in The Sandman, vol. 1, #1, where he was protected from nightmare monsters by the titular hero. In Cancelled Comic Cavalcade #2, he was revealed to be the Earth-1 equivalent of Kirby's Kamandi. In Neil Gaiman's revisionist version of The Sandman, Jed is the brother of Rose Walker and the grandson of Unity Kinkaid and Desire. He was raised by his grandfather, Ezra Paulsen, then taken and imprisoned by his abusive aunt and uncle at the behest of Desire. Once Rose rescues him, he is revealed in The Wake to have become close to her.

Rose Walker

Rose Walker is a fictional character from the Sandman series written by Neil Gaiman. She makes her first appearance in issue #10, part one of The Doll's House story arc. She is a young blonde with red- and purple-dyed streaks in her hair. In later issues, she is shown as having red hair with a blonde streak. In The Kindly Ones, several characters remark that Rose looks much younger than her actual age; Rose's responses to these comments imply that while she may not be a true immortal, she is aware that she is aging more slowly than normal. She is the granddaughter of Desire.

Clarice and Barnaby

Clarice and Barnaby, aunt and uncle of Jed and Rose, were introduced in The Sandman vol. 1, #5, created by Michael Fleisher and Jack Kirby. The pair mysteriously show up on Dolphin Island a few hours after the drowning death of Jed's grandfather, fisherman Ezra Paulsen. They take him to live with their own children, Bruce and Susie. They treat him as a personal slave not unlike Cinderella, with minimal food even as he does all the cooking. Eventually, their treatment of him is revealed to have become much more abusive—after he runs away from home, they place him in a basement dungeon with no toilet. This is told in issues 5 and 6 of the first series, The Best of DC #22, and recapped in Rose's diary in issue #11 of the Gaiman series. In issue #12, their mysterious appearance is revealed to have been because they were being paid an $800 monthly stipend by social services. In issue #14, they are revealed to have been killed.

Wanda

Wanda: A transgender woman featured in A Game of You who is Barbie's best friend. She dies in a storm caused by Thessaly's magic and is buried as 'Alvin Mann', her deadname. In response, Barbie uses lipstick to write Wanda's name on her gravestone. Wanda is last seen, along with Death, in Barbie's dream.

Historical figures

  • Haroun al-Raschid: King of Baghdad, who sells the city to Dream to keep it alive forever, in the One Thousand and One Arabian Nights.
  • Caesar Augustus: The first emperor of Rome. In The Sandman he is revealed to carry psychological scars from being continually raped by his uncle, Julius Caesar, which he (at Dream's advice) assuages by planning the destruction of Caesar's empire.
  • Lycius: A dwarf, born of the Roman nobility, who lived in the time of Caesar Augustus.[24] Augustus had banned the nobility from working as actors upon the stage, but he made an exception for Lycius, who had few other opportunities.
  • Joshua A. Norton: An English-American declaring himself 'Emperor of the United States' in "Three Septembers and a January", after Dream gives him his delusion as part of a challenge issued by his three younger siblings: Despair, who tries to make him fall into her realm by making his life increasingly difficult; Delirium, who makes a half-attempt to drive him insane; and Desire, who uses the King of Pain to tempt him with a real palace and a Queen. In the end, Joshua Norton lives a happy and dignified life; and when he dies, thousands come to see him off.
  • The King of Pain: According to Herbert Asbury's book The Barbary Coast: An Informal History of the San Francisco Underworld, an itinerant healer in 19th century San Francisco who sold aconite liniment.[25] In The Sandman #31 ("Three Septembers and a January", reprinted in Fables and Reflections), the King of Pain is Desire's undead minion. He tries to tempt Emperor Norton into betraying his dignity for his desires (in the form of Worldly Power, Wealth, An Estate, and A Noble Wife). Norton retains his dignity and refuses the offers, saying that he is content ruling his city and that he has all he needs.
  • Mark Twain: American writer who shares his story about a jumping frog with Emperor Norton.
  • Thomas Paine: English radical who, after participating in the French Revolution, is imprisoned in the Luxembourg Palace and briefly encounters Johanna Constantine.
  • Louis de Saint-Just: Orator of the French Revolution and supporter of the Terror, he is deposed after Orpheus sings a song that saps his ability to articulate.
  • Maximilien Robespierre: Leader of the Committee of Public Safety and instigator of the Reign of Terror. An extreme dreamer, he seeks to destroy the head of Orpheus due to his wish to destroy all myths, but is in turn destroyed by it.
  • Marco Polo: The famous 13th-century explorer and trader. He is lost in a part of the Dreaming that connects to the real world, and encounters Rusticello, a friend of his future self; Fiddler's Green; and Dream, who gives an otherwise forbidden passage home. Upon waking Marco is unable to remember any of his encounters.
  • Rustichello da Pisa: The publisher of Marco's autobiography, who encounters his friend in a dream in the Desert of Lop.
  • William Shakespeare: The famous 16/17th-century English playwright. Dream gives him the inspiration for many of his plays in exchange for Shakespeare writing two plays for him: A Midsummer Night's Dream and The Tempest.
  • Hamnet Shakespeare: The son of William, he is often overlooked by his father. It is implied that Titania may have taken him into the realm of Faerie (this is confirmed in a brief cameo in The Books of Magic).
  • Christopher Marlowe: A famous 16th-century playwright who is depicted discussing Shakespeare's terrible writing and Marlowe's Faust. Shakespeare tells Marlowe, "God's wounds! If only I could write like you!"
  • Geoffrey Chaucer: The famous 14th-century poet and author of The Canterbury Tales is seen in the White Horse Tavern in AD 1389 in part four of The Doll's House, where Dream first meets Hob Gadling. It is mentioned in the tavern that people do not want "filthy tales in rhyme about pilgrims", a reference to The Canterbury Tales.
  • Anne Hathaway: The wife of William Shakespeare.
  • Susanna Shakespeare: Older daughter of William and Anne Shakespeare.
  • Judith Shakespeare: Younger daughter of William and Anne Shakespeare.
  • Thomas Quiney: Pub waiter and future husband of Judith.
  • Ben Jonson: Poet and friend of William Shakespeare.

Minor mortals

  • Barbie: Introduced as one of Rose Walker's housemates in The Doll's House, later the protagonist of A Game of You.
  • Daniel Bustamonte: A victim of the 'sleepy sickness' that results from Dream's capture. He falls asleep in 1926, then wakes up sometime before 1955, staying awake much of the time but unable to speak. He recovers fully on September 14, 1988, when Dream escapes.
  • Chantal and Zelda: Apparently lesbian roommates in the house Rose Walker was staying at in The Doll's House. They dress in white and collect dead spiders. Of the two, Zelda relies on Chantal for confidence, and rarely if ever speaks. When they dream, Zelda dreams of her childhood, where it is implied that she collected bones. Chantal's dreams are self-repeating loops, trying to explain something of nothing. In a later issue Zelda is dying from AIDS which she contracted from Chantal, who has already died, having originally contracted it from an organ transplant. They are identified with Euryale and Stheno, the sisters of Medusa.
  • Compton: Roderick Burgess' butler.
  • Nurse Edmund: Alex Burgess' caretaker at the time he is put under Dream's curse.
  • Ernie and Frederick: Two of the men guarding Dream when he escapes from his imprisonment.
  • Doctor "Piggy" Huntoon: a doctor in Arkham Asylum and former schoolmate of Constantine's. He used to perform electroshock therapy on Constantine, back when he was institutionalized.
  • Richard Madoc: An author, director and playwright who imprisoned and repeatedly raped Dream's ex-lover Calliope. Dream punishes Madoc with an overwhelming flood of ideas; whereupon he destroys his fingers trying to record them in his own blood. In The Wake he is seen attending Morpheus' funeral whilst dreaming, and it is implied that after Morpheus' death, Madoc's mind is slowly healing.
  • Ellie Marsten: A victim of the 'sleepy sickness' that occurs during Dream's capture. She sleeps continuously for decades, awaking only four or five times a year, and recovers in an insane asylum on September 14, 1988, when Morpheus escapes. Her waking memory is basically founded on the book Through the Looking-Glass by Lewis Carroll.
  • Paul McGuire: Good friend and lover of Alex Burgess. Originally a gardener at the estate, Paul eventually takes over the Order of Ancient Mysteries.
  • Rachel: An ex-girlfriend of Constantine's who stole Dream's pouch of sand from Constantine and became addicted to its effects.
  • Stefan Wasserman: A victim of the 'sleepy sickness' that results from Dream's capture. Joins the army during the First World War at 14, and goes over the trenches shortly before he catches the sickness. Commits suicide in 1918 at age 16 because he cannot sleep. He was inhabited by the dormant spirit of the Corinthian.
  • The Scarecrow (Dr. Jonathan Crane): The Arkham inmate attempts to dissuade his friend Doctor Destiny from escaping, saying Arkham is a better home for their kind than the outside world. He is portrayed as a nervous, paranoid, babbling academic, trying to make jokes to psychologically test his prison guards, and unable to sleep for fear of rats.
  • Judy, a young lesbian who is one of the victims of John Dee using Dream's ruby in Preludes and Nocturnes. At the time of her forced suicide, she was trying to reconcile with her girlfriend Donna (Foxglove). In The Doll's House, she was revealed to be the best friend of Rose Walker.
  • Nada: A beautiful African queen, cast into hell by the Dream King (known to her as Kai'ckul) when she refuses to become his queen. Her story is revealed in the beginning of The Doll's House. An argument over her unfair punishment prompts Dream's initial actions in Seasons of Mist, and eventually Dream begs her forgiveness and lets her choose her own fate. Nada chooses to be reincarnated as a baby boy in Hong Kong.

Superheroes

  • Mister Miracle (Scott Free) informs Dream that his ruby is no longer kept at Justice League headquarters. (#7, Preludes and Nocturnes)
  • Martian Manhunter (J'onn J'onnz), last member of the original Justice League lineup, gives Dream the details of the storage unit where the JLA's old trophies, including the ruby, are kept. (#7, Preludes and Nocturnes). Also makes an appearance alongside Batman, as does Clark Kent, in issue #71 (The Wake). Darkseid is also seen at the wake.
  • The Sandman (Hector Hall): The dead father of Daniel Hall and successor to Garrett Sanford, whose death is noted. Hall's only previous appearances as The Sandman were in Infinity Inc. #49–51. (#11–12, The Doll's House)
  • Element Girl (Urania Blackwell): Death, coming for an upstairs neighbour who has fallen off a ladder, visits her, sensing her longing to die, but is unable to take her, though she informs her that Ra (the sun) can take her power back so she can die. (#20, Dream Country)

Other

Barnabas

Barnabas is a sarcastic talking dog who belonged to Destruction and was assigned to guard Delirium. His origins are unknown.

Basanos

The Basanos was a living Tarot deck created by the seraph Meleos to duplicate the divining power of Destiny's book. They are incredibly powerful due to the fact that they control probability, making whatever outcome they desire not only likely, but inevitable.

After escaping from Meleos, the Basanos took possession of Jill Presto, a cabaret worker. Lucifer Morningstar sought them out for a tarot reading, which they granted.

When Lucifer created his new universe, the Basanos moved to take control of it so that they could breed (something that is impossible in God's cosmos). Though initially successful in their plan, forming an alliance with Lucifer's enemies, their ability to control randomness was severely limited by Lucifer's creation, and Lucifer was able to outmaneuver them. Lucifer finally gave them an ultimatum: destroy themselves or risk letting the egg they laid in Jill Presto die. The Basanos chose death and extinguished themselves.

Basanos is Greek for touchstone. Such a touchstone may be a piece of slate used to test gold, or it may be a metaphor for torture or torment to test truthfulness. Why Meleos chose this name for his creation is unknown.

Charles Rowland and Edwin Paine

Charles Rowland was the only boy left at his boarding school during the holidays when Lucifer closed Hell, sending its former inhabitants back to Earth. While the adults of the school are preoccupied with the dead spirits who came back into their own lives, Charles is tortured and killed by three dead boys who used to go to the same school. Edwin Paine is a previous victim of the trio, his body still trapped on the grounds. He befriends Charles, but is unable to keep him from dying. When Death shows up, Charles refuses to go with her, and she lets him go, preferring to focus on all the other trouble Hell's closure has brought her. They later appeared in other books as the Dead Boy Detectives.

Eblis O'Shaughnessy

Eblis O'Shaughnessy: a golem and envoy created by the Endless to obtain the Cerements and the "Book of Ritual" for the funeral rites of their brother Dream. Five of the Endless participated in the creation of Eblis O'Shaughnessy, and Delirium named him. He thereafter accompanied them at the funeral. He reappears in the Vertigo story The Girl Who Would Be Death (1999).

Alianora

Alianora was first introduced in A Game of You as the original inhabitant of The Land, a region of the dreaming that Barbie has visited since childhood and is being threatened by the Cuckoo. After the Hierogram is broken and The Land is dissolved, Alianora appears and speaks to Dream. Her history is expanded in The Sandman: Overture, where it is revealed that she was created by Desire to be Dream's lover and to help him escape imprisonment after the Dreaming is invaded by two unspecified gods. Together, they vanquish the Gods, but Dream is unable to make her happy so he creates The Land as a place in which she can be free and contented.

References

  1. ^ McAvennie, Michael; Dolan, Hannah, ed. (2010). "1970s". DC Comics Year By Year A Visual Chronicle. Dorling Kindersley. p. 152. ISBN 978-0-7566-6742-9. The host that was first presented in a framing sequence by scribe Marv Wolfman and artist Bernie Wrightson would provide endless creative material for Neil Gaiman's The Sandman series decades later. {{cite book}}: |first2= has generic name (help)
  2. ^ e.g. by the raven Matthew in Sandman #40, p9.
  3. ^ Del Rosario, Alexandra (May 26, 2021). "'The Sandman': Kirby Howell-Baptiste, Mason Alexander Park & Donna Preston Among 12 Added To Netflix Series". Deadline Hollywood. from the original on May 26, 2021. Retrieved May 26, 2021.
  4. ^ Bui, Hoai-Tran (May 26, 2021). "'The Sandman' Netflix Series Expands With 12 More Actors, Including Kirby Howell-Baptiste as Death". /Film. Retrieved May 26, 2021.
  5. ^ Irvine, Alex (2008), "The Dreaming", in Dougall, Alastair (ed.), The Vertigo Encyclopedia, New York: Dorling Kindersley, pp. 64–65, ISBN 978-0-7566-4122-1, OCLC 213309015
  6. ^ Wallace, Dan (2008), Dougall, Alastair (ed.), The DC Comics Encyclopedia, New York: Dorling Kindersley, ISBN 978-0-7566-4119-1, OCLC 213309017
  7. ^ Page introducing Lucien (Tales of Ghost Castle)
  8. ^ Ramos, Dino-Ray (January 28, 2021). "Neil Gaiman's 'The Sandman' Casts Tom Sturridge, Gwendoline Christie, Vivienne Acheampong, Boyd Holbrook, Charles Dance, Asim Chaudhry And Sanjeev Bhaskar". Deadline Hollywood. Retrieved January 28, 2021.
  9. ^ Flook, Ray (June 6, 2022). "The Sandman Teaser, Key Art Released; Mark Hamill as Mervyn & More". Bleeding Cool News And Rumors. Retrieved June 6, 2022.
  10. ^ There is a story from Tales of the Unexpected #16 in DC Special #4, but it is not the Thor story.
  11. ^ Keating, Lauren (January 25, 2016). "How David Bowie Inspired The Comic Book Character Lucifer". Tech Times. Retrieved April 19, 2019.
  12. ^ Hogan, Peter (September 1997), The Dreaming #16: "Ice", Vertigo/DC Comics
  13. ^ Gross, Peter (August 1998), The Books of Magic: A Thousand Worlds of Tim, DC Comics
  14. ^ Hogan, Peter (August 1999), The Books of Magic: The Good Fella, DC Comics
  15. ^ a b Irvine, Alex (2008), "Death", in Dougall, Alastair (ed.), The Vertigo Encyclopedia, New York: Dorling Kindersley, pp. 54–56, ISBN 978-0-7566-4122-1, OCLC 213309015
  16. ^ Otterson, Joe (January 28, 2021). "'Sandman' Netflix Series Casts Tom Sturridge as Dream, Adds Gwendoline Christie, Charles Dance". Variety. from the original on January 31, 2021. Retrieved February 1, 2021.
  17. ^ The Sandman #29
  18. ^ "The Constantine Family Tree".
  19. ^ The Sandman #13
  20. ^ The Dreaming #4–7
  21. ^ Del Rosario, Alexandra (May 26, 2021). "'The Sandman': Kirby Howell-Baptiste, Mason Alexander Park & Donna Preston Among 12 Added To Netflix Series". Deadline Hollywood. from the original on May 26, 2021. Retrieved May 26, 2021.
  22. ^ Bui, Hoai-Tran (May 26, 2021). "'The Sandman' Netflix Series Expands With 12 More Actors, Including Kirby Howell-Baptiste as Death". /Film. Retrieved May 26, 2021.
  23. ^ Gaiman, Neil. "'The Sandman's' Latest Castings - and the Stories Behind Them". Netflix. Retrieved May 27, 2021.
  24. ^ Kovacs, George; Marshall, C. W. (2011). Classics and Comics. ISBN 9780199734191.
  25. ^ Asbury, Herbert (1957). "The Barbary Coast".

External links

list, sandman, characters, this, list, characters, appearing, sandman, comic, book, published, comics, vertigo, imprint, this, page, discusses, only, events, which, occur, sandman, 1989, 1994, also, some, occurring, spinoffs, sandman, such, dreaming, 1996, 200. This is a list of characters appearing in The Sandman comic book published by DC Comics Vertigo imprint This page discusses not only events which occur in The Sandman 1989 1994 but also some occurring in spinoffs of The Sandman such as The Dreaming 1996 2001 and Lucifer 1999 2007 as well as characters from earlier stories which The Sandman was based on These stories occur in the DC Universe but are generally tangential to the mainstream DC stories Contents 1 The Endless 2 Dreams and nightmares 2 1 Cain and Abel 2 2 Corinthian 2 3 Eve 2 4 Fiddler s Green 2 5 Gate Keepers 2 6 Gregory 2 7 Goldie 2 8 Lucien 2 8 1 Lucienne 2 9 Matthew 2 10 Mervyn Pumpkinhead 2 11 Minor dreams 3 Gods demigods and major personifications 3 1 Bast 3 2 The Presence The Creator 3 3 Loki 3 4 Odin 3 5 Three 3 6 Other gods 4 Angels fallen angels and devils 4 1 Azazel 4 2 Beelzebub 4 3 Choronzon 4 4 Duma 4 5 Lucifer 4 6 Mazikeen 4 7 Remiel 4 8 Minor angels and demons 5 Fair Folk 5 1 Cluracan 5 2 Nuala 5 3 Auberon 5 4 Titania 5 5 Puck 6 Immortals witches and long lived humans 6 1 Hob Gadling 6 2 Orpheus 6 3 Thessaly 6 4 Mad Hettie 6 5 The Silk Man 6 6 Vassily 7 Mortals 7 1 Alex Burgess 7 2 Roderick Burgess 7 3 Johanna Constantine 7 4 John Constantine 7 5 Ethel Cripps 7 6 Doctor Dee 7 7 Wesley Dodds 7 8 Foxglove 7 9 Daniel Hall 7 10 Lyta Hall 7 11 John Hathaway 7 12 Hazel McNamara 7 13 Unity Kinkaid 7 14 Prez Rickard 7 15 Ruthven Sykes 7 16 Jed Walker 7 17 Rose Walker 7 18 Clarice and Barnaby 7 19 Wanda 7 20 Historical figures 7 21 Minor mortals 7 22 Superheroes 8 Other 8 1 Barnabas 8 2 Basanos 8 3 Charles Rowland and Edwin Paine 8 4 Eblis O Shaughnessy 8 5 Alianora 9 References 10 External linksThe Endless EditMain article Endless comics The Endless are a family of seven anthropomorphic personifications of universal concepts around whom much of the series revolves From eldest to youngest they are Destiny Death Dream formerly Morpheus succeeded by Daniel Destruction The Prodigal Desire Despair Delirium formerly Delight All debuted in the Sandman series except Destiny who was created by Marv Wolfman and Berni Wrightson in Weird Mystery Tales 1 1972 1 Constantine first appeared in The Saga of Swamp Thing 37 June 1985 and was created by Alan Moore Rick Veitch Steve Bissette and John Totleben Dreams and nightmares EditThese inhabitants of the Dreaming are often gods myths and even ordinary human beings who later became dreams Cain and Abel Edit Main article Cain and Abel comics Cain and Abel are based on the Biblical Cain and Abel adapted by editor Joe Orlando with Bob Haney writer and Jack Sparling artist Cain and Mark Hannerfeld writer and Bill Draut artist Abel They were depicted together in Abel s first appearance and parted to their respective Houses at the end of the story Although Cain would abuse Abel he was not shown killing him until Swamp Thing vol 2 33 In Elvira s House of Mystery 11 Cain expresses shock at having killed his brother in recent times In the same issue a contest winning letter establishes that Cain and the House exist both in the dream world and the real world and that only in the dream world does Cain continue to harm Abel In The Sandman Cain is shown to kill Abel quite often In issue 2 Lucien calls this unusual and recent Before The SandmanOriginally they were the respective hosts of the EC style horror comic anthologies House of Mystery and House of Secrets which ran from the 1950s through 1983 Cain debuting in House of Mystery 175 1968 and Abel in DC Special 4 and House of Secrets 81 both 1969 During the 1970s they also co hosted the horror humor anthology Plop They were also both recurring characters in DC s Elvira s House of Mystery 1986 88 In 1985 the characters were revived by writer Alan Moore who introduced them into his Swamp Thing series in issue 33 retelling the Swamp Thing s original origin story from a 1971 issue of House of Secrets Gary Cohn and Dan Mishkin included them in the pages of Blue Devil in 1986 Jamie Delano also occasionally used them in a cameo role in his title Hellblazer In The SandmanIn Gaiman s Sandman universe the biblical Cain and Abel live in the Dreaming at Dream s invitation This is based on the verse in the Bible which says that Cain was sent to live in the Land of Nod They live as neighbors in two houses near a graveyard Cain in the broad House of Mystery and Abel in the tall House of Secrets According to their appearance in Swamp Thing the difference is that a mystery may be shared but a secret must be forgotten if one tries to tell it Gaiman s Cain is an aggressive overbearing character He is a thin long limbed man with an angular drawn face glasses a tufty beard and hair drawn into two points above his ears He has been described by other characters as sounding just like Vincent Price 2 Gaiman s Abel is a nervous but kind hearted man He also has a stammer He is somewhat similar in appearance to Cain with a tufty beard and hair that comes to points above his ears though his hair is black rather than brown He is shorter and fatter than Cain with a more open face It is eventually learned that the only time he does not stutter is when he is telling a story or when he is dead Cain kills Abel frequently and in many brutal ways whereupon Abel later returns to life He often expresses hope for a more harmonious relationship with his brother Cain and Abel own a large green draconic gargoyle named Gregory who also made his debut in House of Mystery 175 In the first appearance of the characters in Sandman issue 2 Cain gives Abel an egg that soon hatches into another gargoyle a small golden one Abel names the gargoyle Irving but Cain insists that the names of gargoyles must always begin with a G and Abel after another death and resurrection renames the gargoyle Goldie after an invisible imaginary friend to whom Abel told his early House of Secrets stories A letter in issue 91 was attributed to Goldie who claimed that it was herself depicted on the cover of issue 88 They shelter Dream until his strength is restored following his 72 year long imprisonment In the fourth story arc Season of Mists Cain is sent to Hell to give a message to Lucifer because Cain is protected by a curse that would deter Lucifer from harming him Cain and Abel also aid The Corinthian with the child Daniel during The Kindly Ones the penultimate story arc of the series Abel is one of the victims of the Furies in this series and is brought back to life by the new Dream Corinthian Edit Main article Corinthian comics The Corinthian is a nightmare created by Dream of human appearance but with two small additional mouths in place of his eyes He enjoys eating the eyeballs of people he kills The first version of the Corinthian is destroyed by Dream for spending several unsupervised decades on Earth as a serial killer in Dream s view a waste of his potential and it is shown in The Sandman Overture 2013 that Dream intended to do this before his imprisonment Near the end of the series Dream creates a second Corinthian altering his personality to be obedient and useful rather than homicidal In a later story in The Dreaming the second Corinthian is haunted by the actions of the first Eve Edit Main article Eve DC Comics Fiddler s Green Edit Fiddler s Green is a place in the Dreaming which all travellers specifically sailors dream of someday finding which sometimes assumes human form and goes wandering under the alias Gilbert a kindly portly man who in appearance and behavior resembles G ilbert K Chesterton As Gilbert Fiddler s Green accompanied Rose Walker to find her brother Jed and gave her the means by which to summon Dream to rescue her from danger and thereafter returned to the Dreaming He was killed by the Three in The Kindly Ones and refused to be resurrected by the new Dream Here it is implied that he was in love a little with Rose Stephen Fry portrays the character in the television series The Sandman on Netflix 3 4 Gate Keepers Edit A wyvern a griffin and a hippogriff are the guardians of Dream s castle The hippogriff has a horse s head instead of the traditional eagle s head They derive all their power and authority from Dream so when Dream was captured and lost his power they could no longer guard or protect the Dreaming After the griffin was destroyed by the Furies the new Dream did not remake him but asked the gryphons of Greek myth to send one of their own 71 Gregory Edit Main article Cain DC Comics Gregory Goldie Edit Goldie is a fictional character in The Sandman comic book series by Neil Gaiman Goldie is a pet baby gargoyle given to Abel by his brother Cain in Preludes and Nocturnes Abel originally intends to name him Irving but Cain insists that gargoyle names must all begin with a G Cain then proceeded to murder Abel over this Abel soon returns as he is murdered by Cain all the time He then agrees to name the gargoyle Goldie after an old friend though he tells Goldie in private that he will continue to think of him as Irving Goldie appears for a short scene in The Doll s House in which he is sitting upon Abel s shoulder as Lucien asks Abel about the inhabitants of the house He later appears throughout the Parliament of Rooks story in Fables and Reflections and briefly at the beginning of Brief Lives He also accompanies Abel in The Kindly Ones and is with him when he gets murdered by the Furies crying when his master is killed He is later seen playing with Daniel Hall Goldie later takes on a pivotal role as the guardian of the tree of life in the Sandman spin off series The Dreaming On his her quest to the tree a search party forms He was retconned into a female gargoyle for the new series 5 Goldie is named after the imaginary friend to whom Abel would tell his early stories in the pages of House of Secrets In issue 39 of the 2008 reboot of the House of Mystery comic series it is revealed that Goldie is Gigi a waitress at the House of Mystery and a bit player in the series Goldie was transformed by Lotus Blossom another character in the series at Goldie s request in exchange for a book of magic spells Goldie was not enthralled with the idea of growing up to be a gargoyle and instead wanted to be a human girl The newly reborn Gigi joined Lotus Blossom on her exploits in the series often serving as an enforcer for her It is revealed that Abel knows Gigi s true history but if his brother Cain knew it was not shown Lucien Edit Lucien is the chief librarian in The Dreaming and is a tall thin bookish man He first appeared in Weird Mystery Tales 18 May 1975 and was apparently killed in Secrets of Haunted House 44 January 1982 6 Like Cain and Abel Lucien created by Paul Levitz Nestor Redondo and Joe Orlando was originally the host of a 1970s weird tales comic specifically the three issue Tales of Ghost Castle May June October 1975 In that series he is portrayed as the guardian of a castle in Transylvania abandoned by both sides during World War II 7 watching over its forgotten library with his companion a werewolf named Rover In his first appearance in Preludes and Nocturnes issue 2 this is retroactively revealed to be Dream s castle Lucien is the effective keeper of the Dreaming in Dream s absence and becomes one of Dream s most faithful and trusted servants after proving his loyalty by never abandoning his post during that period His primary function is to protect the Library wherein are contained all the books that have ever been dreamed of including the ones that have never been written The titles of some of these books many of which are sequels to real works are visible He is despite his frail appearance apparently quite capable in combat dealing with several unpleasant creatures who escape imprisonment during the events of The Kindly Ones In issue 68 it is revealed that Lucien s existence in the Dreaming began as serving the role of Dream s first raven When writing The Sandman Companion author Hy Bender interpreted this as meaning that Lucien was also the first man An allusion to Mr Raven the ghostly librarian in George MacDonald s novel Lilith may be intended Lucienne Edit Main article The Sandman TV series In January 2021 Vivienne Acheampong was announced to star in The Sandman TV series from Netflix portraying Lucienne a gender reversed version of Lucien 8 Matthew Edit Main article Matthew Cable Matthew is the raven companion of Dream of the Endless Matthew was originally Matthew Cable a long time supporting character in the Swamp Thing series but because he died while asleep in the Dreaming he was offered the chance to become a dream raven and serve Dream if he wished and he accepted Matthew is not the first of Morpheus ravens Former ravens include Aristeas of Marmora who returned to his life as a man for one year at one point and Lucien the first of the ravens Morpheus seems to keep the ravens around out of some sort of unspoken need for companionship though he also sends them on occasional missions Matthew s word balloons and font style are scratchy and uneven probably to represent a hoarse cawing voice and perhaps as an indicator of his crude smart aleck personality Underneath his frequently irreverent manner Matthew is actually very loyal to Dream and he is one of the characters who takes it the hardest when Dream perishes initially seeking release from his service but eventually coming to terms with his loss and choosing to remain as Daniel s raven Mervyn Pumpkinhead Edit Mervyn Merv Pumpkinhead is Dream s cantankerous cigar smoking janitor an animated scarecrow whose head is a jack o lantern He resembles Jack Pumpkinhead of L Frank Baum s Oz books Mervyn is first seen in Preludes and Nocturnes driving a bus on which Dream travels Thereafter Merv is in charge of the construction maintenance and demolition work in the Dreaming though he sometimes complains that his job is superfluous because Dream can change any of the Dreaming at will One issue of the Dreaming spin off comic focuses on a dreamer who enjoys working under Merv s supervision Mervyn was one of the few who took arms against the Furies in The Kindly Ones but was easily killed He is returned to life by the new Dream in The Wake In a past incarnation shown in The Wake Mervyn was seen to have had a turnip for a head instead of a pumpkin as pumpkins were not then known in Europe Kevin Smith voices Mervyn in the Audible adaptation In the Netflix series he is voiced by Mark Hamill 9 Minor dreams Edit Brute and Glob Two troublemaking nightmares who try to gain power during Dream s absence They originally appeared in Jack Kirby s 1974 Sandman series as sidekicks to the title character and continued as such when Hector Hall became the Sandman in Infinity Inc In the original comics Brute was similar to The Thing shouted It s clobberin time and often referred to his Uncle Harry In The Doll s House it is revealed that they controlled the Sandmen in secret whereupon Dream exiled them to the darkness a place of imprisonment and presumably torture within the Dreaming Near the end of The Kindly Ones the Furies tell Dream that they have released his prisoners from the darkness but Brute and Glob are neither mentioned nor seen in this volume or in The Wake They next appear in The Dreaming 57 60 The Sandman Presents Everything You Always Wanted To Know About Dreams But Were Afraid to Ask and Lucifer 15 where they attempt to kidnap Elaine Belloc They subsequently reappear in JSA 64 again trying to manipulate a human connected to the Dreaming Sandy Hawkins into their own Sandman but Daniel Dream s heir returns them to the darkness The two entities claim this area of darkness is filled with pleasing childhood dreams which they despise First appearance The Sandman vol 1 1 The Cuckoo A parasitic dream who has conquered Barbie s dreamworld in A Game of You She assumes the form of a childhood version of Barbie and uses her self proclaimed adorableness to escape from Barbie s dream world at which point she transforms into a bird The Fashion Thing A minor character whose form changes based on popular fads She is based on The Mad Mod Witch created by Dave Wood and Jack Sparling as the host of The Unexpected another DC horror title At the time of her first appearance in Sandman she is a Mad Yuppie Witch First appearance The Unexpected 108 Most of her appearances are relegated to a few panels She is shown flying on her broom as a Yuppie briefly in issue 2 shown riding her broom in a top hat and tails with bare legs and feet in issue 22 and shown topless serving a meal to Delirium and Dream in issue 42 She also appears in The Kindly Ones Judge Gallows appears in several issues of The Dreaming including the Special Trial and Error Introduced in The Unexpected 113 June July 1969 he is one of the few DC mystery hosts not used by Gaiman Gault appears in the Sandman Netflix series A nightmare who fled the Dreaming in the wake of Morpheus s imprisonment and hides away in the mind of Jed Walker She created a fantasy world for the boy where he is a hero known as the Sandman as an escape from his abuse in the waking world She is eventually tracked down and when confronted reveals her desire to be a dream wishing to inspire rather than frighten Gods demigods and major personifications EditBast Edit Bast in Neil Gaiman s comic book series The Sandman is the DC Universe version of the goddess Bast of Egyptian mythology She was once a major goddess but the loss of her believers over time has significantly reduced her powers She is often coquettish toward Dream who sometimes goes to her for advice or companionship but she has often claimed never to have been his lover Bast has also appeared in issues of Wonder Woman and Hawkgirl wherein she is one of the chief goddesses worshiped by the Amazons of Bana Mighdall She appears in Sandman Presents Bast Eternity Game 2003 where she attempts to regain her lost power The Presence The Creator Edit Main article Presence DC Comics The Presence is the Sandman universe s equivalent of a Supreme Being and he shares many characteristics with the standard Abrahamic God such as almost never taking a physical form being a Creator deity and having unmatched power Nevertheless Gaiman has on several occasions stated that he never intended the Creator to be any specific religion s god just as he makes it clear in the first appearance of the abode of the angels the Silver City that it is not Paradise It is not Heaven It is the Silver City that is not part of the order of created things although the Silver City is often identified as Heaven in the Lucifer comic book series In that series one of the critical turning points is the Presence s abandonment of his Creation which leads to a large number of problems including struggles to claim the power that the Creator has abandoned to make the destruction of the universe inevitable and to the slow unraveling of the universe due to the disappearance of the Name of the Creator written on every atom in existence This is an ongoing storyline in Lucifer Loki Edit Loki is a trickster god seen in Season of Mists based on the Norse god Loki In his own form Loki is a tall thin man with yellow eyes and long red hair that resembles flames but he is capable of assuming any appearance at will He is sometimes nicknamed Lie Smith and Sky walker by other characters In The SandmanHe is temporarily freed from his punishment by Odin to accompany his negotiations for the rulership of Hell whereafter he deceives Odin and Thor into imprisoning another god in his place but fails to fool Dream who frees the other god and sends a simulacrum of Loki to take his punishment in exchange for Loki s debt to himself Loki returns in The Kindly Ones wherein he works with Puck to kidnap Daniel a child under Dream s protection The Corinthian and Matthew eventually find Daniel and Loki attempts to fool them by taking the form of Dream but the Corinthian strangles Loki and consumes his eyes Loki now blind is taken by Odin and Thor back to his punishment After The SandmanLoki reappears in Lucifer wherein Lucifer comes to Loki to take his ship for his own universe and destroys the snake that tortures Loki who therefore allows him the ship Odin Edit Odin as based on the Norse God Odin appears as an old man wearing a wide brimmed hat and cloak and carrying a staff He is usually depicted as a dark mysterious figure missing one eye and accompanied by two ravens Hugin and Munin thought and memory and two wolves Geri and Freki Three Edit The Three appear in the form of any group of three women usually the Mother the Maiden and the Crone the three aspects of the Triple Goddess in many mythologies Sometimes they appear in the form of the three witches from DC s horror anthology The Witching Hour Mildred Mordred and Cynthia As these witches they also appeared in a prestige format limited series of the same title and two standard limited series Witchcraft and Witchcraft Le Terreur In The SandmanThe Three repeatedly appear throughout The Sandman fulfilling different functions at different points in the story Their first appearance is in The Sandman 2 where they appear as the three witches Mildred mother Mordred crone and Cynthia maiden from the DC horror anthology The Witching Hour They later take many different forms over the course of the series and the three women symbol remains an extremely common one often blurring the lines between when characters are supposed to be merely themselves and when they are supposed to be representations of the Three The Three represent the female principle prophecy and mystery and they are often a vaguely menacing and enigmatic presence in the series Incarnations of the Three include the Erinyes Furies in their vengeful aspect and the Moirai Fates or Weird Sisters in their divinatory aspect They also sometimes subtly appear in the form of other characters such as Eve or groups of characters After The SandmanThe Three later appeared in a graphic novel named WitchCraft in which one of their priestesses in ancient Rome Ursula is raped by barbarians She is then reincarnated three times followed by the witches and wronged again by reincarnations of the barbarian leader until the modern age when she comes back as his elderly mother in law and manages to defeat him The Three then assure that he would be reincarnated as each of the priestesses he had raped in order with the exception of Ursula He would never know what was happening until the moment of death at which point it would start all over again The Three are satisfied and in the end decide that Ursula will live another twenty years and become an accomplished and respected witch in her twilight years and her grandchild will be beautiful Other gods Edit Ishtar The goddess Ishtar disguised as an exotic dancer a former lover of Destruction Pharamond a former god last of his pantheon and friend of Dream At Dream s suggestion that he change with the times or fade like many other gods Pharamond now runs a travel agency in Dublin under the alias Mr Farrell He helps Dream and Delirium find the missing Destruction and later provides assistance to Lucifer in his own series Thor The Norse god Thor first appeared in DC Comics in Tales of the Unexpected 16 August 1957 The Magic Hammer illustrated by Jack Kirby In another story attributed to Kirby and George Papp The Magic Stick in House of Mystery 68 November 1957 he looked like a traditional Viking with red hair and his hammer looked identical to the way Kirby would draw it for Marvel Comics That story was reprinted in DC Special 4 July 1969 which also contains Abel s debut 10 Kirby also pitted Wesley Dodds against someone claiming to be Thor in Adventure Comics 75 June 1942 Later a museum worker handled Thor s hammer and briefly became Thor in Batman 127 October 1959 Thor also appears in War of the Gods and Jack Kirby s Fourth World The Thor seen in The Sandman does not resemble the one seen in the other DC comics Angels fallen angels and devils EditAzazel Edit Azazel is a former ruler of Hell reigning for a time alongside Lucifer and Beelzebub Based on a statement from Agony and Ecstasy in Hellblazer 12 he may have usurped his position from Belial described at the time was the third member of the triumvirate He appears as a ragged opening into darkness full of disembodied eyes and mouths He was cast out after Lucifer abandoned Hell and later imprisoned by Dream in a glass jar He reappears still in Dream s glass jar in Lucifer Volume 2 2015 He is based on the demon Azazel Azazel first appeared in DC Comics battling Madame Xanadu in the story intended for Doorway to Nightmare 6 it was cancelled after 5 that was eventually published in Cancelled Comic Cavalcade 2 and The Unexpected 190 As with Lucifer s appearance in The Brave and the Bold he looked more like a traditional devil but was identified as an incubus here a creature who steals people s dreams and imprints them upon tapestries that give him power and cannot be destroyed without killing the victims Beelzebub Edit Along with Lucifer and Azazel Beelzebub was the third King of Hell He often appears as either a gigantic green fly or a fly s head on two short human legs Sometimes a human face can be seen between the fly s eyes His constant buzzing slurs his speech for example Bbbbut nooo Itzzz a Triummmvirate He is based on the demon Beelzebub Choronzon Edit Choronzon is a former duke of Hell who served under Beelzebub He has pink skin and two mouths one under the other He had possession of Dream s helm but lost it in a challenge He later reappeared briefly as one of Azazel s tactics to gain ownership of Hell He is based on the demon Choronzon Choronzon appears in 52 25 Late October 2006 Duma Edit Duma is a fallen angel from the DC Vertigo series The Sandman Duma s name means silence and he is based on the angel Duma from Jewish mythology In Season of Mists Lucifer abdicates Hell and gives the key to Dream until God assigns Duma and Remiel to control of Hell Remiel and Duma lose ownership of Hell in the Lucifer spin off series Duma eventually allies with Lucifer and Elaine Belloc to save creation and persuades Hell s new ruler Christopher Rudd to bring his army to Heaven s aid at the Battle of Armageddon Lucifer Edit Main article Lucifer DC Comics Lucifer is the sometime ruler of Hell and a fallen angel He is based on the fallen angel Lucifer whose story was created by John Milton in his epic poem Paradise Lost 11 Neil Gaiman also used the character Lucifer in his short story Murder Mysteries wherein he was a captain in the Silver City with Azazel as his protege In the book Hanging out with the Dream King a book consisting of interviews with Gaiman s collaborators one of Gaiman s artists Kelley Jones states that Lucifer s appearance is based on that of David Bowie Neil was adamant that the Devil was David Bowie He just said He is You must draw David Bowie Find David Bowie or I ll send you David Bowie Because if it isn t David Bowie you re going to have to redo it until it is David Bowie So I said Okay it s David Bowie Lucifer made at least three previous appearances in DC Comics Superman s Pal Jimmy Olsen 65 Weird Mystery Tales 4 and DC Special Series 8 a k a The Brave and the Bold Special but his appearance was more traditional Lucifer as he appeared in The Sandman also appeared in issues of the series The Demon vol 3 and The Spectre vol 2 and in the miniseries Stanley and His Monster vol 2 Mazikeen Edit Main article Mazikeen comics Mazikeen is a fictional character from Neil Gaiman s Sandman mythos The name Mazikeen comes from that of a shapeshifting demon of Jewish mythology In The SandmanMazikeen first appeared in The Sandman where she was Lucifer s consort while he reigned in Hell At the time half of her face was normal but the other half was horribly misshapen and skeletal causing her speech to be nearly unintelligible Gaiman wrote Mazikeen s dialogue by trying to speak using only half of his mouth and writing down phonetically what came out When Lucifer resigned Mazikeen left Hell and ended up following her master becoming part of the staff at the Lux Latin for light and the first root word in Lucifer an elite Los Angeles bar that Lucifer had opened and played piano at To conceal her demonic nature she covered the deformed half of her face with a white mask and rarely spoke After The SandmanIn the ongoing comic book series Lucifer Mazikeen is a devoted ally of Lucifer Morningstar and the war leader of the Lilin a race descended from Lilith A fearsome warrior and a respected leader Mazikeen is a prominent character in the Lucifer comics She has the appearance of a human female with long black hair In Lucifer Mazikeen s face was turned fully human when she was resuscitated by the Basanos following the destruction of the Lux in a fire This was because the vessel of the Basanos Jill Presto did not realize that Mazikeen s face was naturally deformed and assumed that it was burned in the fire When Lucifer refused to assist her in restoring her face to its former state she defected to her family the Lilim in Exile As their war leader she led their army against Lucifer s cosmos allying herself briefly with the Basanos However this was a ruse after a desperate gamble she bought Lucifer enough time to destroy the Basanos and regain control of his creation Lucifer then accepted her into his service once more and made the Lilim in Exile the standing army of his universe Lucifer ultimately restores Mazikeen s half skeletal face shortly before departing the known universes Remiel Edit Remiel is an angel in the comic book series The Sandman based on the angel Remiel He first appears in Season of Mists In Biblical and Judaic traditions Remiel is an Archangel and a Grigori a Choir Hierarchy of angels whose role is to observe humanity lending a helping hand when necessary but not interfere In The SandmanRemiel along with Duma is sent to observe when Dream is given the key to Hell Dream finally gives the key to Remiel and Duma and the two angels descend to Hell to rule over the countless sinners and demons there After The SandmanFollowing the end of the Sandman series Remiel and Duma lose ownership of Hell in the Lucifer spin off series At the end of the series Remiel tries to rebel against Elaine Belloc refusing to accept her as God s successor When he tries to kill Gaudium and Spera friends of Elaine s she puts him in his own Hell until he reforms Minor angels and demons Edit Merkin Mother of Spiders First appeared in Season of Mists as an envoy with Azazel A lumpen hideous vaguely feminine figure whose womb produces spiders The Merkin s facial form was almost certainly based upon a photograph by the artist Joel Peter Witkin entitled Amour New Mexico 1987 showing a naked female figure wearing a spider like horned mask Fair Folk EditInhabitants of Faerie Cluracan Edit The Cluracan is a courtier of the Queen of Faerie and the brother to Nuala the Dream King s fairy servant An amoral merry capricious homosexual rogue Cluracan features in Season of Mists Worlds End The Kindly Ones and The Wake He is strongly reminiscent of the trickster archetype also associated with Loki Following the events of The Kindly Ones Cluracan offends his queen so badly that she sends him to the court of Llinor where tradition demands that he marry a lady of the royal house whereupon Cluracan s nemesis identical to him in every way except his sexual orientation takes Cluracan s place 12 The Cluracan is named after a drunken leprechaun of Irish mythology the Cluricaun Nuala Edit Main article Nuala comics Nuala is a faerie given to Dream at the end of Season of Mists who takes on the housekeeping duties of the Dreaming only stopping when her brother Cluracan takes her back to Faerie in The Kindly Ones When she leaves Dream grants her permission to summon him at need and when she asks to become his paramour he refuses She subsequently appears in the Sandman spinoff series The Dreaming Auberon Edit Auberon is a character in the comic book series The Sandman and The Books of Magic He is seen for the first time in Sandman 19 as Auberon of Dom Daniel and again in several issues of The Books of Magic and in the Books of Faerie miniseries The character was inspired by Oberon of Shakespeare s A Midsummer Night s Dream Titania Edit Main article Titania DC Comics Titania is a character in Neil Gaiman s comic book series The Sandman In The SandmanTitania is the queen of the fay she first appears in issue 19 The character was inspired by Shakespeare s Titania Fairy Queen in the play A Midsummer Night s Dream There is implication that she in the past was a lover of Dream s although this is never confirmed After The SandmanTitania is also a major character in the comic book The Books of Magic of which the first four issues were written by Gaiman and its spin off series The Books of Faerie In the latter series it is revealed that she was a human girl who crossed over into the fay realm and was then adopted by the previous queen of the fay and received her faerie powers from a circlet seized by her from that queen Despite this power it was revealed that she is illiterate and so regularly uses Dream s library because its special properties allow its users to read books in any language including those they cannot speak There are suggestions that she may be the mother of the series protagonist Timothy Hunter 13 Puck Edit Puck is a brown furred trickster and hobgoblin who appears several times in The Sandman Puck aids the Norse God Loki in kidnapping Daniel playing a small role in the death of the Sandman and Daniel s subsequent assuming of the title Puck later appeared in an issue of The Books of Magic hiding as a gangster called Mr Robbins in Brighton whose true nature is discovered but not exposed by Timothy Hunter 14 The character was inspired by Puck of Shakespeare s A Midsummer Night s Dream Immortals witches and long lived humans EditHob Gadling Edit Main article Hob Gadling Robert Hob Gadling is a human granted immortality who meets with Dream once every hundred years Hob was granted immortality in a pub named the White Horse in 1389 when he simply declared that he had decided never to die whereupon Death agrees at Dream s request to forgo him Hob thereupon takes to a variety of occupations over the centuries including slaving and periodically reinvents himself as a descendant of his previous persona Gradually he acquires a conscience and by the 20th Century has become full of remorse at his past deeds Dream converses with Gadling once per century of Gadling s latest occupations At their 20th Century meeting Dream admits that the purpose of the exercise was simply for him to have a friend In The Wake Death offers to end his six hundred year life but Gadling declines Orpheus Edit Orpheus is the son of Dream and the muse Calliope He is based on Orpheus of Greek mythology In The Song of Orpheus the Endless attend Orpheus s wedding to Eurydice Eurydice dies on the same night and Orpheus asks his father to retrieve her from Hades Dream refuses but Orpheus gets help from Destruction and Death As in the legend Orpheus travels to Hades plays his sad music loses Eurydice again and gets torn apart by the Bacchanae the beloved madwomen of Dionysus but because of his immortality survives as a disembodied head Dream establishes a priesthood to take care of his son saying that they will never meet again In Thermidor Johanna Constantine is asked by Dream to rescue Orpheus from Revolutionary France Orpheus s singing stuns Robespierre and Louis de Saint Just leading to the Thermidorian Reaction Orpheus misses his father who still has not visited him In Brief Lives Dream has to talk to Orpheus in order to find Destruction In return Orpheus is granted his wish of death Thessaly Edit Thessaly is the last of the millennia old witches of Thessaly She makes her first appearance in A Game of You She has a bookish appearance with straight hair and thick glasses that belie her personality amoral cold blooded proud and ruthless though not malicious She will kill people who are potential threats with no hesitation or remorse Neil Gaiman named this character after the land of witches Thessaly in Greece In one of Plato s dialogues the Gorgias Socrates states I would not have us risk that which is dearest on the acquisition of this power like the Thessalian enchantresses who as they say bring down the moon from heaven at the risk of their own perdition In the series Thessaly does exactly that with deadly consequences just as Socrates predicts Later in the series Thessaly changes her name to Larissa which is the capital of Thessaly Larissa was actually the local fountain nymph after whom the town was named It is suggested however that Thessaly is even older than this civilization and may date from Neolithic times Thessaly returns in the later volumes where she is Dream s lover for a time but this relationship ends unhappily for both and is never actually shown in the series When it is alluded to in Brief Lives Thessaly is never mentioned by name so only in The Kindly Ones is this romance revealed Also in The Kindly Ones Thessaly provides Lyta Hall with protection and sanctuary from Dream while he is being targeted for death by the Furies who are using Hall as a vessel In The Wake she attends Dream s wake and funeral She speaks with two of Dream s lovers and recalls her relationship with Dream She remarks that part of his attraction to her was that she was not intimidated by him To her surprise she later would dream of Morpheus and the two kindled a romance with Dream madly in love with Thessaly though this affection was not mutual When Morpheus ended his courtship and resumed working Thessaly realized she did not love Morpheus and left the Dreaming When Lyta wakes up after Dream s death Thessaly calmly advises her to leave Thessaly suggests that many people including herself would be more than happy to murder Lyta for her part in Morpheus destruction Thessaly also is the star of two spin off comic series The Thessaliad and Thessaly Witch for Hire written by Bill Willingham In the spin offs Thessaly under that name and her companion a ghost named Fetch first set out to tackle various gods of the underworld who want her dead Later she is unwillingly pressured into a monster killing contract She is alluded to in the Faction Paradox series in the character Thessalia and her protege Larissa Mad Hettie Edit A London tramp born in 1741 At the time of Sandman 3 she was 247 years old She appears frequently in other DC comics such as Hellblazer first appearing in 9 She also had a large role in Death The High Cost of Living where she is shown to be rude miserly and constantly complains about the lack of knowledge that present day youths have She has been accused of being a witch and also appears to have abilities as a haruspex however she merely states that you don t get to your two hundred and fiftieth without learning a few tricks 15 Later Hettie worked in the series The Dreaming in which it was discovered that she had dealings with Destiny Johanna Constantine and President Thomas Jefferson In The Sandman Overture it is revealed that she had stolen a magical timepiece in her youth which remained hidden in her memories until Daniel retrieved it The Silk Man Edit Appearing for the first time in Lucifer Nirvana The Silk Man is an immortal sorcerer described by Lucifer as a fossil remnant from an earlier cruder creation His body is a weaving that has to be renewed constantly His spirit too come to that A messy form of immortality but it seems to do the job In earlier days he was the leader of the Arao Jinn He appears as a mercenary hired by the angel Perdissa to kill Lucifer He seems to need to consume living things to stay alive weaving them into himself He is severely damaged by Perdissa and eventually killed by Lucifer Vassily Edit In The Hunt Vassily appears as an old man telling his teen aged granddaughter a tale from the old country medieval Russia A youth raised in a remote forest has a series of adventures including meeting with Lucien to whom he gives a book and Baba Yaga and marrying a fellow shape changing wolf At the end of the story it is revealed that the grandfather is the youth in his own story Mortals EditAlex Burgess Edit Alex Burgess is the son of Roderick Burgess mother unknown but probably Ethel Cripps and therefore half brother of Doctor Destiny He is taught by his father and takes part in his rituals Upon Roderick Burgess death Alex inherits his estate including his magical order He keeps Dream imprisoned as his father did trying to bargain for power and immortality in exchange for Dream s release The Order of the Ancient Mysteries enjoys a resurgence in popularity in the 1960s but by the 1970s it is in decline again Alex passes ownership of the Order on to his boyfriend Paul McGuire and becomes obsessed with his prisoner and with his father Finally in 1988 Dream escapes and puts Alex into a nightmare of eternal waking in which he is forever dreaming he is waking up and each waking degenerates into another horrible nightmare This nightmare lasts for years ending only with Dream s death in The Kindly Ones Alex is quite tall and near sighted He has brown hair which he wears in a variety of styles throughout his life but by old age he is bald and has come to resemble his father very closely His relationship with McGuire is deep and heartfelt but his obsessions with his father and with Dream eventually come to rule his life In The Wake he appears again as the child that we see in his first appearance Alex is in many ways a tragic figure perhaps the first statement of the theme that Desire explores in The Wake The bonds of family bind both ways Had Alex not been born the son of his father inheriting the imprisoned Dream his life might have been much happier However he is finally able to find some measure of fulfillment in his old age following Dream s death His name almost certainly derives from Anthony Burgess s A Clockwork Orange the protagonist of which is named Alex but could also be a nod to Aleister Crowley whose original middle name was Alexander and who was mentioned in the first issue Roderick Burgess Edit Roderick Burgess 1863 1947 born Morris Burgess Brocklesby and known also as The Daemon King was the Lord Magus of The Order of the Ancient Mysteries His magical fraternity was based in Fawney Rig in Sussex and was initially funded by his inherited industrial wealth Burgess is a magician rather in the vein of the real Aleister Crowley and within the DC world is Crowley s rival The series begins with Burgess attempt to capture and bind Death which fails capturing Dream instead Burgess keeps Dream trapped in a glass globe for the rest of his Burgess life attempting to bargain with Dream but Dream remains silent Burgess dies from a heart attack still attempting to get a response out of Dream His order passes the globe and Dream to his son Alex Burgess is a bald headed slightly pot bellied man with a large hook nose He is ultimately self centred his sole purpose for the Order is to bring money and power to himself and he is consumed by his desire to achieve immortality His relationship with his son is only briefly touched on though it is implied that it is unhealthy with Burgess pushing his son to spend his life pursuing his father s dreams Charles Dance portrays the character in the television series The Sandman on Netflix 16 This version of the character dies of a brain haemorrhage instead of a heart attack Johanna Constantine Edit Lady Johanna Constantine is an 18th century supernatural adventuress Dream encounters her several times once to ask her to recover the head of his son Orpheus a mission she performed so successfully that part of its aftereffects was the ending of the French Revolution s Reign of Terror 17 After The SandmanIn the Hellblazer Special Lady Constantine graphic novel an ancient evil refers to Johanna Constantine as the Constantine the laughing magician and the constant one all titles that have been used usually by other ancient evils to describe John Constantine The evil taunts her saying did you think to trick us with a new form There is the implication that throughout all times there have been recurring incarnations of Constantine who contain the spark of magic 18 In the story Johanna Constantine learns that the Devil and the Wandering Jew meet once every hundred years in a London pub this meeting is actually between Dream and Hob Gadling as she discovers when she interrupts the meeting 19 The story s conclusion shows Johanna Constantine inheriting a property she calls Fawney Rig after the con job wherein a gilded ring is sold as though it were solid gold the implication being that she attained the property through trickery This property was later owned by Roderick Burgess the mage who captured Dream in the beginning of The Sandman story In her middle age Johanna Constantine is charged by persons unknown with the key to a box containing the sigil of America allegedly created by Destiny 20 This is stolen and hidden in the future by the wanderer Mad Hettie Hettie both blackmails I knows about you and the little Corsican and bribes Johanna for her silence promising her that she would live to age 99 This promise proves true with Johanna dying at age 99 while getting out of her wheelchair when she hears the song of her old companion Orpheus Johanna is an ancestor of John Constantine as revealed in the miniseries The Sandman Presents Love Street She is also mentioned in the Doctor Who novel The Man in the Velvet Mask set in an alternate post Revolutionary France Jenna Coleman was cast as two versions of Johanna one in the eighteenth century and another in the present day in the TV adaptation of The Sandman where she s a occult detective just like John 21 22 23 John Constantine Edit Main article John Constantine John Constantine is a con man and magician who accompanies Dream on a quest to find his pouch of sand John Constantine has his own series John Constantine Hellblazer which occasionally has guest appearances by Cain and Abel He is also prominently featured in another series Swamp Thing from which he originated Ethel Cripps Edit Ethel Cripps also known as Ethel Dee is the mother of John Dee She was the mistress of Roderick Burgess until she fled with Ruthven Sykes Her last joy was her son John Dee whom she sought for 10 years She discovered that he had become a living corpse which happened because of his use of the Sandman s Ruby At this time she was 90 years old and it was alluded that she had been kept alive by an amulet in the shape of an eye which granted its user protection the amulet that Ruthven Sykes had been given by the demon Choronzon in exchange for Dream s helmet Sykes who had been second in command in The Order of Ancient Mysteries needed protection from Roderick Burgess who was seeking retribution for Sykes treachery of the theft of the 200 000 and Dream s magical items which were in possession of the Order at the time he fled with Ethel Cripps to San Francisco in 1930 Magical War was declared upon them and Ruthven knew he would need a way to protect himself from the hexes Burgess sought to put upon him In 1936 Ethel walked out on Ruthven taking with her the amulet of protection and Dream s Ruby While in his possession the amulet protected Sykes from Burgess hexes but without it he died a messy and painful death with his insides exploding out of him The amulet continued to protect Ethel while Choronzon was still in possession of Dream s helmet After Dream escaped and sought to regain his items he descended to Hell to find his helmet He had to battle Choronzon to regain it and after his victory the compact was withdrawn and the power of protection the amulet possessed ended which also ended the life of Ethel Dee Doctor Dee Edit Main article Doctor Destiny John Dee also known as Doctor Destiny is a DC Comics villain whose powers were derived from his use of Dream s Ruby His name is almost certainly a reference to the real life John Dee He was incarcerated in Arkham Asylum with other Batman villains such as The Scarecrow and The Joker until freed by the amulet given to him by his mother Ethel Dee former mistress to Roderick Burgess He had previously fought the Sandman Garrett Sanford alongside the Justice League John originally named himself Doctor Destiny to protect his mother s surname but after her death changed it back The Ruby had drained away his mental and physical state until he was no longer able to sleep or dream without it This had the unpleasant effect of turning him into a browned living corpse Being able to control dreams he used the ruby to bring out the darkness and bestiality of many people across the world He originally sought power money and mostly the restoration of his human body but the madness brought about by overuse of the relic drove him to savage monstruous acts of depravity using the ruby To quote I think I ll dismember the world and then I ll dance in the wreckage While doing this over a period of 24 hours he focused the energy of the ruby on several people in a cafe one of them a friend of Rose Walker and an ex lover of Foxglove He used them as puppets horribly having them murder and degrade each other as if they were toys until all were dead Dream double bluffed him into destroying the ruby which Dee believed to be Dream s life It actually only stored some of his energy and with it released Dream instead became even more powerful than before Easily overpowering Dee Dream decided not to destroy him and instead returned him to Arkham Dee was finally able to sleep and his sadism and depravity faded as he now could again dream He has since appeared in Justice League and Justice Society stories having retained some residual power from the ruby Even worse since he has managed to replicate its power perfectly the second ruby is now out of his grasp However since the new ruby is attuned to him he has since not regressed to his previous vicious persona mostly seeking the dominion of dreams or the waking world through dreams Wesley Dodds Edit Main article Sandman Wesley Dodds Wesley Dodds also known as Sandman is the original costumed crimefighter who used the name According to Gaiman he was merely filling a hole in the universe in a similar way to a process of evolution in which animals fill up a niche for instance what should fly He is first seen in The Sandman series in a two panel cameo in issue 1 and another cameo in issue 26 Dream occasionally appeared in dream sequences in Dodds s own series Sandman Mystery Theatre The two finally met for real in Gaiman s Sandman Midnight Theatre Dodds appeared out of costume during The Sandman The Wake 72 The reason for his prophetic visions is explained as him being embodied with a small portion of Dream s essence His reasoning for assuming his role as The Sandman is given as nightmares of Dream in his helmet that plague him until he begins his career as a crimefighter after which Wesley Dodds sleeps the sleep of the Just Foxglove Edit Foxglove Donna Cavanagh is a writer and musician who first appears in A Game of You She is mentioned in Preludes and Nocturnes as the girlfriend of Judy one of the patrons at the diner who dies in the story concerning John Dee titled 24 Hours In A Game of You she lives with her partner Hazel and the two help Thessaly rescue Barbie After The SandmanIn Death The Time of Your Life Foxglove has become a pop superstar after being seen by a promoter in Death The High Cost of Living She is raising a child with Hazel named Alvie Alvie dies of cot death leading Hazel to make a deal with Death However even in the world of the Endless there is no such thing as a free lunch and another character s life has to be sacrificed for the child s Daniel Hall Edit Main article Daniel Hall comics Daniel Hall is the son of Lyta Hall and the successor to the role of Dream of the Endless Lyta Hall Edit Main article Fury DC Comics Hippolyta Lyta Hall is a major character the mother of Daniel During Dream s captivity pregnant Lyta and her husband were held captive in a dream realm controlled by Brute and Glob two of Dream s minions In this pocket realm Lyta remained pregnant for two years giving birth to her son Daniel only after Dream destroys the pocket realm and Lyta s husband and frees her When Dream tells Lyta that the child she gestated in dreams will one day belong to him Lyta swears she will protect Daniel at all costs When Daniel goes missing Lyta is convinced that Dream has stolen him and seeks revenge unwittingly setting into motion the events of Dream s death John Hathaway Edit John Hathaway is the senior curator of the Royal Museum He steals the Magdalene Grimoire from the museum s collection to aid Roderick Burgess in his attempt to gain immortality after his son Edmund dies He commits suicide in 1920 using a dagger from the museum after a stock taking reveals his theft His suicide note implicating Roderick Burgess in a multitude of crimes is never found Hazel McNamara Edit Hazel McNamara is Foxglove s lover She appears in A Game of You and Death The High Cost of Living She has a son Alvie from her one heterosexual encounter It is likely that Alvie is named after Wanda see below In Death The Time of Your Life Alvie dies of cot death and Hazel makes a deal with Death to bring him back 15 Unity Kinkaid Edit Unity Kinkaid first appears as one of the victims of the sleepy sickness that follows Dream s capture in the first collection of issues in the series Preludes and Nocturnes Following his capture she sleeps until he escapes While asleep she gives birth to a daughter Miranda Walker It is later shown that the father of this child was Desire Unity is later identified as a vortex of Dream a rare entity with the ability to telepathically combine the dreams of other beings and who can thus cause the destruction of The Dreaming The only time Dream is allowed to take a human life is to kill a vortex Desire s intervention transfers the vortex to Unity s granddaughter Rose Walker in the hope that Dream will kill one of their relatives and thus incur the vengeance of the Furies Before Dream can kill Rose Unity reclaims the vortex and dies in her stead Unity is of medium height with reddish brown hair that she wears long and loose in the final dream meeting between herself Rose and Dream as the old woman of waking life she has grey hair and wears a curiously old fashioned dress Prez Rickard Edit Main article Prez comics Prez Rickard is a fictional character who first appeared in Prez 1 December 1973 He is the subject of the story The Golden Boy in Sandman 54 where he is the first 19 year old to be elected President of the United States Ruthven Sykes Edit Ruthven Sykes is a bespectacled Afro Caribbean man with short hair He is Roderick Burgess second in command of the Order of the Ancient Mysteries until November 1930 when he steals a number of treasures including Dream s helmet ruby and pouch of sand and 200 000 in cash from the order and flees to San Francisco with Roderick s mistress Ethel Cripps In December 1930 he trades the helmet to the demon Choronzon for an amulet that looks like an eyeball on a chain This amulet protects him from the magics of Burgess until 1936 when Ethel Cripps leaves him taking the amulet with her He is then killed Jed Walker Edit Main article Jed Walker Jed Walker created by Joe Simon and Jack Kirby first appeared in The Sandman vol 1 1 where he was protected from nightmare monsters by the titular hero In Cancelled Comic Cavalcade 2 he was revealed to be the Earth 1 equivalent of Kirby s Kamandi In Neil Gaiman s revisionist version of The Sandman Jed is the brother of Rose Walker and the grandson of Unity Kinkaid and Desire He was raised by his grandfather Ezra Paulsen then taken and imprisoned by his abusive aunt and uncle at the behest of Desire Once Rose rescues him he is revealed in The Wake to have become close to her Rose Walker Edit Rose Walker is a fictional character from the Sandman series written by Neil Gaiman She makes her first appearance in issue 10 part one of The Doll s House story arc She is a young blonde with red and purple dyed streaks in her hair In later issues she is shown as having red hair with a blonde streak In The Kindly Ones several characters remark that Rose looks much younger than her actual age Rose s responses to these comments imply that while she may not be a true immortal she is aware that she is aging more slowly than normal She is the granddaughter of Desire Clarice and Barnaby Edit Clarice and Barnaby aunt and uncle of Jed and Rose were introduced in The Sandman vol 1 5 created by Michael Fleisher and Jack Kirby The pair mysteriously show up on Dolphin Island a few hours after the drowning death of Jed s grandfather fisherman Ezra Paulsen They take him to live with their own children Bruce and Susie They treat him as a personal slave not unlike Cinderella with minimal food even as he does all the cooking Eventually their treatment of him is revealed to have become much more abusive after he runs away from home they place him in a basement dungeon with no toilet This is told in issues 5 and 6 of the first series The Best of DC 22 and recapped in Rose s diary in issue 11 of the Gaiman series In issue 12 their mysterious appearance is revealed to have been because they were being paid an 800 monthly stipend by social services In issue 14 they are revealed to have been killed Wanda Edit Wanda A transgender woman featured in A Game of You who is Barbie s best friend She dies in a storm caused by Thessaly s magic and is buried as Alvin Mann her deadname In response Barbie uses lipstick to write Wanda s name on her gravestone Wanda is last seen along with Death in Barbie s dream Historical figures Edit Haroun al Raschid King of Baghdad who sells the city to Dream to keep it alive forever in the One Thousand and One Arabian Nights Caesar Augustus The first emperor of Rome In The Sandman he is revealed to carry psychological scars from being continually raped by his uncle Julius Caesar which he at Dream s advice assuages by planning the destruction of Caesar s empire Lycius A dwarf born of the Roman nobility who lived in the time of Caesar Augustus 24 Augustus had banned the nobility from working as actors upon the stage but he made an exception for Lycius who had few other opportunities Joshua A Norton An English American declaring himself Emperor of the United States in Three Septembers and a January after Dream gives him his delusion as part of a challenge issued by his three younger siblings Despair who tries to make him fall into her realm by making his life increasingly difficult Delirium who makes a half attempt to drive him insane and Desire who uses the King of Pain to tempt him with a real palace and a Queen In the end Joshua Norton lives a happy and dignified life and when he dies thousands come to see him off The King of Pain According to Herbert Asbury s book The Barbary Coast An Informal History of the San Francisco Underworld an itinerant healer in 19th century San Francisco who sold aconite liniment 25 In The Sandman 31 Three Septembers and a January reprinted in Fables and Reflections the King of Pain is Desire s undead minion He tries to tempt Emperor Norton into betraying his dignity for his desires in the form of Worldly Power Wealth An Estate and A Noble Wife Norton retains his dignity and refuses the offers saying that he is content ruling his city and that he has all he needs Mark Twain American writer who shares his story about a jumping frog with Emperor Norton Thomas Paine English radical who after participating in the French Revolution is imprisoned in the Luxembourg Palace and briefly encounters Johanna Constantine Louis de Saint Just Orator of the French Revolution and supporter of the Terror he is deposed after Orpheus sings a song that saps his ability to articulate Maximilien Robespierre Leader of the Committee of Public Safety and instigator of the Reign of Terror An extreme dreamer he seeks to destroy the head of Orpheus due to his wish to destroy all myths but is in turn destroyed by it Marco Polo The famous 13th century explorer and trader He is lost in a part of the Dreaming that connects to the real world and encounters Rusticello a friend of his future self Fiddler s Green and Dream who gives an otherwise forbidden passage home Upon waking Marco is unable to remember any of his encounters Rustichello da Pisa The publisher of Marco s autobiography who encounters his friend in a dream in the Desert of Lop William Shakespeare The famous 16 17th century English playwright Dream gives him the inspiration for many of his plays in exchange for Shakespeare writing two plays for him A Midsummer Night s Dream and The Tempest Hamnet Shakespeare The son of William he is often overlooked by his father It is implied that Titania may have taken him into the realm of Faerie this is confirmed in a brief cameo in The Books of Magic Christopher Marlowe A famous 16th century playwright who is depicted discussing Shakespeare s terrible writing and Marlowe s Faust Shakespeare tells Marlowe God s wounds If only I could write like you Geoffrey Chaucer The famous 14th century poet and author of The Canterbury Tales is seen in the White Horse Tavern in AD 1389 in part four of The Doll s House where Dream first meets Hob Gadling It is mentioned in the tavern that people do not want filthy tales in rhyme about pilgrims a reference to The Canterbury Tales Anne Hathaway The wife of William Shakespeare Susanna Shakespeare Older daughter of William and Anne Shakespeare Judith Shakespeare Younger daughter of William and Anne Shakespeare Thomas Quiney Pub waiter and future husband of Judith Ben Jonson Poet and friend of William Shakespeare Minor mortals Edit Barbie Introduced as one of Rose Walker s housemates in The Doll s House later the protagonist of A Game of You Daniel Bustamonte A victim of the sleepy sickness that results from Dream s capture He falls asleep in 1926 then wakes up sometime before 1955 staying awake much of the time but unable to speak He recovers fully on September 14 1988 when Dream escapes Chantal and Zelda Apparently lesbian roommates in the house Rose Walker was staying at in The Doll s House They dress in white and collect dead spiders Of the two Zelda relies on Chantal for confidence and rarely if ever speaks When they dream Zelda dreams of her childhood where it is implied that she collected bones Chantal s dreams are self repeating loops trying to explain something of nothing In a later issue Zelda is dying from AIDS which she contracted from Chantal who has already died having originally contracted it from an organ transplant They are identified with Euryale and Stheno the sisters of Medusa Compton Roderick Burgess butler Nurse Edmund Alex Burgess caretaker at the time he is put under Dream s curse Ernie and Frederick Two of the men guarding Dream when he escapes from his imprisonment Doctor Piggy Huntoon a doctor in Arkham Asylum and former schoolmate of Constantine s He used to perform electroshock therapy on Constantine back when he was institutionalized Richard Madoc An author director and playwright who imprisoned and repeatedly raped Dream s ex lover Calliope Dream punishes Madoc with an overwhelming flood of ideas whereupon he destroys his fingers trying to record them in his own blood In The Wake he is seen attending Morpheus funeral whilst dreaming and it is implied that after Morpheus death Madoc s mind is slowly healing Ellie Marsten A victim of the sleepy sickness that occurs during Dream s capture She sleeps continuously for decades awaking only four or five times a year and recovers in an insane asylum on September 14 1988 when Morpheus escapes Her waking memory is basically founded on the book Through the Looking Glass by Lewis Carroll Paul McGuire Good friend and lover of Alex Burgess Originally a gardener at the estate Paul eventually takes over the Order of Ancient Mysteries Rachel An ex girlfriend of Constantine s who stole Dream s pouch of sand from Constantine and became addicted to its effects Stefan Wasserman A victim of the sleepy sickness that results from Dream s capture Joins the army during the First World War at 14 and goes over the trenches shortly before he catches the sickness Commits suicide in 1918 at age 16 because he cannot sleep He was inhabited by the dormant spirit of the Corinthian The Scarecrow Dr Jonathan Crane The Arkham inmate attempts to dissuade his friend Doctor Destiny from escaping saying Arkham is a better home for their kind than the outside world He is portrayed as a nervous paranoid babbling academic trying to make jokes to psychologically test his prison guards and unable to sleep for fear of rats Judy a young lesbian who is one of the victims of John Dee using Dream s ruby in Preludes and Nocturnes At the time of her forced suicide she was trying to reconcile with her girlfriend Donna Foxglove In The Doll s House she was revealed to be the best friend of Rose Walker Nada A beautiful African queen cast into hell by the Dream King known to her as Kai ckul when she refuses to become his queen Her story is revealed in the beginning of The Doll s House An argument over her unfair punishment prompts Dream s initial actions in Seasons of Mist and eventually Dream begs her forgiveness and lets her choose her own fate Nada chooses to be reincarnated as a baby boy in Hong Kong Superheroes Edit Mister Miracle Scott Free informs Dream that his ruby is no longer kept at Justice League headquarters 7 Preludes and Nocturnes Martian Manhunter J onn J onnz last member of the original Justice League lineup gives Dream the details of the storage unit where the JLA s old trophies including the ruby are kept 7 Preludes and Nocturnes Also makes an appearance alongside Batman as does Clark Kent in issue 71 The Wake Darkseid is also seen at the wake The Sandman Hector Hall The dead father of Daniel Hall and successor to Garrett Sanford whose death is noted Hall s only previous appearances as The Sandman were in Infinity Inc 49 51 11 12 The Doll s House Element Girl Urania Blackwell Death coming for an upstairs neighbour who has fallen off a ladder visits her sensing her longing to die but is unable to take her though she informs her that Ra the sun can take her power back so she can die 20 Dream Country Other EditBarnabas Edit Barnabas is a sarcastic talking dog who belonged to Destruction and was assigned to guard Delirium His origins are unknown Basanos Edit The Basanos was a living Tarot deck created by the seraph Meleos to duplicate the divining power of Destiny s book They are incredibly powerful due to the fact that they control probability making whatever outcome they desire not only likely but inevitable After escaping from Meleos the Basanos took possession of Jill Presto a cabaret worker Lucifer Morningstar sought them out for a tarot reading which they granted When Lucifer created his new universe the Basanos moved to take control of it so that they could breed something that is impossible in God s cosmos Though initially successful in their plan forming an alliance with Lucifer s enemies their ability to control randomness was severely limited by Lucifer s creation and Lucifer was able to outmaneuver them Lucifer finally gave them an ultimatum destroy themselves or risk letting the egg they laid in Jill Presto die The Basanos chose death and extinguished themselves Basanos is Greek for touchstone Such a touchstone may be a piece of slate used to test gold or it may be a metaphor for torture or torment to test truthfulness Why Meleos chose this name for his creation is unknown Charles Rowland and Edwin Paine Edit Charles Rowland was the only boy left at his boarding school during the holidays when Lucifer closed Hell sending its former inhabitants back to Earth While the adults of the school are preoccupied with the dead spirits who came back into their own lives Charles is tortured and killed by three dead boys who used to go to the same school Edwin Paine is a previous victim of the trio his body still trapped on the grounds He befriends Charles but is unable to keep him from dying When Death shows up Charles refuses to go with her and she lets him go preferring to focus on all the other trouble Hell s closure has brought her They later appeared in other books as the Dead Boy Detectives Eblis O Shaughnessy Edit Eblis O Shaughnessy a golem and envoy created by the Endless to obtain the Cerements and the Book of Ritual for the funeral rites of their brother Dream Five of the Endless participated in the creation of Eblis O Shaughnessy and Delirium named him He thereafter accompanied them at the funeral He reappears in the Vertigo story The Girl Who Would Be Death 1999 Alianora Edit Alianora was first introduced in A Game of You as the original inhabitant of The Land a region of the dreaming that Barbie has visited since childhood and is being threatened by the Cuckoo After the Hierogram is broken and The Land is dissolved Alianora appears and speaks to Dream Her history is expanded in The Sandman Overture where it is revealed that she was created by Desire to be Dream s lover and to help him escape imprisonment after the Dreaming is invaded by two unspecified gods Together they vanquish the Gods but Dream is unable to make her happy so he creates The Land as a place in which she can be free and contented References Edit McAvennie Michael Dolan Hannah ed 2010 1970s DC Comics Year By Year A Visual Chronicle Dorling Kindersley p 152 ISBN 978 0 7566 6742 9 The host that was first presented in a framing sequence by scribe Marv Wolfman and artist Bernie Wrightson would provide endless creative material for Neil Gaiman s The Sandman series decades later a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a first2 has generic name help e g by the raven Matthew in Sandman 40 p9 Del Rosario Alexandra May 26 2021 The Sandman Kirby Howell Baptiste Mason Alexander Park amp Donna Preston Among 12 Added To Netflix Series Deadline Hollywood Archived from the original on May 26 2021 Retrieved May 26 2021 Bui Hoai Tran May 26 2021 The Sandman Netflix Series Expands With 12 More Actors Including Kirby Howell Baptiste as Death Film Retrieved May 26 2021 Irvine Alex 2008 The Dreaming in Dougall Alastair ed The Vertigo Encyclopedia New York Dorling Kindersley pp 64 65 ISBN 978 0 7566 4122 1 OCLC 213309015 Wallace Dan 2008 Dougall Alastair ed The DC Comics Encyclopedia New York Dorling Kindersley ISBN 978 0 7566 4119 1 OCLC 213309017 Page introducing Lucien Tales of Ghost Castle Ramos Dino Ray January 28 2021 Neil Gaiman s The Sandman Casts Tom Sturridge Gwendoline Christie Vivienne Acheampong Boyd Holbrook Charles Dance Asim Chaudhry And Sanjeev Bhaskar Deadline Hollywood Retrieved January 28 2021 Flook Ray June 6 2022 The Sandman Teaser Key Art Released Mark Hamill as Mervyn amp More Bleeding Cool News And Rumors Retrieved June 6 2022 There is a story from Tales of the Unexpected 16 in DC Special 4 but it is not the Thor story Keating Lauren January 25 2016 How David Bowie Inspired The Comic Book Character Lucifer Tech Times Retrieved April 19 2019 Hogan Peter September 1997 The Dreaming 16 Ice Vertigo DC Comics Gross Peter August 1998 The Books of Magic A Thousand Worlds of Tim DC Comics Hogan Peter August 1999 The Books of Magic The Good Fella DC Comics a b Irvine Alex 2008 Death in Dougall Alastair ed The Vertigo Encyclopedia New York Dorling Kindersley pp 54 56 ISBN 978 0 7566 4122 1 OCLC 213309015 Otterson Joe January 28 2021 Sandman Netflix Series Casts Tom Sturridge as Dream Adds Gwendoline Christie Charles Dance Variety Archived from the original on January 31 2021 Retrieved February 1 2021 The Sandman 29 The Constantine Family Tree The Sandman 13 The Dreaming 4 7 Del Rosario Alexandra May 26 2021 The Sandman Kirby Howell Baptiste Mason Alexander Park amp Donna Preston Among 12 Added To Netflix Series Deadline Hollywood Archived from the original on May 26 2021 Retrieved May 26 2021 Bui Hoai Tran May 26 2021 The Sandman Netflix Series Expands With 12 More Actors Including Kirby Howell Baptiste as Death Film Retrieved May 26 2021 Gaiman Neil The Sandman s Latest Castings and the Stories Behind Them Netflix Retrieved May 27 2021 Kovacs George Marshall C W 2011 Classics and Comics ISBN 9780199734191 Asbury Herbert 1957 The Barbary Coast External links Edit Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title List of The Sandman characters amp oldid 1135282164 Thessaly, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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