Tom Taylor Explains Why Jean Grey Sets Out to Change the World in X-Men Red

Jean Grey is one of the Marvel Universe’s most legendary mutants because of the power she wielded as the Phoenix and the empathy and compassion she had for the people and the world around her. When she returned to the world of the living at the end of the recent Phoenix Resurrection: The Return of Jean Grey miniseries it was without the massive power of the titular cosmic entity, but her big heart was very much intact, and that meant she couldn’t return to the usual business of super heroics. The world had changed while she was gone and not for the better, so she took it upon herself to be the change she wished to see in it.

In the debut issue of X-Men Red, writer Tom Taylor and artist Mahmud Asrar chronicled Jean’s initial attempts to change the world. They included gathering a team of like minded and politically powerful mutants around her, and announcing her intentions to improve the lives of both humans and mutants on a global basis via a speech at the United Nations. That last action though put her in the crosshairs of one of the X-Men’s most sinister and powerful foes, Cassandra Nova.

RELATED: Jean Grey Couldn’t Have Returned at a More Socially Relevant Time

CBR spoke with Taylor about the events of the issue, Jean’s leadership style, her mission to build a better world, and the teammates that will assist her in that goal.

CBR: In X-Men Red, you’re writing about a team lead by Jean Grey. What’s your sense of Jean and her leadership style?

Tom Taylor: To me, Jean is an incredibly powerful and incredibly compassionate person. Her leadership style comes from wanting the best for the world and the people around her. She’s an incredibly protective person, but it’s not that she’s protective of people because they’re hers. She doesn’t take ownership of them. It’s that she loves and respects the people she’s alongside. So as a leader she’s leading for the best of everybody.

So a sort of Captain America style of leading from the front and not asking anyone else to do things you aren’t willing to do yourself?

Absolutely. You’ll see a moment in issue #2 where it’s exactly that. It’s her going into a fray and telling the people around her that they don’t have to. Of course they’re like, “No! We will join you.” [Laughs]

What can you tell us about the sort of mission statement of Jean’s team in X-Men Red? What type of adventures will they embark upon?

Essentially this book is Jean Grey coming back to life, but not coming back to the life she left behind. She doesn’t want to come back to that life either. She’s seen that the world has moved on. It’s changed and she doesn’t like everything she’s seen. She’s very empathetic and she feels so much of what’s going on around her that she wants to make an actual change to the world. Not just for mutantkind or humanity, but for everybody.

That’s what we’re going to see here. The mission statement is change the world for the better. That’s a very big mission statement. [Laughs] So it’s not all going to be fighting the villain of the week. It’s bigger ideals, and it’s the embodiment of that in Jean Grey.

Page 2: How Does Namor, the SUb-Mariner Fit Into Jean Grey's Plan

That reminds of the the approach of the Champions. They want to fix the world’s problems and if that means they have to fight villains they will, but that’s not why they’re together. Is that what you’re aiming for?

That’s exactly right. One of the things we see Jean do in X-Men Red #1 is we see her go to the U.N. She stands up there for everybody and talks about this idea of a new mutant nation that can exist peacefully with everyone else in the world and what she hopes for the world moving forward. She mentions that every time Mutants have tried to come together in one place like Genosha or Utopia it doesn’t end well for them. So the idea is we can still be one, just where we are.

RELATED: X-Men Red: A Major Villain Returns to Terrorize Jean Grey’s New Team

She also goes across the world and grabs every single once in a generation mind that she can; Nobel Peace Prize winners, educators, artists, leaders, writers. She puts them all in a room and tries to find a path forward using these minds.

Lets talk about the team Jean surrounds herself with starting with probably one of the most unlikely candidates, Namor. What made you want to bring the Sub-Mariner into the book?

I wanted to bring him in because we needed the ruler of another nation. What we’re doing here involves big ideas. We needed someone like Namor. He’s the ruler of the seas. He’s the ruler of Atlantis. Jean needed that backing behind her before she could go to the U.N. And she’ll need that backing again going forward.

EXCLUSIVE: Art from X-Men Red #2 by Mahmud Asrar and colorist Ive Svorcina

He’s such a big player. It’s not that he’s there to punch guys in the face, as we’ve seen. He’s here because he’s a king.

So in a way you’re playing up his dual heritage as both an Atlantean monarch and a mutant.

Exactly, and as you saw in the first issue he basically tells Jean that he doesn’t have time to be one of the X-Men. He has a lot going on. But he’s still there when they need him.

Since you pen their ongoing adventures in All-New Wolverine I’m not surprised to see Wolverine and her sister Honey Badger among the ranks of Jean’s team. What’s it like for Gabby to be a member of the X-Men?

For Gabby it’s incredibly exciting. She’s excited by everything. [Laughs] But being told told that you’re one of the X-Men is huge. She’s going to be a ray of light in the darkness when we need her to be as she has been in All-New Wolverine.

And Jean likes characters like this. She’s an idealist at heart. So surrounding herself with other idealists helps the whole team.

Laura is of course very different from the Wolverine that Jean knew. How does that effect their dynamic?

Yes, she’s very different from the Wolverine Jean knew, but in a way that makes her perfect for this team. Laura has come from a very violent, abusive past, but she’s come to this point where she doesn’t want to see violence as the answer all the time. She actively doesn’t kill in her own book. That’s never the first option. The claws don’t immediately come out.

She’s incredibly effective too. She’s fantastic at stealth. She’s an incredibly important person for this team to have. She can get in anywhere, do anything, and take out anybody they need her too. At the same time though, she’s less likely to stab someone in the neck. [Laughs]

Page 3: Where Nightcrawler, Gentle & New Mutant Trinary Fit Into X-Men Red

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