Merge:Moira MacTaggert

Dr. Moira Kinross MacTaggert (sometimes spelled MacTaggart, McTaggart, or McTaggert) is a character appearing in X-Men stories in the. She was created by Chris Claremont and Dave Cockrum, in Uncanny X-Men #96 (December 1975).

Character biography
Born Moira Kinross to Scottish parents, Moira MacTaggert was one of the world's leading authorities on genetic mutation, earning her a Nobel Prize for her work. She was the longest running human associate of the X-Men and was Professor Charles Xavier's colleague, confidante, and also once his fiancée, having met and fallen in love with him while they were attending graduate school at Oxford University. She ended their engagement when for reasons unknown she married her old flame, the late politician Joseph MacTaggert. Joe proved to be an abusive husband; Moira separated from him after he beat her into a week long coma and raped her, leaving her pregnant. She kept her son's existence a secret, and when Joe refused her a divorce she allowed people to believe she was widowed.

She eventually created a Mutant Research Center on Muir Island, off the coast of Scotland. Moira was forced to contain and imprison her son Kevin, later called Proteus, when he developed reality warping abilities and severe psychosis. One of Moira's goals was to understand human/mutant genetics, in order to cure her son.



Moira's connection to the X-Men began long before the team formed. The silent partner in the founding of Xavier's School for Gifted Youngsters and co-creator of Cerebro, Moira assisted Xavier in helping the young Jean Grey recover after the traumatic triggering of her mutant abilities.

Moira was a kind woman who took to helping humans and mutants alike. She rescued a young Rahne Sinclair (Wolfsbane) from an angry mob, and adopted the girl. She even attempted to treat Xavier's illegitimate son, a mutant known as Legion. When Cable arrived from the future, it was Moira who taught him English and introduced him to Xavier. When Magneto was reduced to infancy, he was entrusted to Moira's care on Muir Island, where she altered his genetic code in an attempt to keep him from reverting to villainy (an unethical decision that she believed was for his benefit).

The X-Men first met Moira when she appeared at Xavier's call to act as housekeeper for the team while they were on missions (a position that required her to demonstrate her aptitude with an M16 rifle within hours of her arrival). Though each of the X-Men formed some sort of relationship with the "Widow" MacTaggert, Moira and Sean Cassidy (Banshee) hit it off immediately, forming an on-and-off relationship that would last for the remainder of her life.

Proteus's escape and eventual destruction at the hands of Colossus and the X-Men left Moira in a position of ethical compromise again: though Banshee stopped her from cloning her son, she saved his genetic structure on disk to allow herself the future option of bringing him back.

After finding out that her foster daughter, Rahne, was a mutant, Moira was the catalyst for change. She talked a discouraged Xavier into opening his school to the next generation of New Mutants, with Rahne becoming an initial member. She was also an integral part of the support for the X-Men and the New Mutants, providing medical aid including cloning Xavier after the Brood attacks, restoring his ability to walk.



With the apparent death of the X-Men, Moira and Banshee formed an alternate team based from Muir, and carried on as the leader of the team without him when his duties with the X-Men called him away. Her behavior became unpredictable, her temper impressive, and her decisions harsh and unforgiving as she displayed behavior that made all who knew her suspicious. On Muir, she began to pit her charges against each other in an arena in merciless battles, supposedly allowing her the opportunity to study mutants in action. Eventually, the entire population of Muir Island was identified as being possessed by and mentally corrupted by Shadow King, pitting the Islanders against the combined forces of the X-Men and X-Factor before Xavier freed them from his control.



Moira's alteration of Magneto did not go unnoticed indefinitely. Enraged when he discovered Moira had tampered with his free will, Magneto took Moira captive and forced her to perform the procedure on half of the X-Men, turning them against their teammates. While Moira's alterations worked, it was revealed that when activated, the X-Factor gene that gave mutants their powers reversed the effects of the procedure, so anything Magneto had done was of his own free will. While hostage on Avalon, Moira witnessed Fabian Cortez draining Magneto of his powers and manipulating him into placing him as his right hand. Though Cortez fled, it was an observation that would eventually put Moira back in the hands of the Acolytes. Back on Earth, Moira was unable to accept her betrayal of her surrogate family and her own infallibility, and fled the X-Mansion, with Banshee in pursuit.

When a mysterious virus began attacking the mutant population of Genosha, Moira volunteered her services as a geneticist and was forced to watch as the former slaves were decimated by disease. Returning to the X-Mansion, Moira found Illyana Rasputin suffering from the same illness, later identified as the Legacy Virus. Moving back to Muir Island after the girl's death, Moira became the key figure in working for a cure to the disease.

The European superhero team Excalibur took up residence on Muir Island after assisting Moira as she was attacked by agents of Mister Sinister seeking the genetic information on her son. Moira became an official member of the group, acting as their medic until an information leak revealed her to be the only human infected by the Legacy Virus-a bizarre turn of events possibly caused by her long exposure to the infected on Genosha, her autopsy of Illyana, or some susceptibility because she gave birth to a mutant. Locking herself in quarantine in a final attempt to cure the virus without endangering any of her team mates, Moira found her attempts foiled by her foster daughter Wolfsbane and Douglock.

Moira did eventually find a cure for the disease, when the terrorist Mystique manipulated her research to force the virus to target only humans, destroying Muir Island and shooting Moira in the process. Moira clung to life long enough to mentally transfer the information to Xavier in one final embrace between the former lovers, and died in the X-Men's jet.

Most recently, Moira has been seen as an active portion of Xavier's conscious as he worked on rebuilding Genosha. Her ghost has also been seen in the rubble of Muir Island, directing Banshee to a hidden room full of video files.

The Deadly Genesis story arc has called to light significant portions of Moira's history that were apparently blocked from her memory by Charles Xavier. During the early years of Xavier's Academy, Moira founded and ran a secondary facility not far from the Xavier School, in which she had her own students-gathered together youths who she took out of bad situations and adopted as her wards, training them in their abilities without the highly militant regimen of Charles' X-Men.

When Krakoa captured the original X-Men, it was Moira's children whom Charles went to first-not the second team of Wolverine, Storm, Banshee, as it was originally believed-putting them through the psionic equivalent of boot camp and allowing them to believe they were being trained over months as X-Men, Charles took them from Moira's care immediately.

Moira's children were apparently all killed, and Xavier suppressed even the memory of them from his own students, to keep them from going back to save them. Only Moira's project tapes, one made directly after the event, before Xavier could suppress the memories, and an abandoned research center remain as clues.

Age of Apocalypse
In the Age of Apocalypse storyline, Moira Trask is the wife of Bolivar Trask, and head of the London based Human High Council. As resistance to Apocalypse's reign, Moira and her husband designed the Sentinels and armed the human resistance with an impressive weapons array that the tyrant eventually turned against them, slaughtering the Council and their human settlement.

Ultimate Moira MacTaggert
In the Ultimate Marvel continuity, Moira MacTaggert is the ex-wife of Charles Xavier, and their son David MacTaggert is Proteus. Moira runs a school/hospital for sick mutants, and assists in the Xavier Institute from behind the scenes though Charles left her to join Magneto's dream of a mutant society, abandoning her to raise their mentally ill child on her own.

House of M
During the House of M event, Moira MacTaggert was declared criminal for attempting to cure her son Kevin of the mutant gene and his psychosis. King Magneto's mutant supremacy saw this as an act against mutant kind, and Sentinels were dispatched to destroy Muir Island and capture Moira. Though Moira escaped, Kevin was also freed, sending him on a gruesome killing spree that was attributed to Moira as failed experiments, as she chased him across the globe. When the reality-hopping Exiles caught Proteus's attention, Moira emerged from hiding to warn them about her son, who was intrigued by their presence and desired to ruin the realities they attempted to fix. When he attacked the team, Moira shot him, exposing him to the metal that was his deadly allergy and only weakness, forcing him to find a new body. Unsurprisingly, he chose his mother's, rather than allow her son to possess her and use her against them, Moira committed suicide.

Appearances in other media

 * Moira appears in a few episodes of an animated television adaptation of the comic book, X-Men, and was voiced by Lally Cadeau.


 * Moira has appeared in X-Men video game spin-offs X-Men Legends and X-Men Legends II: Rise of Apocalypse. In X-Men Legends, she was a non-playable character, voiced by Michelle Arthur. In X-Men Legends II, she is voiced by Jane Carr.


 * Moira is played by Olivia Williams in brief appearances in the feature film X-Men: The Last Stand. She appears on a video talking about mutant ethics and what is considered right and wrong, such as whether it would be right to transfer the mind of a dying father of four into the body of a man born with no higher brain functions. She is subsequently seated next to Beast at the memorial service. After the film's ending credits, she appears again for a brief scene, where it appears that Xavier has transferred his mind into the body of the patient following his physical body being disintegrated by the Phoenix that inhabits Jean Grey. An alternate final scene with Moira is featured in the novelized version of the movie, where she appears to Magneto in the park as he plays chess-presumably offering to reverse the "cure".

List of titles

 * Uncanny X-Men #94, 96-98, 101-104, 106, 109-110, 117, 119-120, 122, 125-129, 133, 135, 141-142, 145-146, 148, 150, 158-161, 163, 165, 167-168, 175, 197, 199, 212-213, 216-217, 227, 253-255, 257-259, 269, 271, 273, 278, 280, 295-296, 300-301, 303, 308, 326, 335, 348, 362, 375, 377, 388-389
 * Uncanny X-Men Annual #5, 15
 * Iron Fist Vol. 1 #15
 * New Mutants Vol. 1 #1, 3, 22-24, 26-28, 44, 46-47, 88-89
 * Secret Wars II #1
 * Fallen Angels #1-2
 * Fantastic Four Versus X-Men #1-2
 * Classic X-Men #2, 4, 6, 9-11, 26, 36
 * Excalibur Vol. 1 #4, 7, 11, 26, 71-75, 79-81, 83-93, 95, 97-98, 100-107, 109, 112-115, 117-118, 120-125
 * Excalibur Annual #2
 * Alpha Flight Vol. 1 #88
 * X-Factor Vol. 1 #69-70, 75, 86, 88-90, 101-102, 106
 * X-Factor Annual #6
 * X-Men (Second Series) #1-4, 14-15, 24-25, 28, 30, 95-96, 108
 * X-Men Annual #2
 * X-Force Vol. 1 #17, 38
 * X-Men: Unlimited #2, 16, 21,
 * Wolverine Vol. 2 #75, 81-82, 146-147
 * Cable Vol. 1 #9, 21, 29
 * X-Men: Prime
 * X-Man #11-12, 26
 * Generation X #32-33
 * X-Men: Hidden Years #10
 * Bishop: The Last X-Man #16
 * X-Men: Deadly Genesis #1-6 (featured in important flashback stories)