Throughout the series, the trio will constantly save each other and cooperate together in multiple missions. However,
Harley Quinn features Ivy as Harley's best friend and then lover.
The first is the Joker who, with his influence, led Harley into the tumultuous world of villainy, changing her life forever. The other is Poison Ivy, a bond that started as a close friendship before blossoming into a relationship Harley Quinn found genuine love and appreciation in.
Luckily, she did not kill the co-worker she hooked up with, but that was overshadowed by the fact that she cheated on Harley with her (which this comic confirms was cheating, as Harley and Ivy are confirmed to still be “girlfriends”).
The series has luxuriated in their relationship ever since, giving us many, many more kisses to come. Injustice: Year Zero gives us something still unique among Harley/Ivy kisses throughout the multiverse—their first, and to date only, kiss at the wedding altar.
Personality Disorder, specifically, Histrionic Personality Disorder plays a key part in Harley Quinn's life. People with Histrionic Personality Disorder are “pervasive and excessive emotionally and display attention-seeking behavior” (Bornstein 1998).
During one of their visits, she drew a heart on the outside of the glass during their phone call. Readers find out in Batman: Beyond the White Knight No. 2 that their connection was romantic. Harley and Bruce Wayne are married.
The longtime partners Harley Quinn and Poison Ivy have made their marriage official, with their wedding now confirmed in DC's Injustice.
Ivy's emotional instability, aggressive and impulsive behavior, and volatile relationship history (such as her on-again, off-again friendship with Harley Quinn and even her efforts to lure Batman into a deadly kiss) offer hints of a borderline personality disorder — while her exploitative tendencies, habit of holding ...
Doctor Pamela Isley is some 40 years older than Harley in publication history, but the two have enjoyed a relationship on any number of levels throughout the 25 years that the Clown Princess of Crime has been smashing hearts with her synonymous mallet.
They have affectionate nicknames for each other, with Ivy calling her "peanut," and Harley giving her gal a peck under the mistletoe or as she calls it "the kisstletoe." This signifies they're more than just besties, especially as Ivy is adamant about the "no exes" rule.
One of its major themes has been Ivy's relationship with Harley Quinn. By focusing so much on one of the most prominent queer relationships in comics, Poison Ivy has become a standout example of LGBTQ representation. The award is just the latest mark of popularity for the series.
She soon succeeded in merging genetic information from both humans and plants, and began growing human/plant hybrids that she referred to as "sporelings". Ivy successfully delivered her two sporelings in secret, naming them Rose and Hazel.
The Gotham City supervillains broke up in Harley Quinn #10, written by Stephanie Phillips with art by Laura Braga and colors by Arif Prianto.
Lucy Quinzel is the daughter of the Joker and Harley Quinn and the niece of Delia Quinzel.
As storylines evolved, Harley and Poison Ivy grew closer, going from friends to romantic partners, until they became the soulmates fans know and love today. It all began with Poison Ivy trying to help Harley see her self-worth, a sentiment that remains true about their relationship to this day.
The story "High School Lows" from DC Saved by the Belle Reve #1 (by Tim Seeley, Scott Kolins, John Kalisz, and Wes Abbott) reveals that Harley's worst fear is a truly corrupted Poison Ivy (aka Pamela Isley).
In Joker's case, pseudobulbar affect probably occurred secondary to severe traumatic brain injury (TBI). A number of studies have established that TBI increases the risk of mood disorders, personality changes and substance use disorders.
She was assigned the undesirable task of taking care of the Joker — an assignment that would change her life forever. In some versions of Harley's origin story, she becomes infatuated with the Joker because he's one of the only few people that seems to actually care for her.
Harley Quinn season two ends with Harley and Ivy finally accepting their feelings for one another and pursuing a romantic relationship. Season three delves into that relationship and examines Harley and Ivy fully as a couple.
And Are Secure Enough To Be Polyamorous. Harley and Ivy are never stated to be poly in so many words in the comics themselves, but it seems that they are. They flirt a ton and have often implied relationships with other people. Regardless, it's never a fight between them.
Given what we know about the character, despite story nomenclature, the killer kiss is more accurately described as poisonous, not venomous. Regardless, the result is the same. Contact with Ivy's lips delivers a toxin capable of killing the recipient. Such a result is not unheard of in the animal kingdom.
Poison Ivy's ex-girlfriend Bella Garten, also known as the Gardener, makes an unexpected reappearance at the end of DC's Harley Quinn: The Animated Series - Legion of Bats #1.