Spies have always been popular in fiction.
Girls have always been popular in fiction.
So, it stands to reason that girl spies would be popular in fiction, right?
Not quite...
With the notable exception of Modesty Blaise, female secret agents have not been able to hold the spotlight, despite several high-quality attempts to crack the glass ceiling of spydom!
In comics, the short-lived 1950s Undercover Girl series from Magazine Enterprises was probably the best of the femme-spy genre.
Featuring
art by luminaries like Bob Powell, Gil Kane, and Dick Ayers, the series
detailed the adventures of government agent Starr Flagg against spies,
saboteurs, and criminals.
Starr could shoot and fight (And, as you can see from the art, ride a motorcycle, one-handed yet!) as well as any male agent, but could play helpless and innocent to throw the baddies off-guard until she could kick serious butt!
You can read some of her adventures HERE!
Since she has no super-powers or outlandish gimmicks, we at Atomic Kommie Comics™ titled her "The Heroine ANY Girl can be!™" and made her one of the feature characters in our Heroines™
line with three different covers, as well as her classic retro-style
logo on a variety of goodies including tops, shirts, mugs, and many
other tchochkies.
What grrrl from 6 to 60 wouldn't want to find something featuring Undercover Girl under her Christmas tree or in her stocking?
Showing posts with label 1950s. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 1950s. Show all posts
Monday, December 19, 2016
Unwrap UNDERCOVER GIRL this Christmas!
Posted by
Britt Reid
at
1:32 PM
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1950s,
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comic books,
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spy,
t-shirt,
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Monday, February 6, 2012
3-D SHEENA QUEEN OF THE JUNGLE "Sargasso of Lost Safaris"
Get out the red/blue 3-D glasses (red on the left, blue on the right)...
| Cover art for the 1985 reprint by the late, great, Dave Stevens |
...cause it's 3-D Week at all the RetroBlogs™!
This tale, penciled by Robert Webb and Inked by Ann Brewster for Jumbo Comics #87 (1953), was adapted from 2-D to 3-D for 3-D Sheena Queen of the Jungle #1 (1953) during the 1950s 3-D craze and reprinted (with corrected 3-D effects by Ray Zone) in 1985 (which is the version we're presenting here).
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Posted by
Britt Reid
at
1:01 AM
Labels:
1950s,
3-D,
3-D Week,
comic books,
comics,
Fiction House,
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Sheena,
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