Showing posts with label David A Kaler. Show all posts
Showing posts with label David A Kaler. Show all posts

Friday, August 30, 2013

NIGHTSHADE "Masque of Mirrors"

The final NightShade solo tale has a kool "Easter Egg"...
...let's see if you can pick it out!
(Note: Unlike Marvel or DC, Charlton didn't tend to use footnotes referring to other issues.)
Co-creator David A Kaler and artist Jim Aparo included a reference to Charlton's WWII-based hero JudoMaster by making his now-adult sidekick, Tiger, the teen-age Eve's martial-arts instructor!
Jewelee (also a Kaler/Steve Ditko creation) was part of a duo who faced NightShade and Captain Atom in an earlier issue.
Charlton's Captain Atom #89 (1967) was the final issue of the series.
While a Captain Atom book-length tale had been penciled and plotted (and finally saw publication in the 1970s), no further NightShade stories were prepared beyond a few story notes continuing this arc.
BTW, while the main stories (starring Captain Atom) from these issues of Captain Atom were reprinted in DC Action Hero Archive hardcovers, the NightShade backup tales were not!

Friday, August 23, 2013

NIGHTSHADE "Poetry of Peril"

...since the first panel has already synopsized the story, sit back and enjoy this never-reprinted tale from Charlton's Captain Atom #88 (1967)!
Be here Next Week
as the Secret Origin of
NightShade
concludes...
Co-creator David A Kaler and artist Jim Aparo continue the origin, adding just enough detail to intrigue the reader!
BTW, while the main stories (starring Captain Atom) from these issues of Captain Atom were reprinted in DC Action Hero Archive hardcovers, the NightShade backup tales were not!

Friday, August 16, 2013

NIGHTSHADE "Image's Idyl"

She only made a half-dozen appearances during the Silver Age...
...and two in the Bronze Age, but the Darling of Darkness made an indelible impression on comics fans...
Be here Next Week
Though Marvel and DC dominated the super-hero genre during the Silver Age, numerous companies jumped into the fray with their own lines of costumed characters.
One of the most successful (artistically, at least) was Charlton.
With a lineup of talent including old pros like Dick Giordano, Pete Morisi, and Spider-Man co-creator Steve Ditko as well as up-and-comers like Denny O'Neil, Roy Thomas, Pat Boyette, and Jim Aparo, Charlton offered a line of "Action Heroes" including two different Blue Beetles, ThunderBolt, Hercules, JudoMaster, The Sentinels, The Question, Son of Vulcan, Captain Atom, and one "Action Heroine"...NightShade.
She had already appeared in several issues of Captain Atom by writer David A Kaler and illustrator Steve Ditko as a super-powered CIA operative assigned by the government to assist the title hero.
No explanation was given for her powers, which were assumed to be technological or chemical in nature.
The Darling of Darkness proved popular enough to receive her own back-up strip in Captain Atom #87 (1967), where co-creator Kaler and new artist Jim Aparo told her origin, making it supernatural rather than scientific!
Next week, along with Part 2 of her origin, we'll include more info about this influental heroine.

Friday, August 17, 2012

TIFFANY SINN "Espionage: Muscle Beach Style"

In the 1940s, it was Senorita Rio!
In the 1950s, it was UnderCover Girl!
Here's their 1960s counterpart in her final appearance from Charlton's Secret Agent #10 (1967)!
Written by Dave Kaler, who also wrote the Steve Ditko-illustrated Captain Atom series, and illustrated by Jim Aparo, who would become the primary Batman artist of the 1970s and 1980s, this was the last of only three stories about private eye-turned-secret agent Tiffany Sinn.
Interestingly, her first two appearances were in Career Girl Romances!
(Well, being a detective is a career...)
Be here next week, when we present another tale of classic comic grrrl power!