Showing posts with label JAYNE MANSFIELD. Show all posts
Showing posts with label JAYNE MANSFIELD. Show all posts

Friday, May 3, 2024

H.P. LOVECRAFT'S HIDDEN HORRORS + EXTRAS!



It's surprising what one can come across while perusing any of the so-called "men's adventure" magazines (aka, "sweats") from the past. For instance, I was quite surprised to find this in an issue of ZEST FOR MEN (Vol. 1 No. 1, January 1956) -- a story by none other than H.P. Lovecraft! Sandwiched between a western story and a spicy mystery is, what the magazine calls "The Greatest Horror Story Ever Told", Lovecraft's "The Rats in the Walls". It was first published in WEIRD TALES in their August-September issue of 1923, over 30 years earlier after having first been rejected by ARGOSY ALL-STORY WEEKLY. It has the distinction of being one of the scant few stories published in his lifetime in the collection, "Switch on the Light". It has been reprinted tons of since, this time of all places, a men's magazine. I don't think you can say that about Poe!

If I'm not mistaken, the photo accompanying the story looks to be one of Lon Chaney as Quasimodo in Universal's THE HUNCHBACK OF NOTRE DAME. Happy reading!



Save your hair from cosmic horror!









BONUS! A cautionary tale, and a titillating topic that was visited often in men's magazine's at the time:





EXTRA! Last but not least is Michael Avallone's complete "novel", "The Glass Eye", for your hard-boiled enjoyment.

Avallone, by the way, was a prolific author who wrote mostly in the fields of mystery and secret agent/spy fiction, as well as wrote a number of horror novels. He is most known for his slew of T.V. and movie adaptations, including: THE MAN FROM U.N.C.L.E., THE GIRL FROM UN.C.L.E., BENEATH THE PLANET OF THE APES, FRIDAY THE 13th, PART 3: 3-D, PLANET OF THE APES OMNIBUS, the SATAN'S SLEUTH series, and BORIS KARLOFF PRESENTS TALES OF THE FRIGHTENED.








Still losing your hair? Try this, sucker!

A 23 year-old Jayne says: "Thanks for visiting!"




Thursday, October 12, 2023

JUNGLE JANE AND JUNGLE JOAN + BONUS

 

Images of women in furs, leopard skins and other primitive attire are used to symbolize the wild and untamed side of their nature. Drop them in a jungle setting and they become all the more exotic and alluring. 

The voluptuous Jayne Mansfield didn't need a jungle print bikini to look good, but we'll thank her anyway. Very photogenic, she never shied away from an opportunity to be in front of a camera.

Inspired by the Tarzan movies popular at the time, actress and comedienne Joan Davis tried the "Jane" look for a gag shoot for HOLLYWOOD magazine in November 1939. Miss Davis had a second career in TV with her show, I MARRIED JOAN, in the 1950s.

Another example of the popularity of prehistoric babes and their skimpy outfits was no more apparent than in comic books. From Nyoka to Sheena, one thing is for sure -- jungle girls rule!




JUNGLE GIRLS
No. 1
1989 (no month)
AC Comics
Editor and Publisher: Bill Black
Cover: Bill Black
Pages: 28
Cover price: $1.95

The lead story stars Bill Black's Tara, Jungle She-Cat, who debuted in PARAGON PRESENTS #2 (1971). The rest of the issue is filled with Golden Age reprints from CAVE GIRL and NYOKA comics. On the back cover is a photo of Victoria Vetri (PLAYBOY'S Playmate of the Month for September 1967, as Angela Dorian).