27 May 2020

The Inverse Evolution Of Jane Martin - War Nurse

We've been looking at how Pat Parker - War Nurse evolved from War Nurse to Adventurer to Superhero and Commando.

While we've looked at Jane Martin - War Nurse previously, it was mostly looking at later episodes featuring Lily Renée doing the artwork. Jane started the year before Pat, in the spring of 1940. When she launched, she sported a rather superheroic look to her uniform...


She kept that look for a few issues. This is one of the two for which we have confirmed art credit - George Tuska on both pencils and inks...
 

...then started to modify it to look less superheroish...
 

...and by her 5th appearance, she was uniformed as a standard Nurse, with Tuska returning on at least pencils...
 
 

Obviously, the outfit change didn't slow her down. She kept up her heroics, no matter how she was dressed, for a decade, long after the war had ended.

Oddly enough, there was another seeming change along the way. Based on the above tales, one might conclude that Jane Martin was British (unless i missed a reference while skimming). The USA wouldn't enter the war for another year and a half, and Jane's boyfriend was a British pilot.

So, why was i thinking she was from across the pond, demarcating her from Pat Parker?

Later stories told me so...


...though actually, it only says that "No American Girl has ever run such a strange gamut of thrills and mystery as Jane Martin." It doesn't actually state that's her nationality.

I'm not going reading through 100 tales to find out now. Read it the way you prefer, as shall i.

page art by George Tuska and ??? (Nick Cardy?)from Wings Comics #s 1 & 2-6, splash page by Lily Renée from Wings Comics #33 (1940,1943)

26 May 2020

Somewhere Between Blackhawks And Boy Commandoes...

We've been looking at Pat Parker's evolution from War Nurse to Adventurer to Superhero to ... ? 

When we left off, the 'artist' promised us that Pat was headed off somewhere new next time. And indeed, not just a new front of the war, but also a new role - Girl Commando...


And now Pat was no longer a solo act - she had a team to back her up. From this point on, the series was The Girl Commandos. They ran for about a score of issues, dissolving after the war... 

(Yes, this is unfortunately how our Friends & Allies were depicted.)












(Finally! we start seeing Jill Elgin's signature on the strip)






Note that last caption - "Not so long ago..."

The war was over, and rather than follow the often tread route of retooling the Girls to fight crime, they allowed the Commandos to retire and enjoy civilian life in peacetime.

Not a bad run. With the exception of #38, Pat appeared in every issue of Speed Comics from #13 to #42, outlasting the war she fought by several months.

page art by Jill Elgin from Speed Comics #s 23-37, & 39-42 (1942-1946)

25 May 2020

Dia De La Cabeza Muerta

It's one of those days...


Brain not talking to me just now. And doesn't want to prep pages. And Mel doesn't want to play. So, here's a few random images from work on The Third Colony. That's obviously another shot from Alyce: Glass Wonderland above.

Here's advertising for one of the most popular eateries -
 
(Yes, Dina Jr.'s pose is intentionally awkward and stiff - and in character)

...Cats Will Play, with Tom Cat and Pritty Kitty (and Manic Monday in the shadows - poor Tom)...
 

...and a recruiting poster for the local force -
 

Yeah, mostly weak bits of filler sitting on hand. Sorry about that. Maybe if we kiss and make up, my brain and i will be back later today with more better.

stuff by -3- (2020)

24 May 2020

Perusing Pat Parker's Progression Proceeds...

We're back with Pat Parker, War Nurse - our latest Fly Girl. As we saw, her look had morphed from Nursing Uniform to Adventurer to Superhero. And her adventures went far beyond what one might expect from a Nurse - a fact that would soon be reflected in both title and content.

As we can see, Pat was out in the field, taking an active role in the war...




...and even going behind enemy lines...
 

That's a fun looking splash, innit? Let's go ahead and follow along on this one before we continue. We open with Adolph Hitler wandering the halls of power, desperate for a Twitter account...
 

For younglings with confusion - the Army Air Corps was what we had before the Air Force became an independent branch of the military. (A real branch, not a PR farce based on tyrants' dreams of conquest like our latest gomer induced military branch.) 

Continuing on, we can see how Pat took an ever more active role in the fight...



The next tale highlights how wrong i was in forgetting that Pat was a Fly Girl when first we spoke of her. Pat Got Around -
Motorcycles, planes, rafts, parachutes ... frelling hijacked submarines!
 

As mentioned several times previously, i love seeing the creators inserted into the comics. But - who in the 9 hells is that?

Best guess for the artwork is Jill Elgin, who was drawing it a couple issues earlier.  That sure doesn't look like her.
We could say maybe it's the writer, but that's a drawing table. So... who knows?

But, we'll be back to see what he was talking about, and the changes to which i alluded above. 
Meanwhile, two issues later, Pat made the cover...
 


page art by Jill Elgin (and maybe others) from Speed Comics #s 16-22 & 24 (1942)