Don Winslow of the Navy (comic strip)
Don Winslow of the Navy | |
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Author(s) | Frank Victor Martinek |
Illustrator(s) | Leon Beroth (1934 to 1952) Carl Hammond (layouts and research) Ken Ernst (1940–1942; assists and ghost art) John Jordan (1953–1955) |
Current status/schedule | Daily and Sunday; concluded |
Launch date | March 5, 1934 |
End date | July 30, 1955 |
Syndicate(s) | Bell Syndicate (1934–1953) General Features (1953–1955) |
Genre(s) | adventure |
Don Winslow of the Navy is an American
Publication history
The idea for Don Winslow was conceived by Lieutenant Commander Frank V. Martinek,
Martinek brought in Naval Lieutenant Leon Beroth as art director and Carl Hammond to handle layouts and research. Martinek articulated this central principle: "Since Don Winslow of the Navy is approved by the Navy Department, I cannot allow him to do anything that is contrary to the ideals, traditions or motives of the Navy."[3][4]
The strip debuted on March 5, 1934. A Sunday page was added on April 21, 1935.[1] Martinek supervised the daily feature’s "general tone and direction", sending the typewritten continuity to Beroth every week for illustrations. From 1934 to 1952, Beroth was the leading artist on the feature. Ken Ernst (later famous for Mary Worth), assisted or ghosted the art between 1940 and 1942. With Don leaving his fiancée behind in December 1941 to go fight the Japanese, the World War II period saw the height of Don Winslow's popularity.
The Sunday page featured several topper strips during the course of the run: Bos'n Hal (April 21, 1935-1940s), Bos'n Hal's Notebook (1936), Winslowgrams aka Don Winslow's Hero-Gram (February 9, 1936-March 14, 1943) [5] and Winslow's Crime Facts (June-August 1944).[1]
The
Story and characters
Don's best pal throughout the run of the series was the somewhat chubby Red Pennington. His commanding officer for a time was Admiral Colby. Mercedes Colby, the Admiral's daughter, was Don's romantic interest for the first half of the narrative, from 1935 to 1946. Mercedes was a war nurse and in a rare instance of realism returned to the states in 1944 suffering from "war trauma." Jane Steele, a captain in the WAVES, was introduced in 1951, and Don's sister Mary Winlsow was incorporated in 1952.[8]
Don's primary nemesis was The Scorpion. He opposed Don from the very beginning of the comic strip, often behind the scenes and unseen for long periods of time, as the head of a global, extra-national organization of espionage and sabotage called Scorpia. Time in Tibet allowed him to develop a variety of abilities, including on at least two occasions having his spirit leave his body and permanently possess another new one. He had a daughter, Madame Mask (1937, 1950), who was just as evil but not quite as persistent. The Scorpion favored beautiful associates, including Lotus (1934–36, 1941, 1943) who later reformed; Tasmia (1936–37, 1940, 1946); and Asmara (1940–42). Agents of Scorpia in the 1930s included the Crocodile (1936), Dr. Thor (1937), and the Duchess (1937); in the 1940s, The Duster (1948), the Polecat (1948), and Cold Shivers (1949); and in the 1950s: Half-Dome (1951), Eight Ball (1951), and the Red Vulture (1952). Efforts to create new menaces other than Scorpia were generally short-lived, but included Owl-Eyes (1939, 1949), and clandestine organizations such as The Panther's Claw (1943) and the Clenched Fist (1944).[9]
Legacy
Although created primarily as a Navy recruitment and propaganda tool, the strip received high marks from Coulton Waugh for “excellent suspense, and ingenious, spine-joggling situations.” Ron Goulart credits Don Winslow with "intrigue, spychasing, beautiful women, and villains with names like Dr. Centaur, the Dwarf, and the Scorpion."[7][10]
Comic books
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Following up on the success of the comic strip, reprints of the feature in
Fawcett Comics released the Don Winslow of the Navy comic book with original stories beginning in 1943.[12] The cover of the first issue shows Captain Marvel introducing the character to the readers. This series lasted until 1948, then was revived in 1951, for a total to 69 issues.[13] Winslow was revived again for a final brief time starting in 1955 in reprints published by Charlton Comics.[14]
In other media
Film serials
- Don Winslow of the Navy (1942)
- Don Winslow of the Coast Guard (1943)
Radio program
References
- ^ ISBN 9780472117567.
- ^ ISBN 9781616961541. Retrieved 2 September 2017.
- ^ Sheridan, Martin. Comics and Their Creators. Westport, CT. Hyperion Press Inc. Reprint Ed., 1977. p. 128.
- ^ Lambiek: Leon Beroth
- ^ "Sumner Atherton - Hero-Gram No.4".
- ^ Jordan entry, Who's Who of American Comic Books: 1928–1999. Accessed Oct, 25, 2018.
- ^ a b Waugh, Coulton. The Comics. New York: Luna P., 1974 (original copyright 1947). p.301.
- ^ "Don Winslow of the Navy" by Mark Carlson-Ghost [1] retrieved on 9/30/2017
- ^ Carlson-Ghost, Mark. "Don Winslow of the Navy". Retrieved on 9/30/2017.
- ^ Goulart, Ron. The Funnies. Holbrook MA: Adams Media Corp., 1995. p. 113
- ^ Don Winslow of the Navy at Don Markstein's Toonopedia. Archived from the original on April 10, 2016.
- ISBN 978-1605490892.
- ^ Don Winslow of the Navy (Fawcett Publications) at the Grand Comics Database.
- ^ Grand Comics Database: Don Winslow of the Navy (Charlton Comics) at the Grand Comics Database.