Heroines Showcase #17
This was a pleasant surprise. Back in my fan days I was one of those who disdained The Heroine Addict (that was really its original title...read the indicia!) as a hangout for heavy-breathing Good Girl Art fans, sometimes known as the Cape and Cleavage Crowd. Judging by one of the letters of comment the fanzine did have that "slightly fetishistic outlook" earlier but by this issue it had morphed into a perfectly respectable old-school fanzine. The quality of the articles varied but I genuinely enjoyed reading the issue.
Hey Crash - You get a gold star for reading the whole thing and another star for having heard of it before. I thought it was too obscure for anyone to know about
Some of the fan art is probably still on the 'good girl' side, so it must have been raunchier back in the day. This was the only issue on the CB+ site, so it was easy to pick which one to use
As we know, this essay was just the beginning of Trina's researches into women comic creators. She's uncovered a lot of important history during her career.
Is this a good time to confess that I'd never heard of Trina Robbins? (Please don't stone me.) But I have done a quick search and realise that I really must look into her art more. I did find out a fun fact that not everyone might know. She is apparently the first of the three 'ladies of the canyon' mentioned in Joni Mitchell's song and album of the same name. That is one of my all-time favourite albums, but I had to go back and remind myself of the lyrics. The first verse is:
"Trina wears her wampum beads
She fills her drawing book with line
Sewing lace on widows' weeds
And filigree on leaf and vine
Vine and leaf are filigree
And her coat's a secondhand one
Trimmed with antique luxury
She is a lady of the canyon"
Then in the last verse when Joni is summing up the three women, she says:
"Trina takes her paints and her threads
And she weaves a pattern all her own"
Joni Mitchell was also a brilliant artist in her own right and did a lot of her own album covers. There are images of hundreds of her artworks on this link from her website. (But I digress).
https://jonimitchell.com/paintings/ I was never a fan of the Superman Family, so the Supergirl article was all news to me. There's something a bit dodgy about the relationship between Supergirl, Biron the Centaur, and Comet the Super-Horse. It sounds like something William Marston would have dreamed up.
I watched a doco on comic books that had a whole episode on Marston and Wonder Woman. I was never able to look at those early Wonder Woman comics again in the same way. The Golden Lasso takes on a whole new meaning. I don't think I've read any of the early Supergirl comics, but she's had a big upsurge in popularity in recent years, maybe due to the TV show and the animated show. The young girl I helped with reading really loved the 'Superhero High' chapter books that feature a lot of the heroines and antiheroines as teenagers (including Wonder Woman, Batgirl, Supergirl, Harley Quinn, Poison Ivy and others). Her favourite was Supergirl. But though the stories are probably aimed at pre-teen girls, I wonder if Supergirl is drawn for boys? There is no way she can fight crime in that boob tube and micro mini skirt - LOL
A couple of years ago, I read the graphic novel 'Supergirl: Being Super' written by Mariko Tamaki and illustrated by Joelle Jones. Great art and story. I looked around to try to work out which other Supergirl graphic novel follows on, and apparently there isn't one. Aargghh! Darn you, DC and your lousy continuity!
I'll look forward to your comments on the others.
Cheers
QQ