Showing posts with label Young Romance. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Young Romance. Show all posts

Wednesday, November 7, 2018

YOUNG ROMANCE "My Father, My Love!"

If that titilating title didn't grab your attention...
...then you're reading the wrong blog!
(Just keep in mind this is a Comics Code-approved story...)
Written and penciled by Ric Estrada and inked by Vince Colletta, this scintiliating story from DC's Young Romance #163 (1969/1970) was not the cover-featured tale for that issue!
(If I was the editor, it sure as hell would have been!)
When the tale was reprinted several years later, it was not only "updated" by redrawing the women's hair and clothing, but the title and opening page were rewritten as well!
 Next Week:
You'll Cry Your Eyes Out If You Miss It!
And now a word from our sponsor...
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True Love Comics Tales!
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Wednesday, September 19, 2018

YOUNG ROMANCE "See Yourself as He Sees You"

Here's a totally-surreal tale from the editor who created the romance genre in comics...
...which appeared in the next-to-last issue of this series!
In 1947, Joe Simon (with Jack Kirby) created Young Romance, the first romance comic, for Prize Comics...which sold the title to DC when the publisher went out of business in 1963.
In 1973, DC returned Simon to the editorship of Young Romance as of #196.
Joe attempted to "update" the title by dropping all the traditional "romance artists" from new material, assigning edgier, experimental types like the ones who illustrated this short from #207 (1975), Jerry Grandenetti and Craig Flessel.
It didn't work, and, with sales dropping, the book (which had gone bi-monthly) ended with the next issue, #208.
Next Week:
We're Not Sure Yet Exactly What We'll Present!
But...
You'll Cry Your Eyes Out if You Miss It!
And now a word from out sponsor..
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Young Romance
And
Young Romance
Volume 2

Wednesday, February 28, 2018

GIRLS' LOVE STORIES "Revenge!"

We wind up Black History Month with one of the few Black romance tales by DC...
...which also has a rather unique history behind it!
In our entry about Fawcett's 1950s title Negro Romance (HERE), we mentioned that the actual stories were rather generic, with the characters being illustrated as Black rather than White being the only difference.
This John Rosenberger tale from DC's Girls Love Stories #170 (1972) proves that point, since it's a visually-modified version of this story...
...from Young Romance #151 (1967-68)!
In fact, the original tale was the cover feature!
While the fashions, hairstyles, and the leads' facial features were modified, except for a couple of captions, the script stayed exactly the same!
Even the characters' names (Terry and Rich) were unchanged!
(Credit where credit is due: the amazing comics historian Jaque Nodell pointed out the link between these two stories several years ago HERE!)
But the saga doesn't end there!
The story was re-presented one more time, in Young Love #111 (1974)...
This time with the usual updating of hairstyles and fashions...but very little modification of the original script and Terry and Rich stayed Caucasian!
Want to see the two other versions of this torrid tale?
Let us know!
Next Week:
We don't know what we'll present..yet,
but we can guarantee that...
You'll Cry Your Eyes Out if You Miss It!
And now a word from our sponsor...
Please Support True Love Comics Tales
Visit Amazon and Order...

Tuesday, September 12, 2017

The Love Poems of Len Wein

The late writer Len Wein was best known as the co-creator of the All-New X-Men...
Secret Hearts #148 (1970) art by Gray Morrow
...including Storm, NightCrawler, Colossus, and particularly, Wolverine!
But before he hit the comics equivalent of the motherlode, Len took writing assignments in a variety of genres, including romance!
And, when DC romance titles needed poems on their intro/contents pages, the then-neophyte scribe was eager to try his hand...
Secret Hearts #146 (1970) Art by Jay Scott Pike
Secret Hearts #147 (1970) Art by Jay Scott Pike
Secret Hearts #150 (1970) Art by Gray Morrow
Young Romance #170 (1971) Artist Unknown
This last one is more an intro than a poem.
 Next Week:
We don't know what we'll publish...yet!
But, You'll Cry Your Eyes Out If You Miss It!
And now a word from our sponsor...
Please Support
True Love Comics Tales!
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Wednesday, March 22, 2017

TENDER LOVE STORIES & YOUNG ROMANCE "Fashion Plate"

When is a contemporary love story not a contemporary love story?
When it was "contemporary" a decade earlier!
You'd think a tale heavily-oriented about current fashion would have been written and drawn, well, currently!
But this story published in Skywald's Tender Love Stories #4 (1971) wasn't scripted and illustrated in 1971!
It was created almost a decade earlier...in 1963!
Published in Prize's Young Romance #124 (1963), the original version illustrated by Bob Powell presents the male ingenue first as a leather-clad biker, then as a preppie, and finally as an average Joe.
The reworked version, inked by Bill Everett, presents the guy first as a leisure-suited layabout, then a double-breasted suit-clad dandy, and finally, again, as an average Joe.
You'll also note in both cases, Bob starts out with extreme hairstyles, then gets trimmed as the tale goes on!
Of course, looking back on these tales decades later, both stories seem like "period pieces"!
And, yes, we did wear clothes like you see here in both those time periods!
They were considered "cutting edge" then.

"Why did they do it?" you may ask...
With sales falling on most non-superhero genres in the late 1960s (including Western and war as well as romance), this "updated reprinting" became a common practice on romance comics until the genre all-but died out in the late 1970s.
Publishers would do a new 8-20 page lead story and use retouched reprints to fill out the book.
Editors felt that:
a) the plots were relatively timeless.
b) "updating" existing art was cheaper than totally-redrawing the story. 
c) artists were better-utilized doing stuff that sold better (like superheroes).
d) the audience for romance comics, unlike superhero comics, changed every 5-6 years anyway, and wouldn't notice the old plots!
Next Week...
We Don't Know What We're Presenting...Yet!
But You'll Cry Your Eyes Out if You Miss It!
And now a word from our sponsor!
Please Support True Love Comics Tales by Visiting Amazon and Ordering...

Wednesday, February 22, 2017

YOUNG ROMANCE "Full Hands, Empty Heart" Conclusion

Art by Bob Oksner and Frank Giacoia
...Nurse Phyllis Carter and Doctor Allan Tate bond over working together in the ER, and a romance develops between the medical professionals.
But it's a romance with a complication the medical professionals never thought they'd have to deal with...
Wait.
The doctor she's working with has just been murdered in front of her!
Even if she wasn't romantically-involoved with him...
They can't let her sit down and rest?
She's clearly in shock!
I wouldn't want her near patients in her present condition!
Plus, the police won't want to talk to her as a witness to the murder?
Speaking of that...has anybody restrained Johnny?
Written by Robert Kanigher, penciled by John Rosenberger and inked by Vince Colletta, this cover-featured story from DC's Young Romance #194 (1973) tries to jam a legitimate moral into the last few panels instead of giving it an extra page to play out in a more coherent manner.
Editor/writer Robert Kanigher was the most vocal proponent of racial equality in the DC editorial "Old Guard" of the 1950s-70s, scripting numerous anti-racist stories as well as introducing several Black characters into the DC Comics universe including...
...Nubia, the second ongoing character to bear the Wonder Woman title, as well as scripting this somewhat infamous Lois Lane story...
Though he meant well, Kanigher was rather heavy-handed, sometimes sacrificing plot logic (like the ending of "Full Hands, Empty Heart") to make a moral point.

Note: On some pages Phyllis (and other Black characters') skin is gray/purple and on some it's brown.
That's because on the pages showing her as gray, the color separators used the wrong combination of yellow, red (magenta) and blue (cyan) screens.
When the story was reprinted in Simon & Schuster's Heart Throbs: Best of DC Romance Comics (1979) trade paperback, the only editorial change was to correct the Black skin tones.
All the other coloring remained the same.
Next Week...
We Don't Know What We're Presenting...Yet!
But You'll Cry Your Eyes Out if You Miss It!
And Now a Word from Our Sponsor!
featuring the cover art from all four HTF issues
on kool kollectibles!