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Blonde Phantom

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Alter ego
  
Louise Grant Mason

Creators
  
Notable aliases
  
Louise Mason, Weezie

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Created by
  
Stan Lee (writer)Syd Shores (artist)

Team affiliations
  
All-Winners SquadInvaders"Avengers" (1959)

Abilities
  
High-level athleteSkilled hand-to-hand combatantFine markswomanExcellent secretary

First appearance
  
All Select Comics #11 (Fall 1946)

Affiliations
  
Similar
  
Sun Girl, Namora, Golden Girl, Destroyer, Black Widow (C

Blonde phantom 13 spring 1947 burning witness comic book


The Blonde Phantom (Louise Grant Mason) is a fictional masked crime fighter appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. Created for Marvel predecessor Timely Comics, she first appeared in All Select Comics #11 (cover-dated Fall 1946), during the 1940s period fans and historians call the Golden Age of Comic Books. The character was ranked 98th in Comics Buyer's Guide's "100 Sexiest Women in Comics" list.

Contents

Blonde Phantom The Blonde Phantom

Blonde phantom 12 winter 1946 7 scourge of the spider man comic book


Publication history

Blonde Phantom Blonde Phantom Character Comic Vine

As superheroes began to fade out of fashion in the post-war era, comic book publishers scrambled to explore new types of stories, characters, and audiences. In an attempt to appeal to young female readers, comics companies began introducing some of the first significant superheroines since Wonder Woman. Those of Marvel Comics' 1940s predecessor, Timely Comics, included Golden Girl, Miss America, Namora, Sun Girl, and Venus, and its teen-humor star Millie the Model. Other companies' included Fox Comics' revival of Quality Comics' Phantom Lady; and DC's Black Canary.

Blonde Phantom Blonde Phantom 19 Cover Image

The creator of the Blonde Phantom is disputed. Don Markstein's Toonopedia says the character was created by writer-editor Stan Lee and artist Syd Shores, but Al Sulman claimed to have created the character during his time as script editor for Timely Comics: "Wonder Woman was popular, so Stan [Lee] thought we should have a heroine, too. So I created a character called 'The Blonde Phantom', and I wrote those strips myself." The Blonde Phantom debuted in All Select Comics #11 (Fall 1946), which became Blonde Phantom Comics the following issue. The series lasted a little over two years (from #12–22, Winter 1946 to March 1949), during which time the crime fighter also appeared as a backup feature in:

Blonde Phantom The Blonde Phantom II

  • Marvel Mystery Comics #84–91 (Oct. 1947 – April 1949)
  • All Winners Comics #1 (Aug. 1948)
  • Sub-Mariner Comics #25–28 & 30 (Spring – Oct. 1948 & Feb. 1949)
  • all three issues of Blackstone the Magician (#2–4, May–Sept. 1948)
  • Namora #2 (Oct. 1948)
  • Sun Girl #2–3 (Oct.-Dec. 1948).

  • Blonde Phantom Blonde Phantom Character Comic Vine

    The character was the province of no one artist, and aside from originator Shores, her adventures in this wide variety of comics were pencilled by Vince Alascia, Ken Bald, Allen Bellman, Carl Burgos, Vernon Henkel, Mike Sekowsky, Ed Winiarski, the pseudonymous Charles Nicholas, and others. When not inking themselves, the pencilers were embellished by inkers including Al Avison, Jack Binder, and Harry Sahle.

    Blonde Phantom Comics changed titles and formats completely to become the anthological romance comic Lovers with issue #23 (May 1949).

    Concurrent Blonde Phantom

    Comics historian Jess Nevins notes that the Timely Comics teen-humor character Millie Collins wore a mask and veil and posed as the "Blonde Phantom" for a cosmetics company's publicity campaign in a story in Millie the Model #2 (Oct. 1946), published near the same time as the superheroine Blonde Phantom's debut in All-Select Comics #11 (Fall 1946). Acknowledging the shared Marvel Universe, Nevins writes that the famous model's stunt "perhaps inspired Louise Grant to put on a costume and fight crime".

    Revival

    The character's civilian identity, Louise Mason, was reintroduced in The Sensational She-Hulk #2 (June 1989). Two issues later, she was revealed to be the retired former superhero. Mason remained a series cast-member through the final issue, #60 (Feb. 1994). She was featured in flashback adventures in All Select Comics 70th Anniversary Special (Feb. 2009) and the five-issue miniseries Avengers 1959, beginning with issue #1 (Dec. 2011).

    Origin and Golden Age adventures

    Louise Grant, born in Hoboken, New Jersey, was secretary to private detective Mark Mason. Enamored with her boss and wanting to help him break cases, she surreptitiously donned a black domino mask and a sexy, skintight, slit-leg red evening gown and high heels, and ventured out at night fighting crime. Highly athletic and seemingly trained in martial arts, the Blonde Phantom also carried a .45-caliber pistol. In a distaff echo of Superman and Lois Lane, Mason had a crush on the Blonde Phantom, but not on Louise. At an unspecified point, the Blonde Phantom fought alongside the All-Winners Squad superhero team for an adventure.

    Modern Age

    Louise Grant had left crimefighting to marry her employer, Mark Mason, in 1949 and taking his last name. She gave birth to their daughter Wanda and, later, to son Earl. After her husband's death, she began working as a legal secretary for district attorney Blake Tower in the 1989–1994 series The Sensational She-Hulk, acting as the general voice-of-reason for both Tower and Jennifer Walters / She-Hulk.

    Mason would often find herself more or less willingly pulled into the She-Hulk's surreal adventures, and occasionally vice versa. They would confront many menaces, from Stilt-Man in issue #4 (Aug. 1989) to a town where stepping out of line, even swearing, was fatally punished. Mason would even accompany She-Hulk into outer space, where the pair become allies of the space-faring hero Razorback and his compatriots U.S. Archer and Al the alien. After being taken prisoner by the subterranean ruler the Mole Man, she was restored to a more youthful version of herself by a mysterious chemical process in issue #33 (Nov. 1991).

    Mason, affectionately nicknamed "Weezi", began a romantic relationship with Jennifer's father, Morris Walters in #36 (Feb. 1992). Mason later found herself trading physical stature and powers with a none-too-pleased She-Hulk in issue #48–49 (Feb.-March 1993), becoming so enamored with her new form and abilities that she only changed back when Morris revealed he wanted Weezi the way she had been.

    Powers and abilities

    The Blonde Phantom had no superhuman powers. She was an athletic woman, a skilled hand-to-hand combatant, and a fine markswoman with the conventional handgun she carried. She also had excellent secretarial skills, as the secretary for the Mark Mason Detective Agency, and later as the secretary of New York City District Attorney Blake Tower.

    Phantom Blonde

    Louise's daughter, Wanda Louise Mason, introduced in The Sensational She-Hulk #21 (Nov. 1990), briefly followed her mother's crime-fighter legacy, becoming the costumed Phantom Blonde two issues later, in a story by writer Steve Gerber and penciler Buzz Dixon. She was later being considered a "potential recruit" for the US government's superhero-training program, the Initiative.

    Other versions

    The Louise Mason version of Blonde Phantom appears as a recurring character in Marvel Adventures Spider-Man and its follow-up series, Spider-Man Marvel Adventures, both published as part of the young-readers Marvel Adventures imprint, taking place in a non-canonical alternate reality from mainstream Marvel continuity. Here, she is portrayed as a famed private detective who often works as a confidant to Spider-Man and his girlfriend Sophia "Chat" Sanduval.

    References

    Blonde Phantom Wikipedia