Dale Messick

Categories: Did You Know|Published On: March 17, 2006|Views: 77|

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Golden Age female comic strip pioneer Dale Messick lived to be 98 years
old, passing away just last April in Penngrove, California.
In the near-century she spent among us, she contributed one of the most
prolific comic strip heroine stories of all time: the Brenda Starr series.
Born in South Bend, Indiana in 1906, Messick’s career began illustrating
for greeting card companies. Her drawings caught the attention of publishing
assistant, Mollie Slott, who recovered Messick’s strip from an office trash can
and convinced her boss, Joseph Patterson to take Brenda Starr, Reporter
on as a Sunday strip. The comic–which prior to publication featured the
trademark redheaded heroine as a bandit instead of a journalist, ran in 250
newspapers at its peak in the 1950s.
Messick is said to have experienced quite a bit of opposition as a woman
trying to break into comics during the first half of the 20th century, but her
work–once finally published–spoke for itself, earning the fascination and
intrigue of male and female readers alike. Brenda’s glamorous look is said to
have been patterned after screen star Rita Hayworth, but Messick often referred
to her creation as her “alter-ego,” in terms of personality.
In addition to the Brenda Starr comic strip, Messick expanded the franchise
by drawing paper cut-out dolls to accompany her Sunday comic. She also pioneered
the multicultural paper-doll market, creating an African American paper doll,
Lona Night, in 1948.
The U.S. Postal Service gave Brenda Starr a commemorative stamp in 1995.
She was the heroine of a movie serial in 1945, a television movie in 1976 and a
feature starring Brooke Shields as the lead in 1989.
Messick received the National Cartoonist Society’s Milton Caniff Lifetime
Achievement Award in 1997. She drew and wrote a single-panel strip “Granny
Glamour” until age 92. Following a stroke in 1998, she was unable to continue
drawing and never fully recovered.

Dale Messick

Categories: Did You Know|Published On: March 17, 2006|Views: 77|

Share:

Golden Age female comic strip pioneer Dale Messick lived to be 98 years
old, passing away just last April in Penngrove, California.
In the near-century she spent among us, she contributed one of the most
prolific comic strip heroine stories of all time: the Brenda Starr series.
Born in South Bend, Indiana in 1906, Messick’s career began illustrating
for greeting card companies. Her drawings caught the attention of publishing
assistant, Mollie Slott, who recovered Messick’s strip from an office trash can
and convinced her boss, Joseph Patterson to take Brenda Starr, Reporter
on as a Sunday strip. The comic–which prior to publication featured the
trademark redheaded heroine as a bandit instead of a journalist, ran in 250
newspapers at its peak in the 1950s.
Messick is said to have experienced quite a bit of opposition as a woman
trying to break into comics during the first half of the 20th century, but her
work–once finally published–spoke for itself, earning the fascination and
intrigue of male and female readers alike. Brenda’s glamorous look is said to
have been patterned after screen star Rita Hayworth, but Messick often referred
to her creation as her “alter-ego,” in terms of personality.
In addition to the Brenda Starr comic strip, Messick expanded the franchise
by drawing paper cut-out dolls to accompany her Sunday comic. She also pioneered
the multicultural paper-doll market, creating an African American paper doll,
Lona Night, in 1948.
The U.S. Postal Service gave Brenda Starr a commemorative stamp in 1995.
She was the heroine of a movie serial in 1945, a television movie in 1976 and a
feature starring Brooke Shields as the lead in 1989.
Messick received the National Cartoonist Society’s Milton Caniff Lifetime
Achievement Award in 1997. She drew and wrote a single-panel strip “Granny
Glamour” until age 92. Following a stroke in 1998, she was unable to continue
drawing and never fully recovered.