Blonde Phantom

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Blonde_Phantom an entity of type: Thing

The Blonde Phantom (Louise Grant Mason) es un personaje de ficción publicado por Marvel Comics la cual era una luchadora enmascarada contra el crimen. Creada por el guionista-editor Stan Lee y el dibujante Syd Shores para el predecesor de Marvel, Timely Comics, apareció por primera vez en #11 (Fall 1946), durante el periodo de la década de 1940 que es llamada Golden Age of Comic Books. El personaje se colocó en el puesto 98 en la lista "Mujeres Más sexys de los cómics" de .​ rdf:langString
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 heroine was so well received that the next issue was retitled The Blonde Phantom. The series continued to feature her until issue #22 (March 1949). She also appeared in backup stories in many other Timely comics; in Superhero Comics of the Golden Age, Mike Benton observes that "for a few months in 1948, readers could find her in seven titles on the newsstand". rdf:langString
rdf:langString Blonde Phantom
rdf:langString Blonde Phantom
rdf:langString Blonde Phantom
xsd:integer 3665269
xsd:integer 1120806217
rdf:langString Louise Mason
rdf:langString Weezie
rdf:langString Cover detail, The Steranko History of Comics 2. Art by Jim Steranko.
rdf:langString All Select Comics #11
rdf:langString Human
rdf:langString 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 heroine was so well received that the next issue was retitled The Blonde Phantom. The series continued to feature her until issue #22 (March 1949). She also appeared in backup stories in many other Timely comics; in Superhero Comics of the Golden Age, Mike Benton observes that "for a few months in 1948, readers could find her in seven titles on the newsstand". Louise Grant is a secretary at the Mark Mason Detective Agency, and secretly in love with her boss. When he is on a case, Louise takes off her glasses and lets her hair down, becoming the glamorous masked hero, rescuing him from danger in a floor-length evening gown. In a gender reverse to the famous Superman/Lois Lane dynamic, Mark is in love with the Blonde Phantom, and has no interest in the mousy secretary back at the office. In The Supergirls, Mike Madrid writes: "Once again, a capable woman hid behind a meek persona and only let her hair down, literally, to come to the aid of a man who completely ignored her unless she assumed a disguise. In a 1947 story entitled "I Hate Myself", Louise even dreams that Mark finally confesses his love for her, only to have the Blonde Phantom persona appear and steal him away". Louise returned in Modern Age comics as a sidekick for The Sensational She-Hulk, from 1989 to 1994.
rdf:langString The Blonde Phantom (Louise Grant Mason) es un personaje de ficción publicado por Marvel Comics la cual era una luchadora enmascarada contra el crimen. Creada por el guionista-editor Stan Lee y el dibujante Syd Shores para el predecesor de Marvel, Timely Comics, apareció por primera vez en #11 (Fall 1946), durante el periodo de la década de 1940 que es llamada Golden Age of Comic Books. El personaje se colocó en el puesto 98 en la lista "Mujeres Más sexys de los cómics" de .​
rdf:langString Blonde Phantom
rdf:langString *Skilled hand-to-hand combatant *Skilled markswoman *High-level athlete *Excellent secretary
rdf:langString Louise Grant Mason
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 18318

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