Romance comics explained

Genre:romance
Pub1:Crestwood Publications
Pub2:Fox Feature Syndicate
Pub3:Charlton Comics
Pub4:Fawcett Comics
Pub5:DC Comics
Pub6:Timely Comics
Title1:Young Romance
Title2:My Romance
Title3:My Life
Title4:Sweethearts
Title5:Young Love
Person1:Matt Baker
Person2:Jay Scott Pike
Person3:Alex Toth
Person4:Mike Sekowsky
Person5:Marie Severin
Cat:Romance comics

Romance comics are a genre of comic books that were most popular during the Golden Age of Comics. The market for comics, which had been growing rapidly throughout the 1940s, began to plummet after the end of World War II when military contracts to provide disposable reading matter to servicemen ended. This left many comic creators seeking new markets. In 1947, part of an effort to tap into new adult audiences, the romance comic genre was created by Joe Simon and Jack Kirby with the Crestwood Publications title Young Romance.

History

As World War II ended the popularity of superhero comics diminished, and in an effort to retain readers comic publishers began diversifying more than ever into such genres as war, Western, science fiction, crime, horror and romance comics.[1] The genre took its immediate inspiration from the romance pulps; confession magazines such as True Story; radio soap operas, and newspaper comic strips that focused on love, domestic strife, and heartache, such as Rex Morgan, M.D. and Mary Worth.[2] Teen humor comics had romantic plots before the invention of romance comics.

Simon and Kirby's Young Romance debuted in 1947. In the next 30 years, over 200 issues of the flagship romance comic would be produced.[3]

By 1950, more than 150 romance titles were on the newsstands from Quality Comics, Avon, Lev Gleason Publications, and National (DC Comics).

The DC Comics romance line was initially overseen by Jack Miller, who also wrote many stories.[4] (Later, a number of female editors oversaw DC's romance line, including Zena Brody[5] and Dorothy Woolfolk.)[6] As author Michelle Nolan writes, "National's romance line was remarkably stable and thus must have sold consistently well. Beginning in 1952, ... the company produced Girls' Love Stories, Girls' Romances, and Secret Hearts on a bi-monthly basis through late 1957, when those three titles along with Falling in Love began to appear eight times per year.... The company picked up a fifth romance title, Heart Throbs, ... after Quality Comics left the business in 1956." By 1970, right before the romance market collapsed, DC had seven romance titles.

Fox Feature Syndicate published over two dozen love comics with 17 featuring "My" in the title - My Desire, My Secret, My Secret Affair, et al.

Charlton Comics published a wide line of romance titles, particularly after 1953 when it acquired the Fawcett Comics line, which included Sweethearts, Romantic Secrets, and Romantic Story. Sweethearts was the comics world's first monthly romance title (debuting in 1948), and Charlton continued publishing it until 1973.

Artists known for their work on romance comics during the period included Tony Abruzzo, Matt Baker, Frank Frazetta, Everett Kinstler, Jay Scott Pike, John Prentice, John Romita, Sr., Mike Sekowsky, Leonard Starr, Alex Toth, and Wally Wood.

Decline and Golden Age demise

Following the implementation of the Comics Code in 1954, publishers of romance comics self-censored the content of their publications, making the stories bland and innocent with an emphasis on traditional patriarchial concepts of women's behavior, gender roles, domesticity, and marriage. When the sexual revolution questioned the values promoted in romance comics, along with the decline in comics in general, romance comics began their slow fade. DC Comics, Marvel Comics, and Charlton Comics carried a few romance titles into the middle 1970s, but the genre never regained the level of popularity it once enjoyed. The heyday of romance comics came to an end with the last issues of Young Romance and Young Love in the middle 1970s.[7] [8]

Charlton and DC artist and editor Dick Giordano stated in 2005:"[G]irls simply outgrew romance comics ... [The content was] too tame for the more sophisticated, sexually liberated, women's libbers [who] were able to see nudity, strong sexual content, and life the way it really was in other media. Hand-holding and pining after the cute boy on the football team just didn't do it anymore, and the Comics Code wouldn't pass anything that truly resembled real-life relationships."

Decades later, romance-themed comics made a modest resurgence with Arrow Publications' "My Romance Stories",[9] Dark Horse Comics' manga-style adaptations of Harlequin novels,[10] [11] and long-running serials such as Strangers in Paradise — described by one reviewer as an attempt "to single-handedly update an entire genre with a new, skewed look at relationships and friendships."[12]

In popular culture

Pop artist Roy Lichtenstein derived many of his best-known works from the panels of romance comics:

Notable romance comics

width=250pxTitlewidth=100pxPublisherwidth=50pxIssueswidth=100pxPubl. dateswidth=600pxNotes
A Date with Judy 79 1947–1960 Combined romance with humor
Falling in Love DC 143 1955–1973
First Love Illustrated 90 1949–1963 Harvey's only notable romance comic
Girls' Love Stories DC 180 1949–1973
Girls' Romances DC 160 1950–1971
Heart Throbs Quality/
DC
146 1949–1972 Acquired from Quality in 1957
I Love You 124 1955-1980
Just Married Charlton 114 1958-1976
Love Diary Charlton 102 1958-1976
Love Romances 101 1949-1963
Lovelorn/
Confessions of the Lovelorn
114 1949-1960
Millie the Model Marvel 207 1945-1973 Ostensibly a humor title; only a true romance comic from 1963 to 1967
My Date Comics 4 1947-1948 Simon & Kirby; first humor-romance comic
My Life: True Stories in Pictures 12 1948-1950 Fox's longest-running romance comic — the only one of the company's 17 romance series with the word "My" in the title to last more than 8 issues
Patsy Walker Marvel 124 1945-1965 Ostensibly a humor title; only a true romance comic in 1964–1965
Romantic Adventures/
My Romantic Adventures
138 1949–1964
Romantic Secrets Fawcett/
Charlton
87 1949–1964 Acquired from Fawcett in 1953
Romantic Story Fawcett/
Charlton
130 1949–1973 Acquired from Fawcett in 1954
Secret Hearts DC 153 1949–1971 Published at various times by the National (DC) romance imprints Arleigh Publishing Co./Corp. and Beverly Publishing Co.
Strangers in Paradise Abstract Studio 106 1994-2007
Superman's Girl Friend, Lois Lane DC 137 1958–1974 Ditched the romance angle by c. 1970; eventually merged into The Superman Family
Sweethearts Fawcett/
Charlton
170 1948-1973 First monthly romance comic; acquired from Fawcett in 1954
Teen Confessions Charlton 97 1959-1976
Teen-Age Romances 45 1949-1955
Teen-Age Love Charlton 93 1958-1973
Young Love Crestwood/
DC
199 1947–1977 Acquired from Crestwood in 1963
Young Romance Crestwood/
DC
208 1947–1975 Generally considered the first romance comic, created by Simon & Kirby. Acquired from Crestwood in 1963

Reprints

Comics historian John Benson collected and analyzed St. John Publications' romance comics in Romance Without Tears (Fantagraphics, 2003), focusing on the elusive comics scripter Dana Dutch, and the companion volume Confessions, Romances, Secrets and Temptations: Archer St. John and the St. John Romance Comics (Fantagraphics, 2007). To research the 1950s era of romance comics, Benson interviewed Ric Estrada, Joe Kubert and Leonard Starr, plus several St. John staffers, including editor Irwin Stein, production artist Warren Kremer and editorial assistant Nadine King.

In 2011, an anthology Agonizing Love: The Golden Era of Romance Comics, edited by Michael Barson, was published by Harper Design. In 2012, many of Simon and Kirby's romance comics were reprinted by Fantagraphics in a collection entitled Young Romance: The Best of Simon & Kirby's 1940s-'50s Romance Comics, edited by Michel Gagné.

British romance comics

Romance comics in the United Kingdom also flourished in the mid-1950s with such weekly titles as Mirabelle (Pearson), Picture Romances (Newnes/IPC), Valentine (Amalgamated Press), and Romeo (DC Thomson). All four titles lasted into the 1970s. Other British romance comics included Marilyn (1955–1965), New Glamour (1956–1958), Roxy (1958–1963), Marty (1960–1963), and Serenade (1962–1963); all of which eventually merged into Valentine and Mirabelle (Valentine itself merged into Mirabelle in 1974).

In 1956–1957 DC Thomson launched a line of monthly romance titles: Blue Rosette Romances, Golden Heart Love Stories, Love & Life Library, and Silver Moon Romances. In April 1965, all four titles were merged into the single weekly Star Love Stories title, with one issue per month maintaining the cover logo from the original companion titles.[26] Star Love Stories, which changed its name to Star Love Stories in Pictures in 1976, lasted until 1990.[27]

The photo comic romance titles Photo Love and Photo Secret debuted in 1979 and 1980 respectively. They both eventually merged into another publication.

See also

References

Sources

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Kovacs . George . C. W. . Marshall . 2011 . Classics and Comics . . 109 . 978-0199734191.
  2. Book: Goulart, Ron . 2001 . Great American Comic Books . Publications International, Ltd. . 0-7853-5590-1 . 161,169 - 172.
  3. Book: Mitchell, Claudia A. . Jacqueline Reid-Walsh . 2008 . Girl Culture . Greenwood Press . 508 - 509 . 978-0-313-33908-0.
  4. News: . 77 . Jan 1970.
  5. Web site: Brody, Zena. Who's Who of American Comic Books, 1928–1999.
  6. Web site: Tales From the Code: You've Lost That Loving Feeling. Sergi. Joe. CBLDF.
  7. Web site: January 7, 2001 . Profiles. Romance Comics . The Quarter Bin . March 25, 2010. https://web.archive.org/web/20110416121239/http://www.fortunecity.com/tatooine/niven/142/profiles/pro41.html. Apr 16, 2011.
  8. Web site: Miller, Jenny . 2001 . A Very Brief History of Romance Comics . March 25, 2010.
  9. Web site: Arrow Publications Presents: MyRomanceStory . Arrow Publications LLC . March 25, 2010.
  10. Web site: May 16, 2005 . Press Releases: Harlequin Ginger Blossom Manga . Dark Horse Comics, Inc. . March 25, 2010.
  11. Glazer, Sarah . September 18, 2005 . Manga for Girls . The New York Times . March 25, 2010.
  12. Web site: Cold Cut Distribution Reviews 13 - March 1996 . Coldcut.com . 2010-09-12.
  13. Web site: Secret Hearts #88. June 1963. Grand Comics Database. September 14, 2020.
  14. Secret Hearts 88 (DC Comics, June 1963)
  15. Web site: Lichtenstein kopierade John Romita. Swedish. Rogers Seriemagasin.
  16. Web site: Secret Hearts #88 (June 1963): DC, 1949 Series. Grand Comics Database. Apr 6, 2024.
  17. Tony Abruzzo. Ira Schnapp. Run for Love!. Secret Hearts . 83 . DC Comics. November 1963. 1.
  18. Book: Waldman, Diane . Roy Lichtenstein . 1993 . . 0-89207-108-7 . registration . 118–119.
  19. Book: Arntson, Amy E. Graphic Design Basics . 2006. Cengage Learning. 0-495-00693-9. 165.
  20. Web site: Secret Hearts 83 (a). June 11, 2013 . Lichtenstein Foundation.
  21. Web site: Barsalou. David. In the Car. Deconstructing Roy Lichtenstein. 2000. September 14, 2020. Flickr.
  22. Web site: DRAWING FOR OH, JEFF... : ... Original Artist: Tony Abruzzo. Deconstructing Roy Lichtenstein. David. Barsalou. December 4, 2022. September 5, 2000. Flickr.
  23. Web site: Ohhh...Alright.... May 20, 2012. Lichtenstein Foundation.
  24. Web site: Barsalou. David. Sleeping Girl. Deconstructing Roy Lichtenstein (2000). 5 September 2000 . September 14, 2020. Flickr.
  25. Web site: Sleeping Girl. May 5, 2012. Lichtenstein Foundation.
  26. https://www.comics.org/series/71421/ "Star Love Stories,"
  27. https://www.comics.org/series/77224/ Star Love Stories in Pictures entry