“Who was the blonde gun-moll who fought the cops all the way to protect her worthless man?”
Whoever she was… she looks mean!
True Crime v1#3, Magazine Village
The ubiquitous cover girl of the Golden Age of comics!
“Who was the blonde gun-moll who fought the cops all the way to protect her worthless man?”
Whoever she was… she looks mean!
True Crime v1#3, Magazine Village
These crime comics can be so formulaic. But sometimes the characters have great chemistry.
Dynamic Comics #11, Chesler
As a teenager, the Blonde in a Red Dress had trained her dog to screen out prospective suitors.
Girls Crystal 528 (UK)
Did “Indiana” have a sister named “Cairo”?
Miss Cairo Jones #1, Croydon
The Blonde in a Red Dress takes a nap while her jungle friend plays a game of whack-a-mole(man)
Prize Comics #46, Prize
Not sure why the bamboo walls of the hut are red, but it allowed our heroine to try avoiding her captor’s attention by blending into the background using the inherent stealth camouflage of her Red Dress.
Fight Comics #20, Fiction House
“30 Great Features”, “128 Pages”, and TWO cover appearances for the Blonde in a Red Dress. She’s keeping busy!
All Great Comics 1945 Edition, by Fox Features
The angles were so odd in this action scene that the Red Dress itself got dizzy and wound up clinging to our heroine for support.
Key Comics #1, Consolidated
An afternoon spent “hanging out” with a friend goes wildly out of hand.
Zip Comics #34, MLJ
The Blonde in Red, Yellow Nazis, Green Hornet, and… a Black Kato?! It’s a multi-media rainbow of multi-colored dangling danger!
Green Hornet #15, Harvey