Category Archives: Mandy

Mandy Annual 1997

Picture Stories

  • Penny’s Place (Pages: 5-12) [Art: Maria Dembilio]
  • Gemma (Pages: 17-22) [Art: Veronica Weir]
  • Stage School (Pages: 23-29) [Art: Juliana Buch]
  • Pony Surprise (Pages: 30-32) [Art: Ian Kennedy]
  • Copy Cat [2 parts] (Pages: 49-53, 97-101) [Art: Edmond Ripoll]
  • Nurses (Pages: 58-64) [Art: Claude Berridge]
  • The Ghost (Pages: 65-69) [Art: Mario Capaldi]
    • Reworking with new art from Judy 1990 (The Ghost of Armley Fell)
  • Dreams (Pages: 70-75) [Art: Ron Lumsden]
  • The Lucky Horseshoe (Pages: 76-78) [Art: Cesar Spadari]
  • Christmas Wish (Pages: 106-111) [Art: Maria Dembilio]

Text Stories

  • The Bridesmaid (Pages: 47-48)
  • The Guy for Rachel (Pages: 88)
  • A Special Date (Pages: 121)

Photo Stories

  • Luck of the Draw (Pages: 13-16)
  • Coincidences (Pages: 116-119)

Features

  • Photos (cover girls) (Pages: 2-3, 126-127)
  • Pin-Up (Pages: 33, 81, 96, 120)
  • Hunky Guys Puzzles (Pages: 34-37)
  • Crunchy ‘n’ Munchy (Pages: 38-39)
  • Make ‘n’ Do (Pages: 40-41)
  • Calendar [3 parts] (Pages: 42-43, 86-87, 124-125)
  • Funny Fax! (Pages: 44-45)
  • This is Me! (Pages: 46)
  • The Problem Is… (Pages: 54-55)
  • Who Needs Mates? (Pages: 56-57)
  • The Problem is… (Pages: 79-80)
  • TV Puzzles (Pages: 82-85)
  • Make ‘n’ Do (Pages: 89)
  • Furry Friends (Pages: 90-91)
  • Pig Out! (Pages: 92-93)
  • Figure It Out (Pages: 94-95)
  • Christmas Puzzles (Pages: 102-105)
  • Puzzle Answers (Pages: 112)
  • Well Made Up! (Pages: 113-115)
  • The Stars Foretell (Pages: 122-123)

Mandy Annual 1995

Picture Stories

  • Penny’s Place (Pages:5-12) [Art: Edmond Ripoll]
  • The Visitor (Pages:13-16) [Art: Ana Rodriguez]
  • Memory (Pages:17-23) [Art: Eduardo Feito]
  • Holiday Magic (Pages:24-28) [Art: Guy Peeters]
  • A Friend for Keeps (Pages:29-32) [Art: Leslie Branton]
  • Stage School (Pages:49-55) [Art: Juliana Buch]
  • The Honourable S.J. (Pages:56-64) [Art: Paddy Brennan]
  • Dream Boy (Pages:65-70) [Art: Julio Bosch]
  • Hold that Tiger! (Pages:71-76) [Art: Wilf Street]
  • The Boy Zone (Pages:77-80) [Art: Norman Lee]
  • Classmates (Pages:97-104) [Art: Maria Dembilio]
  • The Gift Horse (Pages:105-111) [Art: Carlos Freixas]
  • Nurses (Pages:113-118) [Art: Claude Berridge]
  • M & J (Pages:119-121) [Art: Peter Wilkes]
  • Skeleton Corner (Pages: 122-125) [Art: Mike Dorey]

Features

  • Animals (Pages:2-3)
  • M & J Mag (Pages:33)
  • Calendar [3 parts] (Pages: 34-35, 46-47, 94-95)
  • Life at London Zoo (Pages:36-37)
  • Simply the Best (Pages:38)
  • Puzzles ‘n’ Things/ Trivia Puzzles (Pages:39-40)
  • Ha! Ha! (Pages:41)
  • Take That Quiz (Pages:42)
  • Mini Squares (Pages:43)
  • Crosswords (Pages:44)
  • Pin Up (Pages:45, 86, 96)
  • Make ‘n’ Do (Pages:48)
  • M & J Mag (Pages:81)
  • Starscopes (Pages:82-83)
  • Make ‘n’ Do (Pages:84-85)
  • Puzzles on the Box (Pages:87)
  • Name Game / Alphabet Quiz (Pages:88-89)
  • Ready, Steady, Go! (Pages:90-91)
  • Do They Differ? (Pages:92)
  • Make ‘n’ Do (Pages:93)
  • Puzzle Answers (Pages:112)
  • Wish Upon a Star (Pages:126-127)

Mandy Annual 1993

Picture Stories

  • Making Faces [5 parts] (Pages: 4-11, 49-53, 64-69, 75-80, 113-117) [Art: Wilf Street]
  • Sophie’s Last Surprise – Spring story (Pages: 9-12)
  • It’s Magic! (Pages: 13-16) [Art: Pamela Chapeau]
  • A Friend for Flora (Pages: 17-29) [Art: Claude Berridge]
  • Wanda’s Weather Stone (Pages: 30-32)
  • Three’s a Crowd (Pages: 33-37) [Art: Carmen Barbara]
  • Gwen’s Goats (Pages: 42-44) [Art: George Martin]
  • My Gran’s Next Door (Pages: 45-48)
  • Parents for Polly – Summer story (Pages: 54-58) [Art: Tom Hurst]
  • The Greys and the Greens (Pages: 59-63) [Art: Terry Aspin]
  • Lucy and the Leaves – Autumn story (Pages: 70-74) [Art: Leslie Branton]
  • Dear Diary (Pages: 83-85) [Art: Giorgio Letteri]
  • Valda – Traveller in Time (Pages: 88-94) [Art: Dudley Wynne]
  • Candy and Her Cart Horse (Pages: 97-106) [Art: Vernoica Weir]
  • Peg in the Middle (Pages: 109-112)
  • Glenda the Guide (Pages: 118-120)
  • Susan and the Snowman- Winter story (Pages: 121-125) [Art: Bert Hill]
  • M & J (Pages: 126-127) [Art: Peter Wilkes]

Text Stories

  • Puppet Love (Pages: 38-41)
  • Time to say Goodbye (Pages: 81-82) [Art: Claude Berridge]
  • In the Saddle! (Pages: 86-87) [Art: Claude Berridge]
  • Just Jennifer (Pages: 95-96) [Art: Claude Berridge]
  • History Rules Ok (Pages: 107-108) [Art: Claude Berridge]

 

(Click on thumbnails for bigger picture)

Glenda the Guide

Plot

A humour strip about a girl guide, Glenda Gardner, as she tries to earn her badges, usually with some disastrous results.

Glenda

Notes

Appeared

  • Glenda the Guide – Mandy: #1251 (5 January 1991)  – #1269  (11 May 1991) [no episodes in issues: #1256, #1260, #1262 & #1264 ]
  • Glenda the Guide –  M&J: #01 (18 May 1991) – #06 (22 June 1991)
  • Glenda the Guide –  M&J: #27 (16 November 1991)

Other Appearances:

  • Glenda the Guide – Mandy Annual 1993

The Girlhood of Valda [1969]

  • The Girlhood of Valda -Mandy: #139 (13 September 1969) – #163 (28 Feb. 1970)
  • Reprinted – Mandy:  #396 (17 August 1974) – #420 (01 February 1975)
  • Reprinted- Mandy:  #1034 (08 November 1986)  – #1058  (25 April 1987)
  • Reprinted (abridged) – Lucky Charm: #8 (1980)
  • Art: Dudley Wynne

Notes

  • See this post for full list of Valda stories

Plot

This is the origin story of Valda set in the late 1700s in Europe. A man has become a leader of a rebellion against a cruel Archduke, but the rebellion is crushed and he along with his wife and baby daughter are forced to flee for their lives. They reach the river which they hope to cross to the neighbouring state, but the Archduke’s men catch up with them. The man stays behind to delay them, while his wife and child cross the river. He is quickly killed and they shoot his wife while she is still in the water, but the baby’s basket is carried further down the river by the current. An old gipsy woman, Dorcas, has seen the events and rescues the child and returns the basket upturned in order to mislead the soldiers. When Dorcas is safely at the other side of the river, she performs a naming ceremony and on the water the dust forms the name Valda.

girlhood_valda_01

Time passes and Valda grows into a young girl. Dorcas has taught her many things, such as the uses of herbs, communicating with animals and she is preparing to share  with Valda her great secret. She sets Valda tests to prove her worthiness, including tasks to help an uprising against the Archduke (continuing in her parents footsteps). When Valda goes to an inn to pass a message onto a rebel Franz Kessler, she notices the inn was built in 1587, nearly 200 years ago but Dorcas said that she remembered it being built. She manages to give the message to Kessler and help him escape some guards. They hide under Dorcas’s caravan, and Valda observes that Dorcas must have hidden fugitives in the past as there are supports built under the caravan, just for that purpose. Valda and Dorcas help the rebellion and the Archduke flees his home. Afterwards they help the injured with herbs and potions. One man accuses them of using black arts and killing his brother, who Dorcas put into a deep sleep. Kessler squashes the growing mob and when the man wakes up healed the brother apologise. As they leave Valda wonders if they will the people live in peace and happiness. Dorcas says Kessler will do his best but as they just saw people are flawed and she fears that the people and descendants will have more trials and sorrow to face. And she comments that this is something that Valda may see in the centuries to come.

They have more adventures such as saving a prince from his murderous cousin, Count Ludwig. The Count falls down the stairs after a mere look from Dorcas, she says his own guilt destroyed him. By this time Dorcas has shown Valda that she carries with her the Water of Life that restores her strength, but the bottle is empty and they must travel up the mountains to refill it. They meet a storm along the way and Dorcas is too weak to carry on. Valda finds the cave inside a rock shaped like a wolves head has the water of life in its mouth. But it spurts flames. Valda manages to get to the water between bursts. She brings it back to Dorcas to restore her. Later they make camp and Dorcas throws some strange powder on the fire so she can read the mists and see what is in store for Valda, she sees the future of people riding in horseless carriages and soaring in the sky, there will  be many wonderful things to see,  but there will  still be cruelness and sadness in the world.

girlhood_valda_02

Then some outlaws come across the camp, Dorcas and offers them food, but soldiers arrive and take them and Dorcas prisoner. Meanwhile the Prince’s son is sick sp  he has no  time to think about these prisoners. Valda slips away to heal the baby with herbs, in return she asks for Dorcus’s release. The Prince is hesitant but meets with Dorcas, she asks for the release of the bandits, in return she offers to prolong his life. His father and grand father died young but his great-grand father lived long. She directs him to ride out to a spring twice a day. She reveals later to Valda its not the water of life, but the exercise will do the lazy, overweight prince good.

Dorcas is happy that she has chosen her successor well and that she is strong and worthy enough to be given the water of life. She tells Valda the water of life will help her defy years and how she was a young girl during the civil war when Charles I was executed. The water of life does not give eternal youth, but Dorcas knows of a doctor who may know more on such matters. They will seek him out but first they will need more water. There is two places that the water of life may be found, that Dorcas knows of, one in the cave of the wolf, which they have left far behind and the other in the mountains across the border. Dorcas knows she will not defy the years much longer as the water of life no longer restores her as fully as it once did. A war has broken out between the states, which makes their journey more difficult. Valda crosses alone to find the place of eternal flame. Valda finds the water in the middle of a ring of flames she jumps the flame and drinks some water and finds there is no need to jump back she can just walk through the flames. Valda returns to Dorcas, but the water of life no longer can help her, she is just able to tell Valda she knows her secret is safe with her and to seek out Dr. Wilhelm Koenig as Valda need not grow old as Dorcas has. Dorcas dies and Valda burns her in the caravan as gipsy tradition dictates.

girlhood_valda_03

Valda then journeys on to find Dr Koenig.  Koenig is also older than he looks and he has been studying the water of life for years. He believes that the real secret may lie in the volcanic flames that are found near the water. They venture out to find the cave where the fire is constantly burning. Along their way they come across wolves, Valda commands them to stay away but she knows they won’t stay away long, as they are hungry.  During their getaway Koenig trips knocking himself unconscious and the blood attracts the wolves once more. Valda manages to find a cave to drag him to and seek shelter. Some time later Koenig wakes up. They have to return to his lab and scare off the wolves. It’s all too much for Koenig and he begins to show his age, his hair turning white. They get him to the lab and once again the water of life restores him.

girlhood_valda_04

But the villagers have seen the old man enter and when he isn’t found again they accuse Valda of witchcraft and of killing the old man. She is brought to court but is saved by Dr. Koenig, who has run up and down the mountains to appear old again. They continue their quest to find the ultimate secret of life and Valda finds an entrance into the mountain. While they’ve been occupied with their quest, they don’t notice the arrival of the French troops of Napoleon Bonaparte. Napoleon has heard of Koenig’s knowledge and inventive skill and he wants him sent to France to help him win the war. While in the carriage on the way, Valda overpowers the soldiers and the two escape into the mountain. On the way they come across the remnants of the Tyrol army, they are happy to help the wounded but Koenig says the war isn’t their concern they have more pressing matters to attend to.  One of the leaders Franz shows them a village that the French burned as they know they gave food to the opposing army. Valda says they can’t let the innocents suffer like this and Koenig agrees. They join forces with the army. To give them time to escape Valda distracts a group of soldiers. They fire after her causing an avalanche, Valda can out run this  but the soldiers are swept away. The party are impressed by her ability, one man Martin insists she share the water of life with them. But she tells him that his body would reject it. A struggle happens, Martins gun goes off and the bullet grazes Valda’s forehead. Koenig gives her the water of life, and Valda wakes up. Martin grabs the bottle and Valda is too late to stop him drinking it. He wants it to heals his wounds but suddenly falls back gasping for breath, and dies.

girlhood_valda_05

The group presses on to seek food and shelter at a friend’s farm. Valda goes on ahead to check that it is safe but the French have already arrived. She tricks them  into letting her drink from the water of life and she easily overpowers them and escapes with the farmer. Valda suggests to Koenig they take them to the caves where there water of life flows, it means revealing some of their secret but she doesn’t think that’s as important as helping them. She warns them not to drink from the spring. Then her and one of the men, Rudi, go to the valley for supplies. Rudi visits his family but the French are holding them hostage. On their way back Valda notices they are being followed, Rudi apologises for betraying them. While Valda runs on to warn the others he volunteers to stay behind and delay the French. Rudi is shot and in the caves Valda leads the soldiers down one tunnel while the rest go down the other tunnel. She comes across a wall of flame she jumps through it unharmed, one soldier tries to follow but the flames kill him. Valda walks back through the flames, scaring off the soldiers.

After she meets up with the others she returns to the village to help Rudi’s family escape. They do escape but Valda is captured, a captain plans to make her walk through fire, but Valda knows in ordinary flames she will be burnt to death. Luckily once again she distracts them and escapes. Back at the cave her and Koenig and her go to search for where the cold flames burn continually. It isn’t an easy route, but finally they get to the flames, Valda walks into them she can feel the strength surge through her. Koenig thinks the discovery might be too late for him as he is already an old man, but the flames will keep her young. They return to the mountainside, and Otto a friend from the village brings the news that Napoleon has suffered great defeats in Britain. Valda runs far and wide to gather supporters for a final blow to French invaders. Koenig stays with the other men for the fight and afterwards he plans to travel on in his quest for more knowledge. They tell Valda she has done more than enough, and she is feeling weak after all the running. She makes it back to the fire of life. Fully restored and she promises herself that in the years to come she will test herself to the utmost to see what the fir of life can achieve. She thinks of it as a great responsibility and she must prove herself worthy of it.

girlhood_valda_06

Thoughts

This is a very satisfying origin story. It took me a while to write up this post as there is so much going on! I like the historical setting, and while there is the main plot of discovering the final secret of life, we also get the ongoing war driving a lot of the plot. I like that we get to see Valda’s parents and even though they only last a page and we never find out their names, it is better than Dorcus just finding an orphan baby. In their short time we do see important background and characteristics; they are shown to be brave, dedicated and the father is self sacrificial. This makes Valda’s later part in taking down the Archduke and helping war efforts more meaningful, considering her parents previous efforts and deaths.

girlhood_valda_07

The story doesn’t shy away from death, Valda makes a comment after the soldiers are killed by the avalanche, how horrible it is but that is the price of war. Dorcas’s death is well handled and after guiding Valda through half the story it is sad to see her go. Dorcas is a good character and mentor for Valda. I like how she is shown to have a a sense of humour and craftiness, when she sends the lazy Prince off to exercise every morning. While the whole story is good I did prefer Dorcas as Valda’s companion to Dr. Koenig, but Dorcas’s death was an important step to make Valda independent.

There is also explanations for why Valda would compete with athletes in the future, and I like that its hinted at rather than explicitly stated.  Dorcas mentions that age will come slower as long as she keeps herself strong and alert. Then the ending Valda’s run is her first big test and she wants to continue to test herself and the abilities of the fire of life. This is all good, though one thing that is a bit confusing to me is the Dr. Koenig character. He isn’t as old as he appears, but if he is worn out he ages quickly. Dorcas does look more revitalised after drinking the water of life but not any younger. Valda in later stories is also shown to age drastically if she is worn down. I think maybe the explanation for this is the water of life does slow the ageing process but it will eventually catch up to you. Valda will be able to return to her youthful appearance after she is drained because of the flame of life, but for Koenig it’s too late he is already old and his will began to show more and more as time goes by.

Dorcas’s age is in question as well, she is implied to be about 200 years old as she remembered an inn being built in 1587. But later when Valda asks how old she is, Dorcas says she was young girl during the civil war when Charles I execution. That would have been 1649, so she shouldn’t have been a young girl then if she was around in 1587. Perhaps she was just being intentionally vague with Valda, and she was already taking the water of life and just still appeared young in 1649.

This is one of my favourite Valda stories, as  well as the main plots, there is a lot of little adventures going on as well; rebellions, rival princes, avoiding wolves and superstitious villagers and the hard paths in getting the water of life. It’s an interesting and compelling story and beautifully illustrated as always by Dudley Wynne

girlhood_valda_08

Valda (sequels)

Plot

Valda was a long running and popular character from Mandy. She is a mysterious girl, who gained long lasting life, youth and powers from the fire of life.  She has to bathe in the flames regularly to replenish her youth and strength, whenever she exhausts her powers. The powers and skills that Valda primarily is shown to have are; a youthful appearance, strength, ability to leap great distances, mental influence, a knowledge of herbs and a rapport with animals. As a baby over 200 years ago,  she was found by an  old gypsy woman Dorcas. Dorcas raised her and taught her about herbs and potions and shared with the water of life.  After Dorcas died, Valda continued her quest to find the fire of life. While the flames will restore Valda when she is weak, she also has temporary restoration methods, gained from a crystal pendant she wears.

Valda_01

Due to her long life, she appeared many times over the years.  She had adventures with hidden tribes and lost worlds, she fought evil forces and sometimes she competed against athletes to  prove her skills.  In her first appearance she challenges the world champion ice skater,  and other stories saw her compete in sports such as tennis and diving. When the Valda serial appeared in Mandy it would usually come under different names such as;  “The Amazing Valda” “The Ten  Tests of Valda”  and “The Return of Valda”. In  1974 her origin was told in the “The Girlhood of Valda“.

valda_02She was an interesting character, and her original inspiration may have been from a boys comic strip from the 1940s “The Truth about Wilson”  in The Wizard, which had some similarities. Obviously she was quite popular character, and is well remembered. She appeared in a lot of the annuals and in the 2002 annual she was updated with a more cartoony and superhero look.

Full list of appearances are below.

Notes

  • Art: Dudley Wynne

List of Appearances:

  • The Truth About Valda  – Mandy:  #56 (10 February 1968) – #75 (22  June 1968)
  • Reprinted – Mandy: #347 (08 September 1973) – #366 (19 January 1974)
  • Reprinted – Mandy: #590 (06 May 1978) – #609 (16 September 1978)
  • Reprinted – Lucky Charm: #22 (1983)
  • Reprinted – M&J:   #129 (30 October 1993)  – #143 (05 February 1994)
  • The Amazing Valda – Mandy:  #91 (12 October 1968) – #110 (22 February 1969)
  • Reprinted – Mandy: #367 (26 January 1974) – #386 (08 June 1974)
  • Reprinted as Valda Champion Diver and Girl of Mystery – Lucky Charm: #1 (1979)
  • The Girlhood of Valda – Mandy: #139 (13 September 1969) – #163 (28 Feb. 1970)
  • Reprinted – Mandy:  #396 (17 August 1974) – #420 (01 February 1975)
  • Reprinted – Mandy:  #1034 (08 November 1986)  – #1057  (18 April 1987)
  • Reprinted (abridged) – Lucky Charm: #8
  • The Return of Valda – Mandy:  #195 (10 October 1970) – #209 (16 January 1971)
  • Reprinted – Mandy:  #504 (13 September 1976) -#518 (18 December 1976)
  • Reprinted- Mandy: #1060 (09 May 1987) – #1073 (08 August 1987)
  • Ten Tests for Valda – Mandy: #243 (11 September 1971) – #256 (11 December 1971)
  • Reprinted- Mandy:   #557 (17 September 1977) – #570 (17 December 1977)
  • Reprinted- Mandy:   #856 (11 June 1983) – #869 (10 September 1983)
  • Reprinted- Mandy: #1139 (12 November 1988) – #1152 (11 February 1989)
  • Valda in the Secret City – Mandy: #300 (14 October 1972) – #314 (20 January 1973)
  • Reprinted – #824 (30 October 1982) – #838 (05 February 1983)
  • A Mission for Valda – Mandy: #454 (27 September 1975) – #465 (13 December 1975)
  • Valda – Girl of Mystery – Mandy: #639 (April 14 1979) – #652 (14 July 1979)
  • Valda and the Survivors – Mandy: #717 (11 October 1980) – #731 (17 January 1981)
  • Reprinted: Mandy #1217 (12 May 1990) – #1231 (18 August 1990)
  • Valda and She of the Shadows – Mandy:  #839 (13 Feb. 1983) – #850 (30 April 1983)
  • Valda and the Baby Prince – Mandy:  #920 (1 September 1984) – #933 (1 Dec. 1984)

Other Appearances:

  • Valda Mandy Annual 1971
  • Valda – Mandy Annual 1974
  • The Amazing Valda – Mandy Annual 1976
  • Valda – Mandy Annual 1983
  • Valda – Mandy Annual 1984
  • Valda and the Guardians of the Tomb – Mandy Annual 1986
  • Valda and the Way of the Messenger – Mandy Annual 1988
  • Valda and the Burning of Barthol – Mandy Annual 1992
  • Valda- Traveller in Time – Mandy Annual 1993
  • Valda – Mandy Annual 2002
  • Valda – Mandy Picture Story Library: #151
  • Valda – Mandy Picture Story Library: #156
  • Valda – Mandy Picture Story Library: #162

The Truth About Valda

Overview

  • First Appearance: Mandy #56 (10 February 1968)
  • Art: Dudley Wynne

Valda was a long running and popular character from Mandy. She is a mysterious girl, who gained long lasting life, youth and powers from the fire of life.  She has to bathe in the flames regularly to replenish her youth and strength, whenever she exhausts her powers. The powers and skills that Valda primarily is shown to have are; a youthful appearance, strength, ability to leap great distances, mental influence, a knowledge of herbs and a rapport with animals. As a baby over 200 years ago,  she was found by an  old gypsy woman Dorcas. Dorcas raised her and taught her about herbs and potions and shared with the water of life.  After Dorcas died, Valda continued her quest to find the fire of life. While the flames will restore Valda when she is weak, she also has temporary restoration methods, gained from a crystal pendant she wears.

Valda_01

Due to her long life, she appeared many times over the years.  She had adventures with hidden tribes and lost worlds, she fought evil forces and sometimes she competed against athletes to  prove her skills.  In her first appearance she challenges the world champion ice skater,  and other stories saw her compete in sports such as tennis and diving. When the Valda serial appeared in Mandy it would usually come under different names such as;  “The Amazing Valda” “The Ten  Tests of Valda”  and “The Return of Valda”. In  1974 her origin was told in the “The Girlhood of Valda“.

valda_02She was an interesting character, and her original inspiration may have been from a boys comic strip from the 1940s “The Truth about Wilson”  in The Wizard, which had some similarities. Obviously she was quite popular character, and is well remembered. She appeared in a lot of the annuals and in the 2002 annual she was updated with a more cartoony and superhero look.

Click the following link for: full list of stories

 

The Truth About Valda

  • The Truth About Valda  – Mandy:  #56 (10 Feb. 1968) – #75 (22  Jun. 1968)
  • Reprinted – Mandy: #347 (08 September 1973) – #366 (19 January 1974)
  • Reprinted – Mandy: #590 (06 May 1978) – #609 (16 September 1978)
  • Reprinted – Lucky Charm: #22 (1983)
  • Reprinted (abridged) – M&J:   #129 (30 October 1993)  – #143 (05 Feb 1994)
  • Art: Dudley Wynne

Plot

In Austria a mysterious stranger interrupts a skating competition, she jumps into the ice rink, skates beautifully accompanied by an eerie music. She asks the judges to mark her performance. A man objects that this stranger is not an entrant but she uses her mental influence to get the judges to mark her. She gets top marks, and she tells the objectors that she is Valda and she is not interested in being named winner, just in testing her skill. When she leaves the two men follow her back up the mountains. She stops them and tells them they won’t be able to follow her any more. She jumps a large ravine and disappears from sight as she enters her cave. She practices skating again, but finds herself feeling tired. She bathes in the blue flames of life and is restored.

valda_06

Valda continues to enter in ice skating contests to prove her skill, and many people are intrigued by her. At one contest she says that she doesn’t want any prize but if it’s money to give it to a hospital, St. Griseide. A man realises that’s a hospital that shut down a hundred years ago and wonders how a young girl like her, would think it was still opened. Along her way to another competition she helps some men who were buried in an avalanche, when the rescue party arrive she refuses their help and continues on to the competition. She is just finishing her performance when she collapses. They take her onto a helicopter to bring her to a hospital. She wakes up in the helicopter when it is passing over the mountains and she tells them she can’t go to hospital but thanks them for their help and jumps from the helicopter. She reaches her cave in time to restore her strength.

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As she enters more competitions, people began to question, where she has come from and acknowledge that there is something strange about her. Irena Petrova a mid-European champion, is competing in one such contest that she thinks she is sure to succeed, but her coach warns her that Valda has entered. Irena has heard of rumours of Valda but she doesn’t think that a person who won’t reveal anything about herself should be allowed to enter.  Valda arrives late to the competition due to a road blockage forcing her to skate to the town. After its clear that Valda has won, Irena demands that she be examined by a doctor as no normal person could skate for miles and not be worn out. She thinks she must be sustained by some drug but the doctor finds no evidence of drugs, although he is surprised that her heart beat is strong but beats at a very slow rate.

At one competition, 2 men rob the box office, Valda stops one man but another gets away. He escapes to mountains and later spotting a tired Valda bathing in her flames, sees her restored. He enters the flames himself thinking it will do the same for him, and Valda’s warning comes to late. The flames magic does not work for him instead it ages and kills him. Valda continues to move up in rankings. When a competition takes her away from her cave for a few days she reserves her energy by arriving in a refrigerated box full of ice. Later she meets an old woman, the one skater to beat her, Anna Brandt. She is near the end of her life and Valda offers her the chance to restore her youth and skate one last time. Valda brings a judge who crowns Valda the victor, and Anna dies happy to have been given a chance to skate again. As with all that she shows her cave to she makes the judge forget the incident.

When Valda is challenged by Irma Schweck, a proud Slavonian, Valda refuses and advises Irma to give up skating. Insulted Irma and two of her companions follow Valda up the mountains and take her to frozen lake, insisting she take on the challenge and they will film it. Valda is weakened from being away from flame so long, but skates her best as does Irma. It proves too much for Irma as she collapses and dies, as Valda feared when she warned her to give of ice skating, she had sensed a weakness in her and knew she would not be able to take the strain. Valda also weakened collapses and the men also think her dead, they take Irma’s body but leave Valda. Valda is helped by some goat friends to get to her cave and to the Fire of Life.

People are getting more curious about the mysterious Valda, when she mentions getting flowers for the memory of great teacher, they are confused to see her lay them on the grave of a scientist Wilhelm Koenig, who died in 1817! Meanwhile Valda starts to think about a successor, she chooses two girls Ilse and Heidi as potential candidates. She sees good qualities in both girls and brings them to the mountains to test them. Heidi in the end is chosen as her successor, and her training goes well, until Valda discovers a photo of a friend Rudi. She realises that Heidi has connections in the world and is not the right one for the isolated life she lives. She trusts her with the secrets she learned, but lets her go back to her life.

Valda finally gets her chance to skate against the world champion Ingrid Larson. Ingrid seems conceited, she doesn’t bother with anyone she thinks would waste her time.  She brushes pass an old lady who wants to talk to her. Valda stops to helps the woman who is obviously unwell. Valda recognises the woman as an ice skater named Eva.  Eva also recognises Valda but doesn’t know how its possible as she saw her beat the world ice skating champion fifty years ago. The woman is too ill and weak to question this any further and Valda pulls her on a sled  to a hospital.  On her return she challenges Ingrid to a contest but she has exhausted her strength pulling the sled and suddenly feels weak. Ingrid dismisses her, challenge due to her obvious weakness.  Back at the cave Valda recovers and looks through her old chest containing  photos past skaters that she has beaten.

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Valda once again shows of her ice skating skills to prove to Ingrid she is a worthy challenger. When she comes down the mountains to meet up with Ingrid, she is arrested for crossing the border without papers. She breaks out of jail by bending the window bars, but is not able to face Ingrid until she regains her strength. Later she uses a television crew to get the attention of Ingrid. With it all over the news Ingrid must accept her challenge. She sends her friend Franz to research Valda. While trying to track her on the mountains he falls and Valda rescues him. She takes him to her cave to care for him and he pretends to be asleep but he later he sees her bathing in the fire of life. Valda returns him to the village and he still pretends to be unconscious but the moment he gets a chance, Franz tells Ingrid what he saw. But she believes he is still concussed and doesn’t know what he’s talking about.

Ingrid skates her best but she is no match for Valda. Franz tries to help her by distracting her with a camera but Ingrid tries to stops him as she wants to win fairly. The camera drops on the ice but Valda  is quick to clear it with a handspring. Ingrid admits defeat gracefully, Valda hands back the title to her, now she is satisfied she has tested herself against the best. She returns home but Franz leads some reporters to the cave. Valda says goodbye to them, then she walks into the flames and she disappears and the fire goes out. The group just make it outside before an avalanche buries the cave. They muse that they will never learn the truth about Valda and wonder if she will turn up in a another time and place.

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Thoughts

Valda was a favourite character of mine, she was always engaging and just a very cool character. She had lots of different adventures, an interesting background, impressive powers and her stories weren’t repetitive. I think she is a character that would still do well today and could appeal to a lot of people.  She is otherworldly and powerful, but she also has weaknesses. In some stories she shows the burden of a long life being a lonely one and of course there is times where she is physically drained and there is the possibility of death if she can’t bathe in the flames of life. In later stories this is shown more as she begins to age drastically as she weakens. In this first story while she does look tired and weaker when she uses too much of her powers, she doesn’t look old like she will in other stories.

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Her first appearance isn’t the best of her stories, in my opinion (“The Girlhood..” and “The Return of…” would be two of favourites) but it is still good.  She got more development as time went on and I prefer the more adventure/lost world stories, than stories of her competing in sports. Interesting that in this story Irena thinks she may be using drugs to sustain her, this is not true but Valda does have an unfair advantage. The fire of life is like a drug making her stronger and giving her quick reflexes and an ability to leap great lengths. Not to mention that Valda has the advantage of having 200 years of practice.! This is meant to be okay only because she doesn’t take the title of winner and only does this to test her skills. So I think her other adventures are more noble and heroic! Not that she doesn’t show compassion and risks her life to help people in this story, its just that her main motivation is skating against a world champion.

Still if this had been her only appearance it would still be a satisfying story.  A mysterious young girl, who lives in the mountain, challenging some arrogant skating champions to contests.  We find out early that she gains strength from a fire in the mountain, and there are hints of how old she really is. As time goes by we find out more about her yet still know nothing of where she comes from. She arrives and wins contests only to reject all prizes and disappear into the mountain again. Valda seems to stand apart being mysterious, even eerie at times. Yet she still engages with people by being compassionate and helping them when needed. Ingrid, as the world champion actually gets some character development, (for the few issues she’s in)  after starting out quite conceited she is a gracious loser when the time comes.

The art is by the talented Dudley Wynne, and he really does a good job at capturing Valda as the mysterious and beautiful girl. He displays her weakened state convincingly, though like I said later stories would show her more aged. I have little knowledge of ice skating, but these girls do look skilled and talented. I also like her skating outfit, she more commonly wore a lighter sleeveless dress, The mountains, the village and the cold atmosphere, the shadowy cave are all well drawn too.

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Later stories have the fire of life in different places, allowing Valda to have adventures in different places. I haven’t read every Valda story, but I think there may be some continuity issues, such as what powers Valda can use, or the location of the fire, but that still doesn’t take away from the enjoyment of the stories.  Valda is a very enduring character and one that really stands out in the history of girls comics.

The Courage Of Little Sister / “Wendy Will be Married!”

Plot:

Betty and Pam have to live with their lazy cheating aunt and uncle after their parents died. Pam has just come out of hospital after a long illness but she is determined not to let her guardians ruin Betty’s chance of happiness. But the relatives are aware of this and are trying to stop Betty marrying and leaving them. In the updated picture story, Betty’s name is changed to Wendy.

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Married

Notes

  • Originally a text story
  • Updated as a Picture story in Mandy under the new title Wendy Will Be Married!”

Appeared

  • The Courage Of  Little Sister (text)-  Diana: #1 (23 February 1963) – (?)
  • Reprinted as a picture story Wendy Will be Married!” –  Mandy:  #387 (15 June 1974) – #395 (10 August 1974)

 

The Millpark Mystery! \ Help….

  • M240_millpark_mysteryThe Millpark Mystery! – Mandy PSL: #240 (1996)
  • Artist: Carlos Freixas

Plot

Three friends Ruth, Anne and Teri are starting a new school after their old school closes down. They are a bit nervous about their first day and it does not start out well. They have a run in with a group of troublemakers, led by a girl named Mel.  They don’t make a good impression with the other students either or with one of the teachers, Mrs. Stead.  The only highlight of their first day is for Anne who is a computer fanatic, she is happy to see that Millpark has better computer facilities than their old school. The girls think they will get in more trouble when another teacher catches them in the computer room. They are pleasantly surprised when Miss. Brown is friendly with them, she is a French teacher and while she says she doesn’t know much about computers but she does encourage Anne’s interest.

The next day they run into the two girls Mel and Patti, but are surprised when some other girls come to their defence. Even Mrs Stead turns out to be more friendly, she was just stressed the first day. They still think Miss Brown is the nicest teacher and are surprised to hear that no other students or teachers seem to like her. They see a different side to Miss Brown when she sticks up for Mel’s gang over their new friends and later they see her giving money to Mel. They follow Miss Brown and see her going for French lessons. They decide they have to solve this mystery. Miss Brown seeing them nosing around, tells them she’s not really a teacher but a policewoman, undercover.

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Although she doesn’t tell them what she’s investigating the girl’s suspect it has something to do with Mel. Later Anne meets Mel at computer shop and gets talking to her, she tells her that Miss Brown buys her games, one is particularly difficult where you play a hacker. When they are at the school and see police talking about fraud, they see Miss Brown is ready to make a run for it and a phone call proves she is not actually a policewoman. The girls get Mel and her gang to delay Miss Brown while they get the police. Realising Miss Brown was going to let Mel take the fall for the money fraud, Mel is grateful to the girls. The girls are glad to settle into Millpark, although Anne has been put off computers knowing that she must have been  Miss Brown’s second choice to use her computer skills.

Help….

  • B347_helpHelp… – Bunty PSL: #347 (1992)
  • Artist: Eduardo Feito

Plot

Leon a computer whizz, has gone missing. While everyone believes he ran off due to school pressure, his brother Rick thinks that something has happened to him. He confides in Kim of his theory and later in computer studies she believes him. when she sees a message from Leon on her computer screen, it says “Help my name is Leon I am being held prisoner”.  Unfortunately instead of taking the time to read the rest of the message, she runs to show Rick the message but it has disappeared by the time they comes back. Neither her friend Zoe nor teacher Mr. King believe it was there. Kim and Rick have a lead as they know the message came from a striped disk.  Having met the delivery guy earlier, they track him down, and find out that there was 6 disks altogether, 3 were delivered to the school, another 2 to a scientist and the last one to a hospital.

Both Kim and Rick work together to try and find the disks. They find the second disk at the school but it is blank. They track down the scientist, but he wiped the disks as he thought the message was just some game. Kim is reluctant to go to the hospital as her mother works there. Also she worries that Rick’s interest in her is only because he wants her to help him. When she finds his notebook, she finds out a bit more about Rick’s relationship with his brother. He was jealous of Leon and he hopes he can find him and put things right between them. He also mentions how he feels about Kim and wishes they could go out under normal circumstances.  This is enough to convince Kim to sneak around the hospital.

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They find the message from Leon and discover Mr. King is involved with the kidnappers who want Leon to crack a bank code. Before they can read the message further they have to hide from a woman coming into the room. She accidentally spills coffee onto the disk ruining it. Rick and Kim are caught and Kim gets in trouble with her mother. They are taken to see the headmaster, coincidentally at the same time his secretary is about to use the last disk. Seeing the message, Leon is rescued, Mr King is arrested and of course Kim and Rick don’t get into any trouble now the full story is known.

Thoughts

These two short stories have some similarities as they are both set around school and have computer related mysteries. Both seem to have the theme that if a teacher takes an interest in your computer skills you should not trust them! Also both the antagonists are also using computers to try and hack banks.

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In The Millpark Mystery the jumping point for the mystery is Miss Brown’s behaviour and the computer references are more in the background. Early on there is a newspaper headline about money being wrongly transferred into someone’s account. Both Mel and Anne are computer geeks and of course Miss Brown takes quite an interest in the girls computers skills. Miss Brown seems to have a better plan in place than Mr. King. She has a good cover in pretending to be clueless about computers, and has already got Mel set up to be the fall girl. When the girls start investigating her, she is quick to come up with the story of being an undercover police woman.

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Meanwhile Help… jumps straight into the mystery with Leon missing and Kim and Rick having to try and track down the disks with his message. Unlike Miss Brown,  he has no pretence of being nice, Mr King’s nickname is Cannibal King and he looks very shady from the start.  I’m not sure what his plan with Leon was after he got the bank code, presumably he would have him killed as he could identify him, or maybe once he had the money he figured he could skip the country, still it’s not as neat as Miss Brown’s plan.

In Millpark, I like Anne’s attempt to connect with Mel over their common interest, even after the girls think Miss Brown is investigating her. She thinks someone that likes computers can’t be all bad! The girl’s are all very active in trying to discover what is Miss Brown’s story.  Meanwhile Kim’s motives for trying to track down the disks are a bit more blurry. Understandably she’s a bit cautious about wanting to find the hospital disks as she doesn’t want to get into trouble. But a lot of her motive seems to be about Rick rather than helping Leon.  She is worried that Rick is only using her to help find his brother and that he doesn’t really like her as a girlfriend. Once she reads his notepad she is happy to go to the hospital.  It seems a bit self centred, shouldn’t she want to help someone who’s been kidnapped regardless of Rick’s feelings for her!

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I suppose it is a typical teenage reaction (although it is under unusual circumstances). Another teenage response from Kim is she doesn’t tell her parents about the disks so when she gets caught sneaking around the hospital of course she gets in trouble. It’s funny that once the truth comes out, the mother is like if she told her the story from the beginning then she would have gone and gotten the hospital disk for Kim herself! Maybe she should have given her parents more credit!

Both stories are nice little mystery/ adventure stories. The art is fine in both, but I do like Feito’s extra work put into the backgrounds. Of the two stories, I think, Miss Brown makes the better more craftier antagonist. As for the protagonists I think the Millpark girls also win due to Kim being more concerned about her potential romance than Leon. That said I do like Rick, he obviously feels guilty about being jealous and not supportive of his brother. It’s nice that they have a good talk (although it’s off-panel) after Leon is rescued. I also liked the plot of them trying to track down the disks. The story does play up the romance angle, which isn’t bad, it just sometimes makes Kim look like she should get some priorities straight.  I prefer the ending of Help… with her and Rick together rather than Millpark’s  oddly anti-computer message.

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Mandy Annuals

Annuals

Mandy Annual 1971                             Mandy Annual 1990

Mandy Annual 1972                              Mandy Annual 1991

Mandy Annual 1973                              Mandy Annual 1992

Mandy Annual 1974                             Mandy Annual 1993

Mandy Annual 1975                              Mandy Annual 1994

Mandy Annual 1976                              Mandy Annual 1995

Mandy Annual 1977                             Mandy Annual 1996

Mandy Annual 1978                              Mandy Annual 1997

Mandy Annual 1979                             Mandy Annual 1998

Mandy Annual 1980                              Mandy Annual 1999

Mandy Annual 1981                             Mandy Annual 2000

Mandy Annual 1982                             Mandy Annual 2001

Mandy Annual 1983                             Mandy Annual 2002

Mandy Annual 1984                              Mandy Annual 2003

Mandy Annual 1985                              Mandy Annual 2004

Mandy Annual 1986                              Mandy Annual 2005

Mandy Annual 1987                              Mandy Annual 2006

Mandy Annual 1988                              Mandy Annual 2007

Mandy Annual 1989