Tag Archives: Norman Lee

Dolwyn’s Dolls

  • Dolwyn’s Dolls–  Bunty:  #1287 (11 September 1982) – #1291 (09 October 1982)
  • Dolwyn’s Dolls–  Bunty:  #1304 (08 January 1983)
  • Artist: Hugh Thornton-Jones
  • Other Artists: David Matysiak, Norman Lee and Douglas Perry

Plot

Megan Dolwyn owns a small doll shop down a cobbled street. She entertains customers telling them stories about where the dolls come from, some are sad stories, some are mysterious, some have a good moral and some even have a magical element.

When a bored girl on holiday comes into her shop, she tells the story of a doll named Elizabeth. The doll was a birthday present for a  girl Meg, who named the doll after a young princess in 1943. Tragedy strikes soon after as her house is struck by a bomb and her mother killed. Meg was taken to a hospital in a weak condition, and with her father a POW and no other family, she doesn’t have a lot to fight for. But then Elizabeth talks to her and convinces her to fight and even helps her to walk again. Her father returns from the war and Dolwyn reveals to the customer she knows all this, because she was the little girl.

dolwyns dolls

In another story a woman comments on an ugly doll. Dolwyn tells her the doll called Martha belonged to a girl named Sandra. Sandra’s father was a lorry driver often away, he mother was loving but quite disorganized. Her mother gives her the doll and a nice tea before leaving the family. Sandra stays with several family relatives until her father remarries a woman named Jane. Jane looks after Sandra well and gives her a new toy to replace Martha. But Sandra doesn’t care if Martha is falling apart and that her mother had faults, she won’t give up the last gift her mother got her.  Jane accepts that and brings Martha to be repaired.

dolwyns dolls 2

Another girl Sally loves dolls so much and spends all her time with them. She has a near life size doll Sarah Jane  so when her parents plan to go abroad she switches her place with the doll putting it under blanket in backseat of the car. She thinks while their gone she can have fun playing with her dolls all the time but she soon realises make believe isn’t fun when she’s locked in her playroom with no food or bed. Luckily her parents come back the minute they discover Sarah Jane and Sally gives up playing with dolls after that. Someone else that learns a lesson is Maggie, who wishes for the life of child star Goldie. After returning Goldie’s doll she gets opportunity to see how the other side lives but it turns out not to be all that great and quite boring so she is happy when she is home.

dolwyns dolls 3

From a picture story library, a more tragic tale is servant girl Mary falls in love with a gypsy but he is accused of thievery and leaves. Mary dies of a broken heart, she doesn’t even see the gypsy doll that was sent to her. Years later a girl living in the house finds the gypsy doll and discovers a note and money that is from the gypsy who traveled to America and wanted Mary to join him. Also is evidence that he was innocent of the theft.

Thoughts

Like I mentioned in a previous post, an advantage of these storyteller serials is that you had some familiarity with the serial and a variety of stories so even if one story didn’t appeal to you another could. The stories were often emotional in tone, and sometimes hinted at supernatural (such as the doll talking to Meg, though it’s not confirmed if this was just imaginary). Although there is some variety, I think having tales just about dolls was  a bit restrictive compared to serials like Jade Jenkins Stall or The Button Box had a much wider scope to play around with. There are some memorable stories like the gypsy doll, from a Bunty picture story library, that is one I enjoyed and remember well. I also liked in  the Martha Doll’s story, how Sandra was attached to the doll that her mother gave her, even though she had left. It did not matter how nice and more organised, an”ideal mother” that Jane was, it didn’t diminish Sandra’s love for her mother and she wanted to keep onto that reminder.

So while there were some stories I liked, a lot of the others didn’t have much of an impact on me. There are some other appealing points to the serial such as the art is nice, Meg Dolwyn herself is quite memorable, as is the look of the shop. Also the backstory of Meg Dolwyn gives us a good insight into our storyteller and would explain her love of dolls.

dolwyns-dolls4

List of Appearances

  • Dolwyn’s Dolls –  Bunty:  #1287 (11 Sep. 1982) – #1291 (09 Oct. 1982)
  • Dolwyn’s Dolls–  Bunty:  #1304 (08 January 1983)

 Other Appearances:

Annial Appearances

  • Dolwyn’s Dolls – Bunty Annual 1983 [Artist: George Ramsbottom?]
  • Dolwyn’s Dolls – Bunty Annual 1984 [Artist: George Ramsbottom?]

Summer Specials

  • Dolwyn’s Dolls – Bunty Summer Special 1982 [Art: Hugh Thornton-Jones]
  • Dolwyn’s Dolls – Bunty Summer Special 1983 [Art: Rodney Sutton]

Picture Story Library

Miss Danby’s Dolls

Plot

Liz Miller has taken a job as companion and help to Miss Danby. Her sole companions are eight dolls: tinker, tailor, soldier, sailor, rich-man, poor-man, beggar-man and thief. Liz thinks Miss Danby is fantasising when she talks about the dolls as if they were alive – but then strange things start happening that suggest they are.

Notes

  • Artist: Norman Lee

Appeared

  • Miss Danby’s Dolls –  Bunty: #1616 (31 December 1988)  –  #1623 (18 February 1989)

Emma’s Umbrella

Plot

In 1900, Ivan’s Umbrella Shop is renowned for his beautiful personalised umbrellas, with the owner’s name inscribed on the handle. The last umbrella Ivan makes is inscribed with the name “Emma”, after the daughter he and his wife never had. The umbrella passes through a succession of owners over time, and each time it does so, it changes their lives.

Umbrella

Notes:

  • Writer: Alison Christie (Fitt)
  • Artist: Norman Lee

Appeared

  • Emma’s Umbrella –  Mandy: #983 (16 November 1985) – #990 (4 January 1986)

 

The Glamour World of Victoria Jones

Plot:

In The Glamour World of Victoria Jones – a mysterious veiled woman, Miss Trent, had offered to help schoolgirl Victoria and her widowed mother by giving them jobs in her dress shop as models. Victoria returns in sequels:

Victoria Jones – and the Queen of Diamonds

Victoria Jones and her friend Anna are searching for Victoria’s mother, who has disappeared on a modelling tour of Europe. They are being aided in their quest by Madame Carnez, who says she had organised the tour. The mystery deepens when diving gear that Madame Carnez loaned them yields diamonds hidden in the spear gun. After seeing Madame Carnez’s reaction to this, Victoria thinks she is concealing something.

Diamonds

Victoria Jones – and the Dragon Girl

Victoria and her mother now owning a gown salon, hire a Chinese girl Suzi as a model. Victoria begins to suspect her of thievery but is then surprised to find out Suzi is working for the police.

Victoria Jones and the Golden Dresses

Victoria buys up golden material in Greece and makes six dresses from them. Then Secret Service informs her that a secret code is interwoven into the fabric, which she received by mistake, and the dresses need to be recovered before enemy agents get to them.

Victoria Jones and the Black Cat Boutique

A rival boutique, the Black Cat Boutique, opens up. Its owner, “Black Mary” MacRae, makes direct threats to put Victoria out of business after Victoria offends her, and there’s a story that she’s a witch.

Notes

  • The plot of Victoria Jones and the Golden Dresses seems to be reused from [Diana] Jane-Model Miss story
  • Artist: Norman Lee (The Glamour World of Victoria Jones / Victoria Jones and the Queen of Diamonds/ Victoria Jones and the Dragon Girl)
  • Different artists drew the sequels.

Appeared

  • The Glamour World of Victoria Jones – Debbie:  #121 (7 June 1975) – #128 (26 July 1975)
  • Victoria Jones  and the Queen of Diamonds –  Debbie: #136 (20 September 1975) – #150 (27 December 1975)
  • Victoria Jones and the Dragon Girl – Debbie: #171 (22 May 1976) – #179 (17 July 1976)
  • Victoria Jones and the Mystery Princess – #247 (5 November 1977) – #252 (10 December 1977)
  • Victoria Jones and the Golden Dresses – Debbie: #271 (22  April 1978) – #279 (17 June 1978)
  • Victoria Jones  and the Black Cat Boutique – Debbie: #320 (31 March 1979) – #323 (21 April 1979)

Not My Sister

Plot:

After their parents split up, Kelley King stays with her father while her sister Claire goes abroad with the mother. Then Claire comes back to live with Kelley, Dad and his new wife. But Claire has been nasty to Kelley ever since her return and is poisoning her friends against her.

Sister

Notes:

  • Artist: Norman Lee

Appeared:

  • Not My Sister – M&J:  #169 (06 August 1994) – #179 (15 October 1994)

 

The Fish Twins

Plot

As babies, twins Marris and Merri had been washed onto the shore at the Welsh village of Porwen and found by Daniel Hughes, a fisherman.  Around the babies’ necks had been fine, unbreakable chains. As the girls grew, so, mysteriously, did the chains. Apart from this they seemed normal girls. Nobody knew that they could swim underwater for miles or that they could communicate with the sea creatures. There was a problem in the village as for weeks the fishermen had returned to harbour each day, without a catch.

The twins return several times, like when sea creatures  in the waters by Porwen,  mutated into monsters and attacked the villagers. Merri and Morris, the strange sea-children with remarkable powers, returned to help their adopted village. When Morris was trapped by a giant oyster, Merri called to the far-off Wise Ones of the Deep for help as she struggled to free herself from mutated seaweed.

Another time  an unknown element had poisoned  all the shellfish off the coast of Porwen, and several unexplained disappearances had occurred. Merri and Morris,  had discovered aliens living in a transparent dome on the sea-bed. The Twins had made a pact with Zakon, the leader of the aliens, but it seemed as if he had broken it.

fish twins

(The Fish Twins – 1971, Art: John Armstrong)

 

fish twins 2(The Fish Twins – 1979, Art: Carlos Laffond)

 

Fish twins 3

(The Fish Twins – 1981,  Art: Bert Hill)

Notes

  • Art: John Armstrong (1971)
  • Art: Carlos Laffond (1979)
  • Art: Bert Hill (1981)
  • Additionally Norman Lee drew the art for some covers that the Fish Twins appeared; Judy #1032, Judy #1105

Appeared

  • The Fish Twins  – Judy:  #595 (5 June 1971) – #609 (11 September 1971)
    • Reprinted – Judy:  #942 (28 January 1978) –  #956 (6 May 1978)
  • The Fish Twins  – Judy:  #1024 (25 August 1979) – #1033 (27 October 1979)
  • The Fish Twins – Judy:  #1102 (21 February 1981) – #1112 (02 May 1981)

Other Appearances

  • The Fish Twins – Judy Annual 1980

Strangers

Plot:

When Mrs Devere, a scientist, moves into Raven’s End (a large house), Rachel Grant finds her a dragon and unfriendly woman who seems to hold her daughter Laura a virtual prisoner. Mrs Devere suddenly becomes friendly to Rachel’s classmates, and soon after they start behaving as if they are brainwashed, acting like strangers, and do nothing but study. It gets worse when Mrs Devere gets a teaching job at Rachel’s school. Then Rachel discovers that Mrs Devere was sacked from her previous school for strange, unethical teaching methods – and Laura is not her daughter.

Strangers

Notes:

  • Artist: Norman Lee

Appeared:

  • Strangers –  M&J:  #121 (4 September 1993) – #129 (30 October 1993)

Jade Jenkins’ Stall

Plot

Note: this feature was not actually named Jade Jenkins’ Stall. The titles used were individual titles.

Jade Jenkins runs a bring-and-buy stall. Many of her items have a story behind them. Not surprisingly, each story is concerned with why the seller did not want the item and brought it to the stall – which does not make for happy reading. For example:

  • The karaoke kit (below) gets Sharon discovered as a singer and she becomes famous. But she gets so busy with her career that she has no time for friends and family.
  • A pile of unwanted teddy bears tell how Nicola rues the day she said she loves teddy bears, because she ends up with nothing else for her birthday and people keep lumbering her with even more. She gets rid of the teddies at the stall, hoping they will get the message – but her family just buys the teddies back for her Christmas present!
  • A school blazer tells a sad story about bullying. Denise does not have the courage to stand up for new girl Claire when she gets bullied. Then when Denise transfers to a new school, she finds herself in the same position as Claire, with nobody willing to stand up for her.
  • A tennis racquet is strangely unlucky for whoever has used it. They have won no games since they acquired it and it ended up returned.

Jade.jpg

 

Notes

  • Artists:  Maria Dembilio (main artist) and Norman Lee (#115, #118, #120)
  • This was not actually titled Jade Jenkins’ Stall. The stories appeared with individual titles.
  • First appeared M&J #115 (24 July 1993), it appeared sporadically.
  • Last appeared M&J #221 (5 August 1995)

List of Stories

  • Fame – M&J: #115
  • Whose Song? – M&J: #118
  • Two-Timer – M&J: #120
  • Champion – M&J: #126
  • Rachel – M&J: #135
  • Bear With It – M&J: #137
  • Tall Story – M&J: #138
  • Turnabout – M&J: #142
  • Unlucky for Some – M&J: #143
  • Changed Too Much – M&J: #148
  • Masked Feelings – M&J: #149
  • Broken-Hearted – M&J: #150
  • The Boaster – M&J: #196
  • Happy Holiday – M&J: #198
  • Oh, Brother – M&J: #197
  • Lee’s Story – M&J: #199
  • Time to Choose – M&J: #200
  • Excuses! – M&J: #221

Money Matters

Plot:

Linsey Townsend has lived a luxurious life and been spoiled. But all that changes when her father runs off with money from his employers’ company and the family bank. Linsey now faces a tougher financial time and learns hard lessons in being more appreciative, helpful and thoughtful. Meanwhile, her mother tries to conceal the truth about Dad’s absence from their friends, keep up appearances, and dreads their secret being found out.

Money matters.jpg

Notes:

  • Artist: Norman Lee

Appeared:

  • Money Matters –  M&J:  #104 (8 May 1993) – #112 (10 July 1993)