United States Newspaper comics In the early 20th century, when the U.S.
newspaper comics market was in its infancy,
William Randolph Hearst brought the artist
Nell Brinkley over from the competing
Denver Post, and although not doing comics herself, her romantic and glamorous imagery became an inspiration to a generation of female comics artists. Another style popular around the time was cute comics with doll-like round-cheeked children. In 1909,
Rose O'Neill created
The Kewpies, a series continuing for decades and widely used in various marketing purposes. Another cartoonist, Grace Wiederseim (also known as
Grace Drayton and Grace Gebbie), worked in a similar vein and, from the 1910s until the 1930s, created a multitude of series with cherubic children bearing names such as
Toodles,
Dimples,
Dolly Dingle, and
Dottie Darling. She was also the creator of the "Campbell kids," which
Campbell Soup employed for marketing purposes up until the 1930s. Her sister,
Margaret G. Hays was also a frequent collaborator with her on several of her works. In the 1910s, newspaper cartoonist
Fay King was drawing early
autobiographical comics in
The Denver Post and
Cartoons Magazine.
Edwina Dumm created a long-lasting series in 1918 about a boy and a dog called
Cap Stubbs and Tippie, although the frisky dog Tippie soon took over the strip as its most popular character. The series ran until the 1960s. In the 1920s, the USA underwent an economic boom and widespread social change, leading to the appearance of the "
flapper", a female subculture receiving a lot of media attention at the time. Flappers enjoyed partying, jazz music and free dating, and defied many of the social norms surrounding women at the time. Several female cartoonists picked up on the flapper stereotype, often working in a stylish
art deco style, including
Ethel Hays (with her comic strip
Marianne and her famous cartoon
Flapper Fanny),
Virginia Huget (
Gentlemen Prefer Blondes,
Babs in Society),
Gladys Parker (
Gay and her Gang) and
Marjorie Henderson Buell (
Dashing Dot). In the 1930s, the
Great Depression had struck the US, and stories about poor but happy families, and their stoic struggles to make a living, became popular reader fare. Martha Orr created one of the most successful series,
Apple Mary, about an old lady selling apples around the neighborhood, in 1932. The accounts on the series' final fate differs. Most sources state that in 1938, she left it to her female assistant Dale Conner, who renamed it
Mary Worth, although
King Features Syndicate's own account claims that
Apple Mary folded and
Mary Worth was its replacement. In 1940, a new writer
Allen Saunders was brought in, and Conner and Saunders began signing the strip with the joint pseudonym "Dale Allen", which remained after Conner left the series.
Mary Worth has proven a successful concept, and is still syndicated around the globe. In 1935, Marjorie Henderson Buell (signature "Marge") created the
comic panel Little Lulu, later spawning a successful comic book series by
John Stanley and
Irving Tripp. This character inspired the name for the organization
Friends of Lulu, an organization promoting reading and authoring of comics to girls and women. In 1940, veteran artist
Dale Messick created the comic strip
Brenda Starr, Reporter, about a glamorous reporter with a
soap opera-like love life. After Messick left the series, it was continued solely by other female artists. In 1941,
Tarpé Mills created the superheroine strip
Miss Fury for the
Sunday pages. Striking a chord among the readers, she was drawing the strip until 1951.
Jackie Ormes was the first nationally syndicated female black cartoonist with her series
Torchy Brown, created in 1937 as a humoristic adventure strip lasting for three years, and picked up again in 1950 as ''Torchy Brown's Heartbeats
, basically revamped as a black version of Brenda Starr, Reporter'', with the young black eponymous character stumbling onto adventure after adventure, and going from one love interest to another, although the series also took up more serious subjects such as racial bigotry and environmental pollution. The series never became a widespread success, since it was only picked up by black-owned newspapers. In the 1940s,
teen comics became a popular genre. This was a rather down-to-earth genre, mostly comedy-inclined and marketed towards young teenage girls, where young, often gangly, teenagers went through different problems with the opposite sex and dating. Notable artists to mention include
Hilda Terry (
Teena, 1941),
Marty Links (
Emmy Lou, 1944) and Linda Walter (
Susie Q. Smith, together with her husband
Jerry Walter on scripts). These three artists all had earlier works in the fashion field. In 1951, after some internal arguments within the organization, Terry became the first female cartoonist to be accepted to the
National Cartoonists Society. Other successful strips include
Cathy Guisewite's semi-autobiographical
Cathy, about a neurotic city woman and her problems with shopping and romance, and
Lynn Johnston's
For Better or For Worse, about the Patterson household and their family relationships. Overtly feminist and containing much pointed social commentary in addition to character-based humor,
Nicole Hollander's strip
Sylvia is distributed nationally by
Tribune Media Services, with 19 published books collecting strip selections. Sylvia's strong personality and forcefully critical views distinguish her from less assertive women cartoon characters. Due to the
syndicates' often strict demands on recurring characters and an unwillingness to risk offending readers, some cartoonists have gone into self-syndication to maintain control of their work. Some long-running self-syndicated comics are the feminist
Maxine or
Laughing Gas by cartoonist and author Marian Henley (not to be confused with
John M. Wagner's
Hallmark character) and the surrealist
Way Lay or
Story Minute by underground veteran
Carol Lay.
Mainstream comic books Comic books, as well, have been produced by a number of female artists. One publisher in particular,
Fiction House, used many female cartoonists, both on staff and through
Eisner & Iger, one of the era's
comics packagers that would supply comic books on demand to publishers testing the emerging medium. Action and adventure-oriented genres were popular at this time, and Fiction House's forte was capable and beautiful female protagonists, working as pilots, detectives, or
jungle adventuresses. Women working for the publisher include Lily Renée, at the
Lambiek Comiclopedia Fran Hopper and future
romance artists
Ruth Atkinson and
Ann Brewster. These stories were frequently written by a female writer, as well:
Ruth Roche, later an editor. Before finding fame as a crime novelist,
Patricia Highsmith wrote for
Black Terror and other comic books. In the 1950s
Marie Severin, sister of artist
John Severin, was a frequent
EC and
Atlas/
Marvel colorist, later drawing her own stories as well. Her cartoon style made her a frequent contributor to Marvel's
Not Brand Echh satirical title of the late 1960s. Another prolific artist was
Ramona Fradon, who drew
Aquaman and was co-creator of
Metamorpho. Later artists and writers include
Ann Nocenti (creator of
Typhoid Mary and
Longshot),
Louise Simonson (
Power Pack writer),
June Brigman (
Power Pack artist),
Gail Simone (
Welcome to Tranquility),
Devin Grayson (
Batman writer),
Becky Cloonan, the first female
Batman artist,
Marjorie Liu (
The Amazing X-Men writer),
Sara Pichelli (
Ultimate Spider-Man artist),
G. Willow Wilson (
Ms. Marvel),
Amanda Conner (
Power Girl artist),
Erin Williams, and
Kelly Sue DeConnick (
Pretty Deadly,
Bitch Planet) at
Image Comics.
Underground, alternative and independent The
underground comix movement attracted women artists, as it allowed more mature themes and personal work than the commercial newspaper and comic book industry of the time. A pioneer in this market was
Trina Robbins, a driving force in the creation of the early all-female comix books ''
It Ain't Me, Babe and All Girl Thrills
, and later founder of the anthology series Wimmen's Comix''. Robbins has written several books about female cartoonists and their comics. Another all-female comix book series was
Tits & Clits Comix, founded by
Lyn Chevely and
Joyce Farmer, who were inspired by the honesty in the underground comix, but appalled by the frequent male sexist perspective and attitude. With the conviction that sex was political, the series was created with the focus of sex and sexuality from a female perspective. Artists who grew out of this movement include
Lee Marrs (
Pudge Girl Blimp about an overweight self-obsessed wannabe hippie girl),
Shary Flenniken (
Trots and Bonnie about a precocious girl and her dog trying to make sense of their suburban life),
Aline Kominsky (
The Bunch, autobiographical depiction of her least flattering sides) and
Dori Seda (autobiographical stories). After the underground scene turned into the
alternative scene, women artists continued to focus on autobiographical work, such as
Debbie Drechsler (''
Daddy's Girl, 1996, about incest and sexual abuse during childhood) and Phoebe Gloeckner (Diary of a Teenage Girl'', 2002). The scene's unapologetic attitude also inspired artists outside the US, such as Canadian
Julie Doucet, whose surrealist semi-autobiographical series
Dirty Plotte became a worldwide cult favorite in the 1990s. The underground/
alternative market allowed for a more open depiction of sexuality, and in the 1970s and 1980s openly lesbian and bisexual artists told their stories in comic book form, such as
Mary Wings (artist of the first all-lesbian comix book
Come Out Comix (1973)),
Roberta Gregory (
Bitchy Bitch, and frequent contributor to
Gay Comix) and
Alison Bechdel (
Dykes to Watch Out For and graphic novel
Fun Home, 2006). In the
independent market, that began to appear from the 1970s,
Wendy Pini, together with her husband
Richard Pini, started the
manga-inspired series
Elfquest, which soon became a major sleeper hit.
Colleen Doran created her cult space opera series
A Distant Soil which was published in the early-1980s in small press fanzines, then self-published by Doran in the early-1990s, before moving to Image Comics in 1996. Other popular artists include
Donna Barr (
Desert Peach, about
Erwin Rommel's fictional gay brother),
Jill Thompson (
Scary Godmother, a friendly witch in a Halloween environment) and
Linda Medley (
Castle Waiting, daily lives of fairytale characters).
Webcomics Many female comic creators have found their fame in
webcomics and later published hard copies of their work, such as
Kate Beaton for
Hark! A Vagrant!, and
Allie Brosh's
Hyperbole and a Half. Others, like
Emily Carroll (known for the webcomic
His Face All Red) went on to work on other multimedia projects, such as Carroll's
Gone Home. Female webcomic artists include writers and illustrators such as
Kate Leth (Canadian),
Mary Cagle,
Danielle Corsetto, Ramsey Beyer,
Lucy Knisley,
Abby Howard,
Madeleine Flores (
Adventure Time),
Dorothy Gambrell,
Liz Prince, and
Erika Moen, who worked with
Grace Ellis and
ND Stevenson on the popular alternative print series
Lumberjanes. ==Asia==