Marvel Comics had previously explored the possibility of creating a cross-promotional comic character-pop singer hybrid before, working with
Casablanca Records on
Dazzler. However, the musical component of the character had never been realised, and Dazzler had remained a comic-only property. In 1991 LeFrak-Moelis was a subsidiary of
RCA Records, and had achieved chart success with
Stevie B and
Jaya, and were approached by talent manager Don Kessler to sign his latest discovery, Jacqueline Tavares. Born in the
Dominican Republic before moving to America at a young age, Tavares had studied acting growing up in
Queens before modelling with an agency called Judith Models. The exposure there led to her being signed by agent Charles Stein of Black Cat Entertainment, and she had been attempting to break into acting when she met Kessler. Through a chance encounter with Marvel publisher
Stan Lee, Kessler had developed the idea for the Nightcat project. The project was consolidated into a holding company called Night Cat Entertainment, with Lee on the advisory board and Tavares receiving a 10% share. With Stein putting up a reported $1m and LMR providing $500,000, organising the comic side of the operation fell to
Bob Budiansky, Marvel's Head of Special Projects. In turn Budiansky assigned writing duties to
Jim Salicrup, a veteran Marvel staffer who had experience with licensed titles such as
The Transformers and
The A-Team. Salicrup brought onboard protégé Barry Dutter to help write the project, and the pair devised most of the character and storyline over a business lunch with Budiansky; Dutter recalled the trio "decided to make it as much like
Die Hard as possible.". At the time Lee was rarely working on comics, instead living on the West Coast to promote Marvel media projects; while he was officially credited as writing the script for the character's debut appearance and acted the role of writer/co-creator in media appearances, Dutter recalled his actual involvement in the comic as being minimal. which also saw the character 'duet' alongside
Fred Hembeck in a humor strip. Similar reasoning saw
Joe Jusko contribute a painted cover, which was used on both the comic and the album. Lee and the in-character Tavares made several promotional appearances, including on television shows such as
ABC's
Into the Night With Rick Dees,
Dance Party USA and
The Party Machine with Nia Peeples. ==Publishing history==