Cover artist: John Richardson
- Bella – new story (artist John Armstrong)
- Daughter of the Desert (artist Mario Capaldi)
- Sister in the Shadows (artist Giorgio Giorgetti)
- Spider Woman – first episode (artist Jaume Rumeu aka Homero Romeu)
- Edie and Miss T (artist Joe Collins)
- Put Yourself in the Picture! – Quiz (artist Juliana Buch)
- Wee Sue (artist Robert MacGillivray)
- Friend Pepi – Strange Story from the Mists (artist José Ariza?)
- Make Headlines, Hannah! (artist Tony Coleman)
- Cindy of Swan Lake (artist Ana Rodriguez)
Sometimes we deviate from the main topic to bring attention to topics that are related to Jinty. So this entry goes off-topic to discuss the issue where Misty merged with Tammy.
The merger brings one change to the Tammy logo – the floral patterns disappear and the font becomes solid, straight red.
The merger still resonated years later – mostly because a number of Misty readers were not happy with it and wanted the original back. The short-lived Best of Misty Monthly that appeared some years after the merger was a response to the demand for the return of Misty. A “Best of” monthly was something neither Tammy nor Jinty ever had, though Girl (series 2) did get one as well. Even today, there are efforts to bring Misty back in one form or other.
Updated to add: efforts to revive Misty are now meeting with some success, with reprint volumes, The Scream & Misty Halloween Special, and Misty stories being reprinted in Bite Me!
At the time, the merger itself must have been something of a disappointment for a number of Misty readers because there was not much Misty in it (it was for me, and I was a Tammy reader). Things did not improve much once Tammy’s current serials finished, which would have made more room for overt Misty material. “The Loneliest Girl in the World”, “The Sea Witches”, (possibly) “A Girl Called Midnight”, “Danger Dog” and “The Shadow of Sherry Brown” look like they may have come from Misty. Some of them, such as “The Loneliest Girl in the World”, were undoubtedly Misty. But in other cases it can be hard to say if the spooky story was Misty or Tammy; after all, Tammy ran spooky stories too. Later on, Misty’s text stories returned; they must have taken the advice of one reader who suggested it. Mini-serial spooky stories, such as “The House Mouse”, also appeared occasionally, just as they did in the original Misty.
Misty arguably made her mark more in the Strange Stories, which became “Strange Stories from the Mist”, with Misty herself being rotated with the Storyteller. Miss T and Edie merged into one cartoon, which is a simple matter, because Joe Collins drew them both. They are a bit of an odd couple (ordinary girl and witch), which perhaps made the cartoon even better. Once Snoopa joined in the Jinty merger, they became “The Crayzees”.
Misty also brought a darker tone into Tammy, which was still felt even during the Tammy and Jinty merger, when “Monster Tales” started. There was no way either Tammy or Jinty would run anything like that – it had to be Misty. Perhaps “Monster Tales” was originally conceived for Misty, but there was no room until Bessie, Wee Sue and Molly Mills were amalgamated into one feature “Old Friends”, which they shared in rotation.
Some letters from Tammy readers indicate that the incorporation of Misty must have been a shock to them. Several commented that they found her spooky theme not only unsettling but unrealistic as well. Indeed, “Spider Woman” (a sequel to “The Black Widow” from Misty) must have given them all nightmares full of spiders. Spider Woman is an insane scientist who could well have been the first villain in Tammy to be out for world domination. Even more frightening, the story plays on the common fear of spiders to heights that Tammy readers had never seen before. We see spiders capable of eating people alive and leaving only the bones, giant spiders, poisonous spiders, and even a serum that can turn a human being into a spider!
The merger issue also has a very interesting quiz that shows that Tammy and Misty made serious efforts to accustom readers to the tone of the two different comics. Here readers are not only invited to imagine themselves in the places of the heroines in the story, but are also informed about the stories that will replace the currently running “Cindy of Swan Lake”, “Sister in the Shadows”, “Daughter of the Desert” and “Make the Headlines, Hannah!” This is the only case where I have seen upcoming stories being revealed in this way. Normally we are not informed about any new stories until the week before they start. The quiz also informs us that Bessie Bunter has been demoted from a regular weekly strip to a character “who you’ll meet from time to time”.
(Click thru)
In later weeks, Tammy and Misty ran another feature to get readers further acquainted with Tammy regulars (two of whom, Bessie and Molly, were not even appearing at the time). This was “Misty’s House of Mystery”, a game where Tammy regulars Sue, Bella, Bessie and Molly are caught in Misty’s House of Mystery, which is full of horrors such as blood showers and man-eating plants! The game is reproduced below. Imagine Jinty regulars going through a thing like that….
(Click thru)
And in this issue, Bella starts her bid for the Moscow Olympics by entering the world qualifier in Texas, with the help of her coach and her wealthy guardians, the Courtney-Pikes. Sounds like Bella’s hopes for the Olympics are better than in her 1976 Montreal Olympics story, where she had to make her way alone without even a passport, but only got as far as participating in the opening ceremony. But unexpected expenses that cause money shortages, unhelpful Texan coaches, and the sudden withdrawal of the Courtney-Pikes without explanation are already leaving her up the proverbial creek without a paddle before the event even begins.
I think it would have been more logical if Misty had merged with Jinty and Penny with Tammy, don’t you think so?
It must have been quite exiting for readers that upcoming stories were being revealed. Tina in the Netherlands did it several times, for the first time in May 1976. And several final issues of the year in the 80’s revealed what what coming in the new year. I always liked that, and it made one look even more look forward to the next issues.
Dunno about logic, but I have wondered what things would have been like if Misty had merged with Jinty. There were fewer regulars in Jinty, so maybe there would have been more scope for Misty. Miss T would have had to stay on her own as there was no Joe Collins cartoon for her to merge with. Misty would have had to rotate with Gypsy Rose.
If they had merged, Jinty wouldn’t have been able to do her logo in yellow, as she often did, because that was the colour of the Misty logo. Two logos in the same colour on the cover would not have looked right. They needed to be distinct from each other.
I don’t know about that. June and Pixie were both in the same colour after they merged, and it looks all right to me. And also after Tammy and Jinty merged, both logos would have the same colour from time to time.
Spider Woman? This is a few years after the Marvel superhero debuted… so they were lucky to get away with using that name.
I don’t think titles are copyrighted, but you do have to avoid confusion if you can. Maybe they could have phrased the title differently; “Revenge of the Black Widow” or something. Anyway, this Spider Woman was clearly no ripoff of the Marvel Spider Woman, so no case for a lawsuit.