Jane Bond | |
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![]() Jane Bond in an illustration from the 1969Princess Giftbook for Girls. | |
Character information | |
First appearance | Tina (25 February1967) |
In-story information | |
Full name | Jane Bond |
Species | Human |
Place of origin | Earth |
Team affiliations | WorldPol |
Publication information | |
Publisher | Fleetway Publications IPC Magazines |
Schedule | Weekly |
Title(s) | Tina 25 February to 16 September 1967 Princess Tina 23 September 1967 to 28 February 1970 Princess Giftbook for Girls 1969 Princess Tina Annual 1969 Tammy Annual 1979 |
Formats | Original material for the series has been published as a strip in thecomics anthology(s)Tina Princess Tina. |
Genre | Spy |
Publication date | 25 February 1967 – 28 February 1970 |
Creative team | |
Artist(s) | Mike Hubbard |
Reprints | |
Collected editions | |
The Best of Jane Bond | ISBN 9781786188021 |
Jane Bond is aBritish comic character who has appeared in the strip"Jane Bond - Secret Agent", published byFleetway Publications andIPC Magazines. The character, a globetrotting secret agent, first appeared in thegirls'anthology titleTina on 25 February 1967, drawn by Mike Hubbard. AfterTina was cancelled "Jane Bond - Secret Agent" continued in the mergedPrincess Tina until 1970.
Despite the character's name, Jane Bond has no affiliation with eitherJames Bond orJane.
WhenFleetway Publications was created by theMirror Group's acquisition ofAmalgamated Press they acquired severalgirls' comics, and new management addedPrincess. Fleetway's main rivalDC Thomson also had several successful titles, and launched the more adventurousMandy in January 1967 to strong sales. Fleetway policy at the time was to respond to competitors' titles with a similar themed version of their own, and work was started on an answer toMandy in the form ofTina. While still retaining some of the staples of the genre,Tina based a greater emphasis on action-adventure material, and among the line-up of theanthology was "Jane Bond - Secret Agent", designed to cash in on the popularity of the spy genre - as well as the successfulJames Bond films,Emma Peel ofThe Avengers had become a hugely popular figure.[1][2]
Artist Michael Hubbard was assigned to the strip. He was well known at the time for his work on theDaily Mirror strip heroineJane, having been assistant to the character's creatorNorman Pett before taking over as artist himself in 1948. After "Jane" ended in 1959, Hubbard was one of a declining number of Fleetway artists who worked on both boys' and girls' comics as the company's departments became more entrenched. Having worked on the likes ofKnockout,Comet andSun (specialising in literary and film adaptations) as well asSchoolgirl's Library andJune.[3][4][5] Due to Fleetway's policy of not crediting contributors at the time and many of the company's records having not survived, as of 2023 the writer of "Jane Bond" has not been identified.[6]
Tina failed to find a market and was cancelled after six months, being merged withPrincess on 23 September 1967. Unusually for a Fleetway merger, instead of a [title] and [title] name the merger sawPrincess renamedPrincess Tina, a title that would stick until the end of its run in August 1973. "Jane Bond - Secret Agent" would continue inPrincess Tina until 28 February 1970. The character would occasionally reappear in annuals after the end of the weekly comic, last making an appearance with a reprint in the 1979Tammy Annual.[4][7]
The rights to the character were among the pre-1970 AP/Fleetway/IPC properties purchased byRebellion Developments in 2018. The publisher began adding the new acquisitions to theirTreasury of British Comics collection series soon afterwards.[8][9] At one meeting to discuss stories chosen for the series, Rebellion Graphic Novel Editor Keith Richardson suggested Jane Bond. Junior editor Olivia Hicks pulled the material from the archives and quickly became a fan and fervent supporter of the collection, noting "there's something about the stories that's just so whacky, so delightfully camp, that really appealed to me". She also felt the stories were interesting from a social point of view, coming at a time when women in Britain were beginning to have independent careers before marriage. Rebellion put out an appeal for original artwork to help fill the gaps, with the collection being mastered by Joseph Morgan.[3]
The Best of Jane Bond was released by Rebellion on 13 April 2023;[6][10][11] the release was promoted with an 11-page preview in Judge Dredd Megazine #455.[3] Due to some of the material, the collection featured a disclaimer stating the book "may deal with race, class, disability, or gender in ways uncomfortable to contemporary readers".[6]
Jane Bond is a glamorous international globetrotter of many skills, equally at home at a chic Monegasque dinner party or winning thePasadena Grand Prix motor race without a hair out of place. Her wide range of skills are put to secret use as the top secret agent of Worldpol, a worldwide spy agency devoted to keeping world peace. Jane receives coded messages and instructions from Worldpol supremo Colonel Merrill, and uses her skill at fitting in to any situation, whether it's rescuing kidnapped scientists, exposing a school for enemy superspies or saving the polar ice caps. While she doesn't use firearms, Jane is heavily kitted out with Worldpol gadgetry, including a personal jet fighter, a camera-gun, a bracelet-concealed steel whip - and her own sharp wits and highly trained physique. The only thing she needs is a holiday, but instead there's always another mission.
Title | ISBN | Publisher | Release date | Contents |
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The Best of Jane Bond | 9781786188021 | Rebellion Developments | 12 April 2023 | Material fromTina 25 February to 16 September 1967,Princess Tina 2 March 1968 to 6 April 1969 and 6 December 1969 to 28 February 1970. |