Ma Hunkel | |
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Publication information | |
Publisher | DC Comics |
First appearance | As Ma Hunkel:: All-American Comics #3 (June 1939) As Red Tornado:: All-American Comics #20 (November 1940) |
Created by | Sheldon Mayer |
In-story information | |
Alter ego | Abigail Mathilda "Ma" Hunkel |
Team affiliations | Justice Society of America Justice League All-Star Squadron |
Notable aliases | Red Tornado |
Abilities | Great cook Surprising physical strength |
Abigail Mathilda "Ma"Hunkel is a fictional character appearing inAmerican comic books published byDC Comics. Debuting during theGolden Age of Comic Books, she first appeared in her civilian identity inAll-American Publications'All-American Comics #3 (June 1939), created bySheldon Mayer, and became the first character to be known as theRed Tornado inAll-American Comics #20 (November 1940). As the Red Tornado, she was one of the first superheroparodies, as well as one of the first female superheroes and (when occasionally disguised as a man) the firstcross-dressing heroine, debuting months afterMadame Fatal, the first cross-dressing male hero.[1][2]
She was commonly associated with humor title characterScribbly the Boy Cartoonist, debuting as a supporting character of him, then sharing titles alongside Scribbly with the Red Tornado alias occasionally. She then was more recurringly affiliated with theJustice Society of America during the debut of the team and consistently still is in modern interpretation within DC Comics publications. She is also depicted as the grandmother ofMaxine Hunkel.
Initially introduced as simply Ma Hunkel, she originated inSheldon Mayer's semi-autobiographical humor feature inAll-American Comics #3 as a supporting character ofScribbly the Boy Cartoonist.[3]
With the skyrocketing popularity of theSuperman comic in 1938, comic book publishers began featuring their own superhero characters.All-American Comics responded in 1939 withGary Concord, the Ultra-Man, and followed in 1940 withGreen Lantern andthe Atom. The superhero trend was so powerful that in theScribbly story in issue #20 (Nov 1940), Ma Hunkel became a superhero herself.[2] In the story, Scribbly's little brother Dinky and Ma Hunkel's daughter Sisty are kidnapped, and the police are unable to locate them. Scribbly tells Ma about the Green Lantern, and she's inspired to don a costume and fight crime, calling herself the Red Tornado.[3]
The character was immediately popular, and eclipsed Scribbly himself.[4] By issue #23, the Red Tornado was sharing billing with Scribbly, and in #24, Dinky and Sisty joined the fight against crime, calling themselves "the Cyclone Twins".[5] The series continued for three more years as "Scribbly & the Red Tornado".[3]
The feature ran throughAll-American Comics #59, in 1944,[6] the year DC Comics absorbed All-American Publications.
Ron Goulart writes: "AnticipatingWonder Woman, that monumental creation ofWilliam Moulton Marston, possibly even influencing it, Mayer chose a woman to be his costumed avenger, remaking the formidable Ma Hunkel into the even more formidable Red Tornado. Actually the people in the strip never knew the true sex of the Tornado. They only knew that this bulky figure in the red flannels, bedroom slippers, cape, and inverted stew pot could be counted on to tackle all sorts of criminals from the biggest to the smallest".[7]
In 1967, Mayer briefly revived the concept in issues ofSugar and Spike, with both kids and Little Arthur appearing at various times as "Tornado-Tot".[8]
The character reappeared in a three-page "Scribbly" story by Mayer in DC'sSecret Origins #29 (Aug. 1986). She had a one-panel appearance inAnimal Man "Deus Ex Machine", in a sort of limbo for characters who at the time weren't written into mainstream continuity.
In Alex Ross's classic 1996 graphic novelKingdom Come, set in analternative DC future, the "Original Red Tornado" is identified as Ma Hunkel: she can just be seen at the top-left hand side of the Justice League line-up which includesSuperman andNorman McCay. In issue #3, (page 135 of the collected edition), panel 1, she can be seen on a balcony looking down at Superman and McCay and wearing a far more sophisticated, armour-like costume.
She appeared briefly in 1998'sDC Universe Holiday Bash II special, in the story "I Left My Heart at the Justice Society Canteen", and inAll-Star Comics 80-Page Giant #1 (Sept. 1999), in a story, "Way of the Amazon", in which Ma Hunkel takes valorous center stage amidLiberty Belle,Phantom Lady andWonder Woman. She has continued to appear through the mid-2000s, mainly as a supporting character inJustice Society of America.
In the original comics in the 1940s, Ma Hunkel is a working mother whose costume consists oflongjohns and acooking pot on her head. She adopts the identity of the Red Tornado to fight local criminals in herNew York City neighborhood, inspired by her son's admiration for the superheroGreen Lantern. The character's popularity was such that she was given a cameo in the first adventure of theJustice Society of America, visiting the JSA's headquarters but being forced by a humorous mishap, her pants splitting, to leave without having the chance to apply for membership. Later Justice Society stories have declared Ma to be an honorary member of the team. Due to her bright red costume and rotund build, she is sometimes jokingly referred to as the Red Tomato.[9][10]
Ma was later joined by a pair of sidekicks known as theCyclone Kids, consisting of her daughter Amelia "Sisty" Hunkel and neighbor Mortimer "Dinky" Jibbet (brother of boy cartoonistScribbly, the star of the comic book feature in which the Red Tornado debuted).
Ma Hunkel returned inJSA #55 (February 2004). This story reveals that Ma had been in theWitness Protection Program since 1950. Senior JSA members Green Lantern,the Flash,Hawkman, andWildcat find Ma to tell her that she can come out of hiding, as the last member of the gang against whom she testified in 1950 has died. Ma subsequently becomes caretaker of the JSA'sManhattan museum/headquarters. She does not, however, resume her crimefighting activities as the Red Tornado.
Her daughter and (now) son-in-law, the former Cyclone Kids, briefly have their own costumed adventures, starting in the titleYoung Justice. They band together with other Golden Age sidekicks out of concern for the safety of younger superheroes.[11]
Ma's wind-controlling granddaughter,Maxine Hunkel, joins the JSA inJustice Society of America Vol. 3 #1 (February 2007). InJustice Society of America Vol. 3 #3 (March 2007), Maxine adopts the alias "Cyclone".
Ma still has some fighting ability, using a mace and gas weaponry to help the younger JSA stun and delay members of the invadingInjustice Society. She is taken hostage and frozen by the villain Icicle. She only suffers a mild cold as the team's plans was not to kill or injure but steal from the JSA.[12]
Maxine was later responsible for the continuation of the Society as a viable team. When supernatural entities obliterated the brownstone, Jay Garrick believed this was a sign to end the team and move on. Maxine convinced him such an attitude was nonsensical and the Society was more than just a headquarters.[13]
InDark Nights: Death Metal, Ma Hunkel is revealed to have died some time prior beforeBatman resurrects her with aBlack Lantern ring. Furthermore, her name is the password to access the Valhalla superhero cemetery.[14][15][16]
In her prime, Ma Hunkel was a surprisingly strong woman. Many who encountered her often believed that the Red Tornado was, in fact, a man, a notion that helped protect Ma's secret identity on more than one occasion. Furthermore, she is a skilled cook.
In theKingdom Come timeline, an older Ma Hunkel wielding a more sophisticated armor version of the Red Tornado costume joins the re-formedJustice League underSuperman, and appears with her granddaughterMaxine Hunkel. Maxine known asRed Tornado III orCyclone, originally fought againstSuperman'sJustice League after his return, before deciding to join it. She travels with the rest of the team to the Gulag to contain the prisoner revolt.Captain Marvel arrives and blasts the Gulag, freeing all the prisoners, who then attack the surrounding Justice League members.[17]
In the "World Without Young Justice" reality, Red Tornado was brought out of retirement byImpulse. She helps to distract Bedlam so that Impulse can have one of his clones restore the timeline.[18]
The Red Tornado is one of seven JSA-related heroes whose solo appearances are collected in an anthology entry in theDC Archive Editions series:
Title | Material collected |
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JSA All-Stars Archives Vol. 1 HC (2007) | All-American Comics (1939 series) #20–24 |