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Johnny Peril

Created by Howard Purcell

JOHNNY PERIL was a comic book private eye created by Howard Purcell who usually found himself caught up in all kinds of weird suspense tales, bouncing around in the back pages of various All-American (and later DC) titles.

Not much is known about his past (as in, nobody gave him one—he was just there), and in early adventures that appeared in Comics Calvacade, an anthology series that featured funny cartoon animals and early appearances by The Flash, Wonder Woman and Green Lantern, he was often a minor character, or simply served as a narrator to some pretty eerie tales.

His first official appearance in a “starring role” was in the August/September 1947 issue, where it was made clearer that he was a private eye (or possibly a newspaper reporter), specializing in—whether he wants to or not—oddball cases involving monsters, ghouls, killer robots and the like, occasionally working alongside renowned psychic, Heather Storm. Not that she was his steady or anything—through the years he had a bevy of girlfriends.

By the time Comic Calvacade had switched to featuring just cartoon animals, DC had already required the rights to the All-American characters, and Johnny began appearing in All-Star Comics. A persistent little cuss, he went on to appear in Danger Trail, Sensation (Mystery) Comics and other DC titles. At first his stories were still being done by creator Howard Purcell, but within a few years such celebrated artists and writers as Joe Kubert, Robert Kanigher, Gil Kane, Carmine Infantino, Jack Sparling, Mike W. Barr, Ed Robbins, Alex Toth and Frank Giacoia were handling the job. But whoever was doing it, the consensus is that Peril’s original blast of adventures which continued into the fifties,  were the best.

Johnny has occasionally shown up since (including a brief re-emergence in the late sixties as the featured character in The Unexpected, another weird tales anthology which — for one issue — bore the tagline “Weird World of Johnny Peril!”), as well as in occasional reprints, but in his more modern original incarnations, he’s a scientist/adventurer working for ARGUS, specializing in the study of magic and the supernatural.

Still fun, but not a P.I.

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Respectfully submitted by Kevin Burton Smith, with a tip of the fedora to Allen.

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