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Romeo Brown

Created by Alfred “Maz” Mazure

From out of Great Britain came the cheeky comic strip misadventures of ROMEO BROWN, an elegant, dashing young private eye (and charmingly inept ladies man) whose clients—wouldn’t you know it?—were invariably young, totally gorgeous women, all of whom seemed more than willing to be seduced by Romeo’s charms. He solved his cases mostly by accident, but even that didn’t seem to dissuade the ladies.

Okay, so it was more slap-and-tickle and nudge, nudge, wink, wink (wardrobe malfunctions were common) than down-these-mean-streets, perhaps, but good fun.

Mind you, those were different times. The strip ran in the left-leaning Daily Mirror from 1954 to 1962.

It was originally written and illustrated by Dutch artist Alfred Mazure, who had gained much fame in his native Netherlands for his comic strips and books featuring judo-savvy private eye Dick Bos. Writer Peter O’Donnell and illustrator Jim Holdaway took over the strip in 1957, and it ran for several more years, wrapping up in 1963 when some suit at the Mirror complained that he couldn’t understand it.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

After relocating to England from the Netherlands, Alfred Mazure created two other short-lived private eye strips, Sam Stone  (1948-1950) and Bruce Hunter (1951-1953), two obvious rip-offs of his own Dick Bos. His third British eye, Romeo Brown, was more successful, with Mazure both writing and drawing the strip until 1957, when the strip was handed over to writer Peter O’Donnell and illustrator Jim Holdaway. Mazure would continue writing and drawing comics, including a revival of dick Bos and the short-lived Carmen & Co (1957-1959), which featured a sexy detecting couple, purportedly strongly influenced by Alex Raymond.

O’Donnell, of course, would later become famous for  creating the iconic Modesty Blaise,  an extraordinary young adventurer with a shady past, who appeared in a long-running (almost forty years!) comic strip in the Evening Standard and who would go on to appear in films, novels and short-story collections. Holdaway illustrated the Modesty strip from its debut in 1963 until his death in 1970.

STRAIGHT FROM THE AUTHOR’S MOUTH

COMIC STRIP

THE DICK OF THE DAY

Respectfully submitted by Kevin Burton Smith.

THE DICK OF THE DAY

Respectfully submitted by Kevin Burton Smith.
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