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  1. Brenda Starr, Reporter (often referred to simply as Brenda Starr) is a comic strip about a glamorous, adventurous reporter. It was created in 1940 by Dale Messick for the Chicago Tribune Syndicate , and continued by others until 2011.

  2. Jun 30, 2020 · The most twisted storyline involving women’s weight was when, in 1948, a circus fat lady killed a smuggler of bogus weight loss candy that killed her daughter. Pesky, a male reporter, chuckles at the news that the local jail cell was too small to hold Birdie, the fat lady. But Brenda Starr unearths Birdie’s motive.

  3. Dec 30, 2010 · By Chicago Tribune. UPDATED: May 23, 2019 at 8:23 p.m. When female reporter Brenda Starr was introduced to the U.S. in newspapers 70 years ago, she quickly became one of the most recognizable ...

  4. Feb 20, 2019 · Brenda Starr – Reporter began as a two-part Sunday only strip in the comic book on June 30, 1940. It is said that Brenda Starr was named after the celebutante Brenda Frasier. Rosalind Russell and her His Girl Friday movie that had appeared six months earlier. The Brenda Starr comic strip quickly became a favorite among the Comic Book Magazine ...

  5. Brenda Starr. Sixty years a journalist, red-haired Brenda Starr began her career as a funny paper version of the pretty girl daredevil reporter who was a staple of movies and radio over a half century ago. Created by a woman named Dale Messick, Brenda Starr, Reporter made its first appearance in 1940. It was a combination of newspaper melodrama ...

  6. Jan 11, 2018 · Messick obliged, recasting her bandit protagonist as a roving journalist and adopting the pseudonym "Dale." Her strip, “Brenda Starr, Reporter,” became nationally syndicated by the 1940s. A ...

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  8. Rita Hayworth inspired the character’s look, while her name came from the era’s beloved debutante, Brenda Frazier. Severo writes, “The Brenda Starr comic strip was a symphony of décolletage, good legs precariously balanced on high-heeled shoes, and Dior-like clothing that no woman would be likely to wear to a newspaper office.

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