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Showing posts with label Ace. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ace. Show all posts

Jun 14, 2010

Nurse Romance Stories: Love At First Sight 7 - "The Man I Couldn't Have"

Ace romance comics, judging from those in my collection, are physically relatively narrow compared to those of other companies, St. John for example. They also seem to go for these painted portrait covers, but not exclusively. The nurse romance story in issue 7, "The Man I Couldn't Have", while set in a hospital, follows one particular romance story formula - that of the two future couples with partners destined for each other but mixed up in the beginning. The tale starts with Nurse Roa Kent tending to accident victim Andy Hunter. Andy feels bad about his secretary, Serena Barbour, also injured in the accident. She was only in the car because he had asked her to drive home with him. It's not indicated exactly what their relationship had been before their hospitalization, but Andy is quick to propose, and Serena accepts. Roa finds herself somewhat disturbed by this event, and as time goes by she starts to realize she has feelings for Andy. When he asks her to be his private nurse once he's discharged, she declines, even though her heart is all for it. She doesn't want to come between Andy and his betrothed. Despite now being engaged to Serena, however, Andy starts making overtures to Roa - what's going on???
Andy blurts it out - he's in love with Roa. But Roa's own personal code of ethics will not let her involve herself with Andy and hurt Serena. She hands Andy's case over to another nurse. Then Andy's Doctor, Wentworth, starts pushing Roa for a date, despite her protestations that nurses dating doctors are frowned upon by the hospital authorities. Andy, however, assumes that Roa's brush off results from her being romantically involved with Wentworth. Roa tries to make it clear that Andy now has a responsibility to Serena, to whom he is engaged. Serena also now is disabled, making it doubly important to Roa that she not cause the injured woman any further grief. Yet on her date with Ned Wentworth she can't get Andy off her mind, and Ned notices. He realizes he's not going to make any progress with Roa. She's too smitten with Andy.
To quieten Andy's ardor, Roa tells him she engaged to Ned. In her thoughts we see her one hundred percent determined not to steal a disabled woman's fiancee. This was a time when people knew right from wrong and some were prepared to suffer rather than take the wrong path. Andy discharges himself from the hospital, and for the next week Roa hears nothing from Ned, until she's called to assist in Serena's surgery, which is successful. The plot gets really sudsy here, with Andy not quite given the opportunity to state his love for Serena, and Serena apologizing for having kissed Ned out of gratitude for being able to walk normally again. There's a lot of unspoken feelings, but they're all welling to the surface for the finale to this romance tale. In the evening Ned and Roa go dancing and the Doctor gives it one last shot and again asks Roa to marry him.
What Roa doesn't know is that Ned Wentworth has set up a situation that is going to bring everything out into the open. He's already cured Serena to reduce Roa's potential feelings of guilt should she end up with Andy, but he has a further strategy up his sleeve. Knowing that Andy is in love with Roa and that he will leap to her defense, he asks Roa to slap him in the face as if he'd made an improper suggestion. Serena's disgust with Andy's conduct and her sympathy towards Ned is also apparently something the Doctor had predicted. He's read the characters well. There's a double wedding, and Roa can love her man free of guilt.
Although the prevailing opinion is that romance comics are dead because these kinds of stories don't reflect today's reality, I'm starting to challenge that viewpoint in my own mind. While the plots of these romance stories appear contrived, the feelings people have, the emotional turmoil that some go through in their relationships, or their search for love, are not so unreal. Today they may take on a new face, but they're still the subject of romantic movies, t.v. shows, novels, and the anguished confidential talks of people of all ages going through relationships. Without it, in fact, we might completely lose the human condition. We might as well be machines with no feelings. Maybe that's why these old romance books are so fascinating, even though we quip about their cheesiness. On some level perhaps we're connecting with an essential truth about ourselves as human beings. Not for everybody, obviously, although I think that if more people were exposed to romance comics there would be a revival of interest. It certainly isn't true that the genre is dead. Romance manga abound. Could a revival of the American romance comic book be nearer than we think!?

The image of nurses presented by this story adheres to the self-sacrificing angel idea. Roa doesn't want to break the hospital 'rules' about nurse-doctor romance, and she puts aside her own desires so as not to harm Serena. Roa is an honest, principled person (even though she had to tell a white lie about being engaged to Ned so that Andy would discontinue his advances and his betrayal of Serena). Note that the older nurse, Miss Perkins, isn't married - she's the archetypal career nurse spinster who has sacrificed marriage and family for her work - maybe she just wasn't pretty enough to snag a doctor or a rich patient! And so the stereotypes unfold. Roa in this story falls in love with her patient, and the doctor falls in love with his patient, so it seems this phenomenon afflicts the wider medical profession. If you're single and a patient, watch out! In the beginning, though, the doctor was hoping the nurse would fall in love with him. The female nurse is the male doctor's assistant and subordinate. Nurses are mostly pretty, young, white women, who work at the bedside in hospitals or for private patients, and who accept orders from male doctors. Otherwise they are older, not so pretty, white women who never got it together to get married and have kids, and who still have to take orders from male doctors.

Feb 20, 2010

The Unfriendly Skies: Glamorous Romances 41 - "Spitework" - bitter rivalry at 35,000 feet!

The first issue of Glamorous Romances, #41 (July 1949, Ace), features an air hostess story that suggests some women will go to extreme lengths to win a man from a rival, or at least if they can't have him, the other woman won't either. So obviously not true to life there! :) Scene: San Francisco airport, pretty Penny Mason being introduced by her friend Andy to new pilot on the block, Chuck Rogers, resulting in a bout of burning jealousy on the part of go-getting airline stewardess, Nina Luprez. Penny shows Chuck the town and quickly falls in love with him. Chuck appears to have no interest in romance.
 
The fact is, Chuck thinks Penny is Andy's girl, and so his apparent indifference is really masking his ardent passion for Penny, a passion which can only be contained for so long. Their mutual feelings exposed, the couple are surprised by Andy, who appears to have been hiding in the undergrowth, but it's fortuitous that he is there - he is able to quell Chuck's concerns that he will be seen as stealing Andy's girl. The truth is Penny and Andy mostly hang out to keep the wolves away from Penny and to keep Nina away from Andy. However, Nina's watching everything from a distance, and from her perspective Penny has first moved in on Andy, and now Chuck, both of whom were Nina's targets for romance.
Nina's jealousy is about to get really out of hand. Andy goes missing on a test flight to Hawaii, and Nina produces a note she apparently found. It's addressed to Andy from Penny, and it's contents lead to the unavoidable conclusion that there was a relationship between Penny and Andy and that she was just playing Chuck. Nina leads Chuck to the interpretation that Penny's actions towards Andy were so heartbreaking for him that he deliberately took his own life by downing the plane on the way to Hawaii. Chuck falls for it, and cold shoulders Penny, who can't believe this Jekyll and Hyde transformation that has occurred in the man she was planning to marry. This is pure revenge on Nina's part, since she's not getting either man by this action. As the title suggests - she's acting purely out of spite. Penny's hurt big time, just as Nina hoped, and Penny and Chuck go their separate ways, only to meet up again six months later routing out of Seattle. Hostilities resume, and both are keen to end this new phase of contact as quickly as possible.
This job takes them to Honolulu, though, where all of a sudden Chuck starts acting mysteriously. He wants Penny to come and meet an old friend at the hospital, and it turns out to be Andy, who has just been rescued from a tropical island where he's been languishing for the last six months since that new plane he was testing hit an albatross and went down in the Pacific. His unanticipated vacation ended when he was picked up by a passing yacht (and therein lies another romance comic tale I'm sure - yachts, yachtsmen, daughters of rich guys, etc.). Chuck brings the note Nina gave him out into the open, and it is quickly identified by Andy as a forgery. Penny now understands what has been behind Chuck's bizarre behavior. Chuck realizes what a fool he's been. Luckily there's enough love left for everything to be fixed, and Andy ends with a classic line: "Hey Nurse! Quick! Before there is another relapse, administer a minister". I think this one would adapt well to the stage!
It just goes to show that the high-flying world of the airline stewardess can be full of intrigue, venomous envy, and fast-paced, highly emotional shifts in circumstances. I wonder if Penny stuck with her career or whether this was the cue for her to exchange her uniform for an apron and maternity dresses. And what about Nina? Did she spend the rest of her working life bitter, miserable, and resentful of others' happiness? And Andy? Looks like he was the confirmed bachelor. But it was all so long ago. They'd all be in their 80s and 90s now if any of them are still alive.

Note: These scans are refurbished from the file on the Golden Age Comics Download site, which makes available copyright-expired  scanned comics for study and appreciation by discerning members of the public with a penchant for high art.
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