Atomic Mouse had a healthy decade-long run, from 1953 to 1963. |
During the 1950s, Charlton Comics’
bench was surprisingly deep in nuclear anthropomorphic super animals.
They published Atomic Mouse,
Atomic Rabbit, Atomic Bunny (not necessarily the same character as Atomic
Rabbit) and Atom the Cat — all black-costumed, caped, flying super-strong
heroes (although the cat was, true to his species, pretty blasé about heroics).
This radioactive menagerie
illustrated two things — that the ubiquitous word “atomic” was a synonym for
“super” in the fifties, and that fly-by-night Charlton preferred to “borrow”
established features (in this case, that 1940s animated amalgam of Superman and
Mickey Mouse, Mighty Mouse).
Atomic Rabbit was one of three super-bunnies hopping around Charlton. |
Charlton’s foray into atomic
animalism had a more complicated origin, too. When Fawcett’s Captain Marvel —
sued by Superman and plagued by poor sales — finally gave up the ghost in 1953,
the popular character was resurrected in England as “Marvelman” (now
“Miracleman”).
During the 1940s, Fawcett had
cleverly exploited the popularity of their lead character by creating a
Captain
Marvel Jr., a Mary Marvel, three rather pointless Lieutenants Marvel, the
powerless comic relief Uncle Marvel and, in 1942, Hoppy the Marvel Bunny.
Tom the Cat became Atom the Cat |
Charlton acquired the rights to a
few of Fawcett’s defunct characters, like Nyoka the Jungle Girl, and “Captain
Marvel Bunny” was among those. Charlton subtracted the lightning bolt from
Marvel Bunny’s suit, changing the character’s name to Magic Bunny and his magic
word to “Alizam!” He evolved into “Happy the Magic Bunny,” becoming Charlton’s
THIRD super rabbit.
An abundance of bunnies.
Happy the Magic Bunny outlived his inspiration, Fawcett's immensely popular Captain Marvel. Here's a 1957 story. |
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