Welcome to my Sheena, Queen of the Jungle Fan Page

This page and related pages are in the midst of a large update

 The female answer to that neanderthal Tarzan. A powerful and beautiful Queen of the Jungle. Sheena was born in the minds of Will Eisner and S.M. Iger as a feature for the Editors Press Service in 1937. She originally appeared in the overseas tabloid Wags. The American debut of this jungle beauty was in 1938 when artist Mort Meskin and writer William Thomas produced Jumbo Comics #1 for Fiction House(So named because it was oversized for the first several issues). Jumbo Comics was very successful and lasted for 167 issues until 1953. Bondage and headlights galore. Sheena had her own title from 1942 to 1953 which ran for 18 issues. The popularity of Sheena spawned many copy-cat titles including Jungle Comics, Nyoka and other wonderful titles.

Sheena, unlike Wonderwoman (created to target young girls as the main audience), had a target audience of young boys. Wearing only the smallest fur and leopard costumes, this blonde heroin swung into the hearts and minds of young boys that came back monthly for another issue. In the comics, Sheena was always the strongest character rescuing her useless male companion Bob Reynolds from whomever had caught and tied him up that month. The villains ranged from slave traders to Nazis. She was a very tough hero able to take on crocodiles, gorillas, lions and natives. Her knife was her weapon of choice and she was known for corny one-liners in broken english like " My knife is swifter than your claws, killer ". Sheena's popularity climbed beyond the comic medium and into several pulp magazines and a short lived television series starring Irish McCalla. To see several stills from the TV series visit my Sheena TV show page here. In the early '80's, scream queen and Charlie's Angel Tanya Roberts starred in a the movie version produced by Columbia Pictures. On her zebra she and Vic(Ted Wass) try to save Africa. The movie is very camp and a lot of fun if you get a chance to see it. You will find some pictures and information on the movie on my Sheena Movie page.

The most recent addition to the Sheena web page is some original Fiction House Sheena art from Jumbo 71. I have set up a page to better illustrate the details of my favorite piece of Sheenadom, enjoy!.

I don't think the full impact of Sheena on the baby boom generation and popular culture could ever be quantified. Comics with Sheena are hard to find at local comic stores, but can readily be had at Comic conventions. Along the same lines, I have a Jungle Girls Page with more Jungle girls from the 1950's and a Fiction House page as a tribute to the greatest Good Girl comic publisher.

For more info on Sheena, I have recently added an interview with the creator Jerry Iger discussing the myth of Sheena. Look for interviews with Irish McCalla and Tanya Roberts on their respective pages in the near future.

Join the jungle girls discussion group at egroups I have just set up. There will be regular posts and discussions. To join click or go to www.egroups.com/list/jungle_girls/.

 If you want a Sheena theme to your computer screen, download the following