Fantomah is a pioneering female superheroine in American comic books, debuting as the "Mystery Woman of the Jungle" in Jungle Comics #2 (February 1940).[1] Created by artist and writer Fletcher Hanks under the pseudonym Barclay Flagg for publisher Fiction House, she serves as a spectral guardian of the jungle, transforming her face into a grinning skull to unleash supernatural vengeance on poachers, tyrants, and other threats to nature and its inhabitants.[2]Endowed with the ability to detect distant dangers through her "eyes of flame" and to fly as a disembodied, demon-like skull entity, Fantomah embodies Hanks' signature style of crude, moralistic tales where justice is delivered with brutal, fantastical flair.[2] Hanks penned and illustrated 14 Fantomah adventures between 1940 and 1941, often portraying her as an ethereal, white-robed figure who materializes to protect the innocent before reverting to her human guise.[2] After Hanks withdrew from comics in mid-1941, the character persisted in Jungle Comics under writers and artists like H.B. Hovious and Robert Pious, running as a backup feature until issue #51 in 1944, though these later stories toned down her supernatural elements in favor of more grounded jungle adventure narratives.[2][3]Fantomah holds a significant place in comics history as one of the earliest female superheroes, predating Wonder Woman's debut by nearly two years and marking a rare instance of a powered heroine in the Golden Age.[2] Now in the public domain due to lapsed copyrights, she has inspired modern adaptations and crossovers in independent publications, while Hanks' original stories have garnered cult status for their outsider art quality, culminating in a comprehensive 2025 Fantagraphics collection edited by Paul Karasik.[4]
Publication history
Original series
Fantomah was created by artist and writer Fletcher Hanks, who signed the stories under the pseudonym Barclay Flagg, for Fiction House's Jungle Comics anthology series.[2][3] The character debuted in Jungle Comics #2 (February 1940) as a backup feature, introduced as the "Mystery Woman of the Jungle" who protects the African wilderness from human exploiters.[5] In her inaugural story, Fantomah thwarts two ivory poachers attempting to raid an elephants' graveyard by turning their greed against them, transforming one into an elephant and the other into a hyena.[5]The feature ran semi-regularly as a backup story through Jungle Comics #51 (March 1944), with narratives centered on themes of jungle preservation against invasive threats.[3] Early tales by Hanks emphasized Fantomah's supernatural interventions, such as summoning winds to dismantle enemy aircraft or enlisting animal spirits to combat poachers and despoilers.[1] Stories often unfolded in Africanjungle settings, pitting the heroine against ivory poachers seeking hidden tusks, mad scientists unleashing giant alienlizards via experimental serums, and other exploiters like hunters or cultists disrupting the natural order.[6] For instance, in one adventure, Fantomah defeats a scientist who discovers a meteorite-based "super-vitamin plant" and cultivates monstrous reptiles to terrorize the wildlife.[6]Following Hanks' departure after Jungle Comics #15 (March 1941), the series transitioned to writer H.B. Hovious—likely a house pseudonym—and artist Robert Pious beginning with issue #16 (April 1941), shifting toward more grounded jungle adventure elements while retaining supernatural motifs.[2][7] A significant creative change occurred in Jungle Comics #27 (March 1942), where Hovious and new artist George Appel retconned Fantomah's backstory: she is revealed as the reincarnated spirit of an ancient Egyptian princess, awakened in the modern era as a guardian deity of the jungle, complete with a falcon companion named Horus.[8] This origin enhanced her mystical ties, enabling stories like invoking the god Anubis to exonerate herself from false accusations or calling upon ape deities to rescue allies from kidnappers.[8][9]
Reprints and revivals
The first post-Golden Age reprints of Fantomah stories appeared in A.C.E. Comics' Fantastic Adventures #1 (July 1987), which included a previously unreleased 1955 tale illustrated by George Tuska.[10]AC Comics, a successor publisher specializing in Golden Age revivals, continued reprinting her original adventures in anthologies such as Golden Age Greats #14 (March 1999), which explored jungle heroines, and Men of Mystery #85 (April 2011), focusing on female superheroes.[11][12] These efforts also included guest appearances in AC's flagship Femforce series around 1999. An independent reprint collection, Fantomah: Mystery Woman of the Jungle #1 (2015), compiled select Fiction House tales.[13]Fantomah received new material in Devil's Due Publishing's horror-comedy series Hack/Slash: The Series #29–32 (December 2009–March 2010), where she aided protagonists Cassie Hack and Vlad against supernatural threats, followed by a reprise in the sequel Hack/Slash #5 (June 2011).[14][15]In 2017, Chapterhouse Comics launched a four-issue limited series reimagining Fantomah as a modern horror figure, written by Ray Fawkes and drawn by Soo Lee, with the story centering on Paz Gallegos unleashing her inner monstrous alter ego amid family turmoil.[16] The series, rated for teens and emphasizing psychological dread over pulp action, was collected in a trade paperback titled Up From the Deep! in 2019.[17][18]Fantomah's public domain status, stemming from lapsed copyrights on her 1940s Fiction House appearances, has facilitated further independent revivals. A bonus story featuring the character, written by Damian Duffy and illustrated by David Brame, appeared in Rosarium Publishing's The Adventures of Lion Man graphic novel (June 2025), pairing her with another early Black superhero in a narrative updating Golden Age tropes.[19] Similarly, the 2024 webcomic Fantomah: Eyes of Hell, a solo project exploring her vengeful origins, exemplifies ongoing indie adaptations enabled by her unrestricted use.[20] In November 2025, Fantagraphics published Turn Loose Our Death Rays And Kill Them All!: The Complete Works of Fletcher Hanks, edited by Paul Karasik, collecting all of Hanks' original Fantomah adventures alongside his other comics.[21]
Fictional character biography
Golden Age portrayal
Fantomah was initially portrayed as the "Mystery Woman of the Jungle," a goddess-like ethereal figure who served as the protector of African wildlife and native inhabitants against human exploitation and natural threats.[1] In her debut story in Jungle Comics #2 (February 1940), created and illustrated by Fletcher Hanks under the pseudonym Barclay Flagg, she appears as a beautiful blonde woman who transforms into a flying, skull-faced entity with glowing blue skin upon detecting wrongdoing, using her powers to ensnare two ivory poachers in an elephant stampede by exploiting their greed for the animals' tusks.[5] Hanks depicted her without an explicit origin, emphasizing her role as an omnipresent avenger who swiftly delivers brutal, poetic justice to environmental destroyers, such as turning villains into animals or trapping them in inescapable natural disasters, often in untitled tales spanning issues #2 through #14.[3]Following Hanks' departure from comics in 1941, subsequent writers and artists, including H.B. Hovious and illustrators like George Appel, introduced a more structured backstory in Jungle Comics #27 (1942), retconning Fantomah as the reincarnation of an ancient Egyptian princess who rules a hidden jungle kingdom called Khefra.[1] This evolution provided her with a human alter ego—a white woman in safari-style jungle attire—who interacts more conventionally with sidekicks like the black panther Fury and the boy Ken, blending supernatural elements with adventure tropes while retaining her transformative abilities for combat.[6] Her adventures shifted toward serialized plots involving a wider array of adversaries, including ivory hunters seeking elephant graveyards, Nazi spies infiltrating African villages during World War II, alien invaders unleashing prehistoric beasts, and mystical creatures like giant spiders or tiger-women cults, all resolved through magical interventions that restore jungle harmony.[22][2]Visually, Hanks' early stories featured a crude, surreal art style with distorted proportions, stiff poses, and grotesque villain designs that heightened the otherworldly horror of Fantomah's skull-headed form floating amid chaotic jungle scenes.[23] In contrast, later artists adopted a more conventional illustrative approach, with dynamic action panels and realistic depictions of her dual identities, aligning her aesthetics closer to standard Golden Agejungle heroines while preserving the eerie transformation as a signature element.[3]
Modern reinterpretations
In the 2017 Chapterhouse Comics series written by Ray Fawkes and illustrated by Soo Lee, Fantomah is reimagined as Paz Gallegos, a 24-year-old woman grappling with family crises after her sisters vanish, transforming her into a tormented spirit known as the Weeping Woman haunted by ancient curses.[18] The series continued with Season 2 in 2023, with issues released through 2025, further exploring Paz's struggles with her alter ego.[24] This portrayal introduces deeper psychological dimensions, emphasizing personal loss and vengeance against supernatural threats that unravel her ordinary life.[25]AC Comics has incorporated Fantomah into its Femforce universe through reprints and cameo appearances, maintaining her Golden Age essence as a jungle protector while expanding her role in crossover scenarios with other public domain heroines.[26] Similarly, in Devil's Due Publishing's Hack/Slash: The Series #32 (2010), she appears as an immortal guardian confronting modern horrors like undead monsters, adapting her mystical powers to contemporary supernatural dangers in a team-up with Cassie Hack.Indie publications have further blended Fantomah with other public domain characters, as seen in the 2025 Rosarium Publishing graphic novel The Adventures of Lion Man, where a bonus story by Damian Duffy and David Brame depicts her as a young Black woman wrestler battling a vampirecoven in a high-flying ring showdown.[27] This version portrays her as a primordial force of nature, using agility and moral resolve to combat exploitation by supernatural predators.[28]Modern reinterpretations vary in origin details to suit thematic updates; some, like the Dynamite EntertainmentPathfinder: Worldscape series (2016–2017), retain her roots as an Egyptian-derived jungle goddess serving as an immortal ally against interdimensional invaders.[29] Others, such as the Chapterhouse iteration, present her as a shapeshifting entity tied to personal trauma rather than a fixed royal backstory, amplifying themes of colonialism through critiques of invasive forces disrupting natural and cultural harmony, and environmentalism via her defense against resource exploitation.[16]
Powers and abilities
Fantomah possesses vast magical powers, often described as near-omnipotent within the context of her jungle domain, allowing her to protect nature and its inhabitants from threats.[2] In her default guise, she appears as a beautiful woman clad in white robes. Upon sensing danger, she transforms her face into a grinning skull, sometimes detaching her head to fly as a disembodied, demon-like skull entity powered by "concentrated thought waves."[2][3]Her abilities include "eyes of flame" or phenomenal sight for detecting distant threats across the jungle, superhuman strength, telepathy, clairvoyance, telekinesis, and the power to transform others—such as turning poachers into apes or insects.[2][6] She can command animals, create matter, heal injuries, control natural forces like lightning or tsunamis, and exhibit indestructibility, rendering her impervious to conventional harm.[6][3] These powers are typically invoked through mental abilities like "super-thought rays" or "super-willpower auras," emphasizing her role as a spectral avenger. In later stories by other creators, her supernatural elements were somewhat toned down in favor of more adventurous feats.[2]
In other media
Television adaptations
In 2023, Lev Gleason Studios announced a live-action television series adaptation of Fantomah in collaboration with Campanario Entertainment, based on the modern comic series published by Lev Gleason, which reimagines the character in a horror-mystery narrative.[30][31]As of November 2025, the project remains in early development stages without a confirmed release date, incorporating supernatural horror elements alongside the character's transformative powers.[30]
Film adaptations
In 2018, a short film titled Miss Fury vs. Fantomah was released as a proof-of-concept project blending the characters Fantomah and Miss Fury in a modern superhero setting. Directed and produced by Curtis Everitt, the film reimagines Fantomah as an alternative version named Laurel Turner, portrayed by actress Allison Pittman.[32][33]The narrative centers on a dual-heroine team-up where Laurel Turner inherits property from her deceased uncle, activating her supernatural persona as Fantomah to combat technological threats. Paired with Miss Fury, a teenager equipped with a suit granting supernatural abilities, they confront corporate villains infiltrating a tech company to steal secrets. This portrayal adapts Fantomah's classic powers for contemporary conflicts, emphasizing her role as a protector against modern exploitation.[32][33]Produced as part of Saint Studios Films' "12 Films in 12 Months 2018" initiative, the 20-minute short serves as a pilot episode without progressing to a full-length feature film as of 2025. The project highlights independent filmmaking's use of public domain characters to explore female-led superhero stories.[34][33]
Fantomah, debuting in Jungle Comics #2 (February 1940), is widely recognized as the first female superhero in comic books, predating Wonder Woman's 1941 debut by over a year and establishing a groundbreaking archetype for empowered women in the genre.[35][4] Created by Fletcher Hanks under the pseudonym Barclay Flagg, the character emerged during the Golden Age of Comics, a period of explosive growth following Superman's 1938 introduction, when publishers like Fiction House rapidly expanded adventure titles to meet wartime demand.[36] Her stories featured a mysterious jungle guardian who wielded supernatural powers to exact vengeance on threats to nature, pioneering themes of female agency through magic and retribution that influenced subsequent heroines.[37][38]In the context of World War II-era comics, Fantomah's narratives aligned with broader cultural shifts, promoting anti-colonial sentiments by targeting ivory poachers, slavers, and exploitative outsiders who endangered African ecosystems, while emphasizing environmental stewardship as a core heroic duty.[39][40] These tales positioned her as a formidable protector, transforming from a ethereal beauty into a terrifying skeletal figure to deliver poetic justice, which underscored female empowerment in a male-dominated medium and inspired later jungle-based female leads.[41] Her innovative use of mystical abilities for vengeance helped shape the trope of the avenging female superhero, blending horror elements with heroism in ways that echoed through Golden Age titles.[6]Critically, Fantomah's run under Hanks received acclaim for its distinctive, grotesque art style—characterized by disproportionate figures, rigid action sequences, and a raw, folk-art-like primitivism that set it apart from more polished contemporaries.[4][42] However, like many Golden Age jungle comics, including Fantomah's series, these stories have been critiqued for perpetuating racial stereotypes, such as the white savior trope and caricatured depictions of Black African characters as naive or villainous foils in exoticized settings.[40] Despite these flaws, Hanks' unorthodox visuals and Fantomah's bold conceptualization contributed significantly to the evolution of superhero storytelling, highlighting women's potential as central, powerful protagonists.[43]
Public domain influence
Fantomah entered the public domain in the United States in 1968, as the copyright for its debut in Jungle Comics #2 (February 1940), published by Fiction House, was not renewed within the required 28-year period under pre-1978 U.S. copyright law.[44] This expiration allowed unrestricted use of the character and her original stories without licensing fees or permissions, significantly increasing accessibility for creators and scholars interested in Golden Agecomics.[45]The public domain status has facilitated widespread reprints in dedicated anthologies and collections, such as AC Comics' Golden Age Greats #14 (1999) and Men of Mystery #85 (2011), which reproduced early Fantomah adventures alongside other vintage superhero tales to highlight their historical significance.[11] It has also spurred indie comics and fan works, including webcomics like Public Domain Funnies on The Duck Webcomics platform, where artists adapt her stories in modern formats, and self-published zines featuring new artwork inspired by her design.[46] These efforts have boosted Fantomah's visibility in public domain compilations, such as those hosted by the Digital ComicMuseum, preserving scans of her original appearances for free digital access.[44]In 2025, Fantagraphics published Turn Loose Our Death Rays and Kill Them All!: The Complete Works of Fletcher Hanks, a comprehensive collection edited by Paul Karasik that reprints all 14 of Hanks' original Fantomah stories alongside his other works, further elevating her cult status and accessibility.[21]Modern creators have leveraged this freedom to feature Fantomah in crossover projects, notably the 2025 graphic novel The Adventures of Lion Man by Rosarium Publishing, where she appears in a bonus story reimagined as a supernatural wrestler alongside the early Black superhero Lion Man, written by Damian Duffy and illustrated by David Brame.[27] This inclusion enables diverse reinterpretations that explore themes like feminism—emphasizing her role as one of the first female superheroes—and ecology, drawing on her original portrayal as a jungle guardian to address environmental protection in contemporary narratives.[27]While the absence of copyright oversight has encouraged such creative liberty, it has also resulted in inconsistent portrayals across works, ranging from faithful reprints to highly stylized fan adaptations that alter her appearance or motivations.[26] Overall, however, this public domain accessibility has proven positive for preserving Golden Age history, allowing broader appreciation of Fantomah's pioneering contributions without commercial barriers.[44]