| Field |
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| Sequence Number |
1 |
1 |
| Title |
Tondeleyo |
Tondeleyo |
| Unofficial Title? |
No |
No |
| Type |
comic story |
comic story |
| Feature |
Blackhawk |
Blackhawk |
| Genre |
adventure; war |
adventure; war |
| Job Number |
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| Script |
Bill Woolfolk |
Bill Woolfolk |
| No Script |
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| Pencils |
Reed Crandall |
Reed Crandall |
| No Pencils |
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| Inks |
Reed Crandall |
Reed Crandall |
| No Inks |
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| Colors |
? |
? |
| No Colors |
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| Letters |
Joe Rosen |
Sam Rosen |
| No Letters |
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| Editing |
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| No Editing |
X |
X |
| Page Count |
15 |
15 |
| Page Count Uncertain |
No |
No |
| Characters |
Blackhawk; Chop-Chop; Olaf; Hendrickson; Andre; Stanislaus; Chuck; Tondeleyo (villain, introduction, death?); Hans Oberst (villain, death); von Gurst (villain, death) |
Blackhawk; Chop-Chop; Olaf; Hendrickson; Andre; Stanislaus; Chuck; Tondeleyo (villain, introduction, death?); Hans Oberst (villain, death); von Gurst (villain, death) |
| Synopsis |
Blackhawk challenges Nazi Ace Hans Oberst to an aerial duel to the death, which he accepts, but Blackhawk is unaware that it is a trap. However, a newcomer to Blackhawk Island, Tondeleyo, sows seeds of discontent and cowardice among the Blackhawks, and Chop-Chop is the only one to pull his friends out of their depression and take on the Nazis. |
Blackhawk challenges Nazi Ace Hans Oberst to an aerial duel to the death, which he accepts, but Blackhawk is unaware that it is a trap. However, a newcomer to Blackhawk Island, Tondeleyo, sows seeds of discontent and cowardice among the Blackhawks, and Chop-Chop is the only one to pull his friends out of their depression and take on the Nazis. |
| Reprint Notes |
- in The Blackhawk Archives (DC, 2001 series) #1
|
- in The Blackhawk Archives (DC, 2001 series) #1
|
| Notes |
Letterer credit per Mark Evanier in the Archives edition. Mark Evanier states in the Archive edition that Alex Kotzky appears to have assisted Crandall on his early Blackhawk stories. The Who's Who lists Kotzky as a Blackhawk artist from 1942-44/47. |
Letterer credit per Mark Evanier in the Archives edition. Mark Evanier states in the Archive edition that Alex Kotzky appears to have assisted Crandall on his early Blackhawk stories. The Who's Who lists Kotzky as a Blackhawk artist from 1942-44/47. |
| Keywords |
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| Reprint Links |
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