The Mystery of the Striped Orchid: Difference between revisions

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'''"The Mystery of the Striped Orchid"''' is the 24th Mandrake [[daily story]].  
'''"The Mystery of the Striped Orchid"''' is the 24th Mandrake [[daily story]].  
The story was written by [[Lee Falk]] and drawn by [[Phil Davis]].
The story was written by [[Lee Falk]] and drawn by [[Phil Davis]].
This story exists in two variants, one made to span six newspaper columns, the other to span five.  


== Plot Summary ==
== Plot Summary ==

Latest revision as of 07:52, 21 October 2024

The Mystery of the Striped Orchid
Start date: April 7th, 1941
End date: June 21st, 1941
# of strips: 66 (11 weeks)
Writer: Lee Falk
Artist: Phil Davis
Preceded by: "Dr Griff's Invention"
Followed by: "The Great Grando"

"The Mystery of the Striped Orchid" is the 24th Mandrake daily story. The story was written by Lee Falk and drawn by Phil Davis. This story exists in two variants, one made to span six newspaper columns, the other to span five.

Plot Summary

Clair's uncle is her guardian, as long as she remains unmarried. Now she has become engaged to Bob and her uncle fear to lose the estate and the wonderful orchid collection. But in the collection there is a rare tropical striped orchide, said to give off drug-like perfume that arouses urge to kill.

Appearances

Recurring characters

One-time characters

  • Clair
  • Uncle, Clair's uncle.
  • Bob, Clair's fiancé.

Locations

  • New York


Behind the scenes

  • The title for the story is taken from the strip of April 7, 1941 (Beginning - The Mystery of the Striped Orchid).

Signifiant covers

Reprints

This story has been published in the following publications:

Australia

Brazil

Denmark

Finland

France

West Germany

Italy

French Polynesia

  • "L'orchidea del delitto", Mandrake #6 (Comics Stars in the World 1976) note: Italian text.

New Zealand

Norway

Portugal

Spain

Sweden

USA

Original signed by Lee Falk (+ detail)

  • Original with dedication to Jimmy Hatlo (1897-1963), creator of comic strips "They'll Do It Every Time" and "Little Iodine" / text: "“A Nassau Portrait of the Writer At Work".