Mandrake in North Africa: Difference between revisions
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
Line 50: | Line 50: | ||
*"Besa lo stregone", [[Mandrake 16 (Comics Stars in the World)|''Mandrake'' #16]] (1977) | *"Besa lo stregone", [[Mandrake 16 (Comics Stars in the World)|''Mandrake'' #16]] (1977) | ||
**"Re Lothar contro Besa", [[Mandrake 17 (Comics Stars in the World)|''Mandrake'' #17]] (1977) | **"Re Lothar contro Besa", [[Mandrake 17 (Comics Stars in the World)|''Mandrake'' #17]] (1977) | ||
*"Besa, lo stregone", [[New Comics Now 148|''Mandrake - New Comics Now'' #148]] (1985) | |||
*"Besa, lo stregone", [[Mandrake 16 (Comic Art)]] (1992) | *"Besa, lo stregone", [[Mandrake 16 (Comic Art)]] (1992) | ||
Revision as of 11:09, 4 February 2013
Mandrake in North Africa | |
Start date: | September 4th, 1939 |
---|---|
End date: | December 23rd, 1939 |
# of strips: | 96 (16 weeks) |
Writer: | Lee Falk |
Artist: | Phil Davis |
Preceded by: | "Mandrake in Cockaigne" |
Followed by: | "The Mountain Bandits" |
"Mandrake in North Africa" is the 19th Mandrake daily story. The story was written by Lee Falk and drawn by Phil Davis.
Plot Summary
This article, or section of an article, is very short. You can help MandrakeWiki by expanding it. |
Appearances
Recurring characters
One-time characters
Locations
Behind the scenes
Lothar become King of Wambesi, one of the major tribes in the land of the Phantom.
Reprints
This story has been published in the following publications:
Brazil
- "Mandrake na África", Mandrake Coleção #11 (1990)
France
- "Un drame de la sorcellerie", Aventures et Mystère #54 (1948)
- "Le sorcier des Wambesi", Spécial Mandrake #13 (1964)
Italy
- "Besa lo stregone", Mandrake #16 (1977)
- "Re Lothar contro Besa", Mandrake #17 (1977)
- "Besa, lo stregone", Mandrake - New Comics Now #148 (1985)
- "Besa, lo stregone", Mandrake 16 (Comic Art) (1992)
Spain
- "Besa el hechicero", Mandrake #11 (198?)
USA
- "no title", The Official Mandrake #10 – #11 – #12 (1989)
Yugoslavia
- (romanized as "Princ Lotar"), Zabavnik #106 (1941)
- (no given title), Strip #1, #2, #3 and #4 (1951) (Note: ending with the strip of October 5, 1939)