Tag Archives: Button Box

Tammy 4 February 1984

Foul Play (artist John Armstrong, writer Ian Mennell)

Julie’s Jinx (artist Julian Vivas, writer Nick Allen)

Pam of Pond Hill (artist Bob Harvey, writer Jay Over)

First Term at Trebizon (artist Phil Gascoine, writer Anne Digby) – final episode

The Crayzees (artist Joe Collins)

The Button Box (artist Mario Capaldi, (sub)writer Linda Stephenson)

The Last Rider (artist Jesus Redondo, writer Chris Harris) – Pony Tale

Fun Time

Queen Rider (artist Eduardo Feito, writer A. D. Langholm)

My Terrible Twin (artist Juliana Buch)

Work Out! (Mari L’Anson) – feature 

Over at the forum at comics.co.uk there has been discussion about recipe features in girls’ comics and annuals. So in this entry we take a look at a recipe feature Tammy ran during this period called “Tammy’s Tasties”, a sample of which appears below. Readers could make their own contributions to this feature, with presumably some money in return. Recipe features were nothing new in Tammy. Around 1978-1980 she ran “Tuck-in with Tammy”, a full page recipe feature. The feature did not always appear, but as it was page length it could serve as a filler or handy reprint.

In the stories, we have a whodunnit story, “Foul Play”, where Katie Johnson has a treble mystery to solve. The first is trying to unravel who is conducting a vendetta against her team for a foul she received at a hockey match, the second is trying to discover who fouled her, and the third is whether it really was a foul or just an accident. Now that shows just how much investigation anyone ever put into the incident in the first place.

Tammy has three horse stories this week. The “Julie’s Jinx”, where Julie Lee is faced with a mystery of her own: is a Romany doll she gave her friend Gloria a jinx as spiteful Cindy claims, or is there some other explanation as to why Gloria’s pony has been acting strangely ever since he started wearing it? The second is one of my favourite Pony Tales and Jesus Redondo stories. It features the famous Pony Express, and it appears below. Its title is “The Last Rider”, but its title might as well be “The Pony Wrecker” because of the way Pony Express rider Reuben Stone treats his mounts. Cindy Hubble, at the last staging post of the Pony Express, constantly rages at this and not being able to do much about it. Crunch time comes when Cindy faces her worst dread – Reuben riding her own pony. The third is the penultimate episode of Tammy’s adaptation of “Queen Rider”.

Tammy’s other book adaptation, “First Term at Trebizon”, ends this week. Its replacement next issue is the last Tammy story crediting Alison Christie, “Cassie’s Coach”. The artist bringing this Victorian period story to life is a surprising one: Tony Coleman. Perhaps his style is being used because the story has lighter moments as well as dark ones as Cassie Lord and her siblings face surviving on their own when their mother is falsely imprisoned and they are evicted from their home. 

By popular demand, Tammy is reprinting a 1979 story, “My Terrible Twin”. Parole doesn’t often feature in redemption narratives, but that is the case here. Lindy is on parole after serving time in a remand home for shoplifting, which hasn’t done much to change her. It’s an uphill battle for Lindy’s sister Moira to improve her character. Worse, Lindy’s irresponsibility constantly gets poor Moira into trouble while Lindy emerges smelling like roses.

In Pam of Pond Hill, bossyboots Cherry Laurence has been pure aggravation since she was made prefect, but when she takes the lead in having the class help out in a flu epidemic she becomes more endearing. Has this solved the prefect problem, or do we still have to wait and see? 

This week’s Button Box story is a feminist one, with women golfers demanding the right to use the same golfing course as men, in a period where mixed golfing is not accepted. It is agreed that a golfing match will decide the matter, between the owner of the golfing course and his granddaughter. The match ends in a draw (talk about equality between the sexes) and the first mixed golfing course. Mixed golfing still takes a while to be accepted, but the granddaughter becomes a golfing champion!

Tammy 7 January 1984

Queen Rider (artist Eduardo Feito, writer A. D. Langholm)

Pam of Pond Hill (artist Bob Harvey, writer Jay Over) – new story

Foul Play (artist John Armstrong, writer Ian Mennell) – first episode

Happy New Year Fun Time

Your Button Box Calendar (Chris Lloyd)

The Button Box (artist Mario Capaldi, writer Ian Mennell)

Good as New (artist Maria Dembilio but credited as “Mary”, writer Maureen Spurgeon)

Room for Rosie (artist Santiago Hernandez, writer Alison Christie) – final episode

First Term at Trebizon (artist Phil Gascoine, writer Anne Digby)

The Crayzees (artist Joe Collins)

For New Year we present the last New Year issue from Tammy, in which Tammy starts a new story, provides a Button Box New Year calendar, makes the less-than-happy Happy New Year announcement that her price has gone up to 20p, and presents a coupon that could win 25 readers a signed copy of “Queen Rider”, one of the adaptations Tammy is currently running. “Room for Rosie” finishes her run with her own New Year story, in which she has a last-minute save from the scrap heap on New Year’s Day and starts off her new year with a new life in a fun fair. The Crayzees (below) present a surprisingly sobering story for New Year, and it’s one of their best. Both “Queen Rider” and “First Term at Trebizon” hit their climaxes this week, which means their resolutions aren’t far off and more new stories are on the way.

What is the new story for the New Year issue? John Armstrong has a change from Bella and is illustrating “Foul Play”, a new hockey story that’s got a mystery attached. Katie Johnson has suffered a badly injured hand from an ill-fated hockey match. Was it an accident as she believes or a foul from her own team (who viewed and resented her as an usurper) as everyone else believes – including the person who looks like they’re about to conduct a vendetta against the team? Like Carol-Anne Brabazon of Bunty’s “Down with St Desmond’s!”, they’ve even got a photograph of the team they’re going strike against, crossing out the faces of each member as they go. 

New Year was a popular time for new stories, and next week we are promised another new story, “Julie’s Jinx”, drawn by Julian Vivas. 

Pam of Pond Hill also starts a new story for New Year, but it’s anything but happy. She is less than thrilled to come back to school after the revelries of Christmas and New Year, and it seems things only get worse from there: grotty weather, grumpy winter blues staff, a flu bug that seems to be everywhere, and a classmate’s big-headed sister is unwisely appointed prefect, which provides her with the opportunity to throw her weight around, especially with Pam’s class. And so the plot threads are established for the rest of the story to follow. 

The New Year itself is 1984, so two things are expected: George Orwell’s “1984” and leap year. We read on in anticipation to see how Tammy honours both of these.

But no reader would have guessed that new year 1984 ultimately proved to be Tammy’s annus horribilis. This was the year of Tammy’s cancellation and go into what surely would have been the most incompatible merger in comic book history with the photo comic Girl. But even worse, Tammy was cut off by a strike before any of that even happened and never given a chance to finish her stories or say a proper goodbye.

Tammy 31 December 1983

Cover artist: Trini Tinturé

Queen Rider (artist Eduardo Feito, writer A. D. Langholm)

Christmas Chuckles

Bethlehem’s Come to Us (artist Maria Dembilio but credited as “Julian”, writer Alison Christie)

The Button Box (artist Mario Capaldi, writer Alison Christie)

Christmas Chuckles

A Christmas Mystery (artist John Johnston, writer Maureen Spurgeon) – Quiz

First Term at Trebizon (artist Phil Gascoine, writer Anne Digby)

Ralph Roisterham’s “Tiger” – a Pony Tale (artist Veronica Weir, writer Chris Harris)

Pam of Pond Hill (artist Bob Harvey, writer Jay Over)

Room for Rosie (artist Santiago Hernandez, writer Alison Christie)

The Crayzees (artist Joe Collins)

For the Christmas season we present the last Christmas issue of Tammy ever published. Inside, we have “Christmas Chuckles”; a Christmas story from the Crayzees where Miss T saves Christmas by helping to cure Santa of a cold; a special Christmas story from “Room for Rosie” (scans here), which ye Editor put on hiatus but informed us would return at Christmas; a Christmas story from Pam of Pond Hill in which we have morals about being organised for Christmas, but don’t be a power-driver over it; a Christmas quiz; and one of my favourite Tammy stories, “Bethlehem’s Come to Us…”, which is reproduced below. What can the Christmas spirit do for a family who are constantly quarrelling and back-biting because of the stress over Dad’s redundancy? So far, not much, and now it’s Christmas Eve. Is there hope yet? As Tammy would say – read on and see.

The Button Box does not have a Christmas story as it did in Tammy’s 1982 Christmas issue, but it has a story about the value of kindness, which is related to Christmas. It is the only Button story to have a foreshadowing, in which the button itself was shown in an earlier story but its story was not told at the time. Instead, its story is revealed at Christmas. 

An interesting note about Tammy artist John Johnston is that whenever he does spot illustrations for Tammy’s quizzes he uses a style based on Mad artist Paul Coker Jr., even using Coker panels from Mad as templates for some of the spot illustrations. One appears in the aforementioned Christmas quiz.

Tammy was big on adaptations, and it is currently running two: “Queen Rider” by A. D. Langholm and “First Term at Trebizon” by Anne Digby. There is evidence that “Queen Rider” was another book to start life as a girls’ serial, as “Bad Bella” from Tammy annual 1976 has a very similar plot (no, not Bella Barlow, whose title in the same annual has been changed to the once-only “That Barlow Kid” to avoid confusion). “Bad Bella” is no doubt a reprint from somewhere. Update: we have received information that “Bad Bella” is reprinted from Sally.

This week’s Pony Tale has a decidedly feminist slant to it, where Jane Dunnet disguises herself a boy to take over her brother’s “Tiger” job to an aristocrat, as the family badly need the wages. Of course she is discovered in the end, but she has conducted herself so incredibly well that everyone is all the more impressed at her being a girl. 

Tammy 18 February 1984

Cassie’s Coach (artist Tony Coleman, writer Alison Christie)

Foul Play (artist John Armstrong, writer Ian Mennell)

Julie’s Jinx (artist Julian Vivas, writer Nick Allen) – final episode

Pam of Pond Hill (artist Bob Harvey, writer Jay Over) – new story

Where’s Your Valentine? – Quiz (writer Maureen Spurgeon)

The Button Box (artist Mario Capaldi, writer Alison Christie)

Dear Diary – I Hate You! (artist Maria Barrera) – first episode

Plans for a Wedding – (artist Carlos Freixas) – complete Valentine story 

Valentine Chuckles

My Terrible Twin (artist Juliana Buch)

Make His Heart Melt! – Valentine Cookery Feature

It’s Valentine’s Day, and we honour the occasion with Tammy’s final Valentine issue, from 1984. And now it is 2024 – forty years since the issue was published. Happy 40th!

Inside, Tammy honours Valentine’s Day with Valentine’s Day features, a quiz, and a story about an upcoming wedding with a problem – two feuding aunts who will both be attending. Will the aunts’ feud spoil the wedding, or will the family find a way to sort them out and have a happy wedding, aunts and all?

The Button Box could have also gone for something romantic for Valentine’s Day, but instead it’s a historical period tale about “Rebecca”, a 19th century protest movement against exorbitant road tolls, with the protesters smashing toll-gates while dressed as women. The protest in the story ends in arrest (except for the protagonist’s father, who manages to escape), but “Rebecca” makes its point and helps to standardise the tolls. 

The issue also marks where Tammy stopped printing credits, so it is not known who wrote her new serial, “Dear Diary – I Hate You!”. Susie Judd passes a scholarship exam to a top boarding school, but on arrival she discovers she unwittingly packed her sister’s diary, which says she cheated in the exam. This makes things awkward for Susie, as the school really means business about its motto, “Honesty Always”, which seems to be plastered everywhere the eye can see. She gets paranoid about what if someone finds out what’s in the diary. There’s one “what if” we can sense already, as Susie has been warned about a dodgy girl at the school. The girl hasn’t appeared yet, but it’s obvious she’s going to be the villain of the story.

Tammy’s historical period serial, “Cassie’s Coach”, is on its second episode. Cassie and her siblings find an old coach from a junkyard to live in after their mother is wrongly jailed and they lose their home. However, this week it stirs up jealousy from both the upper class (the previous owner of the coach) and the lower class (Cassie’s old neighbours), and Cassie cops the spite at both ends. Fortunately, at both ends there are also helpers to the rescue.

“Julie’s Jinx” reaches its final episode. Julie Lee does not know whether a Romany corn doll she gave her friend Gloria is a jinx or not, but Gloria’s pony has been acting strangely ever since she had it, and now spiteful Cindy has spread rumours about it being a jinx. What a relief when they find a rational explanation – the doll was giving the pony an allergic reaction. 

That’s one mystery solved, but in “Foul Play”, the mystery of who is conducting a vendetta against a hockey team after an accusation of foul play (with nothing proven about it) continues. This week, the vendetta strikes several members of the team in one blow. 

Pam of Pond Hill also starts a new story, which enters the world of ballroom dancing. Pam’s classmate Francesca, after splitting up with her ballroom dancing partner when she’s close to a ballroom competition, chooses Goofy to be her partner instead. Pam is seriously wondering what the hell Francesca is thinking of – and, considering Goof’s disco dancing disaster at the beginning of the episode, we do too.

“My Terrible Twin” Lindy gets away with gatecrashing a fashion parade, but it was still gatecrashing. What does that say about how far she is on the road to reform after being paroled? A test for her looms when the landlady wants the flat redecorated. 

Tammy 15 January 1983

Cover artist: Guy Peeters

  • Romy’s Return (artist Juliana Buch, writer Charles Herring)
  • E.T. Estate (artist Guy Peeters, writer Jake Adams) – first episode
  • The Crayzees (artist Joe Collins)
  • The Button Box (artist Mario Capaldi, writer Alison Christie)
  • Bella (artist John Armstrong, writer Primrose Cumming)
  • Tammy/Gymnastics Freebies
  • Carla’s Best Friend (artist John Richardson) – Complete Story
  • Pam of Pond Hill (artist Bob Harvey, writer Jay Over)
  • Nanny Young (artist Phil Gascoine, writer Maureen Spurgeon)
  • Cuckoo in the Nest (artist Tony Coleman, writer Ian Mennell)
  • Make the Most of Winter (by Chris Lloyd) – feature 

Tammy makes another strong addition to the New Year. It’s the first episode of her classic “E.T. Estate”, complete with a beautiful cover spot to kick the story off and grab the readers. It is one of Tammy’s most striking covers. In the story, Keats Estate is dubbed E.T. Estate after it gets hit by a meteorite shower and emerges from it looking like a war zone…and war it is, for anyone who discovers what really fell from the sky. It’s an alien threat from outer space! 

Nanny Young finishes her current story, so she will start a new one next week for the January/New Year lineup. 

The complete story is another reprint from Misty, which was originally titled “A Girl’s Best Friend”. This is one of Misty’s most powerful stories and one to leave you in tears. A guide dog seeks help from a white witch to restore her mistress’s sight. But for the spell to work, someone must be willing to exchange their own sight for the girl’s blindness, which means they will become blind if the girl is to see. Ulp!

This week’s Button Box story is a World War II story about courage and not giving up, and that courage comes in all shapes and sizes and not just fighting the enemy on the battlefield. And to inspire courage in her Islamic gymnastics pupils, Bella is telling them the story of her going to Australia to teach gymnastics (her 1978 story).

In “Romy’s Return”, so-called best friend Linda resorts to dirty tricks to stop her friend Romy from winning the swimming trials because she doesn’t want to be pushed out. Afterwards, she is surprised and shocked to find the pool full of litter. It looks like Romy did it, but if so, Linda is the one who is really to blame. Has she gone too far? 

The Cuckoo in the Nest has a new problem: how to pass as a girl on the dance floor at the school disco, and in school uniform because he has no disco gear. His uncle did not think to kit him out in a proper girl’s wardrobe.

Pam has an idea to fulfil Tess’ dream of being a ballet dancer – get her into synchro swimming. But she hadn’t counted on Tess getting overzealous about the idea. 

Tammy 8 January 1983

Cover artist: Bob Harvey

  • Bella (artist John Armstrong, writer Primrose Cumming)
  • Hold Tight, Please! (artist Peter Wilkes) – complete story reprinted from Misty
  • The Crayzees (artist Joe Collins)
  • The Button Box (artist Mario Capaldi, writer Alison Christie)
  • Romy’s Return (artist Juliana Buch, writer Charles Herring)
  • Fathers’ Footsteps (artist John Johnston, writer Gerry Finley-Day) – final episode
  • Pam of Pond Hill (artist Bob Harvey, writer Jay Over) – new story
  • Nanny Young (artist Phil Gascoine, writer Maureen Spurgeon) 
  • Cuckoo in the Nest (artist Tony Coleman, writer Ian Mennell) 
  • Make ‘n’ Match! (by Chris Lloyd) – feature

We continue our New Year/January theme with more January issues from Tammy. January was always a time for some old stories to finish and new ones to start for the New Year. What’s in the lineup for that in this issue? “Fathers’ Footsteps” comes to an end, to be replaced next week by Tammy’s smash-hit story of 1983, “E.T. Estate”. Pam starts a new story, and Nanny Young will start one in two weeks, as her current story is on its penultimate episode. “Cuckoo in the Nest” is now building towards its climax; Leslie learns his great aunt, the unknowing cause of all his troubles, is going to pay a visit soon. 

As the cover (beautifully drawn by Bob Harvey) suggests, Bella is holding court at the Palace of the Shah. But this week she is courting trouble as she is pushing for women’s rights in a conservative Muslim country even more forcefully than the reformist Shah. She scores a victory for the women – this time – but others are worried about the backlash over it.

This week’s Button Box story is a moral lesson in the joys of sharing, which you won’t learn if you are selfish. For our complete story we get a reprint from Misty, “Hold Tight, Please!”.

“Romy’s Return” is a story that would not be out of place at DCT (a schemer, dirty tricks, and a girl who can’t find her feet again after she moves back). Linda Powell is enjoying the top spot at school after her best friend, Romy Benedict, vacated it when she moved to London. Then Romy moves back and wants to move back into top spot, but not if Linda can help it. The situation has Linda constantly oscillating between dirty tricks to keep her top spot and pangs of conscience. Which will win this week? At the beginning of the episode it is Linda’s conscience, but by the end of it she goes back to dirty tricks when she loses her form project to Romy.

Tammy New Year Issue 1 January 1983

  • Bella (artist John Armstrong, writer Primrose Cumming)
  • Romy’s Return (artist Juliana Buch, writer Charles Herring)
  • Fathers’ Footsteps (artist John Johnston, writer Gerry Finley-Day)
  • The Button Box (artist Mario Capaldi, writer Alison Christie)
  • Tammy Wall Diary – feature (writer Chris Lloyd)
  • Pam of Pond Hill (artist Bob Harvey, writer Jay Over)
  • What’s Your New Year Resolution? – quiz (artist John Johnston, writer Maureen Spurgeon)
  • Nanny Young (artist Phil Gascoine, writer Maureen Spurgeon)
  • Cuckoo in the Nest (artist Tony Coleman, writer Ian Mennell)
  • The Crayzees (artist Joe Collins)

For New Year we profile the 1983 New Year issue of Tammy. Inside, Tammy provides readers with a wall diary and a New Year quiz. “Fathers’ Footsteps” joins the New Year celebrations when both feuding families become snowbound and take refuge in a barn, where they start a New Year barn dance to keep themselves warm. The Crayzees and Pam of Pond Hill also have New Year themes.

January was a common time for girls’ titles to start new stories, so what is coming up this time? “Fathers’ Footsteps” is clearly about to end, so a new story will replace it soon. Pam will start a new story next week. The current Nanny Young story looks like it is headed for its conclusion, which means she will soon start a new story too. However, Bella and the other serials look like they still have a way to go before they reach their conclusions, so there will not be much else new in the Tammy lineup over January 1983.

Tammy Christmas Issue 25 December 1982

Bella (artist John Armstrong, writer Primrose Cumming)

The Fireside Friend (artist Douglas Perry) – complete story

Father’s Footsteps (artist John Johnston, writer Gerry Finley-Day)

The Christmas Roses (artist Peter Wilkes) – complete story

Tammy Christmas Box! – Christmas quiz

The Button Box (artist Mario Capaldi, writer Alison Christie)

Cuckoo in the Nest (artist Tony Coleman, writer Ian Mennell)

Nanny Young (artist Phil Gascoine, writer Maureen Spurgeon)

Pam of Pond Hill (artist Bob Harvey, writer Jay Over)

Crayzee Christmas (artist Joe Collins)

It’s Christmas time, and here is the Tammy 1982 Christmas issue. It’s dated the Big Day itself, so we have to wonder how and when the issue was distributed. Did readers have to wait until after Boxing Day for their copies? That must have been agony for them.

All the way through the issue Tammy has beautiful holly borders. Two complete stories (recycled from Strange Stories), a Christmas Quiz, The Button Box, Nanny Young, Pam of Pond Hill and Crayzee Christmas all add their bit to Christmas with a Christmas and/or related themes, such as snow and fireside. Mind you, Miss T is rather reluctant to do so as Christmas isn’t for witches, but Edie isn’t giving up that easily (below). Father’s Footsteps (where both feuding families suffer the biggest trick yet from sneaky Joy and Kim but of course will blame each other for it) is heading for a snowbound situation, so in a way it also adds to the theme. Only in Bella and Cuckoo in the Nest is it business as usual. 

As the cover says, it is pandemonium at Pam’s Pond Hill “Snow White” panto. Much of the problem is Di’s hero-worship of the lead, “Divine” Davinia, because she is so sophisticated. Di takes it to such extremes that it is interfering with the panto, annoying the class and upsetting her friends. Worse, Davinia is using it to take advantage of her. Di’s obsession with Davinia even lands her in a kettle drum in the orchestra pit during dress rehearsal! This week, Pam finally brings Di to her senses by getting her to see Davinia for what she really is: a selfish creep. So selfish that she cuts the panto to attend a concert and then has the gall to come back to be a star when the concert is cancelled – but she reckons without Pam.

Miss T is not into the Christmas spirit. From Tammy 25 December 1982.

Tammy 19 February 1983

Pam of Pond Hill (artist Bob Harvey, writer Jay Over)

E.T. Estate (artist Guy Peeters, writer Jake Adams)

Bella (artist John Armstrong, writer Primrose Cumming)

The Button Box (artist Mario Capaldi, writer Alison Christie)

Into the Fourth at Trebizon (artist Diane Gabbot(t), writer Anne Digby) – text adaptation

Just Like a Child… – complete story, repeated from Strange Stories

Heart to Heart Hints (Mari L’Anson) – Valentine feature

The Crayzees (artist Joe Collins) 

Happy Valentine’s Day (writer Maureen Spurgeon) – quiz 

Nanny Young (artist Phil Gascoine, writer Maureen Spurgeon)

Cuckoo in the Nest (artist Tony Coleman, writer Ian Mennell)

Goodies – Valentine’s Day cookery feature

For Valentine’s Day, here is the Valentine issue from Tammy 1983, an issue that is now 40 years old this year. Happy 40th!

Inside, we have plenty of Valentine features, including a Valentine’s Day story from “The Crazyees”. You would think The Button Box would have joined Valentine’s Day with a love story from the button box, but instead it’s a button story about Elizabeth II’s coronation.

Setting the Valentine theme off is a most beautiful Valentine’s Day cover, one of my favourites, with Tammy’s resident features: Bella, Pam of Pond Hill and The Button Box. It also features what must be the most extraordinary story ever in girls’ comics: “Cuckoo in the Nest”. There are loads of Cinderella stories, slave stories, animal stories, sports stories and SF stories, but you surely won’t find another serial like this in girls’ comics. Love it or hate it, you can never forget it. Why? It has a boy, Leslie Dodds, as the main protagonist, no less. Also, he is masquerading as a girl at a boarding school, would you believe? The reason for it is bit complicated to explain here, but maybe there’ll be an entry on this one at some point. So we have a boy who has to learn hard and fast about the girls’ world to keep up his masquerade, and the girl readership gets a taste of the boys’ world into the bargain. No doubt the closet male readership enjoyed this story too, along with the footy that’s in it. The story is now on its penultimate episode, which ends on the note that the game is now well and truly up for Leslie, and there’s no place to hide.

Still on the subject of masquerades, aliens are taking over “E.T. Estate” (and then Earth, of course) by switching all the people with themselves as doubles. They try to do this with Jenny Holmes, the only girl who knows what they’re up to. However, this time a weakness comes into play, which causes it to fail. But then Jenny discovers her parents have been switched. How? These aliens may be able to duplicate the human beings they replace, but boy, are they lousy actors! Their impostures would make the “Cuckoo in the Nest” look professional by comparison. Another weakness exposed. 

Bella’s current job is gymnastics instructor. There’s nothing new about that, but this time she’s doing it in an Islamic country where teaching oppressed Muslim girls gymnastics gets her caught right up in a modernism versus fundamentalism clash, with an usurper taking advantage to overthrow the Shah Bella works for. Shades of Iran! Right now, Bella’s retelling her pupils the story of how she taught gymnastics in Australia. However, the flashback doesn’t quite square with the original 1978 print. Either there’s something wrong with Bella’s memory or there’s some cavalier editing here. 

In Pam of Pond Hill, Tess Bradshaw has gone crazy over synchro swimming. However, an unfair ban (now lifted) on Pond Hill pupils using the public swimming baths at any time and now a clash of instructors have been causing problems. But that is nothing compared with Tess’s biggest problem: her nonstop yakking and bragging about synchro, which constantly annoys everyone if it doesn’t put them off her.

“Just Like a Child…” (reprinted from Strange Stories, with text boxes replacing the Storyteller) is a cautionary tale not to be too quick to dispose of your old childhood treasures, just because you think you’re past them. You never know, as Andrea Owen finds out when she is a little too zealous to switch from toys to teen stuff, only to find that one toy won’t be got rid of that easily. 

In Nanny Young, there’s a fake ghost called Sir Roger when the residents of rundown Manor Towers play ‘ghost’ to get publicity to save the manor (which backfires). It might be coincidence, but could this be a reference to Sir Roger from “Gaye’s Gloomy Ghost”? 

Tammy 20 August 1983

Cover artist: John Armstrong

Namby Pamby (artist Eduardo Feito, writer Ian Mennell)

Bella (artist John Armstrong, writer Primrose Cumming)

Welcome, Stranger! (artist Douglas Perry, writer Chris Harris) – Pony Tale

Room for Rosie (artist Santiago Hernandez, writer Alison Christie)

Holiday Miss Title! (writer Maureen Spurgeon) – Quiz 

Fate – or Fortune? (artist Carlos Freixas, writer Maureen Spurgeon) – complete story

The Button Box (artist Mario Capaldi, writer Alison Christie)

Backhand Play (artist Phil Gascoine, writer Ian Mennell)

Make Your Mind Up, Maggie (artist Juliana Buch)

Pretty Tidy (Chris Lloyd) – feature 

We had this issue before, but the post disappeared for some reason. So here it is again for 1983 issue in our Tammy August month round. 

Inside is one of the most historic moments in the saga of Bella Barlow – the moment when her arch-antagonists, Jed and Gert Barlow, make their final bow and disappear from her strip for good. We never thought we’d see the day. This was an astonishing move for Tammy to take, and we have to wonder what was behind it. Did ye Editor get tired of them or something? Anyway, good riddance to them. Our only regret is that although they had their karmic low points (including prison), they were never really punished for their treatment of Bella. 

In our other stories, Pam’s ridiculously overprotective mother does it again in “Namby Pamby”. The moment she hears Pam’s in a swimming match, she races to the pool, barrelling through the crowd and screaming hysterics, just because she thinks her precious little baby’s catching a chill. Oh, for crying out loud! Pauline Wheeler thinks she’s found “Room for Rosie” pretty quickly, but the new home falls through, so back to square one. No doubt this will be the first in a long string of failed homes before Rosie finds the One. “Backhand Play” is now on its penultimate episode, and it sets the stage for the final one: showdown between the tennis club and their backhand-playing tennis officer, Terry Knightly’s uncle, who’s now making an utter mockery of tennis. And the complications over juggling between riding and ballet get even worse for Maggie in “Make Your Mind Up, Maggie”.

Tammy’s complete stories are now the Button Box series, a Pony Tale series, and a self-contained complete story, a number of which had a supernatural theme. Some of them were reprints of Strange Stories, others were totally new and credited, giving us insight as to who might have written the spooky completes of the past.