Hello Comics Readers:
Today, I’m going to show off the work of a really great and underrated cartoon craftsman, Stan Drake. His milestone continuity strip, THE HEART OF JULIET JONES premiered sixty years ago this week.
THE HEART OF JULIET JONES was a classic love melodrama strip, or soap opera, if you like. This had been a staple genre for strips as far back as when continuities started to flourish in the 1920’s, but Drake’s strip (written by Elliot Caplin) was right up to date.
The story centers around Juliet, a 30-year-old brunette, her teen-aged blonde sister, Eve, and their widower father. They reside in the tidy, quaint little town of Devon. Although never established just what state Devon might be in, it seems an awful lot like Connecticut.
In the first story, Eve is a classic bad girl, straight out of a drive-in biker/hot rod movie. She’s nasty and rebellious, and gets into a love rivalry with poor, put upon Julie over one of her own high school teachers. This “Lolita”-like arrangement ended with the teacher bowing out of the strip for good on a fast train out of Devon. I wonder how this story would fly sixty years on? A storyline like this was designed to show that Julie has to play mother to sis. However, things between the two brightened up immediately, and Eve was a bubbly, adorable creature with more conventional boyfriends and teenage interests, often going from one job after another.
Juliet was still burdened with being the breadwinner of the clan after her father loses his job at a local bank. He’s a tired, meek little man, who looks whipped before he starts. He spends most of his time like Eve, going from one temporary job to another.
Juliet eventually becomes a small business woman, opening a hat shop and creating her own styles, at first, by converting old hand-me-downs. But, she really saves the day by running for, and winning Devon’s Office of Mayor.
Most of the time, though, Eve is the star. Her adventures and love life dominate the strip. Drake based Eve on his wife, and obviously she must have posed for him quite a lot. The expressions and positions are quite realistic, and he could make her seem like a real girl.
I enclose some samples of Drake’s early years here today. He worked on THE HEART OF JULIET JONES until 1989. A gifted draftsman, he had a keen eye for light and shadow. It’s a pity that we haven’t a lot of cartoonists of his talent today.
Yours,
The Archive Man at KFS






I’ve been in love with the character of Eve Jones since I was nine! She was (and is) the most beautiful girl in comics. Her facial expressions were always dead on, very specific to the story situation, as were all the characters. Stan Drake probably used models and photo scrap quite a bit. I think he used assistants as well. It’s interesting to know that Eve was based on Stan Drake’s wife. I’ve also heard a bit of Marilyn Monroe crept in to the character as well. Did Elliot Caplin write the entire run of the strip?
That’s hilarious, Mark, because I have to admit I was not much older when I began to find myself drawn to The Heart of Juliet Jones because of Eve. A couple of years or so earlier I had become more interested in reading The Phantom, as it was about the time Rex was introduced, and I could identify with him since he was a kid like me. But after a while I started noticing Eve and began to read Juliet Jones as well. I had such a crush, I hated it when Juliet was the center of a story rather than Eve. I’m really enjoying reading the earlier Eve…, I mean *Juliet* Jones stories on DailyINK.