"Real Name"@en . "Base of Operations"@en . . . . "Created by"@en . . "Special suit"@en . "Black Fury Newspaper Strip"@en . "Enhanced Strength and Speed"@en . "unnamed metropolis"@en . "Aliases"@en . "Miss Fury is published by Dynamite Entertainment. Price per issue is $3.99."@en . "Bell Syndicate"@en . "Fighting Expertise"@en . . "1941-04-06"^^ . . . "Miss Fury.jpg"@en . . "Team Affliations"@en . . "None"@en . "Original Publisher"@en . "Skills and Abilities"@en . . "Miss Fury (originally called the Black Fury) is a superheroine from the Golden Age of comic books."@en . . "First Appearance"@en . "Creators"@en . . "250"^^ . . . . . . . . . . . . . "Marla Drake was a wealthy socialite who discovered that another girl was wearing the same outfit to a party. Her housemaid, Francine, suggested that (to prevent embarrassment) Marla could wear an African panther skin that her uncle had willed to her. Her friend, Albino Jo, advised against wearing the ceremonial outfit, meant to be worn only by a witch doctor however, it fit her precisely. However, Marla never made it to the party. On the way, she instead ends up helping to recapture an escaped murderer. The press bestowed the name \"Black Fury\" on her though she later corrected them that she was \"Miss Fury.\" Having enjoyed her first case, Drake continued as a costumed crime fighter. Fighting enemies such as General Bruno Beitz, Baroness Erica von Kampf, Miguel Rico, Dr. Diman Saraf, and Whiffy. Miss Fury's vigilantism soon got the attention of Detective Carey who sought to find her true identity and if her alliances were with or against the law and later fell in love with Marla. One ongoing plotline was Marla's adoption of Darron, the abandoned son of Erica Von Kampf and Gary Hale (Marla's former fianc\u00E9). Marla was unaware of the toddler's parentage but, she rescued him in Brazil from the brutal guardianship of Diman Saraf, who planned to use him in a deadly experiment. She was initially denied custody of the boy because she was a single woman, which broke her heart but, her courage and heroism in the rescue eventually won over the authorities. Marla was then, for the duration of the series, an unmarried woman with a child: a rather progressive scenario for a 1940s adventure strip (and because she had a job with a clothing designer, she enlisted the help of her friend Francine, who offered to be Darron's governess after losing her job in a war plant because of returning servicemen \u2014 a significant issue facing working women after the war)."@en . "Miss Fury is published by Dynamite Entertainment. Price per issue is $3.99."@en . "Miss Fury"@en . . . "Black Fury"@en . "Miss Fury"@en . . . . "June Tarpe Mills"@en . . . . "Miss Fury (originally called the Black Fury) is a superheroine from the Golden Age of comic books."@en . "Tools and Weapons"@en . . . . "Tarp\u00E9 Mills"@en . . "Powers"@en . . . . . "Marla Drake"@en . "Marla Drake was a wealthy socialite who discovered that another girl was wearing the same outfit to a party. Her housemaid, Francine, suggested that (to prevent embarrassment) Marla could wear an African panther skin that her uncle had willed to her. Her friend, Albino Jo, advised against wearing the ceremonial outfit, meant to be worn only by a witch doctor however, it fit her precisely. Having enjoyed her first case, Drake continued as a costumed crime fighter. Fighting enemies such as General Bruno Beitz, Baroness Erica von Kampf, Miguel Rico, Dr. Diman Saraf, and Whiffy."@en .