Pinky Pinkerton

For the early 20th-century English translator, see Percy E. Pinkerton. For the sportscaster on Bunnytown, see Bunnytown.
Pinky Pinkerton
Publication information
Publisher Marvel Comics
First appearance Sgt. Fury and his Howling Commandos vol. 1 #8 (July 1964)
Created by Stan Lee, Jack Kirby
In-story information
Alter ego Percival Pinkerton
Team affiliations Howling Commandos
S.H.I.E.L.D.

Percival "Pinky" Pinkerton is a fictional character, a soldier in Marvel Comics' shared universe, the Marvel Universe. The character's first appearance was in Sgt. Fury and his Howling Commandos vol. 1 #8 (July 1964), in which he replaced Jonathan Junior Juniper who was killed in issue #4.

Fictional character biography

Percival "Pinky" Pinkerton was an English member of the original Howling Commandos who fought alongside the team during World War II. A British Army commando and gentleman ranker who used an umbrella as a weapon along with his Thompson submachine gun, Pinkerton had served alongside the unit commander Captain Samuel Happy Sam Sawyer prior to Pearl Harbor when both were with the British Commandos.

Along with Col Timothy Dum Dum Dugan and Dino Manelli, he helped organize the Deadly Dozen.

Though never explained in the series, Pinkerton wore a Carlist Requetés type red beret with a yellow tassel with his Battle Dress that may have involved service in the Spanish Civil War. Pinkerton also wore his battle dress with an open collar with scarf rather than having the buttoned collar of a British other rank.

In issue #23 ("The Man Who Failed") of Sgt. Fury and his Howling Commandos, Percy’s older brother, Lieutenant Colonel Pinkerton appeared. The story, set in Burma revealed that Pinkerton came from an English family with a long tradition of service as officers to the Crown. Why Pinkerton never accepted a commission was explained as his living a playboy womanising life style during his initial military training that led him to be unable to catch up with his studies and resigning.[1]

In the first Sgt Fury Annual taking place with the Howlers (Howling Commandos) being recalled up to service in the Korean War, Pinkerton was a sergeant as were all the other former private soldiers of the unit. At the time of their 1966 Vietnam War mission (Annual #3, Sgt Fury and his Howling Commandos) Pinkerton was managing a Playboy Club in London.

As with several other of the Howling Commandos, Pinkerton joined S.H.I.E.L.D.. He was said to have died in London after a long battle with cancer, with Dum Dum Dugan at his side.[2]

Pinkerton and the Essex Regiment

Pinkerton wore Essex Regiment shoulder flashes on his battledress. The battalion that Lt. Colonel Pinkerton led was referred to as the "Burma Dragons". During the Burma Campaign the Essex Regiment were part of the Chindits. A famous member of the regiment was Arthur Ernest Percival who was commissioned into the regiment in 1916 and achieved fame as the Regimental Intelligence Officer where the Irish Republican Army put a price on his head. He later commanded the Imperial Garrison at Singapore, surrendering his command to the Japanese in 1942.

Ancestry

Three ancestors of Percy were mentioned in Sgt. Fury and his Howling Commandos. These include:

Character basis

In a 2002 interview with the Traditional Values Coalition's executive director Andrea Sheldon Lafferty about the latest incarnation of the comic book character of the Rawhide Kid who was now homosexual, Stan Lee said, "years ago [a comic book] that I did, Sgt Fury, ...had a gay character. One member of the platoon was called, I think, Percy Pinkerton. He was gay. We didn't make a big issue of it. In this comic book that I read, the word gay wasn't even used. He's just a colorful character who follows his own different drummer. He follows a different beat. But we're not proselytizing for gayness".[3] In a 2005 interview, however, Lee stated that Pinkerton came off as being gay but that "it wasn't purposely done that way."[4]

In Sgt Fury #23 Pinkerton was portrayed as a playboy. Artist Dick Ayers said in an interview that Stan Lee told him to base Pinkerton on David Niven.[5] This idea seems logical as one of the Howling Commandos, Dino Manelli was based on Dean Martin who not only had a movie and later television career, but had a former sidekick named Jerry Larkin based on Jerry Lewis who was killed in issue #63. Martin had attracted praise for his performance in the war film The Young Lions. Niven was familiar from his role in The Guns of Navarone where he played a gentleman ranker who refused to take responsibility. Another influence may have been John Steed of The Avengers who always carried and frequently used an umbrella in fight scenes. The time of Pinkerton's appearance in the comic was during the British invasion that hit the United States in 1964, and Marvel may have been trying to appeal to British readers of its comics.

Sgt Fury also had an Australian soldier character in a few issues named "Rolfe Harrison" though he resembled the actor Rod Taylor more than the singer Rolf Harris. Harrison appeared in both "Sgt Fury" and Captain Savage and his Leatherneck Raiders; he never joined any of the teams as a regular character.

In other media

Television

References

  1. Lee, Stan The Man Who Failed #23 Sgt Fury and his Howling Commandos
  2. Secret Warriors #19
  3. CNN.com - Marvel Comics unveils gay gunslinger - Dec. 13, 2002
  4. Thomas, Roy (August 2011). "Stan Lee's Amazing Marvel Interview!". Alter Ego (TwoMorrows Publishing) (104): 22.
  5. Page Not Found
  6. Marvel.com (January 16, 2015). "DEBRIEFING MARVEL'S AGENT CARTER: THE IRON CEILING". Marvel. Retrieved January 16, 2015.

External links

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