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Sizzle The Girl From A U N T Comic By Bill Ward Portable Jun 2026

In the golden age of American comic books, most superheroines wore capes. But in 1966, a different kind of heroine arrived on newsstands—one who wore very little besides a sly grin, a cascade of red hair, and a figure that defied the laws of anatomy. Her name was , and she was "The Girl from A.U.N.T."

Sizzle is not politically correct. She is not a role model. But she is a perfect time capsule of 1960s pop art: colorful, cheeky, and utterly unapologetic about its own absurdity. Sizzle the Girl from A U N T comic by Bill Ward

Unlike Emma Peel or Modesty Blaise, who were sleek and deadly, Sizzle succeeded through a combination of accidental luck, strategic wardrobe malfunctions, and the complete distraction of every male villain she encountered. She wasn't a feminist icon in the modern sense—but she was a powerful parody of male fantasy. In the golden age of American comic books,

Sizzle never actually uses a gun. Her weapons include: She is not a role model