brigid: (9CL)
[personal profile] brigid
McEldowney had a WWII story line (the first of his WWII story lines) that involved the exciting, sexy, and tragic story of how Gran and her husband got together. It more or less starts here.

Edna, aka Edie, aka Eva, is voluntold to entertain German POWs: to sing to them, and then chat gently with them and thus pump them for information. They're young and lonely and horny and she's a lovely young woman who literally speaks their language. It's not a bad plan. She's first generation Austrian-American and speaks German fluently. She meets a hot wehrmacht officer named Lt. Peter Kiesel. He claims he isn't wearing his uniform by choice. He states that a bunch of his musician pals were "able to escape" to Zurich but he was conscripted. He entertains his fellow German PoWs because they are countrymen, he claims, not because he's loyal to any Nazi cause.

He winds up offering bits of intelligence to her, declaring himself "a traitor" while also stating the information is nothing vitally important. Is he downplaying the information she receives, or is it actually... just enough information to string her superior officers along and keep her in that camp? Just how much of a traitor is he?

He gives her a song to sing, "C," by Francis Poulenc, at a CSO show. A song in French will obviously spur English and American grunts on to victory.



He states here that rumors he's passing "actual intelligence" to Allies is unfounded. In other words, the stuff he and the other PoWs is giving her is useless. He's not ACTUALLY a traitor, even though he has every reason to work for Hitler's downfall as an artist who's seen his compatriots imprisoned and killed.

(I want to note that in addition to being an extremely popular singer Edie was a broadcaster, she had a career, and as far as I know never had a job after getting married.)(Also her short hair is super cute.)

Edie and Kiesel reunite ten years later, Bill still MIA, Edie still virginal and waiting. Kiesel has a thriving opera career, by the way.

You don't want a memorial, you don't want a marker, and you don't want to move on is a heartbreaking parallel to Bill's experience with Martine, the French Resistance spy and assassin (who is killed for being a collaborator). (I just want to point out here that McEldowney has written two women who EXISTED to kill Nazis, and killed Nazis better than anyone else around them, and were killed and it made their male lovers sad. Meanwhile the male Nazi here not only survived, he thrived and wound up spending his twilight years with his One True Love.)

This is a good punchline, though.

It would not have been hard to make Kiesel profoundly anti-Nazi. To have him whole-heartedly renounce Hitler and Nazi-ism. To "turn traitor" and pass on intelligence, or facilitate passing it on. He could have spoken more about WHY his fellow artists fled the country, what they were escaping. It wasn't just censorship, you know? At least I hope that McEldowney is aware enough to realize that artists were targeted for a reason that went beyond simple messaging (and yes, the messaging of art isn't that simple).

Instead we have a guy who was conscripted against his will... and is an officer. We have a guy who insists he isn't a Nazi yet remained with his unit instead of running or refusing to join (which, yes, would get him killed or sent to the Eastern Front, which was also a death sentence just a slower one). He offers to "be a traitor" but then apparently doesn't actually pass on information that substantially affected Hitler's army.

Q: What do you get when you have four people sitting at a table with a Nazi?
A: Five Nazis.

He might deny it to himself, but Peter Kiesel is a Nazi. He was a Nazi officer who survived the war because he agreed to be a Nazi officer. He shuffled from PoW camp to PoW camp, was released, and embarked upon a thriving and fulfilling career throughout his long life.

McEldowney denies that Kiesel is a Nazi, and he's the one who WROTE Kiesel without stopping to think how, exactly, you make it clear that someone's not actually a Nazi and that being a Nazi isn't acceptable.

Note: a chorus of ballet artists oooohing over a hot wehrmarcht lieutenant? Not saying "oh gross, that's a Nazi"? That isn't a rousing condemnation of Nazis. That's accepting the "good Nazi" narrative.

There's a lot in this story that's emotional and touching, a lot that's well crafted. It really needed an editor, though, and someone willing to point out that hey, there's a Nazi love interest here, and if you want him to not be a Nazi then you have to make that explicit.
brigid: (9CL)
[personal profile] brigid

12-16-2022

I didn't predict Edie (Gran) and Kiesel because we haven't seen them be romantic/horny in, literally, years.

And it's extremely telling that we have them presented as YOUNG versions of themselves. McEldowney very obviously has no difficulty portraying older men being sexy with with much younger women, but old sexy women? Sure, he'll draw characters having sex on top of tables in diners, or licking toes on the sidewalk, but this is a bridge too far!

The casual reader of this strip will start out wondering why Edda's hanging out with a random red-haired guy - a waiter, perhaps? - then smooching him, cheating on her husband. And then there's the names! Edie and Kiesel. Ah! Got it. Edda has a sister... a twin sister, maybe? Wonder when we'll see her again! Do they have kids, too?

No, no. No. That's her grandmother and the Nazi officer she banged, lost track of, then reunited with and now lives in Austria with.

As, you know, as one does.

To sum up quickly:

During World War 2 Edie, a first generation Austrian-American, was recruited to speak to Nazi soldiers to get intel. You see, she's a pretty young Austrian girl who'd remind them of home, and these scared lonely teenage grunts would spill their hearts out to her... and their secrets. She meets Lt. Peter Kiesel, an Austrian Lieutenant in the Wehrmacht. He doesn't WANT to be a Nazi, and he's angry with HER for working with Nazis (she plays her role well enough to fool him), but he's a Lieutenant because something something patriotism. He ultimately decides to give her information so that The Powers That Be continue to find her useful. Great, right? Woohoo, gonna win that war! The information he passes on is all true, but... none of it will actually endanger the German military or cause them harm. It's pointless. He protests that he's not ACTUALLY a Nazi, he doesn't support them, but... he could absolutely have shared everything he knows with the Allied Forces, yet didn't. He could have refused service entirely and been sent to the Russian Front. (If you ever meet a German whose granddad was at the Russian Front? That's very possibly a dude who was sentenced to a slow, painful death for not joining up. It absolutely WAS possible to refuse... you just faced horrific consequences. Which some people did.)

Kiesel was an opera singer who trained Edie... in the POW camp... for some reason? They fell in love. After the war they met again, still had the hots for each other, fucked, and made plans to go to Austria together and get married. Yes, the fucking involved her deep throating his ice-cream covered hand in a city park.

Almost immediately after that Edie realized that Bill O'Malley, who'd previously kind of sort of proposed to her, was still alive even though years had passed since his disappearance. He was hiding and refusing to speak to her, and other military people were going along with this, for... Reasons? I guess? Edie decided to fulfill her earlier promise and break up with Kiesel. When Bill discovered she was pregnant he married her and raised her kid, Juliette, as his own. He and Edie had another child, Roger, as well. Also they loathed each other?

So! A Nazi.

I want to point out here that Bill, Juliette's dad, was Lost Behind Enemy Lines and hooked up with a sexy sharp shooting member of the French Resistance. She was very sexy and was a sexy assassin. He was super happy with her. They got married. She was killed for being a Collaborator, because she was too good at pretending to be a Nazi so she could kill Nazis. This made him very sad and he was never happy again.

We also had an interminable flashback to Thorax's experience in England in WWII. I'm... not even going to touch on that hot fucking mess except to say that he hooked up with a sexy Polish sharp shooting assassin double agent who was pretending to be a Nazi so she could kill Nazis. She was killed. This made Thorax very sad.

The lesson here, I guess, is that if you're a woman who kills Nazis then you're dead but if you're an actual literal Nazi then you get a long life with a successful artistic career and eventual reunion with your True Love and your immensely talented daughter and granddaughter (and possibly great granddaughters? No idea if they've met Edda's kids, why on earth would we be shown something like that, ugh, how dull, let's get back to tub fucking or licking toes on the sidewalk). If only either of those women had been ARTISTS! Then maybe they'd have deserved to live.

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