Chrystabel Leighton-Porter

Chrystabel Jane Leighton-Porter (11 April 1913 – 6 December 2000) was the model for the Second World War Daily Mirror newspaper cartoon heroine Jane which boosted morale during the Blitz. Prime Minister of the United Kingdom Winston Churchill suggested that Jane was "Britain's secret weapon".[1]

Chrystabel Jane Leighton-Porter
Leighton-Porter posing for "Jane" comic
Born
Chrystabel Jane Drewry

11 April 1913
Died6 December 2000(2000-12-06) (aged 87)
OccupationModel and actress
Known forModel for the wartime cartoon heroine "Jane"

Early life

Born Chrystabel Jane Drewry in Eastleigh, Hampshire in April 1913,[2] she had an older twin, Sylvia, and was the youngest of eleven children of whom three died young. Her modelling started after she left school when she moved to London to live with her sister and earned a living posing for life classes.[2] In 1934, she married pilot Arthur Leighton-Porter. Later during her time as 'Jane' the fact she was married became a carefully guarded secret as Leighton-Porter believed her fans thought of her as their girlfriend, and that she must always remain single in their eyes.

Jane

The Daily Mirror cartoonist Norman Pett had been drawing a weekly cartoon since 1932 which he called Jane's Journal — The Diary of A Bright Young Thing.[3] Pett's original model was his wife, but he replaced her with Chrystabel in 1940. He came across her posing for an art class at the Birmingham Central School of Art.[4] The cartoon came out six days a week, four frames per strip, nearly all of them drawn from life. [5] In 1944, when Jane first appeared nude in the cartoon, she was credited with 'inspiring' the 36th Division to advance six miles into Burma.[1][6]

In 1948, Pett's assistant Michael Hubbard took over the Jane cartoons. Chrystabel Leighton-Porter began a music hall striptease-act based on the Jane character which toured army bases around the country. She won the title of "Britain's Perfect Girl" at the London Palladium and was signed up by theatrical agent Lew Grade[2] which led to her starring in the film The Adventures of Jane in 1949. It was released on DVD in April 2008.[7]

"Jane" received many letters from servicemen proposing marriage (62 in just one week[8]) and Chrystabel was careful to hide the fact that she had already secretly married Arthur Leighton-Porter, a Royal Air Force pilot, before the outbreak of the war.[9] Hubbard continued to develop the cartoons' storyline until 1959, when he gave Jane a happy marriage and ended the series.

Later life

In 1952 Leighton-Porter gave birth to a stillborn baby boy, and then in 1955 suffered another loss of a baby girl named Jane who lived for just fourteen hours. In 1957 the couple had a son Simon, who grew up to be a writer.[10]

In the fifties, she worked for theatre impresario Paul Raymond in such shows as the Festival of Strip-tease (1958).[11]

In the early-1960s Leighton-Porter moved to Bermuda and then to Horsham, Sussex where she centred her activities around her son Simon (who later followed his father into the RAF) and was a fundraiser for several charities. She was also active in her local Conservative Party association.[2] In the 1980s a BBC television adaptation was made of "Jane", starring Glynis Barber.[2]

In her later years, Leighton-Porter made regular appearances at wartime reunions. In 1993, the Imperial War Museum exhibition Forces Sweethearts included her 1940s frilly knickers.[9] She died on 6 December 2000 aged 87.[2][12] Arthur died in January 2002.[13]

gollark: And I can clearly tell in some domains when someone is better at something than me, even if I don't know exactly how.
gollark: The halting problem is that no Turing machine can tell if arbitrary Turing machines will halt though? No complexity hierarchy involved except theoretical oracle things.
gollark: Regardless of whether you think they are impossible or not, IQ tests and similar things are, as far as I know, correlated with stuff like educational attainment and income.
gollark: I can barely visualise things but not in detail. I also have really good memory for random facts but not life events, and excellent short term verbal memory but awful picture/number memory. Which is odd since those are meant to be correlated.
gollark: That isn't the halting problem and I disagree.

References

  1. "The original GI Jane". Retrieved 9 August 2008.
  2. "Chrystabel Leighton-Porter". London: The Daily Telegraph. 8 December 2000. Retrieved 9 August 2008.
  3. "Comic creator Norman Pett". Retrieved 9 August 2008.
  4. "Christabel Leighton-Porter (1913-2000)". Pamela Green: Never Knowingly Overdressed.
  5. "Christabel Leighton-Porter (1913-2000)". Pamela Green: Never Knowingly Overdressed.
  6. Stuttaford, Andrew (25 April 2008). "Churchill vs. Broun". National Review Online. Retrieved 1 April 2010.
  7. "The Adventures Of Jane/Murder At 3A.M. on DVD". Archived from the original on 28 January 2013. Retrieved 9 August 2008.
  8. Cooper, Glenda (30 April 1995). "The real Jane recalls her strip for victory". The London Independent. Retrieved 9 August 2008.
  9. Goldstien, Richard (17 December 2000). "Chrystabel Leighton-Porter, A Comic Stripper". New York Times. Retrieved 9 August 2008.
  10. , Simon Leighton-Porter.
  11. "Christabel Leighton-Porter (1913-2000)". Pamela-green.com.
  12. "Inspiration for WWII 'Jane' cartoon dies". CNN. 8 December 2000. Archived from the original on 23 February 2008. Retrieved 9 August 2008.
  13. "Just when did Jane spark off a rumpus?". The Argus. 13 January 2003. Archived from the original on 30 July 2009. Retrieved 9 August 2008.
  • Saunders, Andy (2004) Jane, a Pin Up at War. Barnsley: Leo Cooper ISBN 1-84415-027-5.
  • " Jane" film. 1943. British Pathe.
  • " Jane and Pett " film. 1945. British Pathe.
  • " Cartoons and Cartoonists" film, 1956. Produced by Harold Baim.
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