In my review of The Complete Chester Gould’s Dick Tracy Volume 3, I wrote a little about the hoodlum Lips Manlis and his girlfriend
Mimi. Since their storyline spans both Volume 3 and Volume 4 of The Complete
Dick Tracy, I thought it would be appropriate to discuss their storyline in
more detail in a stand-alone post.
For me, Lips Manlis always conjures up an image of Paul
Sorvino playing him in the 1990 movie Dick Tracy. Specifically, I think
of the scene where he’s noisily slurping down oysters. In the film, Lips is
clearly a powerful gangster, who is rubbed out by Big Boy in a turf war. In the
comic strip, it’s never made clear what exactly Lips Manlis does, or has done.
Manlis first appears as a suspect in the hotel murders storyline, but he’s not
the guilty party. When Tracy questions Manlis again two months later, Tracy
suddenly gets the notion that Manlis should go straight.
Mimi, displaying her default attitude of haughty disdain, June 1, 1936. |
It's an interesting plot twist, and Tracy raises some
fascinating questions about human nature, and how we perceive people. As Tracy
says to Pat Patton in the May 16, 1936 strip: “Did it ever occur to you that
maybe a gangster wouldn’t be a gangster if he was treated like an ordinary
human?” But because we don’t really know much about Lips Manlis, it’s hard to
be very invested in his rehabilitation. And Manlis’ desire to go straight
happens so quickly, it doesn’t have much drama in it. The guy just tried to
blow up Tracy in an elevator, and now Tracy thinks he can go straight? The
storyline is an interesting contrast to the later Dick Tracy strips of
the 1960’s and 1970’s, where Gould was often critical of the judicial process,
and the whole “innocent until proven guilty” thing.
Tracy gives Manlis a new name, calling him “Bob Honor.” And
while Manlis’ rehabilitation might seem like a lame beginning to a new
storyline, it does introduce us to his girlfriend, Mimi, who will wreak havoc
and chaos in the strip throughout the summer of 1936. Ultimately, Mimi proves
to be a more interesting villain than Manlis ever was.
Lips Manlis, now renamed "Bob Honor," tells Mimi to get lost, June 4, 1936. |
When Mimi finds Lips at his new job as a watchman at a
warehouse, he pretends he doesn’t know her and sends her packing with this
cruel parting shot: “I’ll give you two seconds to haul your fat face down the
street—before
I call a wagon and turn you over to the dicks.” The needless addition of “fat,”
which doesn’t describe Mimi at all, makes it a much harsher insult. And “turn you
over to the dicks” sounds even worse today, because that’s not really a slang
term you can use anymore.
Bob slaps Mimi, July 7, 1936. That left hand doesn't look too good. |
But Mimi proves the adage, “Hell hath no fury like a woman
scorned,” as she makes it clear she’ll stop at nothing until she gets Lips
back. Mimi and her goons kidnap Lips, and plan to make him an unwilling
accomplice in their thievery. However, things don’t go according to plan, and
Lips ends up capturing the rest of the gang in the getaway truck. Mimi deliberately
crashes her car into the truck, causing mayhem that ends with Lips pulling the
gang out of the fiery wreckage and handing them over to the cops. Mimi escapes,
but her left hand is crushed. As Volume 3 ends, Mimi learns from an underworld
doctor that her hand is infected and will have to be amputated. She blithely
says, “Then amputate.” This is not a woman to mess with.
Volume 4 opens with Mimi’s hand being amputated. In Jay
Maeder’s book Dick Tracy: The Official Biography, Maeder writes that
Mimi’s amputation originally consisted of “an operating-room sequence so
stomach-turning that the syndicate refused to have any part of it and ordered most
of a week’s worth of continuity redrawn.” (p.59) Reading the strips that
actually ran, Mimi’s amputation really isn’t grisly at all—it’s the thought of having
your hand amputated that gives the reader the creeps. After her hand was
amputated, Mimi always carried a shawl or towel over her hand, “doubtless by
directive of Gould’s syndicate bosses.” (Maeder, p.96)
Immediately after leaving the doctor’s office, Mimi once again
proves her status as a tough customer by swimming out to a ship in the harbor. The
ship belongs to Toyee, an Asian criminal. Toyee refuses to help Mimi, and his
men are about to throw her back in the harbor when Dick Tracy and Pat Patton
show up. Toyee and his men get the jump on Dick and Pat, tie them up, and toss
them overboard. It’s always interesting to me how criminals in Dick Tracy choose
to escalate things. Toyee very quickly goes from “Ugh, there’s no way I’m
helping you, Mimi! I don’t want to attract the attention of the police!” To
“Let’s needlessly murder these two cops.” There’s some very stylish Gould
artwork as Dick and Pat are rescued in a rainstorm at sea.
Toyee peeks under Mimi's towel, July 19, 1936. |
Back on shore, Mimi and Toyee are once again just a step
ahead of the cops when Toyee has the crazy idea of having himself sewn up inside
of a giant fish to escape the notice of the cops. Ewww. Needless to say, it
doesn’t work.
Mimi briefly comes on to an oblivious Pat Patton, August 12, 1936. It kind of looks like Mimi is feeling up Pat with her right hand. |
Mimi gets away by stabbing Pat Patton, and then she kidnaps
Lips again! She’s nothing if not determined. Once Mimi has Lips in her clutches
again, she drugs him and marries him. (The justice of the peace just thinks
Lips is really drunk.) Surprise, surprise, Mimi’s plan doesn’t work. (Lips
slugs her as soon as he understands what’s happened.) Mimi’s desperation is
actually kind of sad, as she still holds on to this dream that she can get Lips
back. “You’re not through with me, Lips! I won’t let you be!” she says to him. She
even wants him to grow his mustache back and comb his hair like he used to. At
this point, Mimi is kind of like Jimmy Stewart at the end of Vertigo, where
he’s trying to convince Kim Novak to dress up like the dead woman he’s obsessed
with.
Lips is less than thrilled to learn that he's now married to Mimi, September 1, 1936. |
Mimi trying to repeat the past, September 6, 1936. Note that she's still carrying a towel over her hand. |
Lips goes along with Mimi’s grooming for a while, and then
Dick Tracy shows up and Lips makes it clear to Mimi that he’s through with her.
The artwork for September 17th and 18th makes it seem
like Mimi may have had a knife. In the third panel on the 17th, her
hand is empty, but it’s positioned as though she’s holding a knife. When Lips
punches her in the jaw on the first panel of the 18th, a knife is
suddenly seen flying through the air. So, where did the knife come from? Was
Mimi about to stab Lips? That would make his action of punching her in the jaw
a little more called for. My guess is that the knife Mimi should have been holding in the third panel on the 17th somehow got erased.
Mimi's death scene, September 19, 1936. |
When it becomes clear that Lips is going to turn her over to
the cops, Mimi pulls a vial out of her garter top and drinks poison, which
kills her instantly. It makes sense that Mimi kills herself, since all her
actions revolve around one goal: getting Lips back. But even when she gets him back
and convinces him to change his hairstyle back to how it was, it doesn’t work.
She’s like Jay Gatsby. Mimi would definitely agree with Gatsby’s famous quote:
“Can’t repeat the past? Of course you can.” But it doesn’t work out for either
Gatsby or Mimi. As F. Scott Fitzgerald wrote in his short story “The Sensible
Thing,” “There are all kinds of love in the world, but never the same love
twice.” Mimi should have read her Fitzgerald.
Mimi is an awful person, but she’s an interesting character.
Her default attitude is one of haughty disdain—she’s constantly calling her
henchmen “stupid,” or telling them “Don’t ask so many questions!” “Stop the
yelling-you idiot!” If she wasn’t so focused on getting Lips back, it’s easy to
imagine Mimi presiding over a crime empire of her own.
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