Nana
Few comic characters can claim a debut tied to both J. M. Barrie's timeless imagination and the magic of Dell's Golden Age Disney adaptations, but Nana does exactly that — bounding onto the page in Four Color #442 in 1952. This beloved figure from the world of Peter Pan shares those classic Dell issues with Wendy, Michael, and John Darling, Tinker Bell, and the Boy Who Never Grew Up himself, placing her in some of the most enchanting company the era had to offer. Across titles like Walt Disney's Peter Pan and Walt Disney's Peter Pan Treasure Chest, her presence spans an impressive thirty-two years of publishing history, a quiet testament to how deeply this corner of Neverland resonated with readers from the Golden Age all the way into the early 1980s.

