Omaha the Cat Dancer
Few characters in the independent comics landscape carry the artistic ambition and emotional weight of Omaha the Cat Dancer, who made her striking debut in Reed Waller's Bizarre Sex #9 in 1981 — a Bronze Age arrival that announced something genuinely different was happening outside the mainstream. Published through the celebrated Kitchen Sink Press, her story unfolded across 36 years in titles like Omaha the Cat Dancer and The Complete Omaha, a span that speaks to a devoted readership who recognized real storytelling craft when they found it. She shares her world with a richly drawn cast — Chuck Katt, Jerry Davidson, Joanne Follett, and others — whose presence across the pages gives her stories the texture of an ensemble drama rather than a simple solo showcase. For collectors who prize the bold, creator-driven work that defines the best of the independent comics movement, Omaha is an essential figure worth seeking out.
#9
Trivia
- Copies of the comic were seized in Chicago, Toronto, and New Zealand on charges of obscenity or promoting bestiality — though New Zealand ultimately ruled it was not indecent, citing its emotional back story as the deciding factor.heykidscomics.fandom.com
- The Chicago seizure of Omaha alongside other erotic comics served as a direct catalyst for the founding of the Comic Book Legal Defense Fund.heykidscomics.fandom.com
- The series' final, long-delayed chapter only reached print after one of its key creators died, with the surviving material completed from notes and a planned outline before NBM published it years later.heykidscomics.fandom.com