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Femme Fatales Volume 2 Magazine Back Issues

Volume: 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 | 12 | 13 | 14

FF V2 N1
Femme Fatales Vol. 2 # 1 magazine back issue cover image

Buying Choices
Femme Fatales Vol. 2 # 1

Features
Sarah Douglas Rhonda Shear Ginger Lynn Allen Ava Cadell Becky LeBeau
Another Kin Of Jaws, Horror Spoo

 


FF V2 N2
Femme Fatales Vol. 2 # 2, Fall 1993 magazine back issue cover image

Buying Choices
Femme Fatales Vol. 2 # 2, Fall 1993

Features
Monique Gabrielle Mummy Mia! The B-Queen's Pictorial Autobiography!
Brinke Stevens On Faust Stuart Gordon's Horror Comic Adaptation

 


FF V2 N3
Femme Fatales Vol. 2 # 3 magazine back issue cover image

Buying Choices
Femme Fatales Vol. 2 # 3

Features
Covergirl Lydie Denier
Sara Suzanne Brown
Tracy Scoggins

 


FF V2 N4
Femme Fatales Vol. 2 # 4 magazine back issue cover image

Buying Choices
Femme Fatales Vol. 2 # 4

Features
The Ace Ventura Vixen On Her Horror & Fantasy Roles
Maryam D'Abo Melanie Shatner Phyllis Davis Debbie Rochon
Denise Duff, Full Moon's Sexy Vampire

 

Volume: 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 | 12 | 13 | 14
Femme Fatales is an American men's magazine focusing on science fiction film and
horror film and television actresses.

Femme Fatales was founded by Frederick S. Clarke in the summer of 1992, as the sister publication of his science fiction film magazine Cinefantastique.
Published by Clarke, it was originally edited by pin-up photography collector
and expert Bill George. It focused on science fiction, fantasy, and horror actresses,
from B-movies to Academy Award winners, featuring provocative non-nude photography
pictorials, alongside extensive career interviews. It was unique in that it
encouraged contributions from the actresses themselves, and featured articles
penned by scream queens Brinke Stevens and Debbie Rochon, amongst others. It
was a publishing success, at one time producing an issue every three weeks.


Clarke committed suicide in 2000, and for two years, both magazines were published
by his widow, Celeste Casey Clarke. At the end of 2002, Femme Fatales was published
bi-monthly, and had an unaudited circulation of 70,000. In 2002, she contacted
Mark A. Altman, the president and chief operating officer of Mindfire Entertainment,
a science fiction writer and producer, the former editor-in-chief of the fanzine
Sci-Fi Universe and a regular contributor to both magazines, allowing Mindfire
to take over their publication. David Williams, a former executive features
editor at the Hollywood Reporter, became editor-in-chief of both publications.
Both magazines' operations were moved from Chicago to Culver City.


Williams planned the 2003 revamp of Femme Fatales as a version of the men's
magazine Maxim focusing on actresses in science fiction and horror films.

In 2011, the magazine was turned into a hit television series, evoking the spirit of classic film noir and pulp fiction for Cinemax.

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