The one in the screenshot is one I stumbled across doing some research. It's the third aircraft I've found named after my favorite ghost story movie, 'The Uninvited' (1944). Two were B-29s and one was a Typhoon (or a Tempest). The B-29 I've done has the best nose art and has the claim to fame as the last B-29 to bomb the Japanese Empire, but I have left what was painted on the plane about that off as I'm depicting it during hostilities.
I want to do a set of three: one night, one day, and one olive drab. I completed the night but then got bogged down in the olive drab one, then real life intervened. I hope to complete them in June. Fingers crossed!
Following the mission, there was confusion over the identification of the plane. The first eyewitness account by war correspondent William L. Laurence of The New York Times, who accompanied the mission aboard the aircraft piloted by Bock, reported that Sweeney was leading the mission in The Great Artiste. However, he also noted its "Victor" number as 77, which was that of Bockscar, writing that several personnel commented that 77 was also the jersey number of the football player Red Grange.[SUP][25][/SUP] Laurence had interviewed Sweeney and his crew in depth and was aware that they referred to their airplane as The Great Artiste. Except for Enola Gay, none of the 393d's B-29s had yet had names painted on the noses, a fact which Laurence himself noted in his account, and unaware of the switch in aircraft, Laurence assumed Victor 77 was The Great Artiste.[SUP][4][/SUP] In fact, The Great Artiste was Victor 89.[SUP][26]
[/SUP]Bockscar - Wikipedia