Archive for the ‘Me, Me, Me!’ Category

Tunes and ‘Toons at Penn State

Thursday, April 24th, 2008
Above: Me holding forth this Monday in Penn State’s Foster Auditorium.

I was briefly a grad student at Penn State University forty years ago. My stay at PSU in the fall of 1968 was funded by a Shubert Playwriting Fellowship, and a couple of my short plays (one of which can be found on this very web site) even made it onstage as part of the theatre department’s Five O’clock Theatre student workshop series.

Personal issues quickly derailed my attempt to be a Very Good Fellow that fall, unfortunately, and I fled to New York over the Christmas holidays before making much of a dent in my Shubert money.

Despite the inauspiciousness of my grad school career, though, I had a mostly good time at Penn State during my brief stay, the odd depression and panic attack aside. I forged several enduring friendships, helped paint the set for a main stage production of O’Neill’s Ah Wilderness, and even made good grades somehow in the courses I took.

So despite the fact that so much time has passed since then that not a single inch of the campus I encountered looked remotely familiar, I nevertheless felt a definite twinge of nostalgia when I returned to PSU last weekend at the invitation of Eileen Akin, coordinator of PSU Special Collections Library’s Audio-Visual Collections and Fred Waring archives, who asked me to give a talk as part of the Graphic Novel Speakers Series she spearheads.

Below: Eileen and I commune with cartooning greats in the Waring collection’s Cartoon Room

Music fans whose tastes include works that pre-date Buddy Holly will hear the name Fred Waring and think of the smooth orchestral and choral sounds that emanated from America’s radios, televisions, phonographs, and concert stages thanks to Waring’s legendary conducting skills and the voices of his touring choral colleagues, the Pennsylvanians. What I had forgotten about until I walked into Eileen’s office was Waring’s similarly legendary devotion to the cartoon art form and its practitioners.

An honorary member of the National Cartoonists Society and the host of annual NCS golfing retreats at his Shawnee-on-the-Delaware home base, Waring was the regular recipient of thank-you art from his legion of grateful ‘tooner friends.

Hence the "Cartoon Room" at Penn State, because of which the PSU library’s Waring archive is as notable for its walls full of framed cartoon originals that almost nobody has ever seen as for its long shelves of Waring choral arrangements and displays of fascinating memorabilia from the decades during which Fred Waring and his Pennsylvanians graced music-lovers with their unforgettable performances and broadcasts.

Below: Just one of the reasons why Eileen Akin’s lair at PSU is a feast for any cartoon-lover’s eyes.

Our Furniture: Home Again at Last

Tuesday, April 8th, 2008
Above: Lulu bestows ardent face licks on ace contractor Roger "Butch" Molloy, one of the new best friends who’ve spent the last couple of months disassembling, then reassembling in different locations, the rooms of our humble abode. That’s plumber Mike Toniatti sitting and awaiting his turn on our sofa, which was returned to us from warehouse exile this weekend.

The renovation of the rest of our house almost finished now, with Evelyn’s room having been completed well ahead of the others so that she could return from Williamstown Commons to a bedroom built just for her.

We wish she could have enjoyed the room longer, but Eddie’s mom clearly loved occupying her bright new private quarters during the final few weeks of her life. She didn’t even complain about all the hammering and sawing that continued to go on just outside her bedroom door. (There’s something to be said for forswearing the use of hearing aids at critical points of one’s post-hospital recuperation.)

My attention now has largely turned, now that I’m finished cover art that I’ve been sweating out through thick and thin for the May issue of Commonwealth Club magazine (the member publication of the venerable public forum organization, Commonwealth Club of California), to finishing up the two talks I’m scheduled to give unnervingly soon—the first being at Penn State University (April 22) and the second being at the Norman Rockwell Museum in Stockbridge (May 3), in whose Lit Graphic show some artwork from Stuck Rubber Baby (along with artwork by a lot of other graphic novelists) is still hanging. (See my earlier blog entry about that.)

If you’re going to be in either neighborhood on those days, do drop by. It’s so much more fun giving talks when someone’s in the audience!

Perp Talk

Thursday, February 7th, 2008
Last summer I nudged the long-awaited debut issue of the North County Perp out of its birth canal and onto the streets of North Adams.

Ushering my ‘zine out into the world after its lengthy period of gestation was great fun for me, despite the fact that in order to avoid the editorial inhibitions that come from courting advertisers I had to personally fork over the bucks to get it printed. It was a financial indulgence I’m not in a position to make a habit of, but it was worth it this time just to get a little dust stirred up in this sleepy town and to provide a looser-than-normal platform for creatively-inclined locals whose interests and points of view aren’t easily accommodated by the handful of existing publications in these parts.

Stacks of Perp #1 were up for grabs for a short while on counters at Papyri Books, North Adams Antiques, and Cup and Saucer here in North Adams and a lively launch party was hosted by MCLA Gallery 51 on Main Street. A gratifying level of enthusiasm was forthcoming from the local folks who picked up copies before they ran out, and even after the paper copies printed by Becks Printing were long gone, curious would-be readers from around here and from distant climes have continued to download it for free from the Perp’s web site as a PDF document).

In other words, in its small way, Perp #1 seemed to be a home-grown "hit." I offer as evidence of this the question that people have persisted in asking me ever since the first issue’s debut: "So when is Perp #2 coming out?"

Well, predicting an actual publication date for #2 is as iffy a proposition at this point as it was during the year it took to pull #1 together, but I can now say with confidence that the Perp is officially poised to return, thanks to a $2,144 grant the project has received from the Cultural Council of Northern Berkshire.

My job now will be to once again start speading the word. So all you writers and cartoonists scattered in nooks and crannies around Berkshire County thinking oddball thoughts that you’ve never felt able to share with your neighbors should take note: the time is now to get your creative juices flowing.

You will soon start seeing fliers seeking your involvement as a Participating Perp, but you don’t need to wait until you come across a flier to get in touch with me. I’m right here.

Friday Night in the Bronx

Wednesday, February 6th, 2008
Eddie and I have never regretted leaving New York City (as fond as we were of the city, which was pretty fond) and settling in northwestern Massachusetts. We love walking out onto our front porch and being greeted by a snow-capped mountain ridges.

However

…if I were going to be in the Big Apple this Friday night, you can bet I would subway up to the Bliss Hall Art Gallery at Bronx Community College (181st Street & University Avenue) at 5 PM to attend the opening reception for The Color of Comics, an exhibit put together by Eugene Adams and my comics colleague Alex Simmons showing the diverse ways that African American and other characters of color have been and are being portrayed in the comics medium.

Unfortunately, there’s no way I can make the drive down to be part of the fun, but at least I’ll be represented at the show by Anna Dellyne Pepper and her son Les from Stuck Rubber Baby. Who knows? This might be the night that Anna Dellyne breaks her pledge never to sing in public again, and I have no doubt that Les will be hitting the bars in Greenwich Village later in the evening.

David Byrne Knows I Exist!

Thursday, January 31st, 2008
Moreover, he even knows that Stuck Rubber Baby exists!

Discoveries like this provide a more unseemly level of encouragement to me than they would for an artist less insecure and needy than I. But what the hell? I take life’s little pleasures where I can find them.

Thanks to the friend who alerted me to this mention of me and my book in the January 26 installment of David Byrne’s blog. And thank you, too, Mr. Byrne. You show great promise yourself.

A Coupla Thank-Yous

Monday, January 21st, 2008
Two different web sites have been kind enough to call attention this week to my continued existence and ongoing activities.

First came the mention by Richard Krauss of my Cruse Art Newsletter in last Saturday’s edition of MidnightFiction, Richard’s very interesting weekly round-up of webcomics and comics-related news and interviews.

Then word arrived in my email inbox yesterday that an anniversary had snuck up on me, one that led Thomas Heald to mention me in his Yahoo-group site callede Pridelets, an ongoing compendium of moments that Thomas finds worth noting in LGBT history.

Yes, the alert Mr. Heald has graciously informed his Pridelets readers that the 1983 issue of The Advocate bearing yesterday (January 20) as its cover date marked the very first appearance of my comic strip Wendel, snuggled as it was amid the classified sex ads, popper plugs and penis-enlargement come-ons of the magazine’s long-gone but (at least among the dissolute in our ranks) fondly remembered "Pink Pages."
(You can find that first installment on my web site, by the way, if you’re curious to see my online adaptation of the Strawhead’s debut appearance in print. But first a warning for the faint-of-heart and/or underaged, though: the strip is raunchy, kinky, and you can see Wendel’s pubes.)

Many thanks for remembering me, guys.

The Swimmer Lady

Saturday, January 12th, 2008

Last week I wrote about my recording session for an adaptation that may or may not ever happen of The Swimmer With a Rope In His Teeth. Now I want to belatedly take note of the passing last April of the woman from whose imagination the book’s title character sprang.

I’m embarrassed to acknowledge that I didn’t post anything about Jeanne Shaffer’s death at the time I learned about it. I’m terrible at composing quickie obits when friends depart, and in the case of Doc Shaffer, her achievements merit better-rounded tributes that I can provide by folks who knew her better than I ever did.

Jeanne and I may have produced a book together, but our actual face-to-face visits were limited to maybe half-a-dozen. The visits we did have were sprinkled across a span of decades, the first of them occurring while I was an undergraduate drama-speech major at Birmingham-Southern College forty years ago.

1967, specifically. Jeanne, a composer and educator whose professional home base was at Huntington College in nearby Montgomery, envisioned an opera based on an allegory she had dreamed up about a swimmer who undertakes the rescue of an entire population of miserable people. Itching to start coming up with music for it, Jeanne was scouting for a librettist she could team up with.

Someone who knew that I was an aspiring playwright told her I might be interested in having a go at it. Ignoring the fact that I was a 23-year-old greenhorn, she chased me down and pitched the project.

I loved Jeanne’s story and spent a few months trying to nail down a proper approach. But although she was unfailingly encouraging throughout that period, I soon realized that I was in over my head. Just because I had written a few student plays and had listened to every musical comedy cast album in the Birmingham Public Library record collection didn’t automatically confer mastery of the opera libretto form. Chastened by my clear inadequacy, I begged off, and Jeanne graciously freed me from my commitment.

That could have been the end of it, but it wasn’t. Fifteen years later I popped back into Jeanne Shaffer’s life full of excitement about an entirely different way to tell her story. Our heroic swimmer, I told her, could be the protagonist not of an opera but of a comic book story. A story told with silhouettes.

(Why silhouettes? Maybe I’ll get into that another time; this blog entry is about Jeanne Shaffer.)

Now some practitioners of the "fine arts" (and Jeanne’s many musical compositions certainly placed her within those circles) might have looked down their noses at the comics form had they been approached with such an impertinent suggestion. But Jeanne had an adventurous streak and was unburdened by artistic snobbery. She was instantly intrigued by the radical recasting of her idea that I was proposing. Soon she was a certified enthusiast, and her enthusiasm persisted through the more than twenty additional years it took me to complete my adaptation, which mutated early on from a comic book story into a stand-alone book.

If Jeanne had been a more controlling storyteller she might have kept me on a tighter leash as I added my own touches to her fable and revved up its level of satire. But she rolled with the punches, paying me the compliment of trusting me to pretty much have my way with her tale.

Our only creative disagreement during Swimmer’s germination was resolved almost as soon as it appeared. Between the time of her story’s first telling in 1967 and my re-entry into her life in the mid-’80s, Jeanne’s natural generosity of spirit had led her to attach a slightly more hopeful conclusion to her story. I urged her to reconsider. I wanted to confront readers uncompromisingly with her tale’s darker implications and make them deal with it. Our title character may have been propelled by merciful impulses, I acknowledged, but the book itself needed to be merciless.

Mercilessness doesn’t come easily to gracious southern women, but Jeanne saw my point and let me restore her fable’s original ending.

You’d think that our decades-long marathon of creative cooperation and mutual appreciation would have left me more familiar with all aspects of Jeanne Shaffer’s life and personality than it did. Fact is: the ins and outs of Swimmer dominated most of our conversations, whether in person or on the phone. Anything else I’ve learned about her very interesting life history has been absorbed in chance fragments and on the fly.

I did learn that she was a former child actress in the movies. How cool is that? (As "Jeanne Ellis" she played Jeanette MacDonald’s childhood self in Girl of the Golden West.) She toured for five years with Paul Whiteman’s Orchestra beginning when she was eleven — an unusual entry to find in the résumé of a cultured Montgomery Episcopalian, I would say — and I learned just now from her entry in the online listing Classical Composers that she sang with Grace Moore on the Lux Radio Theater. (Hey, my brother and I used to lie awake at night listening to the Lux Radio Theater in Springville during the ’50s. I gather we were twenty years too late to catch one of Jeanne’s performances, unfortunately.)

Jeanne enjoyed a 35-year career as an educator and for thirteen years headed the Department of Visual and Performing Arts at Huntington. And long after her Lux days she became a radio personality again via the Southeastern Public Radio Network, hosting a weekly program on women’s music called Eine Kleine Frauenmusik.

Years ago I asked Jeanne if recordings of her music existed and she directed me to a CD of organ performances by Frances Norbert called Music She Wrote: Organ compositions by Women , which includes selections composed by Jeanne along with the work of others (most of it downloadable from the link above). I’m listening to her contributions to that CD as I write this.

The liner notes of the Norbert CD reveal that Jeanne wrote three musicals in collaboration with her distinguished husband Col. Robert S. Barmettelor. I wish I had known about that when the two of them invited me to dinner in 2002 after driving from Montgomery to hear me read selections from Stuck Rubber Baby and Wendel All Together at a Unitarian Church in Birmingham. I would have prodded them for gossip. I love hearing backstage theatre stories!

I gather that late in her career Jeanne must have played an important cheerleading role for female composers through her web site WomensMusic.com — a site that Google apparently thinks is still alive but that I’ve had no luck accessing this week, which makes me think it did not survive its founder. (If you have better luck than I did, let me know.)

It doesn’t surprise me that teaching, mentoring, and helping other creative people was a strain that ran through the long, productive life that Jeanne led, since even though I personally experienced only a small sampling of her many facets, being giving was the tack she reflexively took with me. Who was I, anyway? An openly gay cartoonist who had gained his chops in underground comix whom she had previously experienced only as a green college-age playwriting wannabe who couldn’t get his act together, materializing out of nowhere after a decade-and-a-half of non-contact to announce that Hey, you oughta be in comics!

"OK," she said. "Put me in comics."

She continued her pattern of givingness by allowing me a huge degree of creative latitude as I expanded and reshaped her story into something very different in its details from the one she first imagined, but one that still had the same concerns about human folly that she had originally invested it with. At least I hope it did. Jeanne never hinted that it didn’t.

The Swimmer lady is gone now, and I’ll never get a chance to ask her what Jeanette MacDonald was really like. But we came away from our three decades of glancing interactions with a book to show for it that has both of our names on the cover.

How cool is that?!

Me At The Mike

Sunday, January 6th, 2008
Here’s me (see above) with a really formidable microphone hovering in front of my face. The snapshot was taken last week while I was recording the text from my 2004 adaptation of the late Jeanne Shaffer’s fable, The Swimmer With a Rope In His Teeth.

Lending his technical expertise to this endeavor was my pal Jason Brown (below), a multi-talented audio whiz and entrepreneur who with his wife (and my friend from college days) Nicky Heron Brown produces audio books from their home studio in south Berkshire County. Their finished products are marketed through Jason’s BMA Audio web site.

At left: The BMA CD of Berkshire Stories, a selection of writings about nature by Morgan Bulkeley, Sr.

Poke around in the BMA online store and you’ll also find recorded works by Henry James (The Siege of London), Edith Wharton (The House of Mirth), and others.

I don’t mean to give anyone the impression that any commercially released audio book of Swimmer is being contemplated. The book as printed contains pictures galore, but the text is so brief it could probably be read aloud in its entirety while waiting in line at the Dunkin Donuts drive-thru lane at Route 2 and Eagle Street.

No, what I’m toying with is a (very) limited-animation version of the allegory using Adobe Flash. The notion of creating such a version of Swimmer has long appealed to me despite the fact that I have virtually no spare time to work on it.

In other words, it’s a presently unfunded bit of digital hobbyism that may never see completion or reach an audience. But even so, Jason is generously helping me create a preliminary soundtrack for it. Thanks to him, I may be able to move my experiment along a step or two further when time does permit. (Maybe I can get a grant or something.)

Writing about my projected reworking of this fable makes me want to say a few words, albeit belatedly, about the passing of Doc Shaffer last April, which I failed to note at the time because, well, I don’t find it easy to whip up comments about such losses on short notice.

It seems best, though, to reserve those relections for a separate blog entry, which I hopefully will find time to compose later this week.

Help For The Wakeful

Monday, December 24th, 2007
Worried that you’ll have trouble sleeping tonight because you’re so excited about an anticipated visit from St. Nicholas? Worried that Santa will leave lumps of coal in your stocking as punishment because you’re not snoozing when he arrives the way good little boys and girls are supposed to be doing?

Or are you kept awake with anxiety because you’re not a Christian, don’t expect any midnight ministrations from jolly old elves in red suits or anybody else, and have the distinct feeling that none of the Republicans who are hoping to become your President really believe in their heart of hearts that non-Christians like you are thoroughgoing American citizens like they are?

Well, don’t let your sleep deprivation paralyze you. There’s still time to rush to one of those malls that are staying open late on Christmas Eve, where you’ll hopefully find at least one bookstore that’s selling Awake!, a brand new anthology of writings (plus a few comics and some photo spreads) that address the subject of insomnia.

This choice literary compendium is edited by Steven Lee Beeber and includes contributions by such luminaries like Joyce Carol Oates, Margaret Atwood, and, uh, me!!

Buying this book won’t solve your Santa dilemma, since you’ll be so engrossed in reading it that you’ll stay awake even later than you would have if you had simply lain in bed tonight fretting. And it certainly won’t make you feel any safer from the belligerent religiosity running rampant across the land.

But you may find yourself so delightfully distracted by this entertaining bundle of reading matter that you’ll barely hear the sounds of coal chunks dropping plop, plop, plop into the stockings (if indeed there be any) hanging from your mantelpiece (if there be such) in some distant, dark room of your dwelling.

And sometime between 1:00 and 6:00 on Christmas morning (if you buy this book today) you may find yourself reading "A Little Night Misery," my Headrack story from the third issue of Barefootz Funnies that was published in 1979 and has now been out of print for a quarter-century.

Giving Norman His Due

Tuesday, November 20th, 2007
There’s something about Norman Rockwell’s "Triple Self Portrait," which appeared on the February 13, 1960 cover of the Saturday Evening Post, that imbeds itself instantly in your brain chemistry if you’ve got a certain mix of cartooning and illustrating genes in your DNA. Its humor, elegance of composition, and absence of pretension (note the spectacles adorning the face in the mirror that are being omitted from the "real" portrait on the canvas) makes you want to be Norman Rockwell yourself, just so you can stand back while the oils are still wet, admire your own deftness, and feel good about having just painted a classic.

While admiration for a job well done is appropriate, the cartoonists among us will inevitably be tempted to do our own inelegant riff on the painting should an opportunity present itself — as exemplified by Laura Weinstein’s promotional graphic (at right above) for Lit Graphic: The World of the Graphic Novel, the exhibition of comics art that opened on November 10 at the Norman Rockwell Museum in Stockbridge, Massachusetts.

I, too, have paid oblique tribute to Rockwell’s image in my work, as you know if you’ve ever read "My Life As a TV Pundit", my 1999 satire of celebrity punditry that appeared in the short-lived magazine Harpoon. Rockwell, of course, was not so tasteless as to depict himself unshaven and painting in his underwear. Maybe it’s a generational thing.
Anyway, I’m delighted to have some of my Stuck Rubber Baby pages included in the Lit Graphic show alongside work by a raft of other comics creators whose skills I admire. (For the full roster follow my links to the museum’s web site.) I even got some nice press in the bargain in the form of an interview by Michael Scott Leonard that occupied a full spread in the November 15 issue of the Berkshire Eagle’s Berkshires Week supplement.
And I’m especially pleased that the show is being mounted at the Rockwell Museum. There was a lot of snobbery in the air for years about the merits of Rockwell’s oeuvre among a lofty branch of art criticism that enjoys being parsimonious with the term art. Official dogma in those circles held that true art began and ended with abstract expressionism…until it began beginning-and-ending with pop art, then op art, then whatever other subsequent categories came along.

To be fair, snobbery hasn’t always been the culprit. Sometimes it’s just been habits of thought. Various of my perfectly open-minded art-loving friends acknowledge that they’ve never felt called upon to give much thought to Rockwell, thus allowing the widespread condescension toward the man’s accomplishments to go unexamined in their minds. One can’t keep up with everything, after all, and the need to worry about George W. Bush’s presidency has more urgency, perhaps, than any need to reevaluate the artistic legacy of a popular illustrator who, it must be said, never suffered from disdain among everyday folks.

Maybe I’ve got a personal agenda at play here. As the target of much (to my mind undeserved) condescension during my Barefootz years, I’ve always felt an affinity for the underrated Norman Rockwell. We schoolyard outcasts have to stick together.

Fortunately, time seems to be rendering a fairer verdict about Rockwell than have some art critics in the past. Decide for yourself. For sheer pleasure in looking at richly imagined pictures that have interesting stories to tell, the Rockwell Museum is the place to beat. And the Museum is assembling a big Rockwell exhibition that’ll soon be touring around the country as well, so original Rockwell paintings may not be as out of reach as you think, even for people who can’t make the drive to western Massachusetts.

I view the man as a master visual storyteller who knew how to portray characters that made ordinariness fascinating. Cynics may bristle at the unabashed "neighborliness" of those images and personalities made famous in the course of the artist’s long partnership with the SatEvePost, but those of us who like telling stories with pictures and aspire to do it well know when we’re seeing a fellow cartoonist in action.

Even if Rockwell’s stories were told on canvases instead of comic book pages, the man was clearly playing in our ballpark.