Tuesday, December 23, 2008

'The Spirit' brings 1940s noir comic to the big screen (StarNewsOnline.com)

WEST HOLLYWOOD, CA - MAY 10: Author Michael Ch...Michael Chabon image by Getty Images via Daylife

Ben Steelman

Dec. 17, 2008

Of all the Christmas Day movies this year, I'm more than a little interested in "The Spirit," the latest from comic-book-artist-turned-filmmaker Frank Miller. Once again, we'll see those digitized backgrounds and weird mixes of color and black-and-white, as in "Sin City" and "300," Miller's collaborations with Robert Rodriguez.

Mostly, though, I want to see what they do with one of my favorite comic heroes.

I discovered "The Spirit" late, in the 1970s, when a lot of the old strips were finally being reprinted for a new generation of fans. That's when a lot of us first discovered Will Eisner.

Who's Eisner? A cartoonist's cartoonist who never quite reached A-list popularity but was always known to the cognoscenti. Jack Kirby ("The Hulk, "X-Men," etc.) worked with Eisner back in the 1930s, when he was still Jacob Kurtzberg; later a young Jules Feiffer would understudy for him. Michael Chabon quoted Eisner in the epigram for his novel "The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier and Clay" and may have used him as a model for one of his cartoonist heroes. Hundreds of other young pop artists studied his work.

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INDEX to MR. MEDIA INTERVIEWS

TV Stars * TV Producers * Movie Stars * Movie Directors, Producers, documentary Filmmakers and Screenwriters * Politicians and Political Writers * Stand-Up Comedians * Health Experts * Magazine Editors * Radio Stars * Bloggers, Podcasters and Web Producers * Novelists * Musicians and Music Journalists * Sexuality Experts * Culture and Society Experts * Food Experts * Biographers, Historians and A.J. Jacobs * Athletes and Sports Experts * Photographers * Journalists * Crime Experts * CEOs and Business Experts * Comic Book Creators * Cartoonists * Will Eisner Co-Workers, Friends and Experts

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Monday, December 15, 2008

Adaptation of Will Eisner's most famous work will hit the big screen (The Post and Courier)

Cover of Cover via Amazon

Thursday, December 11, 2008

Say the name Will Eisner, and for many it is like invoking the names of Homer or Picasso: pioneer figures in their fields.

While Eisner's cultural contribution may not be quite so exalted, for millions of readers he is the seminal figure in a publishing phenomenon.

Eisner created the first successful graphic novel, popularizing the term in the process, with the release of "A Contract With God" (1978).

This semi-autobiographical story is credited with revolutionizing the comic book form. Today, the graphic novel is, arguably, America's fastest-growing literary genre. And widely influential. The character of Kavalier in Michael Chabon's Pulitzer-prize winning (non-graphic) novel "The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier and Clay" was inspired to a considerable degree by Eisner's life and career.

Following "A Contract With God" at an age when most of his contemporaries had long since retired, Eisner created more than 20 additional graphic novels and instructional books.

"Will was still very productive near the end of his life," says Carl Gropper, archivist of Will Eisner Studios, Inc., in New Jersey. "I suspect that now that the new movie based on his work is coming out, there will be quite a bit of additional interest in his remarkable career."

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INDEX to MR. MEDIA INTERVIEWS

TV Stars * TV Producers * Movie Stars * Movie Directors, Producers, documentary Filmmakers and Screenwriters * Politicians and Political Writers * Stand-Up Comedians * Health Experts * Magazine Editors * Radio Stars * Bloggers, Podcasters and Web Producers * Novelists * Musicians and Music Journalists * Sexuality Experts * Culture and Society Experts * Food Experts * Biographers, Historians and A.J. Jacobs * Athletes and Sports Experts * Photographers * Journalists * Crime Experts * CEOs and Business Experts * Comic Book Creators * Cartoonists * Will Eisner Co-Workers, Friends and Experts

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Monday, July 21, 2008

Michael Chabon's literary call to arms (Ottawa Citizen)

Essays show a dizzying range of influences

Review by Joel Yanofsky
Canwest News Service
July 13, 2008

Maps and Legends: Reading and Writing Along the Borderlands
By Michael Chabon
McSweeney's Books, 222 pages, $24

Michael Chabon has made a virtue and a career out of being all over the literary map.

His novels have been inspired by swashbuckling adventures (Gentlemen of the Road), comic books (The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier & Clay, for which he won the Pulitzer Prize) and Raymond Chandler, if Chandler were Jewish (The Yiddish Policeman's Union).

This is eclecticism of a high order. Or it's eclecticism gone bananas. Whichever, the origins and the evolution of Chabon's versatile tastes and talents are on display in Maps and Legends, his first book of non-fiction.

Its 16 literary and personal essays cover a dizzying range of influences from Marcel Proust to comic books, Sherlock Holmes to Shecky Greene, Philip Pullman to Philip Roth.

In fact, calling Chabon well-read is like calling Alexander Ovechkin a good hockey player; it's an embarrassing understatement. Chabon is ridiculously well-read. Which, incidentally, puts him in an ideal position to go to bat for writers who have ended up, often unfairly and unfortunately, on the wrong side of literary judgment.

So while Chabon can demonstrate a scholarly detachment in essays on fashionable authors like Pullman or Cormac McCarthy, he is much happier as an unabashed fan.

In the essay "Thoughts on the Death of Will Eisner," Chabon compares Eisner, "the father of the graphic novel," to Orson Welles. Both had prodigious talents; both were enormous influences on the generations of artists who followed them.

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Monday, March 31, 2008

El Espuritu de Una Vida... Will Eisner: A Spirited Life now available in Spanish Language Edition!



I think the only thing cooler than seeing your book published... is seeing it published in another language!

So it delights me to announce that my authorized biography, WILL EISNER: A SPIRITED LIFE, has been published in Spain by NORMA Editorial as WILL EISNER: EL ESPIRITU DE UNA VIDA, with translation by Raúl Sastre.

You can read brief excerpts in Spanish at Con C De Arte:"NO QUERÍA QUE FUESE UN SUPERHÉROE" and SE SENTÍA MOLESTO CON FRANK.

You can order a copy of this new Spanish edition from La Isla Libros.

REVIEWS!



maumau Barcelona.



The reviewer gives the Spanish language edition four stars -- Altamente Recomendable -- "Highly Recommended" (Translations to English by FreeTranslation.com):

"Will Eisner is to the comic what Shakespeare and Cervantes to the literature or what Orson Welles and John Ford to the movies. A teacher of teachers. A precursor, an inventor of forms and of language. For the screenwriter Alan Moore "Eisner is to a large extent the person responsible for that the comics have brain". It was reading one of its histories when decided what would be of greater. Neil Gaiman, writer of The Sandman and American Gods, compares the importance of Eisner with the Velvet Underground in the popular music. "Perhaps only some five thousand people were bought in their moment a disk of the Velvet, but all and each one of them they finished forming a group of music. If you discovered to Eisner to the adequate age, ¿why were going to wanted to do another thing?"

"The shadow of Will Eisner is infinite and its influence transfers the border of the comic. Michael Chabon, Frank Miller, Art Spiegelman, Spielberg or Tarantino have recognized publicly its debt with him. Norm continues expanding its indispensable Library Will Eisner with the publication of this official biography written by Bob Andelman after more than two years of conversations with the teacher. An opportunity for, through its person, to see the evolution of the American comic along this century, since its starts as industry in the thirties with the first comic books (then called comic magazines) to the current situation where the graphic novel occupies a space increasingly more prominent.

"All began when in 1937 a Will Eisner of only 19 years met with Sam Iger, its leader until closed the blind the magazine "Wow!", and he proposed to mount a study of comics that to sell materials to all the editorial that needed it. It had just been born the Study Eisner & Iger. Here is the most interesting part of the book: that of the Eisner as pioneer of the American comic. They are a hundred full long pages of anecdotes of the juicier. By them they will parade names as Bob Kane (creative of Batman) always with more time for the women that to draw, he provided to Eisner its first loving appointments, although these were of payment and Eisner did not know it. Or as Jack Kirby (perhaps the unique rival capable one to do him shadow like pioneer of the creative, American comic along with Stan Reads of mythical personages of Marvel Comics as the Captain America, the Four Fantastic, Hulk, the Patrol X and Thor among others) that began working in its study.

"Although the great revolution of Eisner arrives with "The Spirit", magazine that was distributed weekly with some newspapers. The first apparition of the detective of the antifaz was June 2, 1940 in five Sunday with a thrown in all the country of million and middle of copies. Each week seven pages appeared that revolutionized the world of the comic. Eisner was capable of counting a history of black series, series "B" or of what was in only 7 pages and utilizing multitude of resources. The vignettes did not have limits, experienced week in, week out. Mythical they are the a single vignette presentation pages where each time the logo was different. With "The Spirit" Eisner broke the confined design of page in which the comic had moved up till then. It suffices to look at some of the precious volumes of "The files of The Spirit" that here has also published Norm to see the modernity that, more than sixty years later, still they remove their pages. Pure lesson of narration by images that has influenced so much contemporary filmmakers.

"The book is profusely documented, with numerous illustrations and photographs that complement the reading. We will know its difficult infancy in the years of the Great Depression. The relation with its Even brother and its wife Ann, all a life. The death of its daughter Alice by leukemia with only 16 years. The long tunnel that supposed the experience of the magazine PS, a bulletin for the army where carried out illustrations. The resurrection of the hand of the graphic novel, term that if did not invent yes recognition contributed him. "Contract of God", published in 1978, is respected for many as the first graphic novel.

"Its last years are full of masterpieces of the comic (never stopped to draw, each time with more ambitious projects) and of recognitions. The prizes of the American comic (the Oscar of the comic to understand us) carry their name. By something Eisner is the teacher of teachers of the American comic. All to their feet."

BANDA DESEÑADA COMICS *librería*


"Of the hand of Editorial Norm this book arrives us where reproduces himself the work carried out by Bob Andelman, who during more than three years was being interviewed with one of the pillars of the comic modern, creator of the call graphic novel, obtaining that the father of Spirit touched all the aspects of his life. Since its influences, to biographical details of its life, passing for its relation with other authors of its epoch as Kirby, Siegel or the same Stan Reads, as well as its relation and influence in younger authors, like Alan Moore, Dave Sim or Neil Gaiman.

"Indispensable book for the lovers of Will Eisner and a recommendable book for all those that want to know a little more on the world of the comic, cash from inside."






















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Danny Fingeroth, DISGUISED AS CLARK KENT, SUPERMAN ON THE COUCH, author, comics editor: Mr. Media Interview, Part 1



Danny Fingeroth spends a whole lot of time thinking about superheroes.

For several years, he did it as the editor of the Spider-Man group of titles at Marvel Comics. Today, he’s the editor of Write Now! magazine and author of two books that go behind the four-color glory of men in tights.

Already the author of Superman on the Couch, Fingeroth’s latest examination of comics, Disguised as Clark Kent, explores why so many of the enduring characters of the golden and silver ages of comics can trace their heritage back to young American Jewish artists and writers such as Will Eisner, Jerry Siegel, Joe Shuster, Jack Kirby, and Stan Lee.

His next book, Rough Guide to Graphic Novels, will be released by Penguin in 2008.
DANNY FINGEROTH AUDIO!
Click to open separate window


ALSO AVAILABLE AS A PODCAST ON iTUNES.


BOB ANDELMAN/Mr. MEDIA: Danny, let’s jump right in. Tell the truth here: Jews aren’t really responsible for the comic book industry, but because we control the media, we can say whatever we want, right?

DANNY FINGEROTH: Well, Mr. Media would know that better than anybody. “Mr. Media” is translated from the Hebrew, I think. Isn’t it in the Bible, I think? Early in Genesis, there’s a mention of the “he who controls all media.”

ANDELMAN/Mr. MEDIA: Well, it’s true. And Nostradamus predicted the coming of me also, yes. Quite true. What inspired you to write Disguised as Clark Kent? And before you answer that, I have to say that is a great title.

FINGEROTH: Oh, thank you. We went through about 10 different titles, and when we hit on that, it was one of those things that stares you in the face. You hear that preamble to the “Superman” TV show from the time. You’re pretty literate, basically, just hearing that from the TV show, and I think it was even the preamble to the radio show and just suddenly it popped out, yeah, Disguised as Clark Kent. So the book, it became a very personal thing for me, or it started out as a personal thing and became even more so, which made it, in many ways, more difficult to write than my previous book, Superman on the Couch. And I’ll talk about that if you want later. But the inspiration was really, as you know as Will Eisner’s biographer, when you’re a Jewish guy of a certain age growing up in the New York area as I did, you suddenly realize that the people who created the superheroes, Siegel and Shuster and Lee and Kirby and Irwin Hayes and Arnold Drake, all those guys, Bob Kane, Jerry Robinson, could’ve been my uncles or my father. They were from that same generation and from similar backgrounds in the Bronx and the other boroughs. So on a personal level, I found it fascinating that these comics and these characters that I had loved since I was a child were, in many ways, very much connected to my own personal background.

ANDELMAN/Mr. MEDIA: It’s funny. And by the way, I’ll make the plugs here. Thank you for mentioning the Eisner biography.

FINGEROTH: Oh, you’re welcome.







ANDELMAN/Mr. MEDIA: But it’s funny you say that because I actually felt that way. I spent about two and a half years with Will working on the book, and I couldn’t help shaking that he seemed very much like one of my uncles.

FINGEROTH: Right.

ANDELMAN/Mr. MEDIA: I’m from New York/New Jersey myself. And the way he spoke, his point of reference, it was all very familiar. So, yeah, I get that entirely. Were you at all influenced in the timing of this by Michael Chabon’s novel, The Adventures of Kavalier & Clay?

FINGEROTH: Well, when you say the timing, I’m not sure…

ANDELMAN/Mr. MEDIA: Well, that had to come out first.

FINGEROTH: Alright. Well, it certainly was an interesting take on it. So I’d say that was always in my mind, but even though there, I think, are some quotes or interviews that he did with Stan Lee and Gil Kane, that was a work of fiction. And ultimately, while I love that book, I think while much of it is set against the backdrop of the comic book industry, it’s ultimately about a lot of other things. He’s that kind of novelist. He’s got this imagination that just reaches all over the place.

ANDELMAN/Mr. MEDIA: And I hate him for it, personally.

FINGEROTH: You have to hate a guy like that. Like I said, I think maybe it made me aware that there was an audience that might be interested in the topic because, if it was just a personal memoir, then I would just keep it in my diary or, I guess, these days in a blog. It’d just be between me and 2 million of my closest friends. But I think it was an interesting parallel history to the well-known histories of comics, and yet I saw all these nuggets in there that certainly were not there intentionally in the stories. But from our vantage point of the 21st century, we can sort of look back and interpret certain things in the work.

ANDELMAN/Mr. MEDIA: I know, in my case, in reading Kavalier & Clay, and the reason I thought of it was, even working with Will, I hadn’t really thought so much about how predominant Jewish voices were in the comics, and that kind of brought it to a head because even though it’s fiction, there’s a big nugget of truth in the history that’s presented in that book. I was kind of curious along that line.

FINGEROTH: I think having worked in the business for so long -- I started working at Marvel in 1977. On the one hand, the industry certainly has that classic kind of Godfather movie, New York ethnic, early 20th century immigrant mix of Jews, Italian, and Irish-descended people, but certainly in the comics, everybody of every race and background was represented, but still it clearly seemed that most of the companies and much of the staff in those early days were from Eastern European/Jewish backgrounds.

ANDELMAN/Mr. MEDIA: One of the theories that you put forth is that Jews wound up there because, and all kidding aside about controlling the media, they couldn’t get jobs anywhere else.

FINGEROTH: Well, I think there were a couple of houses that were known as Jewish houses, but mostly, publishing was pretty much closed off to Jews as was advertising. Again, from a vantage point of the present day, it seems almost like an alternate dimension or something. Although it’s close in history and although a lot of the early creators are still with us and many of them still active, it still is just a quantum distance in terms of what social boundaries people couldn’t cross.

ANDELMAN/Mr. MEDIA: And I’m going to try very hard to make this my last Will Eisner reference.

FINGEROTH: Let’s talk about Eisner the whole time.

ANDELMAN/Mr. MEDIA: No, no, no, no. That would be pushing the line, I think. But one of the things that he had said to me, and I think he said it to other people in talking about that time was that, yes, Jewish writers and artists could get work in comics, but today, we hold it in some esteem cause it’s more of an adult medium than it was then, but then, as he put it, it was “just one step below pornographers,” working in it.

FINGEROTH: Even today, if you go to a movie or watch a TV show and they want to indicate that somebody is socially maladjusted or just an idiot, what do they do? They have them reading a comic book, or -- I’ve noticed this a lot in TV dramas lately -- very often the killer in a “CSI” or something or in a “Law and Order” will be a comic creator, and either he’s really the killer or he’s suspected of being the killer because he’s so screwed up because he’s a comics creator. So I think even though…

ANDELMAN/Mr. MEDIA: But those guys are never Jewish.

FINGEROTH: There’s sort of that TV kind of could-be-anything-looking and name. But even today, that stigma of comics is still there. So even with Maus and all of Will’s later work and Persepolis and all those things that have allegedly brought respect to comics, it’s still short-hand with somebody either being stupid or crazy in most other media. And that’s how we like it.

ANDELMAN/Mr. MEDIA: Well, you know. Did you find when you were at Marvel that it was still profession-dominated in some ways by Jews, or did that change by the late ‘70s and ‘80s?

FINGEROTH: I think the ownership was still -- whether by chance or I think more by chance -- a traditional kind of Jewish media executive. But I’d say in the rank and file of the writers and editors, it had become the kind of thing where people would travel to New York the way people would go to Hollywood to be in the movies, whereas in Eisner’s day and the ‘30s, ‘40s, ‘50s, it was really a local phenomenon. I think it was probably 90 percent of the people in the business were from New York or were living in New York when they got into it Whereas, I think, starting in the ‘70s with the advent of the fan turning pro, I think people would come to New York from the Midwest and from the South and from other countries to pursue a career in comics just the way they might come to pursue a career in fashion or in finance. I think it started to change in that era, which is also when things like advertising and publishing had, by that point, become much more open to Jews to get into.

ANDELMAN/Mr. MEDIA: One of the things that you picked up on, which I found fascinating over the last few years, is that a lot of these early comics guys all went to the same high school, DeWitt Clinton. Being from that area, did you know anything about that going into this, and what did you learn about that school?

FINGEROTH: It’s funny. I went to Bronx Science, which was like the next subway stop after DeWitt Clinton. Clinton was an all-boys’ school so there were no girls around to distract the guys, and I think if you lived in the Bronx, you lived above whatever street, that was pretty much where you went. Now I can’t figure out if in the era when Stan Lee and Will Eisner and Bob Kane went there if you had to take some kind of a test to get in. I never thought you did, but then things I’ve read indicate that maybe there was. But, in any case, the Bronx was the next stop after the Lower East Side. If you had developed a little bit of savings and a little bit of upward mobility as an immigrant or as the children of immigrants, you would take the subway up to the wide open spaces of the Grand Concourse and then in other less luxurious neighborhoods in the Bronx. These guys went to that school, I think, just by chance. It was really just the local high school. It’s phenomenal, not just comics guys but Lerner and Lowe and Rodgers and Hammerstein, Dan Schorr from NPR. If you go to their alumni page, it’s phenomenal who went there.







ANDELMAN/Mr. MEDIA: As you were saying that, I was just trying to look up in the back of the Eisner book the list that I had. The guy who wrote “Singin’ in the Rain” went there, and yeah, it’s phenomenal. I wish that I could say that my high school in New Jersey turned out anything like that. Oh, here, I found the list. I’m just gonna bore people with this for a second – James Baldwin, Avery Fisher, Ralph Lauren, Burt Lancaster, Richard Rodgers, Neil Simon, A.M. Rosenthal from The New York Times, Paddy Chayefsky, Daniel Schorr, Fats Waller, Jen Murray, Avery Corman, David Archibald, Judd Hirsch from “Taxi,” Stubby Kaye, there’s a lost name, Don Adams from Get Smart, Martin Balsam, Arthur Gelb, also from The New York Times, Gary Marshall, the producer, father of Penny Marshall.

FINGEROTH: No, no, it’s father or brother? I think brother.

ANDELMAN/Mr. MEDIA: Is it brother?

FINGEROTH: Yeah.

ANDELMAN/Mr. MEDIA: Alright, brother. Bernard Kalb, the journalist, Bruce Jay Friedman, novelist and father of Drew Friedman, cartoonist, and of course, Stan Lee. It’s just a phenomenal thing.

FINGEROTH: There must’ve been something about the school, I imagine, that encouraged creative activity as well. That would be something that you or I or somebody would maybe need to do research or see if, compared to other high schools in the city, they were receptive. I know Eisner and Kane, I think, were on, I forget if it was the school paper or the yearbook. I’ve heard different reports of that, but certainly, there were avenues for them to utilize their creative abilities of painting backdrops for plays and so on.

ANDELMAN/Mr. MEDIA: And the reality was they were all just doing it to get closer to girls.

FINGEROTH: At DeWitt Clinton? Oh, doing the creative stuff? Yes, that’s true, of course.

ANDELMAN/Mr. MEDIA: That was a boys’ school.

FINGEROTH: That goes without saying.

ANDELMAN/Mr. MEDIA: But, no, it was all an outlet. Obviously, there were no girls.

FINGEROTH: Well, there was a sister school called Walton High School. I’ve never seen the alumni roster there, but it wouldn’t surprise me if there was a fairly impressive list of women who went there.

ANDELMAN/Mr. MEDIA: See, at those same-sex schools, you create all that sexual frustration.

FINGEROTH: Right, exactly!

ANDELMAN/Mr. MEDIA: It pours out in different ways. Danny, tell us a little bit about how you came to the theories that you did. Just the title, Disguised as Clark Kent. And for folks who haven’t seen the cover, it’s very cool. You have this immigrant family, and then you’ve drawn -- I don’t think it’s officially Superman, but clearly…

FINGEROTH: It is not. It is definitely not Superman. It is a…

ANDELMAN/Mr. MEDIA: A Supermanish character.

FINGEROTH: Yes. It’s the same character that was on the cover of Superman on the Couch but with a different chest insignia.

ANDELMAN/Mr. MEDIA: Tell us a little bit about how you kind of came to the theories that you did for this book in connecting the superhero to these very mild-mannered, young, Jewish/Eastern European immigrants.

FINGEROTH: Well, it has to do with what Jules Feiffer has written about and other people - the idea that if you come to another country as an immigrant, you live at least a dual identity. You have your life at home where you speak possibly a foreign language that your parents may have mostly spoken, and then there’s that life with your family and your culture from the old country. And then there’s this desire to fit into the American melting pot and to really become part of the mainstream.

As Chabon says in Kavalier & Clay, who else but a Jew would come up with the name “Clark Kent”? It’s such a purposely bland kind of name. So you have your life at home, your life in school with the idea being that you feel like you have all this secret knowledge and secret power, and yet you don’t want to excel. There’s the immigrant urge to excel, and yet the fear of being singled out and being discriminated against because of excelling. It’s the whole secret identity where everybody thinks, “If only people knew why I seem like a jerk, they’d understand,” or, “If only people knew the secret power that I’m just too responsible to unleash on them.” So it plays to fantasies that are specifically immigrant but then have become universal, and it also has to do with the ability of an immigrant and especially, I think, the Jewish immigrants in the ‘30s and ‘40s to look at a culture they come into and kind of reflect back to it, its image of itself. That’s sort of the whole Jewish thing with being prominent in entertainment. I think it’s traditionally immigrant groups in general that bring a new, fresh idea for entertainment cause they can reflect the dominant culture back to itself.







ANDELMAN/Mr. MEDIA: Boy, I’m tempted to ask you; I don’t know if I want to. We have this whole discussion these days about immigrants and their place in the United States. As you look back on all this and all that these immigrants brought, how do you feel about the current debate?

FINGEROTH: I think it’s the same thing repeats itself. America, with all its flaws, is still pretty much regarded as the best place on the planet, and people want to come here. And then people who are already here want to close the door after themselves.

One advantage that, say, the European immigrants in general and the Jewish immigrants in particular had was they may have had certain ethnic, physical characteristics, but essentially, they looked like Americans. They could generally pass, as the saying goes, whereas people whose ancestors came here as slaves or Native Americans or anybody with a different skin color had to deal with that whole other element of racial prejudice. And I think that goes on today where America is totally schizophrenic about that. We’re founded on this immigrant ethic, but everybody who’s here wants to close the door after them and not let the next group in. But the next group always has something to contribute. If you go to comics conventions now, the teenage kids who are bursting with talent bring you around their portfolios, many of them Asian, many of them Mexican, just from all different groups. I think that still the contribution of the immigrant is still alive, and the debate over it will never die because I think it’s human nature. You get to a place, and then you go, “Okay, close the door now, I’m here, so tough luck everybody else.” It’s that constant struggle.

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© 2008 by Bob Andelman. All rights reserved.

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Monday, October 22, 2007

AFF Review: Will Eisner: Portrait of a Sequential Artist

by Jette Kernion
Oct 21st 2007 11:05AM



I'm not a comic-book reader, so I didn't know much about the subject of Will Eisner: Portrait of a Sequential Artist before seeing the documentary at Austin Film Festival. I knew he was the creator of The Spirit, a comic-book series that Frank Miller is adapting into a feature film ... and that's about all I knew. Fortunately, the documentary filled in many of the blanks for me about Eisner and provided some interesting details about the artist's life.

Eisner is credited for being one of the pioneers in the comic-book form -- as the film's title indicates, he believed in making the comics sequential, giving them an ongoing storyline, which was not standard back in the 1930s when he started work as an artist. His character The Spirit was not a traditional superhero with crazy superpowers, but an ordinary guy in the smallest of masks, who happened to fight crime. During WWII and afterwards, Eisner created military instructional manuals that were drawn in a comic-book style to make them interesting and easy to understand. Later in life, he created more dramatic, personal comic books (A Contract with God) that he dubbed "graphic novels," and paved the way for this type of work to be taken seriously.

One difficulty I had with Portrait of a Sequential Artist was that I didn't always understand the importance and relevance of various interviewers. For example, I had no idea why Michael Chabon was onscreen, having never read The Adventures of Kavalier and Clay. I also wasn't sure why Kurt Vonnegut was interviewed, although he did have good insights and was obviously knowledgeable on the subject. The movie seemed to assume that audience members knew more about the comic-book world than I do; however, that may be a fair assumption, since biopics about comic-book artists may not appeal to a wide demographic. Interestingly, one of the other interview subjects was Frank Miller, who did not mention anything about his desire to make a movie out of The Spirit, but who is obviously a huge fan of Eisner's work.

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Thursday, October 11, 2007

Entertainment Weekly Reviews "Life, in Pictures"

Review by Tom Russo

A collection by the late comics pioneer touching on his early career, family background, and reluctant "retirement"

For Fans of... The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier & Clay; Neil Simon's autobiographical works.

Bottom Line: Even Eisner aficionados will be struck by sequences in which he discovers friends' anti-Semitism. And in an unflattering look at his wife's family, he interestingly casts himself against type as a shallow opportunist."

Grade: A-






















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Saturday, August 12, 2006

Will Eisner & Alex Saviuk - Better Than An Interview

Have you ever wanted to see the phases of a comic book in production? How it goes from rough layouts to finished pages?



And even if you're already a professional in the industry, would you like to see how a master does it?



Alex Saviuk -- who may be best known for his 80-issue stint on Web of Spider-Man from 1988-94 and who currently draws the Sunday "Amazing Spider-Man" newspaper strip by Stan Lee -- was a student of Will Eisner's at the School of Visual Arts in Manhattan in the 1970s. Thirty years later, when Eisner agreed to contribute a story to Michael Chabon's Dark Horse comic book, "The Escapist," he asked Saviuk to help him with some of the finer detail. The story, in which Eisner's Spirit meets the Escapist, became Eisner's final work; he literally sent off the pages in December 2004 before he went to the hospital complaining of chest pains and difficulty breathing.



I met Saviuk at Megacon in Orlando in late February 2006 when this series was just a concept. We talked about doing an interview and he told me about the process of working with Eisner.



Saviuk sent me the pages you're about to see with the intention of doing a related interview. "These are Will's roughs to my pencils to his finishes," he explains. He's been extremely busy, however, so I asked if I could go ahead and share these pages in the meantime.



If you haven't bought the finished product yet, do. It's a great piece of work and a wonderful tease and lead-in to Darwyn Cooke and Jeph Loeb's upcoming "Batman/Spirit" and Cooke's monthly "Spirit" series for DC. (To learn more about Alex Saviuk's career, check out this podcast interview he did with Vincent Zurzolo on World Talk Radio's "Comic Cast"; if you'd like to check out his latest work, surf over to Feast of the Seven Fishes.)


(Many thanks to Ann Eisner and Michael Chabon for granting permission to share these pages.)



Will Eisner's rough, above.




Alex Saviuk tightened Eisner's rough, above.




Eisner finished the page, above.


















All three of these books feature artwork by Alex Saviuk.






Eisner's rough, above.



Saviuk tightens the page, above.




Eisner finished the page, above.















































































































































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