More on Soupy's Star

Here, straight from Mark Kausler's digital camera, are scenes from yesterday morning's Soupy Ceremony. Nice to see how happy Mr. Sales appears in the pics.

And I'll also mention that Mark has made a wonderful animated short called It's the Cat, which has generated some "Oscar buzz." It's being shown next Saturday at 10 AM at the Samuel Goldwyn Theater at the Motion Picture Academy as part of an all-day progam of semi-finalists in the Short Subject category. I saw it in rough cut/pencil test form a year or two ago and it sure struck me as worthy of one of those little golden statuettes.

Another Nice Message

When I was a lad, I liked nothing better than watching Mr. Laurel and Mr. Hardy. I watched them on TV, especially for about a year in L.A. when one of our local kid show hosts, Engineer Bill, ran their shorts every afternoon on Channel 9. I watched them at whatever revival houses ran their work. I even bought 8mm silent movies of them from companies like Blackhawk Films and Atlas Films, and watched them over and over and over. That's the box for an Atlas Film above, scanned right off one I bought when I was ten or eleven. Most Atlas their offerings came in two versions — the 50 ft. reel, which gave you a little less than four minutes of the movie, and the 200 ft. reel which ran around fifteen. This one was Come Clean, a two-reeler edited down to about a fourth of one reel.

As I found, even badly-edited, chopped-up, fuzzy-imaged Stan and Ollie was better than no Stan and Ollie. It's more than a little amazing that we can now own entire movies on DVD…but back then, we had to settle for this.

Soupy's Star

I couldn't get up to Hollywood Boulevard today to see Soupy Sales receive his star in the cement but my friend Mark Kausler (only one of the great animators working today) made the soggy trek. He sent this e-mail and gave me his okay to post it here for all…

Because of your website, I did something today I've never done before, attended a Hollywood Walk of Fame ceremony. Of course, it was the one for Soupy Sales. Only love could get me across town in the pouring rain to see anybody, but for Soupy I made an exception. He definitely does not look well. He's wheelchair bound, and had an eerie sort of fixed smile on his face. When he tried to thank everyone for coming, he could barely talk above a whisper. The only sentence fragment I could hear clearly was: "I want to thank you all from the bottom of my heart for coming…", he repeated this phrase several times. He did muster up enough strength to push a partial pie into Johnny Grant's face, which I couldn't see very well for the solid wall of backs between me and the scene, but I'm sure that'll be on the news. Marc Summers, who hosts Unwrapped on Food Network was there, and Peter Marshall made an appearance. Summers actually mentioned Clyde Adler and Frank Nastasi, which shows that he knows his stuff. He did a pretty fair White Fang and Black Tooth, as well. Anyway, who knows if I'll ever see Soupy again? I'm glad I made the pilgrimage at least once. The fan club goes on.

And in a subsequent e-mail, Mark mentions that the crowd sang "Happy Birthday" to Soupy, who turns 79 tomorrow. I understand that later in the afternoon, Soupy dedicated an exhibit of his props and memorabilia at The Hollywood History Museum. (For those who don't know: Johnny Grant, the gent with his puss covered in shaving cream above, is — this is his actual title — "the Ceremonial Mayor of Hollywood and Chairman of the Walk of Fame Selection Committee." He's a local personality and fixture of the Hollywood Chamber of Commerce, and he hosts the star dedications.)

Sorry to hear that Soupy seems to be no healthier than the last time I saw him. He's never quite recovered from a bad fall he took at the 1995 Local Emmy Awards in New York, and I'm not sure what else is the matter with him. I'm glad to hear that Mark could barely see because of the "solid wall of backs," because that means there were a lot of people there. Soupy deserved a big crowd, and I hope it gave him a sense of how loved he is.

Today's Political Rant

The Bush administration has apparently decided that a good use of your tax dollars is to make cash awards to subsidize right-wing talk radio and TV. So far, this report in USA Today has gone undenied and has even been more or less confirmed…

Seeking to build support among black families for its education reform law, the Bush administration paid a prominent black pundit $240,000 to promote the law on his nationally syndicated television show and to urge other black journalists to do the same. The campaign, part of an effort to promote No Child Left Behind (NCLB), required commentator Armstrong Williams "to regularly comment on NCLB during the course of his broadcasts," and to interview Education Secretary Rod Paige for TV and radio spots that aired during the show in 2004.

Had this been done by a Democratic administration, especially one headed by a guy named Clinton, Republicans would be incensed, shouting about bribery and misuse of government funds and attempts to manipulate Free Speech. But Democrats don't know how to work Outrage to their advantage and Republicans look the other way when their boys do this kind of thing. No one will probably make much of Armstrong Williams's low ethics in the matter, either. Not unless other alleged journalists are upset that they didn't get the same deal.

Congrats to USA Today, for which Armstrong sometimes writes, for breaking this story. Even if they only did it to get out in front of the pack, they deserve some credit. CNN has still never mentioned Robert Novak's family ties to the publisher of a number of right-wing books he's touted on their channel.

A Brush with Comic Book History

Above left is the cover of Fantasy Masterpieces #4, a reprint title that Marvel put out back in 1966. At the time, it was reprinting the original Captain America stories by Joe Simon and Jack Kirby, in part because the publisher was then anticipating legal action from Simon and somehow thought it would help to reprint and re-copyright the old stories without credits. Unlike Simon, Kirby was working for Marvel at the time and he drew new covers for these issues…until he learned they were being printed with the names of Simon and Kirby removed. Jack objected, on his behalf but also on Joe's, and he was basically told to just shut up about it. It became another in a long list of reasons that he chose to leave Marvel a few years later.

He was told that if he wanted to continue with the firm, he would have to sign a contract he found noxious in many ways, including a clause that would have given the company the absolute right to credit or not credit him for anything he had done or would ever do for them. Based on how Joe Simon had ceased to exist, Kirby was certain they would eventually do it to him, and he likened it — admittedly, an overwrought comparison — to how the Russians had erased the name of Nikita Khrushchev from their history books after his ouster. (Simon did sue, eventually settled and his name was eventually mentioned again in Marvel history and allowed to remain on reprints. More recently, he sued again, settled, and now I'm told this credit is contractually guaranteed.)

The cover to Fantasy Masterpieces #4 is interesting because it was one of the last things Jack inked during this period of his career. He generally did not like taking the time to ink what he'd already drawn in pencil, and employers preferred to get as many pages out of him as possible. But what happened here was that Jack did the cover for #3 (which contained the first Simon-Kirby reprints) and Frank Giacoia inked it. After it was completed, someone remarked that it looked like the modern Captain America, not the Golden Age Captain America, and they wondered if Jack could make the covers look more like the 1941 version. Jack said, in effect, "Not in the pencilling. That has to be done in the inking." So to prove it, Jack inked the cover to #4. You can get a better look at the drawing by clicking here, which will show you an enlargement of it that I cribbed from Fred Hembeck's site. It may have been the last time Jack ever inked anything for conventional comic books. Thereafter, Giacoia returned to inking the covers until Jack refused to do them any longer.

The drawing is reprinted as an illustration in the current, highly-recommended issue of The Jack Kirby Collector. Unfortunately, it is erroneously captioned as a Kirby/Giacoia effort, which circumvents the nice bit of history that it represents. We can forgive TJKC editor this error since he makes so few in his fine publication and since he's had his mind on more important matters, lately. Last Monday, he and spouse Pam welcomed a new Morrow, Hannah Rose, into the world. I'll even forgive that the wrongly-credited illo adorned my column in that issue, so people who think I made the mistake are writing me messages that say, approximately, "Evanier, you dip! You should know that cover was inked by Kirby." The things I do not know are many, and include an awful lot of things more important than who inked the cover to Fantasy Masterpieces #4…but I do know that.

Abner Confirmed

Okay. About the same time I was posting the rumor that Paramount Home Video was about to announce a DVD of the 1959 Li'l Abner, Paramount Home Video issued a press release announcing a DVD of the 1959 Li'l Abner. It comes out April 19, as does a DVD of Darling Lili, another interesting movie for which many were clamoring.

Pieman on the Pavement

TV Legend Soupy Sales is supposed to receive his long overdue star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame, tomorrow morning at 11:30 AM. The location is at the corner of Hollywood Boulevard and Orange Dr., right in front of the Hollywood Roosevelt Hotel. That's the good news. The bad is that the National Weather Service says it'll probably be pouring H2O tomorrow morning. I called the Hollywood Chamber of Commerce and asked what they do in that situation and a gent there said the ceremony will proceed, "rain or shine."

These are usually very nice ceremonies, with not only the honoree but also a few special celebrity guests, plus photographers and a lot of tourists and fans who crowd around to watch. I dunno what it'll be like if it's raining but if you're a Soupy fan in the area and you own an umbrella, you might want to find out. Soupy is one of the greats (here's an article I wrote about him) and he has been in poor health for some time. I hate to think his unveiling will be a rushed, poorly-attended fiasco on account of the weather.

Cornpone Meeting

I am told by several sources that Paramount is about to announce a DVD release of the 1959 Li'l Abner movie (the one we all want) for April 19. It'll have a new, crisp transfer but probably no extras apart from the theatrical trailer. If I hear anything more, I'll let you know.

Early Wednesday Evening

Hello, everyone. The computer is fixed (thanks, Bill) but I'm way behind on things, so there won't be a lot of postings here the next few days.

A lot of you are sending me long, thoughtful letters about Will Eisner. They are all interesting to read, but please share them with the world by posting them somewhere. The message boards at Newsarama, Comic Book Resources or The Comics Journal would all be good places. And if you're looking for info and other obits, I couldn't possibly assemble a better batch o' links than Tom Spurgeon has.

(Well, I will mention one: Shane Shellenbarger sent this link to an hour of streaming video of Will lecturing at some sort of Library of Congress function about graphic novels.)

My apologies to all those who've written lately, only to have your e-mails languish in a folder on my hard drive. I'll get to as many of them as possible in the next few days.

Early Wednesday Morn

So this morning, my high-speed Internet connection suddenly begins cutting in and out, mostly out. The Comcast people were of no help on the phone and they're currently planning to send out a repair person next week, assuming they can find one. But that wasn't a total crisis since I still had my dial-up connection, and I had a good idea how to fix the high-speed connection from my end.

My repair job was so flawless that I not only did not fix the high-speed connection, I wiped out my computer's ability to make a dial-up connection and busted my home network setup. Well, even I'm not that incompetent. I had help from a particularly nasty spyware infection that somehow got on my computer and made it deep into my system registry. My resident computer expert, Bill Goldstein, is making a house call later today to try and undo some of the damage done by the spyware and my inept attempts to fix things.

Around an hour ago, my high-speed connection mysteriously began working again. I'm not confident this is a permanent condition but as long as it's on, I'm able to log in and check mail and post this. I have oodles of messages about Will Eisner, like this one from Bob Foster…

I always knew Will Eisner, just like I always knew Carl Barks and Harvey Kurtzman. I grew up on their work. But it wasn't until I was an adult, working in the comics and animation business that I actually did get to know each of them.

In the early 90s I was living in Denmark and attended all the comic conventions and book fairs in Europe on business. It was in Angouleme, France that I seriously approached Will with the idea of teaching the art of graphic storytelling to a bunch of eager, out-of-work animators in Dublin, Ireland. The company I was working for in Copenhagen was recruiting new artists and writers, and Dublin was a fertile source. Will agreed.

He spent about 2 weeks teaching, and he was an inspiration! He'd arrive punctually and I had to force him to take a break or go to lunch. Otherwise he would keep blabbing away about story, character, acting, drawing, all the while demonstrating with great sketches. After 8-10 hours of teaching and talking and drawing and sharing anecdotes, we'd go out to a local pub and eat and drink, and he'd tell more stories and discuss every aspect of comics and their history until Ann forced him to stop and get some sleep. And the next day he'd do it all over again. Will was the kind of guy you wanted to spend time with even if he wasn't famous. I had a hard time keeping up with him, and he was 26 years older than me! Perpetually vibrant, hilarious, nourishing, inspiring. Boy, will he be missed.

Let me say something about his fantastic wife, Ann. What a kick! Always a bundle of energy with more great stories to tell, and with a great sense of humor. She always held her own at the pubs, too. She'd jump right into the conversations with her own opinions and recollections, making the evening a pure pleasure. Another inspiration!

None of this surprises me…or anyone who knew Will. His sheer creative energy was to be envied, and based on the occasional seminars and talks I was able to catch, I suspect he was a very good teacher. He was certainly open to all approaches and most encouraging about artists developing their own styles instead of aping his.

I'll post some more messages about Will and some more thoughts over the next few days. I lost too many hours today to this silly computer problem and to just feeling depressed about losing another of the greats. Good night.

Slow and Steady

If I look a little slow for the next few days, it's because the high-speed Internet connections in my area are stammering — on for ten minutes, off for an hour, on again, off again. I'm on a primitive, moves-like-molasses dial-up connection right now and may be for some time. So posting will be lighter here, and I'll be even farther behind on e-mail than I usually am. Please forgive.

Will Eisner, R.I.P.

Above, we see Will Eisner in his natural habitat: At the drawing board, and probably producing one of the most innovative pieces of comic art of its day, whatever day it was. Eisner, who died Monday evening due to complications following his recent heart surgery, was one of the most important architects of the American comic book…a medium that took life and form about the time he got into it. He was 87 years old but boy, seeing and talking with him at conventions, he sure didn't look it. Didn't draw his age, either. I recall Frank Miller paging through one of Will's recent graphic novels, looking up and saying, "Isn't it embarrassing that a man in his eighties is kicking all our asses?"

I can't improve on the biography of Will posted here so I'll just add a couple of thoughts. Will was among the most envied craftsman in his field…admired for both his skill as a writer and artist but also for having a certain business acumen. The latter skill escaped most of comics' great creators but Eisner had enough to retain ownership and control of most of his creations. He also (and this may not be completely unrelated) never stopped drawing, never stopped pioneering in a field that could and did easily burn out its top talents. We can look at his work from the late thirties and see that it is wonderful and ground-breaking. Then we can look at what he's done the last decade or so, blazing the trail with graphic novels, often on very personal, low-concept subjects…and see that those are wonderful and ground-breaking, as well. Only when you stop and consider that those two bodies of work came from the same guy, and were part of a 60+ year pattern, does his full impact begin to dawn on you.

Like many of my generation, I first heard of Will Eisner in the mid-sixties, when he was away from mainstream comics, producing comic-type material for other venues, most notably the Army. Then his friend and former employee, Jules Feiffer, wrote glowingly of him in The Great Comic Book Heroes, and even included a Spirit reprint to prove Eisner worthy of such praise. Soon after, the Harvey comic book company launched a brief, unsuccessful Spirit reprint book which the guys in my old comic book club all devoured. It was like, Gee, comics can also be this! In 1968, we voted him or that comic some kind of award, and since I was the club's president and had his address, I wrote him a clumsy letter telling him this. Mr. Eisner quickly sent back a polite thanks and at the bottom of his note, he took the time to draw a little sketch, which I just ran through my scanner. It looked like this…

Needless to say, we were all thrilled and when I showed the letter at the next club meeting, a near-riot broke out on the question of whether the physical letter belonged to me or to the club. Somehow — don't ask me how — I managed to get out of that meeting alive and with that piece of paper.

Thereafter, it was a joy to become better acquainted with the man's work and, somewhat later on, the man who'd done it. He was always gracious, always glad to talk about any aspect or era of comics. He favored the future but his memory was razor-sharp about the past, and a lot of us historian-geeks gladly exploited that fact. You could not learn more about comics' past than by talking with Will Eisner, just as you could not learn more about their future than by reading his work.

It is not just a hollow honorific that the major awards in the comic book field are called The Will Eisner Awards. And I'll bet I speak for most/all of those who've won a couple when I say that the best part of receiving one is that when you go up to the stage to get it, Will Eisner hands it to you. Or did. He would always be there to hand you the plaque…always standing. Everyone used to joke that he shouldn't be on his feet for the marathon, drags-on-for-days ceremony; that he should be seated in a throne. One year, Kurt Busiek and Frank Miller (I think) arranged to rent one from a local prop house and early in the festivities, they happily carried it onto the platform.

Will was gracious enough to sit in it and complete the joke…but only for a minute or so. When the next award was announced, he was back in a vertical position to congratulate the recipient, not as royalty but as a peer. You never saw so much perfect symbolism at a convention: A newer generation trying to tell Will Eisner he could rest on his laurels…and Will happily declining. That's how you get to be that age and still produce vital, significant work.

A year or two after that, a Will Eisner award went to…Will Eisner. He won for one of his recent works and the next day, we were joking about how finally, at long last, he had done work that lived up to the standard of Will Eisner. He was genuinely proud to have his name in two places on the award, but I told him he'd missed out on the best part. He didn't get to have Will Eisner hand it to him. Sadly, from this day forward, everyone else who wins one will have to do without.

TiVo Coming Through

As many have written me, the TiVo folks have finally started releasing "TiVo to Go," which is a new feature for most Series 2 TiVos. If you have your machine networked with your computer, you can record a show on your TiVo and then transfer it to your PC. (A Macintosh version is somewhere in the future.) From your computer, you can then — with additional software, soon to be released — burn the show to a DVD. If you go to this page, you can find out all about the process and even sign up, as I just did, for a "priority upgrade," which means they move you up on the list to receive the new software.

I look forward to this upgrade but a tiny part of me resents having to wait in line. I owned one of the first TiVos made, and have continually upgraded and purchased new models, and I think they should cater to "charter subscribers" before they service Johnny-come-latelys to the wondrous world of TiVo. It's odd — and yes, I know it's probably not healthy — to have an emotional connection to a product. I think TiVo is the best thing to happen to television since Chuck Barris retired. If nothing else, I find it so liberating that I never have to fret about being home on time to watch a certain show or to hassle with setting the VCR. I can go about my life, comfortable in the knowledge that the latest broadcast of The Daily Show will always be there to watch when I'm ready to watch it…and I can pause it or rewind it or watch part and then stop and go get lunch and watch the rest tomorrow. It makes you feel like you own your TV instead of the other way around.

Kelly Freas Services

Funeral services for Frank Kelly Freas are being held tomorrow afternoon in Canoga Park, California at 1 PM. If anyone wants the information, drop me a private note and I'll forward what I have.

A Better Idea

The other day, I suggested that a good place to send your money for disaster relief was the Red Cross. This is still a good idea but I have a better suggestion.

If you have money to send and you want to see it used by an organization that truly puts it where it'll do the most good, give it to Operation USA This is not a well-known outfit but I know some of the folks involved in it and, trust me, they work their butts off to help others and take nothing for themselves. For years, Operation USA has quietly been feeding and caring for people who need both, often in venues that the more famous causes cannot get to. They have my highest recommendation as a force for good in the world.