Since Google's saluting him, I should. The late Will Eisner was a much-loved individual and not just because he wrote and drew such wonderful comics. People just liked Will. They admired his industry and his willingness to go to conventions and not be The Great Will Eisner but just one among many equals. One could argue whether there was more reverence at Comic-Con for Will or for his one-time employee, Jack Kirby. But after Jack passed, Will had the place to himself in that regard and he wore it well. He was, like Jack, accessible and within reason, humble. He was also sharp and productive, right up to his last year. The comics he produced at age 75+ compared favorably to those produced by anyone, himself included, at any age. Even if you can't write or draw, you ought take another look at that guy as a Role Model…because you are pretty likely to get old and Will did that as well as anyone, too.
I always have a book around that I read in small increments when I suddenly have ten minutes with nothing to do. At the moment, it's Will Eisner: A Dreamer's Life in Comics by Michael Schumacher. He could have substituted words like "leader's" or "pioneer's" for "dreamer's" in the title and it would have worked too…but "dreamer's" is also accurate. I'm enjoying the book a lot and have yet to come across anything with which I disagreed. What I have come across are dozens of stories that make me say, "Gee, I wish I'd asked Will about that." As long as we had him around and as much as we got from him, it wasn't enough. Here, by the way, is an Amazon link to order a copy of this fine volume.
In it, Schumacher mentions the 1999 panel I moderated at Comic-Con which brought together, for the only time ever, Eisner and another of his one-time employees, Chuck Cuidera. It was an interesting panel because the two men did not like each other. Chuck was jealous of Will for obvious reasons, money probably being the biggest. I got the feeling Chuck didn't like anyone very much but since Will represented success in comics and Chuck hadn't had much, Will was a special target. There was a genuine dispute as to which of them (if either) had created Blackhawk, which was a pretty successful comic in its day. Chuck was determined to lay sole claim to that credit. Will wasn't but he wasn't about to let Chuck get away with it, either.
Given that contentiousness, Will might have been forgiven for avoiding any face-to-face with Cuidera altogether…but since they were both going to be at the con, I had to ask if there was any way to get them in the same dais at the same time. I sent him a fax, didn't hear anything for a week or so and figured, "Well, I can't blame him for not wanting to do it." I didn't know he was out of town. When he got home, he immediately faxed me back that he'd love to do it…
After the fax arrived here but before I'd noticed it sitting in my fax machine, Will phoned me to make sure I'd received it and to apologize for not answering sooner. He made me think that I'd been wrong and that there was no tension between them. When we got them in the room together at San Diego, I instantly realized I'd been right the first time. They were not old buddies being reunited and Will knew exactly how much Chuck resented him and the fact that people said Will Eisner had created Blackhawk. Will also realized that the best way to deal with it was to confront Cuidera in this forum and to come at it from a friendly attitude of camaraderie and giving Chuck as much respect as possible, up to but not including the words, "Chuck created Blackhawk." A partial transcript of that panel can be read here.
I was seated between them. My "read" was that Chuck walked into the room wanting to make it clear to the assemblage that he thought Will had taken more credit than he deserved for Blackhawk and some other things. But then he noticed the reverence that the audience had for Will…and Will, as you can see, began to speak well of Chuck and to treat him as an equal and one who warranted more recognition. And because of it all, Chuck's resentments got stuck in Neutral and never did get into gear. I don't know if either Will or Chuck deserves whole or shared credit for creating Blackhawk but I do know Will handled an awkward situation well by meeting it head-on and being a true (if crafty) gentleman about it. Yet another thing to admire him for.
If you are not familiar with the works of Will Eisner — there must be someone reading this who isn't — here's another Amazon link. It's so you can buy a copy of The Contract with God Trilogy: Life on Dropsie Avenue, a collection of stories created about residents in a Jewish tenement section of New York back when Billy Eisner was a wee lad. Will was 60 when he started producing material like this and kept it up, getting better and better at it, for the rest of his life.
One year, not long before he left us, Will won an Eisner Award. The next day, I had him on a panel and I asked him how it felt to finally have done work that measured up to the standard of Will Eisner. He laughed and I forget what he actually said in reply. But he later said to me, "I've spent my whole life trying to do work that lives up to the standard of Will Eisner." I said something like, "We all do," and he said, "Well, then you know it just gets harder and harder."