Sunday, July 06, 2008
MEET BRAD TEARE

 

I know what I’m about to say may stir up a hornets’ nest: I don’t like the movie of The Wizard of OZ. I can applaud Judy Garland’s performance, but nothing more. So when Tom Pomplun asked me to adapt Frank L. Baum’s The Glass Dog, I had my preconceptions, and this is not the best way to approach any job.

 

The main character of the story is a wizard annoyed by people constantly interrupting his work to ask him for his magical expertise. In order to get some peace, he asks a glass blower to make a glass dog, which he transforms into a real barking dog with his magical powers. This the wizard keeps as a guard dog to ward off unwelcome visitors.

 

I had two problems with this story. First, I didn’t want the wizard to look like the standard old man with a pointy hat and long white beard, not to mention the long robe decorated with stars and planets: in other words, I didn’t want an ordinary wizard. Secondly, how could I describe a glass dog? How could I give the artist an idea of the fragility and at the same time the consistency of an object made of glass?

 

I’ve had the opportunity to see glass blowers at work, and it’s a fascinating process. I could appreciate the skill with which the glass blower handled a molten lump of glass and, through a long, thin pipe, how he blew into it and transformed it into a fragile, iridescent object.

 

When I write or adapt a script for any strip, I try to approach the strip from the artist’s point of view. Living and working with an artist, I have often witnessed his frustration when he has to translate verbose, hyper-detailed scripts into drawings. But with this script, for the first time I decided that the question of how to deal with the rendering of a dog made of glass was someone else’s problem, namely the artist’s, and I would leave him to solve it. The first problem I resolved by describing the wizard as a sort of eccentric genius rather than a stereotypical wizard.

 

When Tom Pomplun, the editor/publisher of Graphic Classics©, where The Glass Dog was going to be published, told me the artist he had chosen to draw the strip was Brad Teare, I was surprised and thrilled. I’ve known Brad’s work since the ‘Eighties, when his strips appeared in Heavy Metal, and I deeply admired his art; but I was puzzled to see how he would render an object made of glass with his unusual scraperboard technique. When Tom emailed me Brad’s finished pages, I was thrilled. Brad had been able, I don’t know how, to render the shine, translucency and fragility of glass and the wizard looked more like the mad scientist I was after than the classic stereotype.

 

 

Unfortunately, although Brad did a great job with The Glass Dog, I haven’t made peace with Frank L. Baum, and I’m still not going to watch The Wizard of Oz!

 

As usual with these articles, I sent Brad a questionnaire to fill in. This is what he sent back. Enjoy!

 

 

 

Marvel or Disney?

Definitely Disney. I grew up reading the comics of Carl Barks.

 

What’s in your drawer?

Paints and brushes.

 

On the road with…

my gloucester easel. It is extremely light weight but I can paint outdoors on a canvas up to 36” x 48” (inches). It’s awesome.

 

What was the first book you ever read?

Tik-Tok of Oz by Frank L. Baum

 

What do you prefer to read in a waiting room?

I usually bring the book I am currently reading since I don’t enjoy reading most magazines (exception; Harper’s, but you will never find that magazine in a doctor’s office).

 

It’s a waste of time to…

indulge negative thoughts and behaviour.

 

What would you be happier without?

Indulging negative thoughts and behaviour. A lofty goal but hard to accomplish.

 

 

Never give up…

Hope. Hope is essential for the kind of persistence necessary to make it in the art world.

Instead of taking sleeping pills, you would read...The philosophy of Georg Hegel

Why do you do it? Because of the need to do my very best. Art is a field that requires one to be constantly improving.



Sunday, July 06, 2008 3:33:41 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #  Comments [0] 
 Sunday, June 22, 2008
HONY SOIT QUI MAL Y PENSE

 

I was adapting one of Sir Arthur Conan Doyle’s short stories, The Crime of the Brigadier, or, How Brigadier Gerard Slew the Fox for Graphic Classics©, and as usual I was trying to find a face suitable for the hero, Etienne Gerard, Hussar of Napoleon’s Cavalry; I need to visualise the character so that I can “see” how the story will look. I do this even though the artist who draws the strip often has his own ideas about how a character will look. In this case, I chose Gerard Depardieu as the model for the Brigadier; I love the actor and I think he is the epitome of Frenchness.

 

I also wanted to give the reader a flavour of the sharp humour Conan Doyle used to underline the weirdness of French manners as seen from the English point of view. I thought that dotting Gerard’s dialogue here and there with short French phrases might be a good way of emphasising his character, but there was a problem; I don’t know any more French than “Oui”. I tried using translator programs found on the Internet, but the results were unsatisfactory. Then I realised that I had an ace up my sleeve: my next door neighbour was born and bred a FRENCHMAN!

 

 

So I approached Professor Ronan de Kervenoael and asked if he would help me translate a couple of idiomatic sentences for the script. And I couldn’t have found a better helper. During the couple of years we were neighbours, I often enjoyed watching the friendly but sharp cut and thrust between him and my partner Nick; I realised that the endless wars between England and France are far from being over, although at least these days they are fought with words! I have to admit that, even though I had to support Nick because he is my partner, I had to acknowledge the sharpness of the wit coming from the French side of the garden fence. Although there is also an endless quarrel going on between the French and Italians about the supremacy and quality of food and wine, sometimes I found my point of view was nearer to that of my transalpine cousin than with the Brit!

 

Some choice French phrases supplied by Ronan. He also helped us with the script...

 

Soon after Professor De Kervenoael left England for Turkey, where he teaches marketing at Ankara University, but we still keep in touch.

 

I asked if he would be willing to answer a few questions. Here’s what he sent back. Talk about French wit…

 


Tin Tin or Asterix?
Asterix of course .... the multiplicity of actors and the less serious  plots are better I think


What was the first book you ever read?

Gaston Lagaffe  then asterix then tintin and milou

If your life were a book, who wrote it?

Someone that do not have any concept of backward or forwards, in multiple language as an adventure story that never finishes and with the cynical humour of Jeremy Clarkson (Top Gear presenter)

What do you prefer to read at the dentist?

Nothing just never go to dentist got very good teeth

What do you wish you had bought but never got around to it?

A classic car probably Italian

It's a waste of time... to try to understand women

When you do research, do you trust the Internet or do you prefer to 
consult books?

Neither I talk to real people and look at real  'practices' including practionners ( all stakeholders), practices (the doing and actions in situ) and praxis (time and intensity)

Instead of sleeping pills, you would read a couple of pages of...

Not sure of that one what about
1- Taking care of my kid best insurance to be tired at any time really
2- sex
3- sex again
4- Margaret Thatcher bibliography

Why buy books?

So if you have a wobbly table you can fix it

Never give up... running after the life and dreams that one day you may have time to do



Sunday, June 22, 2008 4:15:49 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #  Comments [0] 
 Tuesday, June 17, 2008
MEET ANNE TIMMONS

 

Soap operas… hands up anyone who never saw a single episode of Dallas or Dynasty. Nobody? It seems we all sneer at them while simultaneously checking through the TV guide for the next episode of Lost.

 

Soap operas, or telenovelas if you are Latin American, pin millions of people to their TVs, following the vicissitudes of JR or Pamela.

 

Our great-great-grandmothers enjoyed similar entertainment, the only difference being that they read these stories in book form. Stories with plenty of thrills and drama, often read surreptitiously because they were considered too dangerous for the gentle, delicate minds of young ladies.

 

Basic ingredients of the plot are as follows:

 

1 ~ a young girl: she has long, blonde hair and big, blue eyes. She is the orphan of both parents, and the heiress of a reasonable fortune.

 

2 ~ an evil relative: he or she is either an uncle, an aunt or a cousin. This person is stony-broke, therefore they plan to steal the heroine’s fortune.

 

3 ~ a young lover: he is the son of the arch-enemy of the girl’s family: either that, or he has been undeservedly accused of a crime. With his love he will save the girl and her fortune.

 

4 ~ a location: a dark castle with dungeons, barred windows and long, narrow corridors…

 

5 ~ an ending: the villain dies asking forgiveness, and the two lovers marry and live happily for a long time.

 

I was prepared for a similar plot when I was given the job of adapting The Dream, by Mary Shelley. In this story the heroine, Constance, can’t marry her sweetheart, Gaspar, because he is the son of the arch-enemy of her family. I could imagine young ladies weeping at the thought that such gentle love could never be, just because of ‘family matters’. OK, so Gaspar’s father butchered Contance’s father and brother during a religious war, but these are mere trifles…

 

Because love must always win out, Shelley used an old trick, a deus ex machina: in this case, the vision of St. Catherine appearing in a dream. The saint blesses Constance for her love, the girl changes her mind, Gaspar is forgiven and they all live happily ever after. The end.

 

Though I did my best to preserve the saccharine nature of the story in my script, I wasn’t sure if an artist could convey, through my descriptions, this cloying sweetness. When I saw Anne Timmons artwork, which she kindly showed me at the pencil stage, I knew she was the right artist. Anne has a soft and gentle touch, and was able to soften those passages where I couldn’t cut corners. The result is a graphic story depicted exactly as if seen through the eyes of a young lady of the nineteenth century. Although I prefer stories that are stronger stuff, I found The Dream very enjoyable to adapt.

 

The Dream is published in Graphic Classics©: Special Edition. This is a limited edition first published for Free Comic Book Day 2008. You can buy it from the Graphic Classics website.

 

I asked Anne a few questions about herself. Here are her answers:

 

 

 

Barbarella or Catwoman?

Barbarella. Who wouldn't like flying with an angel? Barbarella has more costumes, too!

 

What’s in your drawer?

Templates, lead holders, pencils, compass, a quartz crystal, glasses case, lens cleaner, barrette, toy from a cereal box and a mini calculator

 

What was the first book you ever read?

Cat In the Hat

 

If your life were a book, it would be a book about…

A person who could go to any city they wanted to in the world, at a moments notice.

 

What would you be happier without?

Doubt.

 

 

What do you wish you had bought but never got around to it?

A scooter.

 

It’s a waste of time to…

let yourself worry about everything little thing.

 

Instead of taking sleeping pills, you would read a couple of pages of…

I rarely read to go to sleep but if I just can't sleep, I'll read articles in old TV Guides.

 

Never give up…on a friend. Stand by them through everything.   

 

Why do you do it?

Drawing? Because I know it's something I will do till the end. I don't think I'll ever retire like most people do. It's always been the most comfortable way of expressing myself.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Anne Timmons' pencils for pages 12 and 18 of Mary Shelley's The Dream.



Tuesday, June 17, 2008 11:29:25 AM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #  Comments [0] 
 Monday, June 09, 2008
Dictionary Sketches 4

More escapees from the secret wing of the OED...

 

"TU QUOQUE: The retort so are (or did etc.) you. [Latin, = you too]".

 

"TULCHAN: Calf-skin stuffed with straw or spread on mound beside cow to make her give milk".


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Monday, June 09, 2008 10:51:18 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #  Comments [0] 
 Sunday, June 08, 2008
UBI MAJOR MINOR CESSAT

 

 

I’ve collaborated with Tom Pomplun, publisher of Graphic Classics©, for several years, adapting stories by the best of British and American authors, but I always thought of myself as a part-time scriptwriter because at the end of the day I became a writer more by accident than design. When Tom asked me to look for a retailer in Lancaster (UK) who might be interested in distributing free copies of Graphic Classics during Free Comic Book Day, it wasn’t a problem for me. A quick search and I found a little gem of a shop called First Age Comics, run by Mark Braithwaite.

 

Young and with plenty of enthusiasm, Mark has a contagious smile, so when I went to see him he was more than willing to distribute free copies of Graphic Classics and even persuaded me that I could do a book signing session. He told me that Andy Diggle would also be signing on the day. Needless to say, with such a big name at the event I was puzzled as to why I should be there. However, things had been set in motion and I had to carry on.

 

I was supposed to be doing my signing session late in the morning. The big day came and I arrived at the shop ten minutes early. After a cup of tea, at 11 o’clock I sat down, ready to sign copies. There were two or three people hanging around waiting for the main event who, seeing as I was there, approached me for an autograph, after all, you never know one day…

 

I was so flustered that morning I forgot to wear my reading glasses, and was left wondering why I couldn’t focus on the point of the pen as I wrote my first signature. After the first one however, everything went more smoothly. Sort of…

 

As I usual I was puzzled as to why young people would be interested in something that was so far from superheroes and manga, but Mark did a good job of introducing me and Graphic Classics.

 

By midday, all the copies were gone. At one o’clock it would be Mr. Diggle’s turn. In the best English tradition, a queue was already forming.

 

At twenty past one, Andy Diggle arrived running, sat in the chair, took out his pen and started signing. His fans were over the moon. I was too shy to ask for a signed copy.

 

I asked Mark some questions. Here are his answers:

 

Superman or the Hulk?

Superman. Not to be dismissive of the Hulk, there have been some very good Hulk comics over the years. The Superman concept has endured for so long and survived so many changes in the comics industry over the decades. The material that Kurt Busiek and Geoff Johns have been writing recently are also definitely worth a read.

 

What’s in your drawer?

A seemingly endless supply of paperwork (it's a very big drawer), a calculator, two pens (one black, one red) and a diary.

 

On the road with…

My wife Lucy and daughter Katie. There's no-one else I'd rather travel with.

 

What was the first book you ever read?

I can't honestly remember the title but I do recall Meg The Hen being in it somewhere meeting with some accident prone pots and pans.

 

Comics or comix?

Comics. Definitely comics.

 

What would you read while travelling from Earth to the Moon?

I'd probably take a few carefully selected Green Lantern comics. Those and the Lord Of The Rings trilogy

 

Instead of taking sleeping pills, you would read a couple of pages of…

Currently I'm reading William Shatner's autobiography "Up Till Now" and "Showcase Presents Booster Gold Volume One".

 

It’s a waste of time to…

Regret. Always look at what you can do about the future. The past has already happened.

 

Never give up…

...never surrender!!!!

 

Why do you do it?

For the love of the game.



Sunday, June 08, 2008 5:12:57 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #  Comments [0] 
 Saturday, June 07, 2008
Dictionary Sketches 3

"FRICANDEAU: 1. Slice of fried or stewed meat, esp. veal, served with sauce".


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Saturday, June 07, 2008 5:55:50 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #  Comments [0] 
 Friday, June 06, 2008
dictionary sketches 2

 

 

"Humbug: 1. n Fraud, sham; deception; impostor. 2. Kind of hard-boiled sweet usu. flavoured with peppermint. 3. Delude (person into, out of, thing or doing). 4. Be, behave like, impostor". 

 

"Matrass: Long-necked glass vessel with round or oval body, used for distilling".

 


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Friday, June 06, 2008 3:39:53 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #  Comments [0] 
FRET FOR THE DAY 6th June 2008

 

 


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Friday, June 06, 2008 3:31:25 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #  Comments [0] 
 Thursday, June 05, 2008
Dictionary sketches

In an effort to generate some kind of creative impulse, I've taken to choosing words from the Concise Oxford English Dictionary at random, sketching whatever comes into my head, then going back to the OED and checking the definition to see how close I came. Here's the first two...

 

"JAGER: Var. of JAEGER:German or Austrian rifleman; kind of woollen clothing-material excluding all vegetable fibres as unwholesome; garment of this".

 

"RETROGRESSION: backward or reversed movement; return to less advanced state, reversal of development, decline, deterioration".

 


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Thursday, June 05, 2008 10:30:26 AM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #  Comments [0] 
FRET FOR THE DAY 5th June 2008


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Thursday, June 05, 2008 10:18:44 AM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #  Comments [0]