Comic Art Friday: Wonders from WonderCon, part 1

Posted April 15, 2011 by swanshadow
Categories: Comic Art Friday

So, we had this WonderCon thing a couple of weekends back.

I’ve been a WonderCon regular for the past several years, mostly for opportunities to hobnob with comic artists and commission on-the-spot pieces for my collection, but also to just wander about and take in the spectacle. This turned out to be a pretty good con for me, art-wise. I didn’t accomplish every objective on my wish list, but I came home with several nice creations, as you’ll see over the next few installments of Comic Art Friday.

Iron Man and Conan the Barbarian, pencils and inks by comics artist Ernie Chan

Today’s featured piece actually had its genesis before the con even began. Ernie Chan almost always finds his way onto my WonderCon to-do list, but this year I had an idea for a Common Elements commission that I wanted Ernie to draw. I knew that if I contacted the Amazing Chan ahead of time, he’d produce something more intricate and detailed than the convention environment would permit. So, I e-mailed Ernie, and he agreed to draw this nifty scenario in his studio and bring it with him to the con.

This particular concept was right up Ernie’s alley, because he worked for many years on Marvel’s various Conan the Barbarian comics back in the day, mostly inking the pencils of the legendary John Buscema, but also drawing the occasional issue as well. In fact, I’d hazard a guess that no comic book artist alive has put his hand to as many published Conan images as has Ernie Chan. Asking him to bring to life this battle between the sword-slinging Cimmerian and the invincible Iron Man just made logical sense.

So what’s the “Common Element” between Conan and old Shellhead?, you’re asking yourself. Allow me to enlighten you, friend reader. First appearing in the pulp magazine Weird Tales during the 1930s, Conan’s fantastic adventures sprang from the fertile imagination of writer Robert E. Howard. In Marvel Comics continuity, Tony (Iron Man) Stark is the son of industrialist and inventor Howard Stark (who appears as a prominent character in the forthcoming motion picture, Captain America: The First Avenger). Thus, both Conan and Iron Man are — each in his own way — “sons of Howard.”

Which is why I’ve titled Ernie Chan’s artwork “Howard’s End.”

Ernie Chan, WonderCon 2011

Here’s the proud artist with his latest masterpiece.

I’ll have another WonderCon acquisition or two to display next Friday, as well as highlights from my convention experience. Drop around in seven.

And that’s your Comic Art Friday.

Comic Art Friday: Happy birthday, Supergirl!

Posted March 25, 2011 by swanshadow
Categories: Comic Art Friday, SwanStuff

Supergirl turns 22 today.

Supergirl, pencils by comics artist Ramona Fradon

No, not that Supergirl.

My Supergirl.

Twenty-two years ago today, The Daughter entered my world, and changed it forever.

I’ve called her Supergirl for years, because she often used to wear a pink hoodie with the Kryptonian shield emblazoned on the chest. Truth to tell, though, she’s really more of a Mary Marvel — like Mary, she’s a brunette, and also like Mary, she retains her youthful innocence and charm even when she transforms into a superheroine.

Mary Marvel, pencils and inks by comics artist Michael Bair

I hope you have a spectacularly wonderful birthday, Supergirl. You’ve earned it this year. And I hope and pray that you enjoy many, many more birthdays to come. I love you as much as a father can.

And that’s your Comic Art Friday.

Comic Art Friday: I loved an Amazon before she was a website

Posted March 11, 2011 by swanshadow
Categories: Comic Art Friday

You know that old saying, “Clothes make the man”? Shouldn’t that be, “Clothes make the woman”? Women — to generalize to the point of stereotype — tend to be more selective about their clothes than men are.

A hue and cry erupted in comics fandom some time back when DC Comics radically redesigned Wonder Woman’s iconic costume, putting the Amazing Amazon in an outfit that — to my eye, anyway — looks like she’s trying out for a mid-’90s version of the Avengers. (Remember that period when half the members of Marvel’s premier superteam wore leather jackets, like extras from West Side Story? Yeah, I know — I’ve tried to forget, too.)

The furor mostly ignored the fact that DC has tinkered with Diana’s fighting togs on several occasions. For several years in the late ’60s and early ’70s, she didn’t even wear a costume. In the main, however, the platform of Wonder Woman’s gear has followed a pattern — the tiara, the bustier, the star-spangled lower half, red footwear.

If I were designing Wonder Woman’s ideal outfit, it would look the way Gene Gonzales draws it in today’s featured artwork.

Wonder Woman, pencils and inks by comics artist Gene Gonzales

I’m partial to the old-school bustier with the golden eagle emblazoned on the front. It seems a more realistic reflection of Diana’s connection to ancient Greek mythology than the stylized version of the past several decades, in which the eagle has been transmogrified into a modern “WW” logo.

I like the notion — as impractical as it might be for fighting and flying — of Diana in a skirt. (Contrary to popular belief, Wonder Woman’s original costume was not skirted. Her earliest ensemble had a pair of flouncy culottes covering her pelvic region; as drawn by H.G. Peter, the original Wonder Woman artist, these looked like a pleated skirt. Peter soon modified the culottes into a pair of form-fitting bicycle shorts.)

I’m especially fond of the calf-laced ballet flats that Diana wore throughout the 1950s and into the early ’60s. Not only are these far more effective for running around in than the high-heeled boots Wonder Woman has sported for more of her history, but like the eagle-emblazoned top, the slippers recall at least the flavor of ancient Greece. To me, that’s an essential element of Wonder Woman’s character. (The primary problem with the slippers was that the artists who drew Diana during the years when she wore them could never agree on what they were supposed to look like — how many times did the laces criss-cross the leg, for example? Half the time, the laces didn’t even connect to the backs of the shoes, making it appear that Diana simply wrapped ribbons around her shins for no good reason.)

No one in the comics world ever seeks my opinion about anything. But if they did, I’d tell them that this ought to be Wonder Woman’s standard costume, forever and ever.

I may not know much about fashion, but I know what I like.

And that’s your Comic Art Friday.

36 Days of Adrenaline: Day 11 — “Life in the Fast Lane”

Posted March 7, 2011 by swanshadow
Categories: 36 Days of Adrenaline, Soundtrack of My Life, SwanStuff, That's Cool!

Artist: The Eagles

Why this song is an adrenaline rush: If there was ever any doubt that Joe Walsh is one of the most spectacularly gifted guitarists in the history of rock, the opening riff of “Life in the Fast Lane” should dispel said doubt.  And if there was ever any doubt that Walsh playing alongside Don “Fingers” Felder was one of the most potent two-guitarist combinations in the history of rock, the dueling break at the bridge of “Life in the Fast Lane” should kill that, too. Plus, the lyrics are classic L.A. cool.

Lyric line that’s fun to belt at maximum volume:

He said, “Call the doctor — I think I’m gonna crash.”
“Doctor says he’s comin’, but you gotta pay him cash.”

Fun factoids:

  • “Life in the Fast Lane” represented one of Joe Walsh’s first musical contributions to The Eagles, which he joined shortly before the band recorded Hotel California, the album on which the song appears. According to legend, Walsh improvised his signature guitar part during an Eagles rehearsal, and his new bandmates Glenn Frey and Don Henley wrote the rest of the song around the riff.
  • Walsh replaced founding Eagle Bernie Leadon, who left the band in dissatisfaction with Henley and Frey’s changing musical direction, which gradually deemphasized Leadon’s preferred country/bluegrass-flavored style in favor of harder-edged rock. Leadon announced his departure from the band by pouring a beer over Glenn Frey’s head.
  • There used to be a roller coaster named “Life in the Fast Lane” at the short-lived Hard Rock amusement park in Myrtle Beach, South Carolina.
  • Although I’ve followed the common convention of preceding the name with “The” — because it reads awkwardly to do otherwise — the band’s official name for legal purposes is simply “Eagles.” All of the band’s album covers omit the article as well. (I’ve been a fan for more than 35 years, but I never noticed this until I read Don Felder’s memoir, Heaven and Hell: My Life With The Eagles.)
  • My friend Donna loves The Eagles more than life itself. She just wanted you to know that.

Other songs by The Eagles that I could have chosen instead: “Already Gone,” “Hotel California,” “Victim of Love,” “Heartache Tonight,” “Those Shoes.”

[Late to the party? Here’s an explanation of 36 Days of Adrenaline.]

Comic Art Friday: The chauffeur’s daughters

Posted March 4, 2011 by swanshadow
Categories: Celebritiana, Cinemania, Comic Art Friday, Teleholics Anonymous

I’ll be honest — sometimes, the only reason for a new Common Elements commission is that the idea made me grin from ear to ear when I thought of it.

Well, not literally from ear to ear in that Julia Roberts / Cameron Diaz sort of way. My mouth is not that enormous. More like from mid-cheek to mid-cheek.

First, the art. (As always, you can click the image for a better view.)

Sabrina the Teenage Witch and Fairchild, pencils and inks by comics artist Mike DeCarlo

Comics veteran Mike DeCarlo, who has drawn and/or inked everything from Spider-Man to The Simpsons during his quarter-century-plus in the industry, teams Sabrina, the Teenage Witch — star of comics, animation, and live-action TV, and responsible for extending the acting career of Melissa Joan Hart well beyond her teens (and, some might opine, beyond the limits of her talent) — with Caitlin Fairchild, leader of the youthful superhero team Gen13, who’s often known simply by her surname.

Next, the concept.

As an aficionado of old-school Hollywood, one of my favorite classic films is Sabrina. (That’s Billy Wilder’s 1954 original, starring Humphrey Bogart, William Holden, and a luminous Audrey Hepburn in the title role, not the tepid 1995 remake with Harrison Ford, Greg Kinnear, and Julia Ormond, directed by Sydney Pollack.)

Bogie and Holden portray two wealthy brothers — David, a good-for-nothing playboy (Holden), and Linus, who’s older and more serious (Bogart) — competing for the affections of a young woman (Hepburn) who happens to be the daughter of their family’s chauffeur. It’s sort of a reverse spin on Cyrano de Bergerac, with Linus working to sabotage the budding romance between his brother and the chauffeur’s daughter in order to score a huge business deal with the family of another woman, to whom David is engaged. And of course, Linus ends up falling in love with the girl himself. (Who wouldn’t? It’s Audrey Hepburn, for crying out loud.)

Okay, you’re thinking — that explains Sabrina. But what’s the Fairchild connection? If you’ve seen the movie, you know: the character Sabrina’s last name is Fairchild.

That makes me smile. Doesn’t it you?

And that’s your Comic Art Friday.

Abby turns 10

Posted February 28, 2011 by swanshadow
Categories: Aimless Riffing, Hero of the Day, My Home Town, SwanStuff, They Say It's My Birthday

Happy First Decade to my personal assistant Abby.

Abby gets a 10th birthday low five from her new octopus toy

After wearing herself out mauling her new octopus toy — sent to her via Amazon by The Daughter — Abby is, at this writing, celebrating with a nap.

Because that’s how she rolls.

Comic Art Friday: Three is a magic number

Posted February 25, 2011 by swanshadow
Categories: Comic Art Friday

How many characters are depicted in this Common Elements commission, the latest masterwork by veteran Marvel Comics artist MC Wyman? Your answer will depend on how little you rely on your eyes, and how much you know about the characters. (Click the image for a better view.)

3-D Man, Triathlon, and Triplicate Girl, pencils and inks by comics artist MC Wyman

First, let’s introduce the players. The stony-faced gent at upper left is the 3-D Man, Technicolor hero of 1950s America. The smiling fellow in the center of the frame is Triathlon, fleet-footed member of the Avengers and later, recruit of the 50 States Initiative. The three identical women are the separated selves of Triplicate Girl, from the Legion of Super-Heroes.

The original 3-D Man was NASA test pilot Chuck Chandler, who, though a typically comic-booky sequence of events, found himself transformed by alien invaders into twin images embedded in the lenses of a pair of glasses worn by his younger brother Hal. (Hey, I said it was comic-booky, didn’t I?) When Hal donned the glasses and focused his concentration, Chuck would reassemble in three-dimensional form, with triple the strength, speed, and endurance of a man in his physical condition, and with the merged consciousness of both brothers, with Chuck’s mind predominant. Although the 3-D Man’s adventures took place in the 1950s — the heyday of 3-D movies — his first run of stories (scripted by veteran Marvel writer-editor Roy Thomas) actually appeared in 1977, in the pages of the anthology comic Marvel Premiere.

Twenty years after the Chandler brothers made their published debut, Marvel introduced another character with similar powers. Like the 3-D Man, Delroy Garrett — known in superhero guise as Triathlon — also possessed three times the abilities of a normal man. This similarity was no coincidence. Delroy’s powers came from a shadowy, quasi-religious organization called the Triune Understanding, which — unknown to Delroy — had stolen these powers from the 3-D Man. As Triathlon, Delroy served a hitch as a member of the Avengers, and years later participated in Marvel’s mega-events Civil War and Secret Invasion. By the time of the latter storyline, Delroy had become aware of the origins of his powers, and had adopted the name and costume of the 3-D Man, in which role he continues to this day.

Triplicate Girl — real name, Luornu Durgo — boasts a longer and more complex history than either of her male counterparts here. Luornu joined the 30th century Legion of Super-Heroes way back in Action Comics #276 (May 1961) as the first addition to that historic team (with founding members Saturn Girl, Lightning Lad, and Cosmic Boy). She has continued as a stalwart throughout the numerous permutations of the Legion between that day and this. During a key period, one of Luornu’s selves was killed in action, resulting in a recasting of her hero identity as Duo Damsel. In other Legion continuity reboots, she has also used the names Triad, Una, and Duplicate Damsel.

So, back to the original question: How many characters do you see? If you imagine that the 3-D Man you’re seeing is merely an image of Delroy “Triathlon” Garrett, you might say only two. If that 3-D Man is Chuck Chandler, then you’d say three… unless you consider that the original 3-D Man is, on some level, both Chuck and his brother Hal, in which case you might say four. But are Luornu Durgo’s separated selves one character, or three? Either answer is correct, depending on your point of view, as well as the particular Legion continuity you embrace.

You see? Schoolhouse Rock had it right. Three really is a magic number.

And that’s your Comic Art Friday.

No Justice for the Maestro

Posted February 22, 2011 by swanshadow
Categories: Celebritiana, Cinemania, Comic Art Friday, Dead People Got No Reason to Live, Getting Racial Up In This Piece, Hero of the Day, Ripped From the Headlines, Teleholics Anonymous

I could hardly be more shocked and stunned than I was earlier today, when I read the news of the sudden death of Dwayne McDuffie.

Dwayne McDuffie leads an animation panel, WonderCon 2008

If the name is unfamiliar to you, then I’ll assume that you’re not a fan of either comic books or animation, or if you are, you don’t pay much attention to the names in the credits of either. McDuffie was a prolific writer and editor of comics who became an equally prolific writer, story editor, and producer of animation, primarily for television.

In the former realm, McDuffie created one of the most unique series in the history of comics: Damage Control, which spotlighted the exploits of a company that cleaned up cities after superhero fights. He also co-founded Milestone Media, an entire comics line that focused on bringing greater diversity to the medium, both on the page and behind the scenes. From Milestone’s publications came Static, the young electricity-wielding hero who later went on to star in the long-running and popular animated TV series, Static Shock.

McDuffie’s contributions to animation didn’t end with Static Shock. He served as story editor and producer on the Justice League franchise, as well as on the various iterations of Ben 10. He recently wrote the script for Warner/DC’s latest direct-to-DVD project, All-Star Superman, which debuted in stores — ironically enough — today.

As successful as he became in animation, McDuffie never completely abandoned printed comics. A few years ago, he wrote an outstanding miniseries for Marvel entitled Beyond!, and a well-regarded run on Fantastic Four. More recently, he breathed fresh life into DC’s tentpole series, Justice League of America.

Unlike many creators, McDuffie maintained a close connection to the readers and viewers who consumed his product. His personal website hosted a thriving online discussion forum, in which McDuffie himself (nicknamed by his fans “The Maestro”) actively participated. Never shy of expressing his opinions — and he had strong opinions about everything — McDuffie in correspondence was much like the characters whose adventures he wrote: witty, thoughtful, and more than a little tough. He gave no quarter, but he had a deft way of disagreeing vehemently with opponents without resorting to ad hominem attacks.

I had the privilege of meeting McDuffie briefly at WonderCon in 2008, following a panel featuring himself and several other top animation writers. (I took the above photo during that panel.) Although I didn’t muster the gumption to mention it to him in person, it was one of my career goals as a voice actor to snag a role in one of the series McDuffie wrote. As recently as a week ago, I’ve participated in workshops where McDuffie scripts served as the fodder for honing my acting chops. I deeply regret that I will never have the opportunity to work with him professionally.

McDuffie spoke and wrote much about the uphill struggle of being an African-American creator in a mainstream comics industry often frustratingly closed to diverse talents and storylines. His founding of Milestone Media represented his best effort at giving other people of color the opportunities that he, like few other creators of his background, had been afforded, and expanding the palette of characters about whom great comics tales could be spun. And yet, McDuffie would have been the first to correct anyone who referred to him as a “great black comics writer” — he was just a darned great writer, period.

A darned great writer, gone far too soon.

Dwayne McDuffie leaves behind his wife, his mother, a monumental legacy of work, and a numberless legion of colleagues and fans who appreciated his character as much as his creative genius. He was a singular talent in two discrete media, and successful in both.

He was just 49 years old — almost exactly two months younger than I. His birthday was yesterday.

Rest in peace, Maestro.

36 Days of Adrenaline: Day 10 — “Da Butt”

Posted February 22, 2011 by swanshadow
Categories: 36 Days of Adrenaline, Soundtrack of My Life, SwanStuff, That's Cool!

Artist: E.U.

Why this song is an adrenaline rush: There are songs that make you want to dance, and there are songs that absolutely compel you to dance. This is one of the latter. Straight from the opening drum riff and horn blast, “Da Butt” lays down a groove that forbids you to sit still. Even if I’m driving in the car when this song comes on, my hips immediately start undulating. (If you have a problem with that visual, that’s on you.)

Lyric line that’s fun to belt at maximum volume:

When you get that notion
Put your backfield in motion!

Fun factoids:

  • Contrary to popular assumption, the band name E.U. does not stand for “European Union.” Instead, it stands for “Experience Unlimited.” The band’s use of the initials precedes that of the political organization (under its present name) by nearly 20 years.
  • E.U.’s musical style, go-go, enjoyed a brief explosion of popularity in the mid-to-late 1970s, primarily in the Washington, D.C. area. Go-go can probably be best defined as a merger of funk/R&B with Latin rhythm and percussion instruments. The genre’s best-known practitioner, Chuck Brown, scored with “Bustin’ Loose,” which experienced a resurrection when Nelly sampled it for his megahit “Hot in Herre,” and when the Washington Nationals baseball team adopted “Bustin’ Loose” as their unofficial theme song.
  • “Da Butt” is prominently featured in Spike Lee’s second feature film, School Daze. Although Spike has gone on to direct some of the finest American films of the past quarter-century — including Malcolm X, Do the Right Thing, 25th Hour, and Inside Man — the goofy, irreverent, and admittedly uneven School Daze was my introduction to his work, and remains a personal favorite.
  • For the record, here’s the roll call of girls who “got a big ol’ butt” in the song’s bridge: Tanya, Shirley, Irene, Theresa, Sonya, Melissa, Tammy, and little Keisha. If you answer to any of those (or any other) names, and you too “got a big ol’ butt,” wear it proudly, girlfriend.
  • And I don’t care what you thought you heard — E.U. lead vocalist Sugar Bear (real name, Gregory Elliott) never, ever utters the phrase “do it in da butt.” Shame on you.

Other songs by E.U. that I could have chosen instead: “Buck Wild,” “Gimme That Beat,” “Shake It Like a White Girl.” (Avoid E.U.’s later material, which found the band trying to expand its audience by pumping out flaccid R&B ballads. Stick to their earlier go-go records, which are guaranteed to launch a dance marathon in your iTunes.)

[Late to the party? Here’s an explanation of 36 Days of Adrenaline.]

36 Days of Adrenaline: Day 9 — “China Grove”

Posted February 10, 2011 by swanshadow
Categories: 36 Days of Adrenaline, Soundtrack of My Life, SwanStuff, That's Cool!

Artist: The Doobie Brothers

Why this song is an adrenaline rush: Are you kidding? Have you not heard those opening guitar chords?

Lyric line that’s fun to belt at maximum volume:

But every day there’s a new thing comin’
The ways of an Oriental view
The sheriff and his buddies with their samurai swords
You can even hear the music at night
And though it’s a part of the Lone Star State
The people don’t seem to care
They just keep on lookin’ to the East…

Fun factoids:

  • There really is a China Grove, Texas, down around San Antonio. It is not, however, a Chinese-American enclave; only 0.08% of the population is Asian. I think that’s, like, maybe two Asian guys.
  • Samurai — and their swords — are Japanese, not Chinese. In case you were confused.
  • The game show Don’t Forget the Lyrics! used the “China Grove” guitar riff as its theme music. Rickey Minor, now the bandleader on The Tonight Show, played the theme.
  • The Doobie Brothers were one of the first — and one of the relatively few, to this day — hard rock bands to include both white and black musicians in their lineup. To the best of my knowledge, however, there has never been a Chinese Doobie Brother.
  • On the other hand, several of the Doobies have performed and recorded with Japanese pop star Eikichi Yazawa, who might own a samurai sword or two.

Other songs by the Doobie Brothers that I could have chosen instead: “Listen to the Music,” “Take Me in Your Arms (Rock Me),” “Long Train Runnin’,” Jesus is Just Alright.”

[Late to the party? Here’s an explanation of 36 Days of Adrenaline.]