| The Art of Arthur Adams
A career-spanning chat with the celebrated artist/writer on his comics
Conducted by Jon B. Cooke
Transcribed by Jon B. Knutson
From Comic Book Artist #17
Let's face it: Arthur Adams, since blasting onto the comics scene like a neutron
bomb with his limited series Longshot back in the 1980s, is a creator of
enormously fun comics. From that refreshing debut to his memorable three-issue
run on the Fantastic Four (#347-349) to his creator-owned Monkeyman and O'Brien
to his present-day (and some say personal best) work on "Jonni Future" in Tom
Strong's Terrific Tales (not to mention Ye Ed's fave AA work, The Creature from
the Black Lagoon), Arthur's artistry remains eminently entertaining and pleasing
to the eye. But few Arthur Adams interviews seem to exist, so we cover pretty
much his entire career in the following three-hour interview, which took place
via telephone on November 15, 2001, and was copyedited by the artist. Special
thanks to John Fanucchi for his spectacular and herculean assistance in
gathering and contributing art for this feature. Special kudos also to Joyce
Chin.
Comic Book Artist: Where are you from, Arthur?
Arthur Adams: We're not going to film out of sequence? [laughs] Where am I from?
That's hard to remember; after all, I was very young when I was born. That's
complicated. I was born in Holyoke, Massachusetts, many, many years ago. My dad
was in the Air Force, so we actually moved around quite a bit until I was about
five years old, when we moved to a little town called Vacaville outside Travis
Air Force Base in California. My dad found some way to keep us stationed there
was the rest of his 20-year Air Force career. It's just 50 miles from here where
I am right now, in San Francisco, California.
CBA: You were born in 1963?
Arthur: I was!
CBA: You're probably the youngest guy I've ever interviewed for the magazine!
[laughter] Younger than me!
Arthur: Bruce Timm isn't that much older than me! I mean, he's old, but....
CBA: Bruce is one of the few exclusively contemporary guys I've interviewed [in
Comic Book Artist Special Edition #1]. He was born around 1961, I believe.
Arthur: That sounds about right, he's about 40, right? Man, he's old. [laughter]
CBA: Hey, I'm almost 43, so watch it, dude! [laughs] Did you get into comics at
a young age?
Arthur: Yeah, I'd always liked comics, I think my interest really started when
my dad came back from one of his trips overseas, and he brought with him the
first Marvel Treasury Grab-Bag, that had in it a Ross Andru Spider-Man/Human
Torch story, a Wally Wood Daredevil/Sub-Mariner story...
CBA: Had that holly wreath on the cover?
Arthur: Yeah! I think it was a Buscema cover, maybe inked by Romita. But yeah,
it's a bunch of the super-heroes running forward, and then on the back cover,
it's them running away. It also had a real nice Gene Colan/Bill Everett Black
Widow story, and my favorite was the two-parter Fantastic Four and the Avengers
versus the Hulk!
CBA: By Stan Lee & Jack Kirby! Was this your first real exposure to
super-heroes?
Arthur: The first time I really noticed. I'm sure I must've seen them before,
but this was the first one I really got jazzed about. I'm sure I'd seen all
those old Marvel cartoons... I must've seen some comics, because my mom once a
month would go to the thrift shop and come back with a hay-bale of comics, a big
pile wrapped in twine. About half of them would be romance and war comics, and
those would get tossed aside, and the other half would be super-hero and monster
comics.
CBA: The good stuff!
Arthur: Yeah! It was the stuff I liked. I now wish I'd kept some of those war
and romance comics, those would've been pretty interesting to see now.
The stock Arthur Adams iconic image of Wolverine, Marvel's most popular
character, reproduced on a zillion items, from T-shirts to cans of Chef
Boyardee. ©2002 Marvel Characters, Inc.
CBA: Did you see the Marvel reprints of the old Atlas monster stories? Where
Monsters Dwell, Creatures on the Loose...
Arthur: Oh, yeah, sure! I love that stuff! When I first started Monkeyman and
O'Brien, I had the Marvel reprint book they did, Marvel Monsterworks, with Walt
Simonson's cover as inspiration. "Van Doom's Monster" was my favorite! It was
about a big wax monster, and it didn't really make much sense, but it sure was
cool! [laughter]
CBA: Did you start drawing at a young age?
Arthur: Oh, I've always drawn. I don't remember ever not drawing. My mom has
some drawings around the house-don't ask to see those!-and I drew everything!
Mostly I drew dinosaurs, King Kong and monsters. I was crazy for all those
monster movies, the Creature Features every Saturday.
CBA: Did you draw your own comics as a kid?
Arthur: You know, I was not intending to do comics when I was a kid. I wanted to
be a paleontologist, because I just thought dinosaurs were the coolest, I was
really into dinosaurs, so I wanted to just sit around and draw prehistoric
creatures all the time. Then I found out paleontologists actually have to go out
into the desert where it's really cold or really hot! I didn't think that
sounded that good. [laughter]
CBA: When did the idea of comics as a vocation come to mind?
Arthur: You know, I haven't thought about that for a while, but the first time I
thought about comics as something I wanted to do was when I bought and read the
very first issue of Micronauts, by Michael Golden and Joe Rubinstein, written by
Bill Mantlo. So when I saw it, I bought lots of copies of that one and was
giving them to everyone I knew in high school, and they were looking at me like
I was insane, and I'd say, "Look, that's what I'm going to do!"
CBA: [laughs] You immediately clued into Mike Golden's abilities?
Arthur: Somehow, it just leapt off the page at me. I'm not even sure why,
because I've looked at the first issue since then, and while there's neat things
about it, his drawing style changed so radically around issue #5 or 6 and I
liked that stuff much better. It's really strange to look at #1 and then the
last issue he did, because they're completely different!
CBA: Was he the first artist you really admired?
Arthur: He's the first one I really noticed. I don't know if I'd really seen too
much of Bernie Wrightson at that point. That would've been in 1978, '79.
CBA: He was working on Frankenstein, I think.
Arthur: Yes, that's right, portfolios and stuff like that, so I wasn't really
aware of that material, and we didn't have any comic book shops where I was
living. I'd go to the Air Force base commissary and it was tough to find my
comics. They had pretty much standard comics. After Golden, then I started
looking more at other artists.
CBA: As you were getting an interest in comics again, the direct sales market
was just starting.
Arthur: Right. I knew a guy at the base whose mom would take him to Comics &
Comix in Berkeley once a month, so he had a huge collection of comics and lots
of the old Mego super-hero action figures. Man, was I jealous! [laughter]
CBA: Did you get into the Star Wars stuff?
Arthur: A little bit. You know, I was never that crazy about Star Wars. I liked
the first movie-that's the one you're supposed to like, right? [laughs]-and I
had some of the toys, but I don't think I went nuts on the Star Wars stuff. I
was always more interested in model kits. I got all the model kits of the Star
Wars and Star Trek I could find, all the Aurora monster models and stuff like
that.
CBA: Did you start developing an interest in retro, older material at all? Or
was it pretty much the contemporary scene?
Arthur: It's hard to imagine now, but I guess I always liked that old stuff,
because it wasn't like they were making Boris Karloff Frankenstein movies in the
'60s, and that's what I loved, the Frankenstein stuff, Creature from the Black
Lagoon... It never even occurred to me that that stuff was old or new or
whatever. I just liked it! [laughs]
CBA: I try to get my kids to understand what's so cool about King Kong, and my
12-year-old looks at it, of course, and says, "Dad! It's in black-&-white!"
[laughter]
Arthur: "Yeah, that sucks!" [laughter] That was the thing that always bugged me
about Mike Mignola: The first King Kong he saw was the Dino Di Laurentis one,
and he loved it! It's so awful! [laughter]
CBA: We have to be slightly reverent now, right, because it's got the World
Trade Center twin towers in it.
Arthur: That's not enough, it's a terrible movie! [laughter] It doesn't even
compare to the original King Kong!
CBA: Well... It does have Jessica Lange in it.
Arthur: Yeah... but that's not enough, either! When my wife and I first started
going out, she came over to my place, and I sat her down and said, "You've got
to watch these!" and I had her watch both Frankenstein and Dracula, and she
watched them, and when they were done, she went, "Well, that was weird. There's
no music in those!" That had never occurred to me! There's almost no music in
those movies! She said, "They're dull, and there's no music!" It was really hard
to put music on the talkies in the early days, I guess.
CBA: So, you picked up Micronauts, and you said...
Arthur: That was it! That got me going, and then I started looking at comics all
over the place, and I was keeping an eye out for Golden's stuff, and right
around that time Bill Sienkiewicz started working on "Moon Knight" in the back
of The Hulk magazine. I thought that stuff was pretty cool. I also really got
into Walt Simonson's stuff. He had done some Rampaging Hulk stuff I liked. He'd
done one fill-in issue of Star Wars that I really loved, then he penciled and
inked-and I think maybe wrote-one issue of Battlestar Galactica I thought was
the greatest. His X-Men/Teen Titans was like the bible of how to draw comics for
me. I wore out I don't know how many copies looking through that thing!
CBA: When you learned more about Walter, were you surprised to find parallels in
your respective lives? He studied paleontology.
Arthur: [laughs] Walt's a much smarter guy than I am! [laughter] He's actually
done some stuff! He went to college! I've only thought being a scientist, "Hey,
that would be cool! Nah, I'd have to go outside!"
CBA: Did you become friends?
Arthur: Yeah, I like Walt a lot! We don't talk as often as we should, I'm
notorious for not calling anybody, but Walt and I have gone through periods
where we were talking every day, then we'd go through periods where we'd talk
about every six months, but every time, it's like we talked just the day before.
I love Walt and Weezie, they're great.
CBA: Did you see him as your biggest influence for a period?
Arthur: Walt and Michael Golden, they were both about equal in their influence.
Of course, it was easier to get Walt's stuff! [laughs] He was doing more of it!
Barry Windsor-Smith was a huge influence, as well. It's hard to say who wasn't
an influence around that time. I really liked Windsor-Smith, Wrightson, Kaluta...
CBA: You were buying the old comics?
Arthur: When I could, I was finding old stuff as time went by, yeah, I was
learning more about things, so I started picking up Swamp Thing reprints, early
on. When I was 18 or 20, A Look Back came out, and I picked that up at a
convention, and somehow I worked up the nerve to spend as much as $40 on a book!
CBA: [laughs] Now probably valued at $250!
Arthur: Yeah, I know! I'm not selling my copy! [laughter] Actually, mine's
pretty messed up by now. Before I started going to conventions, I was doing
drawings for people at school to get money to buy comics. I had a couple of the
Frazetta books, and I'd get Xeroxes of the black-&-white drawings, and I'd paint
them... I didn't know what I was doing with any of the stuff! I wanted it to
look like the oil paintings, but I had no idea how to do that, so I was just
using watercolor, putting it on as thick as possible! [laughs] If you bent the
pages, the paint would just crack off! [laughter] I ended up using it in really
odd ways, but I would sell those for a couple of bucks to kids at lunchtime, and
I'd take that money to buy comics. Then, I started going to conventions when I
was about 17, and I met Bob Shreck at a Creation Convention, and asked if I
could set up at a table, too. I had brought my portfolio and showed it to him,
and he said, "Sure! Grab a table!" There was this one particular girl out here
who just wanted drawings of Harrison Ford as an elf. Fortunately, I don't think
I have any copies of those! [laughter] Somehow, I'd go to the conventions and do
things for like five or ten bucks or so. Then I started buying that old stuff!
The old "New" X-Men, featuring the shortlived member, Thunderbird, in this
Arthur Adams pin-up. ©2002 Marvel Characters, Inc.
CBA: What was in your portfolio?
Arthur: Crap! It was just lots of pin-up stuff. There was nothing!
CBA: There was no attempt at continuity?
Arthur: By the time I starting going to conventions, there was a little bit of
continuity. Early on, I'd done one monster comic for myself, but it was all
splash pages-50 pages of splashes!-so I hadn't really tried much continuity.
When I was around 17, I started trying to draw, I did a Wolverine story.
Everyone else did, why shouldn't I?
CBA: Were you into X-Men?
Arthur: I knew X-Men was popular, but I was not into it that much. Which is
actually pretty funny because I became so associated with X-Men for a while. I
thought Chris did a great job on it, though I was never that crazy about the
John Byrne stuff.
CBA: Do people naturally assume he's an influence on you?
Arthur: No, I'm just talking about when the book was really popular, and people
were telling me, "You've got to check out this X-Men stuff!" I'd look at it, and
I really liked the story, the whole Phoenix story towards the end, but I liked
it as a writer/artist package! I could recognize it was a good comic book. The
writing and the art were balanced. You couldn't really have one without the
other, and I really liked those, but artistically, Byrne was never really an
influence.
CBA: I'm a little surprised, because there's that element of whimsy in your
work, as well as in his.
Arthur: I think what might be the aspect I really liked about X-Men artistically
was Terry Austin. He inked Tom Sutton, I think, on some Alice Cooper Marvel
Premiere, and Terry had just gone nuts on it! He put Popeye in the background,
graffiti on the walls... [laughter] Just really odd things everywhere! I loved
that stuff. Somehow, Terry was more of an influence, I think, than John was on
my stuff.
CBA: What was High Anxiety [misnaming High Energy]?
Arthur: [laughs frenzied and nervously] That never happened! There is no High
Anxiety! [laughs] It's an old Mel Brooks movie! [laughter] Honestly, I met some
guy-can't even remember his name now, it's been so long-at a convention, and he
was putting together a comic book magazine, and he saw some of my stuff and
asked me to put something together, and I put together something I hope will
never, ever see print! Ever! [laughter] It was pretty bad.
CBA: What was it?
Arthur: I can't remember it that well, it was just not good. [laughs]
CBA: Was it super-heroes, science-fiction...?
Arthur: [Sobbing] It was horror, as I recall... please stop. I'll give you
money.
CBA: [laughs, after accepting a large sum of cash] Thanks. We'll move on, now!
Was that your first published work?
Arthur: That might've been the first, but the first piece I was ever definitely
paid for, was a pin-up in the back of Captain Carrot and His Amazing Zoo Crew!
Those of us of a certain age remember the Farrah Fawcett poster of her in a
one-piece swimsuit, very multi-colored background, and I basically copied it for
a Zoo Crew character, "Farrah Foxette," and I sent that to the letters page and
got a call from Roy Thomas telling me, "We'd really like to publish this, but we
can only pay you $10!" I said, "That's cool!" [laughter]
CBA: Ten whole dollars, your first professional sale! Did you get stuff
published in fanzines at all?
Arthur: No, I was not even aware of fanzines. They weren't around much at that
time. Amazing Heroes might've been being published around then, and I'd
occasionally pick up those.
CBA: Did you have any art education?
Arthur: No, I just sat around drawing all the time! [laughs] I had a couple of
good teachers in high school that mostly told me not to draw super-heroes.
[laughs] When I was a freshman, there was a teacher who was teaching newspaper
strip kind of storytelling, so I did one or two of those, and he just stressed
how important it was to be clear in storytelling, and that's always stuck in me.
Mr. Vandenberg, as I recall.
CBA: What did your parents think about you drawing?
Arthur: [laughs] Well, they thought it was neat that I drew. They were
supportive enough that they made sure I always had pencils and paper. They were
way more generous than they should've been! I had four younger brothers, and I
know things were always tight, but... we were pretty spoiled! [laughs] I always
had my art supplies, and we always had more toys than we probably should have.
[laughs] But yeah, they were very supportive. I was very into drawing, and I'd
say, "Oh, yeah, I'm going to become a comic book artist," and they'd say, "We
like that, that's great, that's really terrific, but we really think you should
have something to fall back on." Then I got into drama club! So I said, "Okay,
if I don't work out as a comic book artist, I'll become an actor!" [laughter]
CBA: "And if not that, a musician! Okay, Mom?" [laughter]
Arthur: "This is not what we had in mind, son!" My grades in high school when I
got in were pretty good, but by my senior year, I just didn't care anymore. They
were sure I was never going to move out.
CBA: [laughs] Was there any thought for you going to college?
Arthur: Not really, no, I was desperate to become a professional comic book
artist, and I guess I was young enough to be arrogant enough to think I didn't
need to go to school, I'd just got myself a couple of "how to draw the human
figure" books, and I thought that was enough! I guess I was right! [laughs] It
seems to have worked out okay. I was looking at all those various people I was
talking about were comic book artists, all big influences as well, and I think
that showed for a long time. It probably still does, to some degree.
CBA: Did you get support from people you showed your work to? Did they spark
into it and say, "Hey, this kid's got something!"?
Arthur: Yeah, some did, which is funny because, looking back on some of that
very early stuff, it was god-awful! [laughs] But yeah, I'd hang out a little bit
with Mignola early on, before he started as a professional inker.
CBA: Where did you guys meet up?
Arthur: Oh, we met at a Creation Convention in San Francisco. We were both
showing our artwork to some guy, and he was horrified that I was inking with a
Croquille. Mignola might've been inking with a Croquille, too, so I went home
and thought, "Oh, I'd better learn how to ink with a brush." Actually, that was
good advice. Somehow, in getting control of the brush, I actually got to be a
much better artist all the way around! Much better with the pencil and the
Croquille, which I eventually went back to inking with.
CBA: How soon?
Arthur: Maybe a year or so after. I was mostly interested in penciling anyway, I
didn't spend that much time trying to ink, as I recall.
CBA: You're renowned as a really tight penciler, right?
Arthur: Well, that's what people say! That's what I hear. Yeah, I don't trust
inkers. [laughter] I don't even like them! They're terrible people... [laughter]
No, no, I've been terribly lucky, I've had very good inkers. But I guess I'm
kind of a control freak when it comes to my art, I want it to look "just so." So
yeah, my pencils have tended to be pretty tight. They're not so tight when I'm
inking myself.
A pastiche of Carmine Infantino's memorable '60s Caped Crusader cover featuring
Batman holding up a wired Gorilla Grodd (who was-holy heavyweight!-timed to
explode if the ape touches the ground), Arthur Adams drew this unused Impulse
cover. ©2002 DC Comics.
CBA: Which is the majority of your work nowadays?
Arthur: Well, I prefer to ink myself, because as lucky as I think I've been with
inkers, still somehow, it's never looked quite right to me, mostly because when
I do it myself, I'll just change things as I'm inking it, or add a little more
shading or rendering. Once the inker has it, it's out of my hands, and no matter
how much I beg my editor to send it back to me, [laughter] editors just don't
think that's a good idea! So yeah, I prefer to ink my own stuff. Right now I'm
inking "Jonni Future" for Tom Strong's Terrific Tales, but I'm still working-as
of this moment-on The Authority, and that's being inked by Tim Townsend, who's
doing a great job.
CBA: Could you name a handful of favorite inkers?
Arthur: Sure! Of course, I was very fortunate to have Terry ink a couple of
things early on, and that was great. I really like the way Bob Wiacek inked me
on some X-Men Annual.
CBA: Who inked you on Fantastic Four?
Arthur: That was Art Thibert, who inked all of the first issue, and I think most
of the second. Al Milgrom inked the third one, and I think Al did a great job on
that desperately late issue. Walt [Simonson, the writer] said he needed a
breather, so he got me to pencil three issues. Not only did he need a breather,
he needed to get a little bit ahead on the issues, so he wrote three for me, and
I think during the whole time I was working on those three, he didn't do any
work on his own stuff, so he didn't get anywhere! [laughter] That was a fun
series... See, I have a reputation for being slow, so I remember the few times
that I'm not! [laughter] I think the first issue I ended up taking five weeks, a
week longer than it should've been, but I did my best. [laughter] I think the
second issue-of course, it was getting later-took about four weeks, and then the
third issue, I think it was so desperately late, I think Ralph Macchio was
calling me several times a day, saying, "Please send out pages today!" I think I
ended up doing that one in three weeks! That's unbelievable! For me, anyway.
CBA: [laughs] I heard that story earlier this morning. One of his old
assistants, George Khoury, said, "Ask Art about that last issue!"
Arthur: Oh, yeah, that was a rough one! I think I actually ended up inking two
pages at the last minute, because it just had to be done! I penciled those two
pages the day before, inked both of them and mailed them off. I was very
impressed with myself! [laughter] I was finally a real comic book artist! Then I
think I took the next three months off.
CBA: [laughs] What can you produce in a day?
Arthur: I can apparently produce two pages in a day, but I have to be in some
weird state of panic. [laughter] As a general rule, I tend to do 2/3 to 3/4 of a
page a day.
CBA: And inking?
Arthur: About the same. Really, that's one of the weird things about me, it's
always depended on the deadline. If I have a lot of time, I'll take a lot of
time. If I don't have a lot of time, I won't! I did have one cover for Scott
Dunbier [Wildstorm/ ABC editor], I don't think it came out particularly well,
but it came out okay. It was a blank page at eight o'clock in the morning, and
at four in the afternoon, it was completely done, penciled and inked. It can be
done!
CBA: Do you color at all?
Arthur: No. I've toyed with painting at various times, just watercolor, nothing
fancy. I'll try it once every couple of years, and then, because I haven't done
it in such a long time, I always have to relearn whatever I've forgotten,
[laughs] and then I'm not generally happy with the results, and don't have a
chance to do it again for quite a long time. I'd like to find more time to do
stuff like that. We talked earlier a little bit about my trying to paint
Frazetta drawings, like oil paintings. I eventually did get some oil paints, and
that was a lot of fun, I would like to experiment with that again.
CBA: In a perfect world, would you like to go to art school?
Arthur: The only thing I really regret about not having gone to art school is
knowing more about art history. I think I would've been exposed to more artists,
and I think that probably would've been a good thing. Mostly nowadays, I don't
really like talking too much with artists about art! "Look, I did this magical
thing!" "Shut up, whatever!" [laughter]
CBA: Early on, did you seek out professional advice?
Arthur: Definitely. I have only got one comic book signed ever-some issue of
Spider-Woman-by Steve Leialoha and Chris Claremont, who were at that same
Creation Convention where I first met Mignola. I just got it signed because I
wanted to ask them how to get into comics. They gave me the standard answer, and
that was fine.
CBA: So how did you go about getting into comics?
Arthur: [laughs] Actually, this is pretty weird! At one of the early Creation
Conventions, I met Joe Rubinstein, who said, "Let me take some of your samples
to Denny O'Neil and Linda Grant." They were at Marvel at the time, maybe editing
Daredevil at the time. They were doing a black-&-white book called Bizarre
Adventures, of which they only did three or four issues. They said, "Do you want
to do a short story for this?" I said, "Sure, why not? I'll come up with
something." So I wrote a three-, maybe four-page story, and I did thumbnails of
it, so I had the complete script with thumbnails, and I sent that in, and they
said, "Oh, this is great, this is funny, who would you like to draw it?"
[laughter] I said, "You don't understand, I want to draw it!" They said, "Okay,
give it a go!" So I penciled it, sent it in, Joe inked it, and I was so excited,
"Wow, I got my firstlittle short story done!" I called up Grant, and asked, "So,
do you have anything else for me now?" She said, "We'll call you." [laughter]
Thank God, that book was cancelled, and that story was never printed. It was
some really odd thing about some middle-aged guy whose life has gone horribly
wrong, and decided some high school teacher had ruined his life. So he went back
to school to kill his teacher, at this point an old lady, and she whips out this
giant machine gun and blows him away, and says, "Do you remember that apple you
gave me? It was sour!" [laughter] So I'm not really sorry that wasn't published!
CBA: At the time, you must've been disappointed.
Arthur: I was, but I got the impression nothing more was coming, so I did yet
again more samples. I was working at Round Table Pizza at the time, so I did a
short story of the She-Hulk and Spider-Woman going to Round Table Pizza.
[laughter] There's a monster at Round Table Pizza. So I sent that to everyone,
because at this point, I think DC Comics had a submissions editor, but Marvel
did not, so I just sent copies of everything to every editor whose name I could
find at Marvel.
CBA: Did the fanboy within cry out, "All I want to do is Fantastic Four"? Did
you have a goal?
Arthur: I just wanted to draw comic books. I didn't care what I drew. I figured
I was going to end up drawing G.I. Joe, at that time my least favorite comic
book.
CBA: But you were willing to do it?
Arthur: I just wanted to be a professional comic book artist. After I decided
that was what I wanted to do, that's all I ever wanted to do. So, I sent these
samples to everyone at Marvel, and apparently Al Milgrom at that point was just
beginning to go freelance, so he had a big pile of Xeroxes, and Carl Potts was
moving into his office, and so Al was just going through this pile and tossing
ones he thought might have some potential over to Carl! So I got a call a couple
of days after that from Carl or Ann Nocenti, who was Carl's assistant at the
time. They thought my samples might have some potential, so they sent me a
script they wanted me to take a pass at (that was already being made into a
finished story by another artist). I did thumbnails, sent those in, and they
seemed to like my work okay, but then the real comic book came out, and I
thought, "Wow, mine's actually better than that! Mine's actually funnier!"
CBA: Was it a super-hero story?
Arthur: Yeah, it was. I don't want to say who did the printed story. It was a
script for a regular Marvel series at the time. So they liked my samples, and
then they asked if I was interested in drawing Longshot. I said, "Sure!"
CBA: How did they describe Longshot?
Arthur: [laughs] It's been a long time, I don't remember there was that much
description on the phone. I think she sent me the description, after she said
she'd asked absolutely every artist involved with comics at the time to draw it,
and absolutely everyone else said no. Carl had done some character designs on
Longshot. Do you remember in Star Trek: The Motion Picture, the blue suits they
wore that looked kind of like footie pajamas? He drew Longshot like that, with
curly blonde hair with a black streak in it. Somehow, Longshot also had a tattoo
on his eye when he was using whatever the heck his stupid power was, and that
didn't make any sense to me whatsoever. [laughter] I just started doing my own
drawings. I think I did five or six different drawings of Longshot, and then I
did 20 alien creatures. It was a lot of fun!
CBA: The general look of the character, was there an influence from Michael
Jackson with the costume?
Arthur: I don't think so. This was actually the early days of MTV, 20 years ago,
and there was a group called Kaja Googoo, and I saw the lead singer and said,
"Oh, that's weird hair! I don't see anyone in comics with that kind of hair, I
can use that for Longshot!" I'm not sure where the rest of the costume was from,
I was just trying to make it look different than other costumes that I was aware
of.
CBA: Did you have a specific schedule for Longshot?
Arthur: Thank God, no, I didn't. Louise Simonson was the editor on that-which
was weird, because as we were just getting started, she decided to just
freelance edit the rest of the book, which was great for us. We didn't really
have much of a schedule, no, and I ended up taking eight months for the first
issue! I don't even know why it took that long, I just wanted it to be just so.
I think I actually redrew the first half of the book. The way Ann writes, she
just packs a ton of story in those few pages, so I was sending in layouts for
pages with 20 panels on them, and Louise wisely said, "Maybe this isn't such a
good idea." So I redid the first half. I had all kinds of problems with
perspective, because I'd always drawn just guys running around and fighting, and
hadn't really bothered to learn how to draw buildings, things like that. In that
first issue, I had to draw a town, and there's a windmill there. Oh, my gosh, a
windmill! There's all kinds of perspective on that! So I had to draw that, and
there was a baby in it, and it had never even occurred to me previously to draw
a baby! Yeah, that first one ended up taking about eight months.
Ye Ed found Arthur Adams' rendering on the comics adaptation of the Universal
monster flick, The Creature from the Black Lagoon, to be a revelation and in our
humble opinion, Arthur's best work to date (well, before "Jonni Future,"
anyway!). Bravo, Mr. A! Courtesy of inker (and the recipient of this issue's
dedication), CBA's Main Man, Terry Austin. ©2002 Universal Pictures Company.
CBA: Were you still working at the pizza joint?
Arthur: No, I was done working at the pizza place by then. No, I was still
living at home, thank goodness! [laughs]
CBA: Did you have a job?
Arthur: At Round Table Pizza, after a while, I started having nightmares about
pizza, and I thought that was a good sign to stop working there and just work on
comics. I'll tell you, I was fortunate that my mom and dad let me stay home and
work on that stuff, to do more samples. So I finally did get some work.
CBA: Oh, you slacker, you!
Arthur: Yeah, I was pretty bad. [laughter] Let's see, I think it took eight
months for that first issue. What could I have been doing?
CBA: Did you see your style progressing during that eight months? Could that
have been a part of it, too, of redoing the first half of the book?
Arthur: Well, that was certainly why I redid the cover a year later! [laughs] It
just didn't look good, my drawing had definitely improved, as I think anyone's
would, if you're not used to drawing all the time, like over eight months-I
could've been drawing all the time, I think I was! [laughs]-after that, I did
the Pacific Comics Alien Worlds 3-D Special, so I did one little short story in
there.
CBA: Did you luck out getting Weezie Jones as your first editor?
Arthur: Oh, I think so! I think anyone else-especially considering what she was
doing, she became a freelance writer with some freelance editing on the side-I
think mostly she was just saying, "Yeah, you guys do it, whatever!" [laughs]
CBA: Were the plots Ann gave you particularly dense?
Arthur: Oh, yeah, definitely. That's why there are some pages in there that are
just cram-packed! Almost every issue is a couple of pages longer than it
should've been. I kept asking, "Please, let me have one more page. We need this!
Can we have one or two more pages?" We were really lucky. I don't know how many
mini-series had been done at that point, there weren't that many, but I think
Marvel was just very flexible on that particular book at that time. I'm not even
really sure why, I don't know whether we were getting any attention from Jim
Shooter, because I wasn't really aware of him at that time! I'd met Jim once at
a convention. Louise had introduced me to him at, I think, my first San Diego
convention, and he was very helpful. She made him sit me down, and he got this
old, tattered Marvel comic-I can't even remember what it was, I think it was an
old Kirby Captain America comic-and he just gave me a really quick, "This is how
to draw comics... this panel introduces the character, this is a... just try to
make the storytelling as clear as possible," and it was really, very helpful!
That was pretty much my only interaction with Shooter! I was never in New York,
I was in California this whole time.
CBA: Did you remain in California?
Arthur: Yeah, I was in California for ages. I finally moved away from home,
moved to Oakland, moved to the same apartment building where Mignola and one of
our friends, Steve Purcell, was living. We weren't sharing an apartment, just in
the same apartment building.
CBA: Were you close with Mike?
Arthur: Yeah, it's funny... I sometimes think of Mike as an older, meaner
brother. [laughter] Which is kind of strange, since I only have little brothers,
I never had an older brother. I hope my brothers don't read this, [laughs] but I
was just always closer to Mike than my own family, because my family's not
interested in the same things I'm interested in.
CBA: Have you ever inked anybody else's work?
Arthur: Very little, not too much. I inked a Don Heck thing, a "Mister Miracle"
for... I can't remember what the name of that book was [Secret Origins]. It was
a really odd job. I think Mike Carlin was the editor on it. It was a really odd
job, it was from two different characters' points of view, so the top half of
the page and the bottom half of the page was the same pencil drawing, even
though Don Heck drew it twice-it wasn't like a lightbox, it was actually drawn
twice, the same thing-but it was written from two different points of view, so
the top half of the page, as I recall, was inked by Klaus Janson, and I inked
the bottom half. It was a really peculiar job. But it was weird, sort of fun.
CBA: Did they offer the job to you?
Arthur: Sure, sure. I inked an issue of Superboy, of all things. Who did I ink
on that? I think it might've been Jim Mooney! That was really odd!
CBA: [laughs] That was your limited experience inking others?
Arthur: Oh, I've done some bits of stuff. I was supposed to ink an issue of
Ghost Rider for [editor] Bobbie Chase over one of the Kubert brothers, and they
sent me a bunch of pages, and I don't remember anyone giving me a deadline, so I
was just putzing away at it, until finally somebody said, "Hey, the whole issue
is due tomorrow!" "Well, I've inked five pages!! Why didn't someone tell me
that?" [laughter] I ended up having to send that one back. I inked a handful of
those pages, and I liked the way those came out. Not too long ago, I inked over
my wife, Joyce's pencils. She'd done a couple of pages for Dan Brerton. That was
fun.
CBA: At the time, when you came to the fore, people could argue that 1986 was
just about the best year in comics. From one side, there came out The Dark
Knight Returns and Watchmen, but there was also Love and Rockets and Maus coming
out, some real solid alternative material, and it just seemed almost limitless
where comics could go. Of course, it came crashing down in '87, but for a moment
there... Did you have aspirations of not going the Marvel route at all? Seeking
out your own way?
Arthur: Not at that point. That never even occurred to me, really, until Image
showed up. I was content working on various Marvel things. I'd done a little bit
of DC stuff, but not too much at that particular point. You know, it never
occurred to me until the early '90s, when Erik Larsen called and asked if I ever
considered making up anything of my own, and that now was the time to do that
with Image. It never occurred to me to make up my own thing! So I talked to him,
and said, "Oh, I don't know what the hell I'd want to do," but I thought about
it for a few minutes, and said, "Well, I like King Kong. I know: 'Monkeyman and
O'Brien.' I can do that!" So I had the giant scientist ape, and this smart
woman, realizing that, oh my God, I just made up Angel and the Ape! [laughter]
CBA: Were you ever particularly political?
Arthur: No, not at all. I've probably been way too wishy-washy. I'm hoping I'm
getting to be less so as I get older, but...
CBA: Do you see issues within the comics field that perhaps you should address
more?
Arthur: Gosh, no. I just want the comics industry to do well! [laughs] When
various companies are doing too much of one particular book, I understand why
they're doing it, but I don't necessarily think it's a good idea. And then
subject matter, like when Marvel was doing all the Punisher books, that bugged
me, because I hated those. I thought they were pretty unpleasant, too much
glorification of a guy with a gun. But you know, now I really like the new
Punisher series, [laughs] and I don't know why! Maybe because it's written with
more of a sense of humor, and I think those other issues were kind of humorless,
at least for me. For a while, I was worried about things in comics getting too
violent and women being too objectified. But you know the stuff I'm working on
right now? [laughs] This Authority stuff? We've actually had to tone the stuff
down temporarily because of the [Sept. 11] attack, we've pulled back on the
violence on the first and second issues. Who am I to say things are too violent,
when I've just drawn something that's really horrifyingly violent here? I'm
actually thinking about a new series that's going to be really objectifying
women, let's just leave it at that! [laughs] Have I mentioned that I'm not very
smart? "I'm not very smart." [laughter]
CBA: Do you feel that, perhaps, the difference is there's an injection of
humanity within your work?
Arthur: I think almost anything is okay as long as there's some sense of humor
to it. In the second chapter of "Jonni Future," the universe is invaded by
moth-women, and the description says, "they are kind of cute, but they're just
eating everything... rocks, vegetables, animals, people, everything... " Why
moth-women want to eat everything, I don't know. [laughter] I really like what
Steve Moore and Alan Moore are doing with the series so far, and I'm amazed
they're able to get as much story into eight pages and still make it relatively
comfortable to draw. The moth-women are kind of terrifying! They're outrageously
shapely, but have these horrible buggy heads [laughter]...
CBA: As long as you're not aroused by them! [laughs]
Arthur: No, no, no, no! [laughter] It's just that people are going to look at
this and go, "Oh my God, what happened?!?" [laughter] There's millions of these
moth-women invading the solar system eating everything, so Jonni tricks them by
igniting this magnesium asteroid, so it's burning brightly, so all the
moth-women are attracted to it, and of course, they all die horribly! [laughter]
They all fall into it, and they're exploding, and there's flames everywhere...
I'm thinking, "This is grisly!" [laughter] But oh, well... ! It's written by
Steve and Alan Moore, so it's genius, pure genius!
Arthur's pencils to his delightful "Li'l Danger Girl" story, "Delusions of
Grandeur," from the Danger Girl Special Edition. Okay, so it's cheesecake. But
it's really cute cheesecake! Danger Girl ™ & © 2002 J. Scott Campbell.
CBA: I read a Comics Interview featuring you, in which you said that because of
your experience with Ann's dense scripts, you weren't particularly interested in
collaborating with Alan Moore.
Arthur: You tracked down that Comics Interview, huh? I was hoping I didn't leave
enough of a trail, so I could just be mysterious at all times! [laughter] Yeah,
I was really worried about working from a full script. I liked the freedom of
being able to set my own pacing from just a plot and suggesting dialogue, which
I would often do. So I wasn't crazy about the idea of a full script, but I
figured, hey, give it a try, and you know, it's been a lot of fun! It's been a
surprising lot of fun, and both Alan and Steve constantly makes it clear that
I'm welcome to change things wherever I think might be appropriate.
CBA: Are Alan's scripts, as legend has it, very dense?
Arthur: They can be, but not overly so. Early on, they just set the tone,
there's quite a bit of description, but not too bad. Not nearly as much as I
feared. The Authority has been all full-script. I think of "Jonni Future" as
being Steve and Alan's book, really. Only partly mine, because I designed it.
But The Authority, I really think of that as being solely Mark Millar's book,
and sometimes, if he asks for something I might not think would be a great idea,
I'll try to find some way to do it the way he suggests. Sometimes it doesn't
work, and I go with what I think would be better, but I've really enjoyed
working from a full script, both on the Mark Millar stuff and on the Steve and
Alan Moore stuff.
CBA: On The Authority, did you always have in mind this would be a temporary
stint?
Arthur: It was only going to be three issues... and it still is only three
issues! And maybe not even that! [laughs] There's just been problems throughout
the whole thing.
CBA: Isn't the content you're talking about post-September 11?
Arthur: Mark has been ill, and there've been some illnesses with some people
around here. It's just been a rough year, terrible for some reason for getting
that book out. It's coming along, and I'm really happy with it. I liked it
better before it was toned down, but you know, we felt we had to lighten up on
the violence. In the first issue, it was made clear that George Bush-while not
necessarily being a bad guy-was certainly one of the pawns of the bad guys, and
then in the third issue, Bush was going to be treated very unkindly, and that's
not that popular right now, and that's okay, because I don't know Bush
personally, so I felt a little bit bad about making him a bad guy. He might be a
bad guy, but I don't know!
CBA: Not now, he isn't, mister! [laughter]
Arthur: Oh, no, not now!
CBA: Do you think Alan Moore is generous with co-creator credit in his ABC
titles?
Arthur: Oh, absolutely. He's had a hand in the creation of Jonni Future, but on
the little "created by" credit it says "Steve Moore and Arthur Adams." So, yeah,
he's very generous, and a really smart guy. I really like those ABC Comics! I
was actually asked to do one of those earlier on, and I said, "I don't think I'd
enjoy doing that right now, but thanks for asking." But the things started
coming out, and those are great.
CBA: You drew a Tom Strong story.
Arthur: Right, around #4, after I realized my mistake!
CBA: Do you have a piece of the action, so to speak? Do you own the Nazi
villainess you visually created in that issue?
Arthur: Oh, no. That never even occurred to me. If someone told me I did, I'd
look at them like they're crazy, because it's Chris Sprouse's book. It's like if
I was to do a Batman book, and make up a new villain, it's nice that I did that,
but they're not mine! I made it up for a Batman book. If I made noise about it,
it's possible, but no one's going to make a series about the naughty nympho Nazi
torture goddess! [ponders] Although, come to think of it... hmmm....
CBA: For instance, when Eastman and Laird were doing Teenage Mutant Ninja
Turtles, they would feature characters created by others like Steve Bissette's
X-Dimension turtle... the Panda Khan action figure would have its creator's
trademark on the package, for instance. I was wondering, how far can it go with
ABC?
Arthur: It just depends on the people involved. I'm not too sure how Wildstorm
would be with that, now that DC is involved, but in the past, certainly, if I'd
come in and said I want to try out a character, could he visit one of your
characters, I don't think there would've been a problem with that. I'd think
that's true with ABC Comics, whether there's a problem because of whatever
involvement DC might have, I don't know.
CBA: Getting back to the chronology, did Longshot come out on schedule?
Arthur: As I recall, yes, because they were all the way done!
CBA: Was the plan to have a double-sized last issue?
Arthur: From the very beginning? No. But I asked if we could expand the last
issue, because I thought it would be nice, and because there's a lot of story in
it.
CBA: Did you feel you were getting some impact within the industry? Did you
receive notice from peers?
Arthur: Well, certainly from fans, and yeah, I was getting offered more work.
[laughs] Louise had been editor on The X-Men, and then Nocenti became editor on
The X-Men, so Claremont was in the office all the time when I was having pages
coming in, so Chris was notorious at the time for stealing artists! [laughs] So
every time I saw Chris at a convention, we talked about doing some X-Men thing,
talking about doing the regular series, and what the sales would be, this and
that... and I was, "Okay, whatever. I don't know!" [laughs]
CBA: Were the sales on Longshot good?
Arthur: Nowadays, it would be unbelievable. I think the first issue was a little
over 100,000-which at the time was, I think, slightly above average, it wasn't
anything people were going nuts about. I think the last issue went down to
70,000 or 80,000, but now that I think about it, the cover price was probably
higher, so that's probably not that bad a thing. The sales on it were okay. They
weren't stellar, but they were okay.
CBA: Did you get royalties from it?
Arthur: Yes. They weren't huge, because it was one of their regular books, and
there were a little bit of creator royalties.
CBA: Was it the equivalent of a month's income, or less?
Arthur: More like a half-month's income. It was like $1,000, something like
that. Some of the royalty checks, as I recall, were around $600, most around
$1,000. The one Marvel book that actually made a ton of royalties for me was the
Excalibur special I did, which surprisingly enough, is the book I hate the most
that I've done! Excalibur Mojo Mayhem, they called it. It's baby X-Men who were
on Longshot's planet who get away from Mojo and come to Earth and meet
Excalibur. At this point in the series, everyone thinks the X-Men are dead, so
Kitty's like, "Oh, my God, it's the X-Men, but they're babies!" [laughter] Very
peculiar. It was one of those when I didn't have a good time with the editor,
because the deadline kept changing. That one has the page I drew the fastest. In
half an hour!
CBA: And you made the highest royalties on that book?
Arthur: Yeah, I got a lot... Yeah, tens of thousands out of that one.
CBA: Cool! [laughs]
Arthur: Yeah, it was really wild.
CBA: I guess you should do stuff you hate more often! [laughter]
Arthur: Well, I guess it got done fast enough!
CBA: Working for Chris, you did a couple of
specials?
Arthur: I did an Annual every year, or every other year for a while.
Arthur's pencils of a page of his second "Jonni Future" story, "Moth-Women of
Myriad Moons," featuring some outrageously-shaped aliens! Her anthropomorphic
companion is Jermaal Pan Pavane, the Para-Man! ©2002 America's Best Comics, LLC.
CBA: I do recall you doing a pastiche of Kirby's Journey into Mystery #83, the
first Thor, for a cover.
Arthur: Yeah, for the X-Men Annual #9.
CBA: Around the same time Jack was having a hard time with Marvel about getting
his art back. Did you have any feelings about that controversy at the time?
Arthur: No, I don't know if I was even aware of that at the time. You know, I
really don't remember any of that stuff. Of course, I wanted him to get his
artwork back. My feeling was that Marvel should've just written out huge checks
to Kirby, Stan, and Ditko-especially at that time, because they were making big
money at the time-and should've said, "Look, here's a million bucks for each of
the things you made up. Ditko gets his million for Spider-Man... I don't know if
you'd give him a million for Doctor Strange, but maybe, I don't know! [laughs]
CBA: Three-quarters of a million!
Arthur: Yeah, I love Doctor Strange, but I don't think Marvel's ever done that
well with it. I wouldn't want to say anything bad about Doctor Strange for all
of his fans out there!
CBA: It was obviously a big issue at the time.
Arthur: You know, I honestly don't remember that much about it.
CBA: Did you go to the San Diego conventions?
Arthur: I would go to San Diego every once in a while, but I never met Mr.
Kirby.
CBA: You never got a chance to?
Arthur: I saw him, but I've always been shy around the artists I admired. I
regret now that I had not talked to Gil Kane. I wish I'd spent some time talking
to him. We actually shared the same birthday, April 5th.
CBA: Did Kirby increasingly become an influence as you were working
professionally?
Arthur: Oh, definitely. Even more so after I became a professional. There was
that early issue with the Avengers, Fantastic Four and the Hulk, and I loved
that like crazy, and there was a bunch of Kirby stuff I loved, but I wasn't
necessarily aware it was Kirby. But when I was trying to draw better, Kirby's
stuff wasn't more of an influence, actually. I don't think this is that unusual
amongst young artists, but I actually thought Kirby's style was ugly. You know,
a lot of the faces would just be ugly, and I just couldn't see beyond that. But
certainly, as I became a professional, I became more and more aware of the value
of the Kirby stuff.
CBA: I wonder if there's a parallel there with you and Mignola. Kirby certainly
seemed to become a bigger influence as he became a professional. Today, Mike's
style is almost a weird amalgamation of Kirby and Toth.
Arthur: Oh, yeah, I think that's true. I don't think I ever got as much
Kirby in me, as much as I tried. That X-Men Annual wasn't the only
pastiche I did of a Kirby cover, as I've done others since. I just love
those things so much, and I'm not that smart on my own! [laughter] (END
FIRST HALF)
Interview with Arthur Adams & Dick Ayers Part 1 (9.6mb)
Interview with Arthur Adams & Dick Ayers Part 2 (11.2mb)
Interview with Arthur Adams & Dick Ayers Part 3 (9.6mb)
|