Thursday, May 01, 2008
Donation: David Apatoff's Boyhood Collection of Newspaper Comics

There was a time when heroes arrived on your doorstep each and every morning... Flash Gordon, Prince Valiant, Tarzan, Terry and the Pirates, and dozens of others... every day without fail. On Sundays, they were in COLOR.

It was a great time to be a kid. For a nickle, you could travel to Dogpatch or Mars or Shanghai. Kids across the country commandeered the comics page at the breakfast table and carefully clipped their favorite stories. They filled scrapbooks, pinned them up on their walls, stashed them in neat little piles under their bed until their mothers complained of the fire hazard.

Moms never understood... they'd use most amazing image of a pterodactyl attacking a sabre toothed tiger to line the birdcage and not even see the irony. Moms are like that. But kids knew that the funny papers were a treasure trove for people with the imagination to appreciate them. Especially kids who loved to draw.

Newspaper comics were an encyclopedia of cartooning styles, and the heroes weren't just the characters in the strips... there were heroes on the other side of the pen too. We've profiled a few here in the past... Milt Gross, Alex Raymond, Milton Caniff, George McManus, Al Capp, Rube Goldberg and Walt Kelly, to name just a few. These men were the direct descendants of Thomas Nast. Their drawings had power.

Some of those kids grew up and never forgot the power of cartooning. David Apatoff is one of them. His blog, Illustration Art is a terrific resource for cartoonists and illustrators interested in all aspects of the artform. David was one of those kids who carefully collected the work of his heroes. And he just donated his boyhood collection of comic strips to the ASIFA-Hollywood Animation Archive.

The collection includes hundreds of comic pages, mostly from the late 30s and early 40s. David collected complete Sunday sections, as well as prime examples from his favorite comic strips... Prince Valiant, Flash Gordon and Tarzan. There are also special poster size pages that ran as specials in the 60s featuring Pogo, Dick Tracy, Peanuts and Dennis the Menace.

If you'll excuse me, I have a little digression to make at this point. I want to tell you a story about something that happened to me a couple of weeks ago...
There's a boy who's a big fan of the archive. He saw the article on us in the L.A. Times and made his mom bring him in for a visit. He lives in San Francisco, but he has family in Los Angeles and visits several times a year. He's only eight or nine, but he can discuss the differences in directoral style between Freleng and Jones, he knows the true story of the creation of Bugs Bunny, and he's interested in the Ub Iwerks Mickey Mouse cartoons. On his first visit, I gave him a copy of Leonard Maltin's Of Mice and Magic as a gift. He devoured it from cover to cover, and sent me a copy of the book report he did on it for class. On his visits he never fails to impress me with his enthusiasm for animation.
Last time he was here, he asked me if we could sit down and talk. He said he had an important question to ask me, and he had asked his family and teacher, but he wasn't satisfied with their answers. He wanted my opinion. He looked me straight in the eye and asked me, "Mr. Worth, was I born too late?"
I was stunned.
That's a question that every cartoonist I've ever met has asked. That same realization hit me like a ton of bricks when I was in college. Ralph Bakshi called me the next day, and I told him what this nine year old had asked me, and all he could say was "Oh my God."
The kid was waiting for my answer. I sat quietly for a second to gather my wits. I looked back at him squarely in his eyes. "I'm not going to lie to you." I said. "The short answer to your question is 'yes'. We were both born too late. The 20th century was one of the most interesting times to live in all history. The world will never be the way it was ever again. I just got a taste of the very end of that golden age myself."
"But that doesn't mean that you can't do great things. You've got a whole life ahead of you. Study hard. Work hard. Always try to improve yourself. Learn from the past and apply it to your own work. Try to be better than the rest, and leave the world a little better than you found it. With any luck, you and people like you will build a new golden age."
That answer satisfied him. He knew it was the truth.

OK. I'm speaking to all you cartoonists out there now... Look at these amazing comics that David Apatoff so generously donated. I'll be scanning them for this blog very soon. While you study them, never forget that the dreams of a million kids resided in those yellowed pages. Compare these comics to the comics in your newspaper. What happened? Why are we cheating our audience so shamefully? Cartoonists have an obligation to go out there and give kids today new dreams that are just as great as the old ones.

Many thanks to David Apatoff for this incredibly generous and thoughtful gift. I'm sure it will inspire great things.
Stephen Worth
Director
ASIFA-Hollywood
Animation Archive
.
Labels: comic strips, donate, meta, newspaper





























11 Comments:
That kid.... is awesome.
Big thanks to David Apatoff for this tremendous donation. Simply overwhelming.
Can't wait to see this collection in person.
Reading the story of the kid you mention in here, I couldn't help relate. In some ways, I was pretty much like him at his age. I even thought seriously about pursuing an animation career while in high school. Unfortunately, living in a non-conductive environment for this craft and the required high tuition fees forced me to look for other career paths. (which probably ended up being a good thing, seeing as computer animation has regrettably vanished the 2-D industry over time). Hope this kid has better luck than I did. :)
We all have gone through that "Did I came late to the party?" phase, and while sometimes it may seem so, truth is that the only permanent thing in this world is change itself, and as such we have the chance to build a "golden age" every day. It may not look the same - but the times are never the same either. All we create is, in whole or in part, a reflection of the times we live in. Everything is in a constant state of flux, and it's on us to make the better use of what we've got.
I've been following this blog for a while and I occasionally travel to L.A for work reasons. Might try next time to make the hop to Burbank and pay you a visit. Cheers.
Steve, thanks so much for the kind words, and especially for your poetic response to these old comics, which confirms that you were exactly the right place to send them. ASIFA appreciates their cultural significance, and can do a far better job than I can at making sure this beautiful work remains in circulation and accessible to people who are interested.
Just to clarify one point, these are my "boyhood collection," but that was in the 1970s when I traded for them. I may be an old goat, but I was not around in the 1930s and 40s when most of these strips came out.
David
Steve, this has to be one of the greatest posts you have ever done. I'm sure that kid is going to make one great cartoonist when he's older. Hearing this story has inspired me to work hard and hopefully I will help to usher in another golden age. CARTOONISTS UNITE!
HAPPY BIRTHDAY, STEVE! This post is one of your greatest ever!!
awesome! thanks david!
That kid summed up my feelings on the state of cartoons & comics better than anyone with just a few words.
Best wishes to him.
This is a very moving post, Steve. I think alot of us feel like that little kid.
I've only been seriously interested in cartoons for the past five or six years. This is because I finally got the internet and discovered everything I had missed. I've got ALOT of catching up to do.
Josh Heisie
Here I was thinking the 1980s was paradise lost. :)
Very moving post. But before you go telling a kid he's born too late...
The best thing about being surrounded by suckiness is that you've got the playing field all to yourself when it comes to bringing something better. The challenge is that you have to fight harder to get it across, and you have to go it alone and feed off your own energy.
Remember, it's easy to be a revolutionary in a time of revolution - it makes you less of a revolutionary and more of a follower of the trend.
It's extremely difficult for an artist to be all alone on the playing field. Artists need to be able to share ideas and feed off the culture around them. Hopefully, the internet can function as a link between like-minded people, so young cartoonists don't feel like they're the only one in the world who thinks the way they do.
See ya
Steve
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