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R**Z
My Harvey Kurtzman
Harvey Kurtzman was a cultural icon of the 1950s and ‘60s. But he wasn’t as famous as other heroes of those times, so many details about his life are not widely known.That gap has been filled by Bill Schelly’s biography: Harvey Kurtzman—The Man Who Created Mad and Revolutionized Humor in America. The title is not overstated.Kurtzman may not have been photographed by Avedon, but he finally has the full-dress biography he deserves.It’s all here—Kurtzman’s Brooklyn-Bronx upbringing, his time in New York City’s High School of Music & Art (M&A), his apprenticeship in the downtown comic book mill and his hooking up with young publisher William M. Gaines.Kurtzman evolved from being a great war comics writer who painstakingly created vellum roughs from which M&A classmates like Will Elder would draw and ink the final strips, into the force behind Mad. And there he found his true calling—as a satirist.Mad “questioned the status quo at a time of social conformity, creating a mindset that grew into what came to be called the ‘counterculture,’” Schelly writes.It also inspired a generation of high school goof-offs like me.I read The Bedside Mad paperback at age 13, and was reduced to hysterics by the opening strip: Outer Sanctum, the story of Heap, a living garbage pile created by a mad scientist. I didn’t even realize it was a parody of an old radio show.As funny as the meticulously crafted story were Will Elder’s sight gags—like a man in his underwear fleeing in terror from Heap while his pants run in the opposite direction—and the repetitive Yiddishisms.Enflamed, I procured four of the five other Mad paperbacks then out: The Mad Reader, Mad Strikes Back, Inside Mad and Utterly Mad—and consumed them in one Saturday evening.Put together by Kurtzman, these collections contained all the great parodies of ‘50s culture: Starchie, Mickey Rodent, Superduperman, Hah Noon and, “What’s My Shine,” in which the Army-McCarthy hearings are restaged as a TV quiz show (the five-o’clock-shadowed McCarthy keeps saying, “point of order").“Mad” was the perfect word to describe this stuff. “What were you on?” a fan asked Kurtzman.What I didn’t realize—until reading the increasingly tepid magazine itself—was that Kurtzman was no longer there. Don't ask how I even knew who Kurtzman was given that Gaines took his name off the paperbacks.Around that time, though, I stumbled onto Harvey Kurtzman’s Jungle Book, a darker, more adult paperback that he drew himself without assistance from Elder or anyone.The highlight was the Organization Male In the Gray Flannel Executive Suite, a parody of publishing in which an old man is pushed out of his job inking the black boxes in crossword puzzles by a younger man. (Kurtzman had actually worked on crossword puzzles, Schelly reports).Schelly tells the story of Mad and its wild success, its conversion from comic book to magazine at Kurtzman’s insistence and Kurtzman’s bitter split with Gaines over money and control.We follow Kurtzman through creation of the Jungle Book, (for which he was paid only $1,500), the frustrating Trump, Humbug and Help magazine years, and finally his seeming success with Little Annie Fanny, the lavish color comic strip he did in Playboy with Will Elder.In one Little Annie Fanny episode, Daddy Bigbucks kicks a legless man on a cart the day after Christmas to whom he had given money the day before. “Are there no prisons, are there no workhouses, the treadmill and the poor law—are they in full vigor?” he demands. The man’s legs appear as his cart falls over.None of this was easy. Kurtzman is portrayed as a suburban middle-class family man who struggled financially throughout his career and had to put up with micro-management from Hugh Hefner. Sometimes he was brought to tears. Such is the life of a freelancer.Schelly moves on to Kurtzman’s teaching career at the School of Visual Arts, and his later bouts with Parkinson’s and cancer. And he records the admiration of younger comic artists like Robert Crumb and Art Spiegelman, some of whom Kurtzman used in Help magazine.Schelly also lets us in on Kurtzman’s other work that is not so well known—like his version of The Christmas Carol, a planned book that would have been an early graphic novel. And there is at least one big scoop here—that the FBI investigated Kurtzman at J. Edgar Hoover’s behest, although it determined that he was no threat to the United States.It’s all well-sourced, with a full index, and very readable.Of course, I have a couple of quibbles. For one, I don’t agree with Schelly (or Kurtzman) that Jungle Book is less than Kutzman’s peak: I believe it is an underground masterpiece.But we all have our favorites in Kurtzman’s immense body of work. Bill Schelly has provided a solid biography. And this Kurtzman admirer thanks him heartily.
K**O
A Furshlugginer's Review.
Harvey was the "Cat's Meow" for cartoonists. He would hand back your art work to you with a tracing paper overlay peppered with notes and corrections. Then he would disappear and return shortly to hand you a frosted mug of beer. The point is Harvey wanted you to get it right but he wanted you to feel good about it. Mr. Schelly writes about Kurtzman the Cartoonist, Kurtzman the Editor and Kurtzman the Icon. Kurtzman is revealed as sui generis Mensch whose generosity to cartoonists big and small reminds me of the current John Stewart's disposition toward his fellow comedians. I think Mr. Schelly's biography of Mr. Kurtzman is TERRIFIC, but admittedly, I'm partial.Mr. Stout has written ( on this site) an eloquent and objective rational for reading this book.In yet another review in the Seattle Weekly News Mark Rahner says " if you could shine a black light on American Pop Culture, you'd see Harvey Kurtzman's DNA splattered all over it. And not just a little bit. A lot. Everywhere."I can only add to this that Mr. Schelly , an artist and Comics Scholar has really done his homework. His book is exhaustively researched. I particularly enjoyed reading Mr. Schelly's descriptions of Kurtzman's drawing process. Mr. Schelly also seems to have interviewed everyone from Robert Crumb to Gloria Steinem, from Bill Stout to Terry Gilliam. These interviews bring Kurtzman to life on the page.I think this book would make a GREAT movie. The question is whose hand would the producers cast to facsimilate the lyrical , animated, and elegant drawings of a modern master?
W**T
A Rock-Solid Kurtzman Biography
This is an outstanding book, a real work of well-researched scholarship. It is also an important book, as Harvey Kurtzman should be a household name in America --- and throughout the world.Harvey Kurtzman not only created MAD (he wrote and laid-out the first 23 issues before he changed it from a comic book to the black and white humor magazine we recognize today), he introduced Terry Gilliam to John Cleese (thereby becoming one of the sparks that lit the fire known as Monty Python's Flying Circus), wrote and laid-out the very first realistic war comics (the first war comics that told the gritty truth and did not glorify war) and created "Little Annie Fanny" for Playboy, as well as the magazines Help!, Humbug and Trump. Harvey was the first to publish future ZAP! Comix cartoonists Robert Crumb and Gilbert Shelton (who were both inspired by the subversiveness of Kurtzman's humor; Harvey is considered the Godfather of Underground Comix) and played a huge role in the launching of many prominent artists' careers (including my own) and was an inspiration to legions more. One of the two highest awards in comics is named the Harvey Award (the other being the Eisner Award).The complexities that made up Harvey Kurtzman are detailed here with input from hundreds of sources. If you have any interest at all in the history of comics or the ups and downs of its greatest creators, then you won't want to miss this important book.
C**N
The definitive book on Kurtzman
Don't expect to much art in this book as it is mostly a biography. But in a time when most of books about comic artists are mostly pictures and no words or context, this book does an amazing job of telling the whole story of Harvey Kurtz an, with even the smallest anecdotes. His story is not only of interest to comic fans, but is a story plagued with hits and misses, with moments of briliance and obscurity and honestly, of good and bad decisions. I just couldn't stop reading this book to know more about this genius of American culture. Fantagraphics does an excellent job of preserving great comic history with this book.
R**A
More thanks than a review
I was a student of Harvey’s at the School Of Visual Arts. What I learned in his class was just to be me. A lesson I still carry with me. Thanks, Harvey.
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