An Afternoon in June
(William Overgard)
by Rick Marschall
by Rick Marschall
A Crowded Life in
Cartooning owes a lot to serendipity.
June, 1967, a sunny,
gorgeous Spring day. I was a high school senior at Northern Valley Regional High
School in Old Tappan, NJ. School let out early for seniors, because the senior
prom was that night. I started to drive home, thinking this was too beautiful a
day to mark time and shuffle around with friends. Neither did I really want to stare
at my rented tux till witching hour.
When I dead-ended at
Piermont Road, instead of turning right toward my home in Closter, I
impulsively turned left, determined to do a little sight-seeing. A “Sunday
Drive” on a weekday. (Back when gasoline was cheap, people used to meander
aimlessly in their cars on weekends.)
Northward I drove, into the
town of Piermont on the Hudson (where years later I ran an antiques shop); Tappan,
where Major John Andre was hanged for plotting with Benedict Arnold during the
Revolution; and other quaint New York towns just over the state line.
In the little town of Stony
Point I spotted an old barn that presented itself as a crafts and collectible
shop (probably “shoppe”). I felt lucky, not merely aimless, and often have
followed my instincts at flea markets and used-book stores. Thee place offered more
local crafts than old artifacts, but one painting on the wall caught my eye.
It obviously was new, not
old, but I recall was painted on wood and had an intentionally “primitive” look. It was the artist’s name
that really caught my attention. “William Overgard.”
My local paper, The
Record, ran Steve Roper – written by Allen Saunders, drawn by
William Overgard. The signature was his; what a coincidence. I asked the guy
behind the counter if he knew Overgard. Yes. Did he live locally? Yes, just up
the hill. I introduced myself as a comics fan, and wondered if I could borrow
the shop’s phone and call Mr Overgard.
“Sure.” Serendipity.
Mr Overgard answered the
phone, and I went through the same story I had just spieled, but added a few bona
fides about cartoonists I knew and some of the work I had done.
He invited me up the hill.
A wonderful man, working in a wonderful studio, in a wonderful centuries-old
house. We spent a wonderful few hours – cartoonists were invariably gracious to
young aspirants when I was a young aspirant. But I was aware of the looming
prom night, and Sue Keel never knew how close I came to “calling in sick.”
As he lived less than half
an hour from my house, I was to visit Bill Overgard more times, even though I
left for college a few months later. We kept in touch, and a few years later I
was his Comics Editor at Publishers Syndicate in Chicago. One of the brush
fires I was hired to put out was Bill’s feud with Allen Saunders. It was
decades old. Saunders wrote the strip that Overgard joined in 1954, and his
scripts came in the form of pencil-sketch panels – the plotting, pacing,
composition all laid out (with Saunders’ insistence on compliance), and with
bubble-headed characters, no less; for that was the extent of Allen’s artistic
talent.
Overgard considered himself
a writer (indeed he wrote paperback action novels and screenplays), and he
wanted a wilder feel to Roper. In two years he prevailed upon Saunders
to add a roughneck sidekick for the urbane newsman Roper, and thus Mike Nomad
was born, a crewcut beefcake who soon dominated the strip and eventually shared
the title.
Eventually Saunders
surrendered the plotting and dialog, and after a creative tug of war (where I
was tasked as referee) Bill took over the writing and layouts. Overgard was
a talented writer, and had great natural instincts for comic-strip
storytelling. In another syndicate dust-up given to me, Saunders’ long-brewing
feud with another collaborator – Alfred Andriola on Kerry Drake – had to
be solved. That strip eventually was scripted by Overgard, too; and
long-overdue credit given to ghost artist Sururi Gumen. (Some day here I will
share back-stories of those strips and those creators and those wars.)
Closing circles, in
serendipitous ways, a few years later I received a call from Sid Goldberg, my
old chief at United Features Syndicate. (Sid’s wife Lucianne was on an ABC-TV
special this week as the provocateur who prodded Linda Tripp to prod
Monica Lewinsky to save the blue dress with Bill Clinton’s ick on it) – Sid has
just signed Bill Overgard to draw a strip, Rudy, about an insouciant
talking chimp in La-La Hollywood.
Overgard had left Roper
around 1985, succeeded by my old friend Fran Matera, whom I had tried to
connect to Publishers when I was Editor. Cartoonist/columnist Harry Neigher, a
mentor of mine, had introduced us. Fran, back in the day, had drawn Dickie
Dare, succeeding Milton Caniff, Coulton Waugh, and Mabel “Odin” Burwick.
Rudy was a terrific strip, full of outrageous sarcasm, in-jokes,
parodies, and double-entrendres. Sid knew it would be a tough sell… and
it was. He asked if I would help promote it – not even knowing my friendship
with Bill Overgard. But I truly liked the strip – Sid muscled a reprint book of
its first episodes – and I wrote glowing reviews. It was a sad day when the
promising, eccentric strip died.
A little while later, in
further serendipity, Bill wrote scripts for ThunderCats at the
invitation of Leonard Starr. He had also invited me and Ron Goulart to write
scripts for the TV cartoons; I later learned that Larry Kenny, country disc
jockey who also lived in Westport and was in the Imus in the Morning cast,
was one of the characters’ voices.
I suppose I would have
gotten to know Bill Overgard eventually, since he was in the stable of
Publishers Syndicate. Yet I likely would not have developed the friendship we
had, and probably not have visited that fabulous farmland and Colonial home in
Stony Point – a part of the world he fell in love with whilst briefly working
for Milt Caniff in nearby New City.
Piermont, Tappan, Sparkill,
Stony Point… all those wonderful towns in the Palisades-hugging rural New York
State. The lower Catskills of Rip Van Winkle legends. It seemed, and still
does, unbelievable that their winding roads, dense trees, and old barns are a
mere 45 minutes from Broadway. To me – despite the fact it is not on any map,
nor possessing a postal code – it will forever be the place of Serendipity.
[By the way, I donned the
tux and barely made it to Sue’s house, and the prom, in time. Another
off-script serendipity occurred after the prom. Many kids went “upstate”
afterwards – living on the border of New Jersey, seniors were attracted to bars
where the drinking age was a year lower – but I suggested we do something
different. No, not that. Being so close to New York City, we drove to Fort Lee on
a lark, and walked across the George Washington Bridge. Around midnight, she in
her gown, me in white jacket and boutonniere.
[I heard on the car radio
that the United Nations Security Council was meeting in emergency, overnight
session. The Six-Day War! A crazy idea formed after I dropped Sue home… and I
drove back to the George Washington Bridge, and headed south on the FDR Drive.
How could I miss a chance to witness history? Around the UN there bizarre
claques of protesters and celebrants, but I worked my way through… and actually
secured a gallery pass. I sat in the balcony till dawn, listening to delegates’
speeches (I recall Jamil Baroody of Saudi Arabia decrying Western influences in
the Middle East: “We don’t want your hots dogs and mini-skirts”), through the overnight emergency
session, sitting there in a white tuxedo jacket.
[In a Crowded Life, that
turned out to be one crowded day…]
The Comics are a Serious Business by Allen Saunders HERE
Teepee Town to Times Square HERE
The Soaps on Sunday HERE
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Great story!
ReplyDeleteWell, I'm glad we did end up going to prom and I thought the bridge idea came even earlier before that, but I do remember being so disappointed that we didn't get very far crossing the bridge since the wind was making me the clanger to the bell it was creating with my long dress. It was a bell skirt, after all. I do know it was a very fun night with a crazy adventure. Sue (Keel)
ReplyDeleteYes, fun. Serendipity. The weather in the dark night was great, but, yes, windy. I believe we braved it as far as the marker sign along the walkway, halfway across, so we could say we walked all the way to New York City...
ReplyDelete