Father Knows Best.
by Rick Marschall.
I wonder, sometimes,
if I would have had this “crowded life” in comics if it had not been for my
father. My parents and my supportive family.
This week upcoming
will see what would have been my parents’ 72nd anniversary, so
my memories are fresher, my
recollections a bit accelerated.
My dad never drew, or
aspired to be a cartoonist. But he loved cartoons and strips. He had saved,
from his own younger years, a long run of Judge Magazine, beginning with
a 1927 issue with a cover cartoon by S J Perelman. I managed a bit of homage by
making that cartoon the cover of an anthology of Perelman’s work I edited years
later. Ironically, When our family moved from a brownstone in Queens to a
spacious New Jersey suburban home, he sold the stack of Judges. He
almost immediately, and with subsequent frequency, regretted the decision.
But he loved comic
strips, maybe more than anyone lacking artistic ambitions could. In New Jersey,
he subscribed to the Bergen Record; and on Sundays the New York Times
and the Newark Star-Ledger. However… he subscribed, or would buy at
newsstands (remember them?) papers he would not read at all, except for the
funnies. New York City: Sunday News; the Mirror; the Journal-American;
the Herald-Tribune. Long Island:
The Press. New Jersey: Newark News; Atlantic City Press (all
the NEA strips; saved by his old Army buddy for me); Philadelphia: The
Bulletin; The Philadephia Inquirer in its garish roto-colors. Also
saved by family friends for me.
I say “saved for me,”
but he devoured them all with equal gusto. And saved them all neatly for me, a
percentage of my tonnage of comics. He also neatly cut out daily-strip pages of
comics; and likewise saved them neatly. And our archival trove was of more than
New York-area comics. Dad visited out-of-town newspaper stands in Manhattan,
where he worked, and brought home random Sunday papers from random cities – I
remember being amazed at the Chattanooga Times, which resembled The
New York Times (same ownership) except that it ran comics! Perhaps making
up for the Gray Lady’s sins of omission up north, it carried two color
comic sections every weekend, a tabloid and a standard section.
He loved almost all
the comics, but he invariably laughed the hardest, and most frequently, at –
hard to guess, but hard to argue – Archie, Hubert, and The
Jackson Twins. In later years I was able to secure sketches, signed books,
or originals of these, and other cartoonists’ creations. Bill Watterson
inscribed one of his Calvin and Hobbes collections to my father.
Lank Leonard (Mickey Finn) was a cartoonist we saw on Florida trips. One year he invited us to join the cartoonists’ contingent, a couple tables at a Welcome Home event for Jackie Gleason, who had traveled abroad between seasons of his American Scene TV show. Jackie was attempting to make Miami a center of television production. We also met Art Carney that evening. |
He infected me with
pleasant “conditions.” I am not sure if I would have tried to draw, or
earn my living as a cartoonist for years, without the first germs. Would I have
collected comics? Would I have collected, on broader horizons, first editions
and rare books of literature, otherwise?
I was able, in a
properly ordered and organized life cycle, to reciprocate in various ways. When
I interviewed Bob and Ray – sitting in their WOR studio for an entire broadcast
(and risking hernias, trying not to laugh out loud) I asked if they minded if
he joined me. Dad also played jazz
piano, and after I developed a friendship with the great Teddy Wilson – one of
his stylistic idols – I introduced them and we attended an intimate
performance. And so forth.
There is a saying
that The boy is father to the man. In Marty Marshall’s case, the boyish father
was father to the boy who became the man I am, at least chronologically. As we
must all be grateful to our parents, I thank God every day… and I am not even
talking about faith or citizenship or being kind to dogs.
If you have endured
this far, glean a lesson, if I may suggest.
Appreciate the deeds your parents planted in you. And be intentional
about planting seeds in this who follow you.
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