No Straight Lines
- Description
- Reviews
- Citation
- Cataloging
- Transcript
NO STRAIGHT LINES: THE RISE OF QUEER COMICS tells the story of five scrappy and pioneering LGBTQ cartoonists- Alison Bechdel, Jennifer Camper, Howard Cruse, Rupert Kinnard, and Mary Wings- who depicted everything from the AIDS crisis, coming out, same-sex marriage, and themes of race, gender, and disability. The film explores how these trailblazing LGBTQ artists resisted censorship and displayed tremendous courage and conviction in providing an uncensored window into queer lives from the 1970s onward, beginning at a time in which there was no other genuine queer storytelling in popular culture. Equally engaging are their personal journeys, as they helped build a queer comics underground that has been able to grow and evolve in remarkable ways–against all odds. Peabody Award-winning filmmaker Vivian Kleiman weaves together intimate conversations with these foundational artists and younger cartoonists who were inspired by their work, resulting in a rich tapestry of diverse voices and images to explore the power of self-representation.
Stanford University | Estelle Freedman, Edgar E. Robinson Professor in United States History Emeriti
"No Straight Lines provides a lively and engaging account of lesbian and gay comics in the U.S. from their origins in 1970s counter-cultures to their establishment in the 21st century. Driven by the compelling personal histories of pioneers such as Howard Cruse and Alison Bechdel, the film takes care to draw out intergenerational influences, technological change, and the non-linear trajectory of queer comics from margin to mainstream."
Los Angeles Times
“Quietly powerful.”
IndieWire
"10 Must-See Films"
The Guardian
“A rich tapestry of interwoven voices and images.”
San Francisco Chronicle
“Kleiman tells a wider and deeper tale about the power of seeing one’s experience represented… Kleiman made the artwork itself the star of film.”
ArtNet
“One of ‘6 Gripping Art Films to See at the 2021 Tribeca Film Festival"
Filmmaker Magazine
“Kleiman does a phenomenal job… A film that evokes laughter with the timeless humor of queer comics while engaging as well with the AIDS crisis and other elements of historical LGBT political oppression, No Straight Lines succeeds in blending history with narrative, ultimately doing justice to the rich history of queer comics.”
CBS News
“An entertaining and enlightening documentary… Traces the evolution of comics as a social movement, and artistic expression as a vital channel of sexuality.”
Citation
Main credits
Kleiman, Vivian (film director)
Kleiman, Vivian (film producer)
Kleiman, Vivian (interviewer)
Hall, Justin (film producer)
Bechdel, Alison (on-screen participant)
Camper, Jennifer (on-screen participant)
Cruse, Howard (on-screen participant)
Kinnard, Rupert (on-screen participant)
Wings, Mary (on-screen participant)
Other credits
Edited by Christiane Badgley, Linda Peckham; director of photography, Andrew Black; original music, René-Marc Bini; art director, animator, Suzanne Slatcher.
Distributor subjects
Community,Art,Humor,Activism,Zines,"Graphic Memoir","Self Representation","Queer History",LGBTQ,cartoonist,cartoonists,cartoon,"Alison Bechdel","Jennifer Camper","Howard Cruse","Rupert Kinnard","Mary Wings",AIDS, "AIDS crisis","same sex marriage","coming out",race,gender,disabilities,"queer storytelling","popular culture","pop culture","queer comics","queer storytelling",Keywords
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[Charming instrumental music]
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[Jen Camper]: When
I was a teenager,
00:00:11.560 --> 00:00:14.520
that’s when I first found
00:00:14.520 --> 00:00:17.120
Roberta Gregory and
Mary Wings’ comics.
00:00:17.120 --> 00:00:22.800
And I remember reading those
and just being transfixed.
00:00:22.800 --> 00:00:24.800
[Mary Wings]: I was very
tired of feeling hidden.
00:00:24.800 --> 00:00:27.800
I was very tired of
feeling misunderstood.
00:00:27.800 --> 00:00:30.480
I needed to speak
to other people.
00:00:30.480 --> 00:00:33.080
[Rupert Kinnard]: I started
creating these black characters
00:00:33.080 --> 00:00:36.200
and I was just super
into drawing
00:00:36.200 --> 00:00:38.200
the Brown Bomber...
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The Brown Bomber was
not only African American,
00:00:41.480 --> 00:00:44.760
but he was a gay superhero.
00:00:44.760 --> 00:00:49.760
[Jen Camper]: Defining ourselves
was an exciting thing for me.
00:00:49.760 --> 00:00:51.080
[Howard Cruse]:
Doing Gay Comix
00:00:51.080 --> 00:00:54.160
essentially was a turning
point for me artistically.
00:00:54.160 --> 00:00:57.040
The experience of
being totally honest,
00:00:57.040 --> 00:01:02.120
suddenly it’s a greater
chance for high voltage art.
00:01:02.120 --> 00:01:04.120
[Mary Wings]:
It’s so out there
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about something
that is so hidden.
00:01:05.520 --> 00:01:08.840
I was just drawn to doing it.
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[Alison Bechdel]:
I remember so clearly
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when I discovered
Gay Comix.
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All of a sudden,
here was this permission,
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and a roadmap for
exactly what I felt like
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I wanted to do in my life.
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[Paint splatters]
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[Meow!]
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[Charming instrumentals continue]
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[Ajuan Mance]:
The idea of creating comics
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that aren't really about
making people heroic
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is one of the
things that I think
00:01:47.080 --> 00:01:48.680
queer comics
have done the best.
00:01:50.960 --> 00:01:52.400
[Maia Kobabe]: I grew to
hate being photographed
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as a teenager,
specifically after puberty
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and it was because
I didn’t recognize myself
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in a photograph.
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But when you are
drawing yourself,
00:02:01.040 --> 00:02:02.760
you can draw yourself
however you want.
00:02:02.760 --> 00:02:04.760
And that is another
reason why I think comics
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is a media that is so
friendly to a queer author.
00:02:11.040 --> 00:02:13.040
[Ivan Velez Jr.]: You know
you’re gay, you’re lesbian,
00:02:13.040 --> 00:02:15.040
whatever you are,
your identity,
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all of a sudden you don’t
know how to be that.
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There’s no representation,
there’s nothing at all.
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No fairy tales even.
No movies.
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- As a kid, I was always
on the lookout for
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something that resonated with
my perspective of the world
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which was, you know, tough,
beautiful, kick-ass women.
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[Adventurous music]
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And so in the comics
those were the kinds of
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female characters
I was drawn to.
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Especially the villains.
00:02:47.160 --> 00:02:48.440
Like in Steve Canyon,
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the female villains were gorgeous
and powerful and exotic.
00:02:56.440 --> 00:03:00.800
And then of course there
was Hank in Brenda Starr,
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who was very
masculine appearing.
00:03:03.800 --> 00:03:06.080
So, I was finding
dykes in comics
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from a very early
age, I think.
00:03:16.200 --> 00:03:18.080
[Howard Cruse]:
When I was in my early twenties
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and had ambitions,
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I thought I would do
a newspaper strip.
00:03:22.160 --> 00:03:25.480
Comic books were
considered slightly lowbrow
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compared to newspaper strips
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‘cause everyone
saw newspaper strips,
00:03:28.480 --> 00:03:32.760
and people became
famous and rich.
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So that seemed like
a worthy ambition.
00:03:36.080 --> 00:03:38.080
Eventually I learned that uh,
00:03:38.080 --> 00:03:39.960
newspaper strips
were highly censored.
00:03:39.960 --> 00:03:42.040
[Horror music, spooky cackling]
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In the 50s there
was a big scandal
00:03:44.040 --> 00:03:47.040
over the horror comics
and crime comics,
00:03:47.040 --> 00:03:49.360
widely known
as EC Comics.
00:03:49.360 --> 00:03:51.720
Kids loved them.
00:03:51.720 --> 00:03:55.160
Parents hated them,
government people hated them.
00:03:58.160 --> 00:04:02.640
There was a book about how
horrible comics were for kids.
00:04:02.640 --> 00:04:05.600
There started to be
censorship in the air.
00:04:05.600 --> 00:04:07.640
The Comics Code Authority
was imposed,
00:04:07.640 --> 00:04:10.920
and any comic that was
displayed on a news stand
00:04:10.920 --> 00:04:14.320
had to follow a
certain set of rules.
00:04:14.320 --> 00:04:18.600
You could never show law
enforcement in a bad light.
00:04:18.600 --> 00:04:21.000
There could be no mention
of homosexuality.
00:04:21.000 --> 00:04:24.280
All sorts of things that were
designed to reinforce
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the most bland vision of what
American life should be like.
00:04:28.600 --> 00:04:30.600
[Horror music,
pages turning]
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[Rock instrumentals]
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Then when you had the
counterculture revolution,
00:04:43.160 --> 00:04:44.880
underground comix
would never have passed
00:04:44.880 --> 00:04:46.280
the Comics Code Authority.
00:04:46.280 --> 00:04:48.880
They were sold in general in
head shops, where they sold
00:04:48.880 --> 00:04:52.160
drug paraphernalia
and psychedelic posters
00:04:52.160 --> 00:04:55.840
and things that hippies liked.
00:04:55.840 --> 00:04:59.160
Anything you could think of could
be in an underground comic.
00:04:59.160 --> 00:05:02.040
[Rock music intensifies]
[Gunshots fire]
00:05:07.320 --> 00:05:11.000
They were full of stuff about
drugs and uncensored sex,
00:05:11.000 --> 00:05:12.320
because underground comics
00:05:12.320 --> 00:05:15.040
were only sold to
adults, theoretically.
00:05:18.000 --> 00:05:20.600
[Accordion plays]
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[Mary Wings]: We felt
very alone and isolated.
00:05:27.280 --> 00:05:29.000
Most of our parents
hated us,
00:05:29.000 --> 00:05:30.880
or would have
nothing to do with us.
00:05:30.880 --> 00:05:32.600
And we were
all living in secret.
00:05:32.600 --> 00:05:36.280
We started to read all
the underground things
00:05:36.280 --> 00:05:37.880
that were coming out.
00:05:37.880 --> 00:05:39.880
[Rock instrumentals return]
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I had seen Robert Crumb
comic books,
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which were really,
really disturbing and you know,
00:05:48.560 --> 00:05:52.280
an example of why feminists
would want to make their own.
00:05:52.280 --> 00:05:54.560
[Accordion plays]
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So, there was a
Portland women's
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bookstore and I happened
upon Trina Robbins,
00:06:04.920 --> 00:06:08.040
the Wimmen’s Comix.
00:06:08.040 --> 00:06:14.040
And I was so happy to see there
in Wimmen’s Comix was,
00:06:14.040 --> 00:06:16.320
“Sandy Comes Out.”
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And then
I was disappointed!
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It looked very
superficial to me.
00:06:28.320 --> 00:06:30.000
It's sort of as if,
one day she wakes up,
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she takes a karate class,
she sleeps with a woman,
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men can't come into her house.
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She's going to
wear overalls forever
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and never
shave her armpits.
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Goodbye, the end.
00:06:41.280 --> 00:06:43.600
And I thought, well,
00:06:43.600 --> 00:06:46.600
this has nothing to do
with what it really feels like.
00:06:51.160 --> 00:06:52.880
And I didn't know
what I was doing.
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I grabbed a Rapidograph pen,
00:06:54.560 --> 00:06:57.160
and I sat on a sofa
with bad lighting,
00:06:57.160 --> 00:06:59.760
and I just sort
of went at it.
00:07:10.120 --> 00:07:13.120
Come Out Comix is a very
simple story about a woman
00:07:13.120 --> 00:07:17.520
who gets attracted to
another woman and, oh dear,
00:07:17.520 --> 00:07:18.800
what are they
going to do about it
00:07:18.800 --> 00:07:20.520
and do they really
feel that way?
00:07:32.960 --> 00:07:37.360
I really wanted to do something
that showed all the emotion,
00:07:37.360 --> 00:07:40.960
all the sort of worry and trauma
that you have about coming out
00:07:40.960 --> 00:07:46.960
and all those things
about really being a queer.
00:07:46.960 --> 00:07:50.040
[Printing press rustles]
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I did have two friends
who had an offset press
00:07:52.960 --> 00:07:55.960
and they were two women
who ran a karate studio.
00:07:55.960 --> 00:07:58.960
So, we kind of printed
it in the off hours.
00:08:02.440 --> 00:08:04.120
I created Come Out Comix
00:08:04.120 --> 00:08:07.120
with absolutely no
idea of distribution.
00:08:11.440 --> 00:08:14.120
I'm not even sure the word
“marketing” had been invented.
00:08:14.120 --> 00:08:16.720
I mean it was sort of the
boondocks, the nowhere.
00:08:16.720 --> 00:08:19.400
It was the, the field was
open, it didn't exist.
00:08:19.400 --> 00:08:22.120
When I think more and
more about why I did it,
00:08:22.120 --> 00:08:23.400
it was just a gift.
00:08:27.680 --> 00:08:29.080
I wanted women to
have some things that
00:08:29.080 --> 00:08:31.840
mirror their experience,
that felt good.
00:08:34.120 --> 00:08:36.200
Cause most of us just settled
down into lives that are,
00:08:36.200 --> 00:08:37.840
you know,
pretty repetitive.
00:08:37.840 --> 00:08:42.200
And I wanted my lesbian sisters
to go on an insane adventure
00:08:42.200 --> 00:08:44.520
while they're sitting
in their arm chairs
00:08:44.520 --> 00:08:46.200
and they have to go
to work the next day.
00:08:47.800 --> 00:08:50.400
[Dog barks along to accordion]
00:08:50.400 --> 00:08:55.680
Come Out Comix came out of a
period of great transformation.
00:08:55.680 --> 00:08:57.680
Women were transforming
themselves,
00:08:57.680 --> 00:09:00.160
breaking barriers
right and left.
00:09:00.160 --> 00:09:03.040
It was a very,
very exciting time.
00:09:06.760 --> 00:09:10.720
I had no idea that I was going to
be part of such a big adventure.
00:09:12.120 --> 00:09:14.440
[Charming accordion continues]
00:09:22.040 --> 00:09:24.000
[Meggie Ramm]: I was in
the room with Mary Wings,
00:09:24.000 --> 00:09:26.400
Trina Robbins,
and Lee Marrs,
00:09:26.400 --> 00:09:29.000
and I definitely had
a panic attack.
00:09:29.000 --> 00:09:31.720
I remember us all sitting
on the couch together
00:09:31.720 --> 00:09:35.120
and them telling us how they
first got started in comics
00:09:35.120 --> 00:09:37.400
and how drastically
different it was,
00:09:37.400 --> 00:09:39.000
and it was just
so overwhelming
00:09:39.000 --> 00:09:41.680
because I was just so
grateful that these people
00:09:41.680 --> 00:09:43.400
had come before
and had helped me
00:09:43.400 --> 00:09:45.400
get to the point
where I am today,
00:09:45.400 --> 00:09:48.000
where I can make comics
about being a queer person
00:09:48.000 --> 00:09:53.400
and have people acknowledge
them and take them seriously.
00:09:53.400 --> 00:09:54.400
And without them,
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I don’t think I would’ve
been able to do that.
00:09:58.080 --> 00:09:59.960
[Breena Nuñez]:
I was born in San Francisco,
00:09:59.960 --> 00:10:02.360
and just knowing, like,
00:10:02.360 --> 00:10:05.960
years later that there was an
underground comics movement
00:10:05.960 --> 00:10:07.080
but there was also like,
00:10:07.080 --> 00:10:10.680
this critique initiated by like
women and queer folks,
00:10:10.680 --> 00:10:13.360
like to create
their own space,
00:10:13.360 --> 00:10:16.360
and to know that these
are like the footsteps
00:10:16.360 --> 00:10:21.040
that we’re walking in
for this generation,
00:10:21.040 --> 00:10:23.960
that’s something I don’t
want to ever forget.
00:10:35.040 --> 00:10:36.440
[Rupert Kinnard]:
When I was a kid,
00:10:36.440 --> 00:10:39.040
I got into so many
different comic books.
00:10:39.040 --> 00:10:40.720
I got into The Fantastic Four.
00:10:40.720 --> 00:10:42.120
I really, really
loved them.
00:10:42.120 --> 00:10:44.120
They were my
favorite comic strip.
00:10:44.120 --> 00:10:48.000
I drew Batman,
I drew Spiderman, Superman,
00:10:48.000 --> 00:10:50.000
and I drew them
well enough that
00:10:50.000 --> 00:10:52.400
I gained notoriety in
the neighborhood.
00:10:52.400 --> 00:10:54.000
Oh, Rupert can
draw the Hulk,
00:10:54.000 --> 00:10:56.000
have Rupert draw the Hulk.
00:10:56.000 --> 00:10:58.080
[Groovy instrumental music]
00:11:02.480 --> 00:11:04.480
I grew up in Chicago and
00:11:04.480 --> 00:11:08.760
my hero in popular culture
was Muhammad Ali.
00:11:08.760 --> 00:11:12.160
[Announcer speaks,
audience booms]
00:11:12.160 --> 00:11:16.080
Muhammad Ali didn't merely
say he was the greatest.
00:11:16.080 --> 00:11:19.160
He said, “I am so pretty.”
00:11:19.160 --> 00:11:21.440
- He’s too ugly to be
the world's champ.
00:11:21.440 --> 00:11:24.440
The world's champ should
be pretty like me!
00:11:24.440 --> 00:11:27.440
[Rupert Kinnard]:
The degree to which white people
00:11:27.440 --> 00:11:32.040
hated his brashness
increased my love for him.
00:11:34.040 --> 00:11:38.120
One of the things that
struck me was his confidence
00:11:38.120 --> 00:11:41.120
during a period of time where
Black men were almost like
00:11:41.120 --> 00:11:44.040
not wanting to be seen,
you know,
00:11:44.040 --> 00:11:47.720
be literally the invisible man.
00:11:47.720 --> 00:11:52.120
Once I started becoming really
enamored of Muhammad Ali
00:11:52.120 --> 00:11:55.120
and his message,
it was like a wake-up call.
00:11:55.120 --> 00:11:58.400
I looked at these characters
I was drawing and I thought,
00:11:58.400 --> 00:12:04.600
my God, why the hell am
I drawing white superheroes?
00:12:04.600 --> 00:12:08.000
And there was a
certain degree of anger.
00:12:08.000 --> 00:12:11.320
The word that keeps
coming to mind,
00:12:11.320 --> 00:12:15.320
oddly enough,
is bamboozled.
00:12:15.320 --> 00:12:22.920
I felt that I had accepted that
the world of comics were…
00:12:22.920 --> 00:12:24.600
were white.
00:12:24.600 --> 00:12:28.320
And that led me to
create Superbad.
00:12:28.320 --> 00:12:32.280
He had this giant ‘fro that
was designed to strike fear
00:12:32.280 --> 00:12:34.880
in the hearts of
every white person.
00:12:34.880 --> 00:12:39.280
His costume was the
Black Liberation flag colors.
00:12:39.280 --> 00:12:43.600
It was the very beginning of my
comics for me being cathartic.
00:12:43.600 --> 00:12:45.560
[Pensive piano music]
00:12:54.280 --> 00:12:56.160
I decided I wanted to create
00:12:56.160 --> 00:13:00.160
a more whimsical superhero
that was more original.
00:13:00.160 --> 00:13:02.360
And I actually started
discovering the history
00:13:02.360 --> 00:13:05.960
of another boxer:
Joe Lewis.
00:13:05.960 --> 00:13:08.640
Joe Lewis always
struck me as more meek,
00:13:08.640 --> 00:13:10.320
more humble.
00:13:10.320 --> 00:13:13.920
His nickname was
the Brown Bomber.
00:13:13.920 --> 00:13:17.320
I started drawing these little
sketches of this character.
00:13:17.320 --> 00:13:21.000
He had these socks that went
up to right below his knees
00:13:21.000 --> 00:13:23.320
and a cape.
00:13:23.320 --> 00:13:27.600
I just became more and more
humored by the whimsy.
00:13:27.600 --> 00:13:29.600
[Playful instrumental music]
00:13:39.280 --> 00:13:43.880
I was at Cornell College in Iowa
and I was approached by
00:13:43.880 --> 00:13:46.560
the editor of the
school newspaper
00:13:46.560 --> 00:13:50.560
saying that they wanted
an editorial cartoonist.
00:13:50.560 --> 00:13:55.160
So, it was an incredibly pivotal
part of my whole career.
00:13:58.160 --> 00:14:01.040
All of a sudden, the
Brown Bomber became melded
00:14:01.040 --> 00:14:08.320
with this idea of editorial
content and it was campus life.
00:14:08.320 --> 00:14:10.320
So, I did comics
about the way
00:14:10.320 --> 00:14:12.640
men were treating women,
00:14:12.640 --> 00:14:16.600
kids who are pampered
by their parents.
00:14:16.600 --> 00:14:19.600
The Brown Bomber really
had morphed into like
00:14:19.600 --> 00:14:22.320
being a school mascot,
00:14:22.320 --> 00:14:26.280
but he wasn't identified as
a gay character per se.
00:14:26.280 --> 00:14:29.880
It happened my senior year where
I came up with the idea
00:14:29.880 --> 00:14:34.000
of these totally black panels
where the Brown Bomber’s
00:14:34.000 --> 00:14:36.880
contemplating being
in the dark,
00:14:36.880 --> 00:14:39.880
wanting to reveal who
he truly was.
00:14:39.880 --> 00:14:43.000
But he wasn’t sure if he
would be accepted.
00:14:47.160 --> 00:14:51.160
I actually had people come
to my dorm room and say,
00:14:51.160 --> 00:14:53.280
wow, I had no
idea all along
00:14:53.280 --> 00:14:55.280
you’d meant for the
Brown Bomber to be gay,
00:14:55.280 --> 00:14:57.240
that he,
that he's gay.
00:14:57.240 --> 00:14:59.160
And then there'd
be this light.
00:14:59.160 --> 00:15:01.640
They go, are you gay?
00:15:01.640 --> 00:15:03.040
And I have to say,
well yeah,
00:15:03.040 --> 00:15:05.080
I've been gay all along.
00:15:18.960 --> 00:15:21.400
[Sentimental acoustic guitar]
00:15:25.360 --> 00:15:27.680
[Howard Cruse]:
From the time I was eight or so
00:15:27.680 --> 00:15:30.680
and my father told me that
some people earn a living
00:15:30.680 --> 00:15:34.960
doing this drawing that I
was doing, that got my interest
00:15:34.960 --> 00:15:38.360
because the adults
that surrounded me
00:15:38.360 --> 00:15:41.640
in the little farm town,
Springville, Alabama,
00:15:41.640 --> 00:15:44.400
none of their jobs looked
terribly interesting and
00:15:44.400 --> 00:15:47.040
particularly the farmers,
looked like that was an
00:15:47.040 --> 00:15:52.640
incredibly heavy labor job and
that didn't appeal to me.
00:15:52.640 --> 00:15:55.040
So, I began wanting
to be a cartoonist.
00:15:58.920 --> 00:16:02.120
The first time I was aware
that any cartoonists anywhere
00:16:02.120 --> 00:16:06.400
were doing cartoons
about gay people was in
00:16:06.400 --> 00:16:10.720
the Advocate, the
pre-Stonewall Advocate.
00:16:10.720 --> 00:16:13.320
He was called Miss Thing
and it was very campy.
00:16:20.000 --> 00:16:22.280
Basically, he was someone
that a straight person
00:16:22.280 --> 00:16:25.600
would never know about,
like Tom of Finland who is now
00:16:25.600 --> 00:16:28.000
well known and they have
gallery shows in New York,
00:16:28.000 --> 00:16:30.280
but for my generation
it was, it was just porn.
00:16:30.280 --> 00:16:31.920
It was just particularly
excellent porn.
00:16:35.320 --> 00:16:38.040
It was a big step when
I moved to New York.
00:16:38.040 --> 00:16:41.000
I wasn't just interested in
doing comics about gayness
00:16:41.000 --> 00:16:42.920
or even just in doing comics.
00:16:42.920 --> 00:16:46.600
I wanted to do magazine
illustrations and other things.
00:16:46.600 --> 00:16:48.920
I didn't want to be pigeonholed.
00:16:53.280 --> 00:16:55.320
[Muffled concert noise,
car engines]
00:16:57.000 --> 00:17:00.960
In 1969 by happenstance,
I and some friends of mine
00:17:00.960 --> 00:17:03.360
happened to be witnesses
to the Stonewall riots.
00:17:04.960 --> 00:17:07.080
[Uplifting guitar riff]
00:17:19.360 --> 00:17:21.640
[Cheering crowd]
00:17:46.000 --> 00:17:49.000
Within the days immediately
following the Stonewall riots,
00:17:49.000 --> 00:17:52.680
it became clear that
a fuse had been lit.
00:17:56.080 --> 00:17:59.400
[Cheering crowd]
00:18:02.080 --> 00:18:07.440
I became aware that there was a
civil rights battle to be fought.
00:18:07.440 --> 00:18:09.760
Then I felt like,
you know,
00:18:09.760 --> 00:18:12.760
something has to be done
so that every generation
00:18:12.760 --> 00:18:14.520
does not go through
what I went through.
00:18:17.480 --> 00:18:20.800
And one of the ways that I felt I
could contribute was to
00:18:20.800 --> 00:18:23.200
represent a world
that had gay people in it.
00:18:25.200 --> 00:18:27.080
[Pen scratching paper]
00:18:35.160 --> 00:18:38.080
[Taneka Stotts]:
I have only just begun to grasp
00:18:38.080 --> 00:18:40.480
the wealth of queer
comics history,
00:18:40.480 --> 00:18:41.760
so to speak.
00:18:41.760 --> 00:18:44.480
It's something that I feel you
should always know your roots,
00:18:44.480 --> 00:18:47.160
but these are very
new roots for me.
00:18:47.160 --> 00:18:48.440
[Alex Combs]:
I remember Mary Wings
00:18:48.440 --> 00:18:51.440
said she thought she
was the only lesbian.
00:18:51.440 --> 00:18:53.160
To put yourself out
there in a situation
00:18:53.160 --> 00:18:56.760
where you are going…
am I a total anomaly?
00:18:56.760 --> 00:18:59.040
And to still put
yourself out there,
00:18:59.040 --> 00:19:01.840
I mean, that’s
just amazing.
00:19:01.840 --> 00:19:05.120
- If it hadn't been for people
who came out before me
00:19:05.120 --> 00:19:07.520
in a time when it was much
more dangerous to do so
00:19:07.520 --> 00:19:09.120
and been willing
to make work,
00:19:09.120 --> 00:19:12.520
then my work wouldn't be
received the way that it is now.
00:19:12.520 --> 00:19:15.200
- I read Dykes to Watch Out For
cover to cover
00:19:15.200 --> 00:19:19.480
at the Lucy Parsons Library
in Boston, Massachusetts.
00:19:19.480 --> 00:19:23.520
And that experience of finding
that book and sitting
00:19:23.520 --> 00:19:27.080
in this library by myself and
just really delving deep
00:19:27.080 --> 00:19:29.800
into these characters that
this person had spent
00:19:29.800 --> 00:19:31.200
25 years creating…
00:19:31.200 --> 00:19:33.080
That had a huge
impact on me.
00:19:50.160 --> 00:19:53.080
- I’m filling in the blacks on
a very old comic strip.
00:19:55.080 --> 00:19:57.480
It’s very easy to fill in the
blacks with just a mouse click
00:19:57.480 --> 00:20:01.160
in Photoshop,
but for them to really look nice
00:20:01.160 --> 00:20:03.480
on their own they
should be inked in,
00:20:03.480 --> 00:20:05.440
so I’m doing that,
after the fact.
00:20:10.440 --> 00:20:16.160
I remember so clearly when
I discovered gay comics.
00:20:16.160 --> 00:20:17.760
The thought that
I could draw about
00:20:17.760 --> 00:20:21.440
my own queer life was
really revolutionary for me.
00:20:26.720 --> 00:20:30.120
It was soon after seeing that
first issue of Gay Comix
00:20:30.120 --> 00:20:34.120
and being exposed to this
wonderful world of these stories
00:20:34.120 --> 00:20:38.440
that I forced myself to
start drawing lesbians
00:20:38.440 --> 00:20:40.440
because although
I had drawn all my life,
00:20:40.440 --> 00:20:45.400
I almost exclusively
drew men, uh,
00:20:45.400 --> 00:20:47.400
which started to
seem really odd to me
00:20:47.400 --> 00:20:50.720
once I came out and
realized that I was like
00:20:50.720 --> 00:20:52.000
really interested in women.
00:20:52.000 --> 00:20:53.400
Why was I just drawing men?
00:20:53.400 --> 00:20:55.000
[Donnie meows]
00:20:55.000 --> 00:20:57.400
[Laughing] Donnie,
you are so funny today.
00:20:57.400 --> 00:21:00.000
I just use Rapidograph ink.
00:21:00.000 --> 00:21:03.200
I put it in a bottle
so I can get at it,
00:21:03.200 --> 00:21:06.920
and I use a dip pen,
a Hunt #100.
00:21:09.920 --> 00:21:11.920
But you can see it's…
00:21:11.920 --> 00:21:14.320
it can be a very fine line
or very thick line.
00:21:14.320 --> 00:21:17.640
It's very sharp and precise,
but it's also,
00:21:17.640 --> 00:21:20.320
it's got this emotionality
to it, you know,
00:21:20.320 --> 00:21:23.640
and the way you can get
so many different widths.
00:21:27.920 --> 00:21:30.000
Dykes to Watch Out For
evolved really slowly.
00:21:30.000 --> 00:21:32.000
First from these just silly
drawings I was doing
00:21:32.000 --> 00:21:33.600
for my friends.
00:21:35.920 --> 00:21:38.600
Just one image with a
caption, that was kind of
00:21:38.600 --> 00:21:41.920
like the New Yorker
influence of my childhood.
00:21:41.920 --> 00:21:44.600
I would always read the
comics in the New Yorker.
00:21:44.600 --> 00:21:46.600
[Lighthearted instrumental music]
00:21:52.280 --> 00:21:57.000
They were all just single panel
comics in the early days...
00:21:57.000 --> 00:22:00.680
something that I published
in the feminist newspaper
00:22:00.680 --> 00:22:02.680
where I worked in
New York City.
00:22:10.360 --> 00:22:13.080
So, this is
kind of like my,
00:22:13.080 --> 00:22:17.080
my final sketch that I’m
going to draw from.
00:22:17.080 --> 00:22:20.000
So, I put my good paper
down on top of it,
00:22:20.000 --> 00:22:23.680
on a lightbox so
this shines through
00:22:23.680 --> 00:22:30.080
and then I redraw it all in
pencil and then I ink over it.
00:22:30.080 --> 00:22:32.840
The pencil is like this beautiful
evanescent stage that no longer
00:22:32.840 --> 00:22:35.840
exists because I have erased it
and I have drawn over it.
00:22:35.840 --> 00:22:40.800
But it is my favorite part of the
process when the pencil is
00:22:40.800 --> 00:22:43.120
all finished and I
haven’t inked it yet.
00:22:43.120 --> 00:22:44.200
[Vivian Kleiman]:
Why is that your favorite?
00:22:44.200 --> 00:22:47.520
- Because it still has the
possibility of perfection,
00:22:47.520 --> 00:22:49.160
I haven’t fucked
anything up yet.
00:22:54.040 --> 00:22:55.480
[Pensive instrumentals]
00:23:09.120 --> 00:23:10.240
I didn't earn a living
for a long time.
00:23:10.240 --> 00:23:15.120
It took me till I was 30 to
really have enough gigs
00:23:15.120 --> 00:23:18.200
that I could take that risk
of quitting my day job.
00:23:18.200 --> 00:23:21.120
My day job at that point
was cutting and pasting.
00:23:21.120 --> 00:23:22.800
That's before computers,
00:23:22.800 --> 00:23:25.800
really like wax and
rubber cement,
00:23:25.800 --> 00:23:28.200
which was great training
for being a cartoonist.
00:23:28.200 --> 00:23:29.200
I loved it.
00:23:29.200 --> 00:23:31.080
I love that challenge of having
to fit a certain amount of text
00:23:31.080 --> 00:23:34.200
and a certain number of
images into a given space.
00:23:51.080 --> 00:23:53.160
- If I can find what
I’m looking for...
00:23:53.160 --> 00:23:58.080
that’s not the drawer,
that’s not the drawer...
00:23:58.200 --> 00:24:00.080
That’s what I’m looking for.
00:24:00.080 --> 00:24:05.160
These are drawings that were either
drawn while I was tripping on acid,
00:24:05.160 --> 00:24:08.800
or that were inspired by
the acid experience.
00:24:13.480 --> 00:24:15.480
I was down in Alabama
in Birmingham
00:24:15.480 --> 00:24:19.480
and I discovered
Kitchen Sink Comics,
00:24:19.480 --> 00:24:22.080
published by
Denis Kitchen.
00:24:22.080 --> 00:24:24.480
So, I sent him
some of my stuff
00:24:24.480 --> 00:24:28.160
I had been doing for
underground newspapers locally.
00:24:28.160 --> 00:24:31.080
And Denis liked those and
asked me to send more.
00:24:31.080 --> 00:24:33.760
And so, he began to
regularly publish my stuff.
00:24:33.760 --> 00:24:37.160
[Laughter, mellow music]
00:24:37.160 --> 00:24:39.160
In 1979, Denis,
00:24:39.160 --> 00:24:41.160
with whom I had this long
relationship by then…
00:24:41.160 --> 00:24:43.160
He had published most of
my underground comix.
00:24:43.160 --> 00:24:44.440
He said he was
thinking about starting
00:24:44.440 --> 00:24:47.440
a new series
called Gay Comix.
00:24:47.440 --> 00:24:49.720
So, he said, would I
be interested in editing it.
00:24:49.720 --> 00:24:53.040
I realized it was really an ideal
way to come out professionally.
00:24:58.120 --> 00:24:59.120
- Denis!
00:24:59.120 --> 00:25:02.520
[Denis Kitchen]: Howard! Hey.
00:25:02.520 --> 00:25:03.800
- You remember Molly?
00:25:03.800 --> 00:25:07.200
- Of course.
Hey, Molly.
00:25:07.200 --> 00:25:09.800
- Let’s sit in here,
we can have some tea.
00:25:09.800 --> 00:25:11.080
- Alright.
00:25:16.080 --> 00:25:17.800
[Denis]: Nice cup.
00:25:17.800 --> 00:25:20.080
[Howard]: You know we
were talking about
00:25:20.080 --> 00:25:23.000
Gay Comix a while back.
00:25:23.000 --> 00:25:25.680
I remember getting a letter from
you about it but I don’t know
00:25:25.680 --> 00:25:30.080
if you ever told me sort of
what led you to think of it.
00:25:30.080 --> 00:25:31.680
[Denis]: I think, um,
00:25:31.680 --> 00:25:33.680
was it a story you
did in Snarf maybe,
00:25:33.680 --> 00:25:37.080
one of the comics where
Headrack came out?
00:25:37.080 --> 00:25:39.080
[Howard]: Yeah that
was Barefootz Number 2.
00:25:39.080 --> 00:25:41.160
[Low instrumentals]
00:25:45.280 --> 00:25:49.400
[Denis]: It just seemed to
me that the time was right.
00:25:49.400 --> 00:25:51.120
I mean I was doing,
you got to remember
00:25:51.120 --> 00:25:54.400
I was doing other
anthologies, Dope Comix,
00:25:54.400 --> 00:25:56.720
I was a card-carrying
marijuana smoker,
00:25:56.720 --> 00:25:59.000
that was easier for me.
00:25:59.000 --> 00:26:00.800
I was doing
Bizarre Sex comics.
00:26:00.800 --> 00:26:02.080
I was doing...
00:26:02.080 --> 00:26:03.800
[Howard]: You had a
bizarre sex life, right.
00:26:03.800 --> 00:26:06.080
- I was doing Wimmen’s Comix
with Trina and others.
00:26:06.080 --> 00:26:09.320
And it just seemed like
for me what underground comix
00:26:09.320 --> 00:26:14.920
were partly about is for a forum
for groups and individuals
00:26:14.920 --> 00:26:17.920
to speak their mind
and it was kind of
00:26:17.920 --> 00:26:20.920
an offshoot of the
free speech movement
00:26:20.920 --> 00:26:22.320
and it was like, it’s time.
00:26:22.320 --> 00:26:24.320
Comics were so
suppressed for so long
00:26:24.320 --> 00:26:27.320
my feeling was let
all the voices out.
00:26:27.320 --> 00:26:30.880
And once I figured out,
took me awhile,
00:26:30.880 --> 00:26:33.880
that you were gay
and I thought well, gee,
00:26:33.880 --> 00:26:35.280
you would be the
perfect guy to edit it.
00:26:38.880 --> 00:26:41.880
[Howard]: That was scary.
You can't take it back.
00:26:41.880 --> 00:26:45.160
The cat’s out of the bag.
00:26:45.160 --> 00:26:46.560
So, I wrote to
everybody who was
00:26:46.560 --> 00:26:49.880
in the world of
underground comix.
00:26:49.880 --> 00:26:52.880
I said, I know that
many of you may feel
00:26:52.880 --> 00:26:55.280
that it's threatening
to your career,
00:26:55.280 --> 00:26:58.160
for you to be open
about being gay.
00:26:58.160 --> 00:27:00.320
As a gay person I felt
those feelings too,
00:27:00.320 --> 00:27:02.320
but I feel like,
you know,
00:27:02.320 --> 00:27:05.040
given the onslaught
of anti-gay activity,
00:27:05.040 --> 00:27:08.040
uh, that it was
really important
00:27:08.040 --> 00:27:12.600
that people be out and it's not
just for political reasons,
00:27:12.600 --> 00:27:16.640
but people should be able
to do art about their lives.
00:27:16.640 --> 00:27:18.000
[Typewriter clicking]
00:27:21.000 --> 00:27:22.600
We sent this letter
to every cartoonist
00:27:22.600 --> 00:27:25.320
in Denis Kitchen’s Rolodex.
00:27:25.320 --> 00:27:29.600
- I know there were more than a
handful of rather macho guys
00:27:29.600 --> 00:27:34.280
who were quite indignant
that they got this form letter
00:27:34.280 --> 00:27:36.600
but I mean,
like I said who knows.
00:27:36.600 --> 00:27:38.920
And there were a
number of surprises,
00:27:38.920 --> 00:27:41.280
that we never
would have guessed,
00:27:41.280 --> 00:27:44.000
including some
people who were bi.
00:27:44.000 --> 00:27:46.280
[Lively music beat]
00:27:50.880 --> 00:27:53.160
[Howard]: I wanted to establish
this is co-gender.
00:27:53.160 --> 00:27:56.160
Uh, this is not
a boy’s club.
00:27:56.160 --> 00:27:59.280
I said, I want this
to be an honest comic book
00:27:59.280 --> 00:28:01.640
about the human
experience of being gay.
00:28:01.640 --> 00:28:03.960
I mean even if you want
to do a funny animal story,
00:28:03.960 --> 00:28:07.920
it needs to grow out of
the real-life experiences
00:28:07.920 --> 00:28:10.640
of gay people in spirit.
00:28:10.640 --> 00:28:12.640
I mean it could be
fanciful, it could be,
00:28:12.640 --> 00:28:13.920
you know, you can
take all sorts of
00:28:13.920 --> 00:28:15.640
liberties with reality.
00:28:15.640 --> 00:28:16.960
But what I didn't
want was something
00:28:16.960 --> 00:28:20.960
that was all about
camp or that was
00:28:20.960 --> 00:28:24.360
specifically just
about sex.
00:28:24.360 --> 00:28:26.360
I said in my
opening statement,
00:28:26.360 --> 00:28:29.040
I wanted this to be about
people, not penises.
00:28:29.040 --> 00:28:32.360
And some of the artists took
me so literally that the issue
00:28:32.360 --> 00:28:34.960
was in danger of being,
you know,
00:28:34.960 --> 00:28:38.920
so sex free that I made my
contribution to the first issue
00:28:38.920 --> 00:28:41.040
was a very sexually
explicit story.
00:28:43.640 --> 00:28:45.320
It's called Billy Goes Out was
the name of the story.
00:28:45.320 --> 00:28:49.840
It was about going out for a
night of hopefully sex
00:28:49.840 --> 00:28:51.840
in Greenwich Village,
in the late seventies
00:28:51.840 --> 00:28:54.520
before the AIDS epidemic.
00:28:54.520 --> 00:28:57.840
Externally, the guy was
out looking for sex,
00:28:57.840 --> 00:28:59.520
he was cruising.
00:28:59.520 --> 00:29:02.320
It was about the inner
life of the character.
00:29:02.320 --> 00:29:04.320
Every panel had his
thought processes
00:29:04.320 --> 00:29:06.560
above his actual actions.
00:29:09.880 --> 00:29:12.280
He had this thing called
the rejection checklist.
00:29:22.840 --> 00:29:24.240
But also talked about
head things about his
00:29:24.240 --> 00:29:26.840
family relationships,
all the things
00:29:26.840 --> 00:29:28.240
that might go
through your head,
00:29:28.240 --> 00:29:33.160
and the point was people who
entered that sexual world
00:29:33.160 --> 00:29:36.720
that was so freewheeling
during the 70s,
00:29:36.720 --> 00:29:39.400
they were full-fledged human
beings who had lives.
00:29:42.000 --> 00:29:44.000
[Street noise, 70s synth]
00:29:58.080 --> 00:30:05.360
[Jen Camper]: I remember
in 1979 I had a friend
00:30:05.360 --> 00:30:10.080
who was always sick and nobody
could figure out what it was
00:30:10.080 --> 00:30:14.360
and he would go to the doctor
and they would give him
00:30:14.360 --> 00:30:16.960
some sort of diagnosis
and give him
00:30:16.960 --> 00:30:20.360
some kind of medication
and he never got better.
00:30:20.360 --> 00:30:23.040
And then we started
hearing about GRID,
00:30:23.040 --> 00:30:26.360
the Gay Related Immune
Deficiency, and then AIDS.
00:30:26.360 --> 00:30:28.360
[News Anchor]: ...more than
800 cases nationwide.
00:30:28.360 --> 00:30:30.960
300+ of those, fatal.
00:30:30.960 --> 00:30:33.960
And every day, three more
cases are identified.
00:30:33.960 --> 00:30:36.640
And yet, still,
surprisingly few people
00:30:36.640 --> 00:30:40.360
are familiar with the Acquired
Immune Deficiency Syndrome.
00:30:40.360 --> 00:30:42.920
[Heavy hearted instrumentals]
00:30:47.640 --> 00:30:52.640
- And we lived through this
period where it was this mystery
00:30:52.640 --> 00:30:55.920
and then it was this
death sentence.
00:31:20.360 --> 00:31:23.680
AIDS was a huge part of
our lives and our friends
00:31:23.680 --> 00:31:26.360
were getting
sick and dying
00:31:26.360 --> 00:31:29.680
and we were
helpless to stop it.
00:31:33.080 --> 00:31:36.360
And our whole community--
00:31:36.360 --> 00:31:37.960
I don't know if
I can talk about this.
00:31:40.640 --> 00:31:42.520
[Heavy hearted music continues]
00:31:56.200 --> 00:31:57.800
I can’t talk about it.
00:32:10.160 --> 00:32:12.560
[Jen weeps]
00:32:15.240 --> 00:32:22.520
[Crowd chants]: Act up,
fight back, fight AIDS!
00:32:32.120 --> 00:32:33.240
- It was a frightening time.
00:32:33.240 --> 00:32:35.240
It was a heartbreaking time.
00:32:35.240 --> 00:32:38.840
I watched people behave
in terrible ways.
00:32:38.840 --> 00:32:41.520
And we wrote
about it in comics.
00:32:41.520 --> 00:32:44.520
It was hard to write
about sometimes.
00:32:44.520 --> 00:32:46.200
It was difficult.
00:33:07.160 --> 00:33:10.280
Some people told personal
stories about characters
00:33:10.280 --> 00:33:13.280
with HIV and AIDS,
like Howard did in Wendel.
00:33:15.880 --> 00:33:19.160
Seven Miles a Second
by David Wojnarowicz
00:33:19.160 --> 00:33:22.160
was really about the
rage and the horror
00:33:22.160 --> 00:33:25.160
that was involved
in this epidemic.
00:33:25.160 --> 00:33:27.240
[Fire roars, sirens blare]
00:33:31.160 --> 00:33:34.520
Some people did satirical
comics about the reaction
00:33:34.520 --> 00:33:36.840
to HIV and AIDS.
00:33:36.840 --> 00:33:38.520
[Water splashing]
00:33:46.120 --> 00:33:47.520
[Howard Cruse]: That's the
kind of humor you would get
00:33:47.520 --> 00:33:48.800
from people with AIDS.
00:33:52.120 --> 00:33:57.400
Humor is one of the ways that
people deal with tragedy.
00:33:57.400 --> 00:33:59.400
Death was in the air.
00:33:59.400 --> 00:34:02.160
They weren't pretending
it wasn’t.
00:34:02.160 --> 00:34:06.080
[Female voice over system]:
Jerry Lopresky.
00:34:06.080 --> 00:34:10.480
L.H.M.
Michael.
00:34:10.480 --> 00:34:11.760
[Howard Cruse]: Basically,
you know, America
00:34:11.760 --> 00:34:15.160
at large was not
interested in reacting.
00:34:15.160 --> 00:34:17.040
Gay people stepped
up to the plate.
00:34:17.040 --> 00:34:19.040
[Name listing continues]:
Michael McDowell.
00:34:19.040 --> 00:34:21.440
Joe Avela.
Maysle.
00:34:21.440 --> 00:34:24.720
Michael Babcock.
Ninhas.
00:34:24.720 --> 00:34:26.120
[Howard Cruse]: There's no
other group of people
00:34:26.120 --> 00:34:28.640
I would rather go through
a deadly epidemic with
00:34:28.640 --> 00:34:30.960
than the gay community.
00:34:30.960 --> 00:34:35.280
[Names continue]:
Howard Dill.
00:34:35.280 --> 00:34:38.160
[Howard Cruse]: Our response
to the AIDS epidemic as,
00:34:38.160 --> 00:34:42.160
as horrible as it was,
made you proud to be gay.
00:34:42.160 --> 00:34:44.880
- Alex Covenant…
00:34:51.560 --> 00:34:55.240
[Seagulls squawk]
00:34:55.240 --> 00:35:57.240
[Inquisitive music instrumentals]
00:35:08.040 --> 00:35:12.680
- Look at the highlights
on that sausage sign!
00:35:12.680 --> 00:35:14.160
The lettering is amazing.
00:35:14.160 --> 00:35:16.560
You've got drop shadows.
You've got italics.
00:35:16.560 --> 00:35:18.160
You've got outline.
00:35:18.160 --> 00:35:20.120
Some have serifs;
some don't.
00:35:20.120 --> 00:35:25.040
It's classic old style,
hand-painted sign lettering.
00:35:25.600 --> 00:35:29.280
I love these two characters
on the roof of the building.
00:35:29.280 --> 00:35:31.600
But it always cracks me
up that the little girl is
00:35:31.600 --> 00:35:35.280
carrying a mug that looks
like a giant mug of beer.
00:35:35.280 --> 00:35:39.160
And I think originally those
were root beer stand signs,
00:35:39.160 --> 00:35:43.280
but now it looks like she's an
exclusively drunken child,
00:35:43.280 --> 00:35:44.560
which I love.
00:35:47.560 --> 00:35:49.840
I always drew comics.
00:35:49.840 --> 00:35:52.240
In school, it was making
fun of the teachers
00:35:52.240 --> 00:35:57.840
or the people in authority,
and art was a way for me
00:35:57.840 --> 00:36:02.040
to comment on
what was going on.
00:36:02.040 --> 00:36:03.920
And I am very
opinionated,
00:36:03.920 --> 00:36:05.360
and I have something to
say about everything.
00:36:08.360 --> 00:36:10.680
I didn't really think of
being a cartoonist.
00:36:10.680 --> 00:36:12.080
I just, it was
something that was
00:36:12.080 --> 00:36:13.640
accessible to me.
00:36:13.640 --> 00:36:15.080
It was a pencil
and a piece of paper
00:36:15.080 --> 00:36:18.640
and it didn't require a whole
lot of expensive equipment.
00:36:20.640 --> 00:36:22.360
[Cultural string music]
00:36:32.320 --> 00:36:34.040
I come from a
mixed background.
00:36:34.040 --> 00:36:38.040
I'm half Lebanese, half
white-bread American mongrel.
00:36:38.040 --> 00:36:41.640
And I didn't relate to
the little girls in the,
00:36:41.640 --> 00:36:43.320
you know, the
books I was reading.
00:36:43.320 --> 00:36:45.320
And I didn't relate to the
00:36:45.320 --> 00:36:48.640
downtrodden,
struggling, whatever.
00:36:48.640 --> 00:36:52.160
I wanted characters like
me to be victorious.
00:36:57.240 --> 00:36:59.560
[Heavy rock music]
00:37:09.600 --> 00:37:11.320
[Atmospheric bar noise]
00:37:11.320 --> 00:37:15.920
I remember going to a gay bar
when I was under age
00:37:15.920 --> 00:37:17.600
and that was amazing,
[laughing]
00:37:17.600 --> 00:37:20.880
those are some stories!
00:37:20.880 --> 00:37:23.280
I remember seeing
all these older dykes
00:37:23.280 --> 00:37:25.600
and being
fascinated by them.
00:37:25.600 --> 00:37:29.880
And the drink was the, um,
what was the orange drink?
00:37:29.880 --> 00:37:31.000
Tequila sunrises.
00:37:31.000 --> 00:37:34.280
All those pretty drinks,
that bright colors.
00:37:34.280 --> 00:37:37.000
And then these big old
dykes who had like
00:37:37.000 --> 00:37:38.560
been kicked out
of the Army.
00:37:38.560 --> 00:37:41.880
And they were like buying
drinks for their girls.
00:37:41.880 --> 00:37:43.880
And I was watching
everything and learning,
00:37:43.880 --> 00:37:45.120
Oh, this is how
you do it. Right.
00:37:48.720 --> 00:37:50.720
And I remember hanging
out and being just,
00:37:50.720 --> 00:37:52.440
you know,
a little brat.
00:37:52.440 --> 00:37:55.440
And that's really how
I saw the queer world
00:37:55.440 --> 00:37:59.120
and learned
about dyke behavior.
00:38:01.800 --> 00:38:02.800
[Growl!]
00:38:02.800 --> 00:38:04.200
[Fast-paced beat]
00:38:20.480 --> 00:38:27.080
My feeling was I was creating
sexual imagery for dykes,
00:38:27.080 --> 00:38:28.480
and I felt like,
00:38:28.480 --> 00:38:32.160
well why can't we have
our own sexy comics?
00:38:32.160 --> 00:38:34.440
[Curious string instrumentals]
00:38:47.760 --> 00:38:50.760
Some women felt that
my work was too sexist.
00:38:50.760 --> 00:38:54.040
And I was
objectifying women.
00:38:54.040 --> 00:38:55.040
I’m a dyke!
00:38:55.040 --> 00:38:56.720
I do objectify women,
I love them.
00:38:56.720 --> 00:38:58.720
I find them sexy.
00:38:58.720 --> 00:39:01.520
I loved the fact that people
were paying attention
00:39:01.520 --> 00:39:04.200
and if they got mad then
I was doing my job.
00:39:04.200 --> 00:39:06.520
[Campy instrumental music]
00:39:19.800 --> 00:39:22.600
I never had an idea
that this was a career.
00:39:25.600 --> 00:39:27.600
This is what I did
because I loved it,
00:39:27.600 --> 00:39:30.000
because it was fun.
00:39:30.000 --> 00:39:34.280
In the early eighties,
Howard Cruse had started
00:39:34.280 --> 00:39:38.560
the anthology comic,
Gay Comix, with an x.
00:39:40.880 --> 00:39:45.280
And I sent something in and
Howard said he would print it.
00:39:45.280 --> 00:39:49.160
And Howard was just an amazing
editor and amazing mentor.
00:39:49.160 --> 00:39:53.240
And as I went along in my career,
every time I hit a wall of,
00:39:53.240 --> 00:39:55.280
‘Oh, how do
I do a contract?’
00:39:55.280 --> 00:39:58.160
Or ‘how do I, how much
should I charge for this?’
00:39:58.160 --> 00:40:00.680
Or ‘what if they don't pay me?’
you know, call Howard.
00:40:00.680 --> 00:40:02.000
Cause he’d know.
00:40:02.000 --> 00:40:03.080
He'd done it, you know.
00:40:03.080 --> 00:40:05.080
And so, he really, um,
00:40:05.080 --> 00:40:07.400
is the godfather
of queer comics.
00:40:10.400 --> 00:40:12.360
[Coffee drips, eggs sizzle]
00:40:15.360 --> 00:40:16.680
[Howard Cruse]:
My now husband,
00:40:16.680 --> 00:40:21.080
and for 37 years partner,
Eddie Sedarbaum,
00:40:21.080 --> 00:40:25.960
I met in 1979 after I had lived
in New York for two years.
00:40:25.960 --> 00:40:28.040
We met at a gay
discussion group.
00:40:28.040 --> 00:40:31.360
I quickly detected
that, you know,
00:40:31.360 --> 00:40:33.360
he was a really interesting
person to talk to,
00:40:33.360 --> 00:40:36.360
and he had thoughtful
things to say and it had
00:40:36.360 --> 00:40:38.040
possibilities of
moving beyond
00:40:38.040 --> 00:40:41.960
just a, you
know, hookup.
00:40:41.960 --> 00:40:43.640
Here we are,
37 years later.
00:40:43.640 --> 00:40:46.320
- Have you ever
remembered your coffee?
00:40:46.320 --> 00:40:48.320
- Once, I think
I did once.
00:40:52.640 --> 00:40:54.320
Starting with Gay Comix
and then continuing
00:40:54.320 --> 00:40:57.320
through the 80s,
I was drawing about
00:40:57.320 --> 00:40:59.320
the kind of people,
00:40:59.320 --> 00:41:02.640
uh, like Eddie and
me and our friends.
00:41:05.040 --> 00:41:07.640
In the third issue,
I felt all the stories were
00:41:07.640 --> 00:41:12.920
about young buff gay
men and I wanted to do
00:41:12.920 --> 00:41:14.320
something about,
uh, older gays,
00:41:14.320 --> 00:41:17.000
who are underrepresented.
00:41:17.000 --> 00:41:18.320
So, I created
these two characters,
00:41:18.320 --> 00:41:20.000
Luke and Clark,
and the story was called
00:41:20.000 --> 00:41:21.920
“Dirty Old Lovers,”
spun off of
00:41:21.920 --> 00:41:24.600
some of the kind of times
Eddie and I would have.
00:41:24.600 --> 00:41:26.320
Eddie and I have always been
very uninhibited about,
00:41:26.320 --> 00:41:28.280
uh, you know, saying
lascivious things,
00:41:28.280 --> 00:41:30.000
that what was
going on around us
00:41:30.000 --> 00:41:32.880
or taking note
of cute guys.
00:41:32.880 --> 00:41:36.000
- Nice smile!
[Chuckling]
00:41:36.000 --> 00:41:37.720
- And so, the
“Dirty Old Lovers,”
00:41:37.720 --> 00:41:40.000
it was just about a stroll they
took in their neighborhood.
00:41:40.000 --> 00:41:42.000
And ultimately, they
wound up at a bar.
00:41:42.000 --> 00:41:45.000
All of the other guys in
this gay bar were being
00:41:45.000 --> 00:41:48.720
really snotty about
these two older gay men.
00:41:48.720 --> 00:41:51.680
This guy took umbrage at that
and went home with them.
00:41:51.680 --> 00:41:53.200
And so, they had a
nice cuddly threesome.
00:41:59.800 --> 00:42:02.280
It was an affirmative thing
about getting older,
00:42:02.280 --> 00:42:04.600
but it was also just fun to
write because these guys
00:42:04.600 --> 00:42:09.880
are just so uninhibited and
the repartee wrote itself.
00:42:14.280 --> 00:42:18.160
- I have a very early
Dykes to Watch Out For.
00:42:18.160 --> 00:42:19.560
Oh my god look at it,
yeah, it's crappy.
00:42:19.560 --> 00:42:21.560
It's like just normal drawing
paper with Wite-Out
00:42:21.560 --> 00:42:23.560
that's so chipping off and...
00:42:23.560 --> 00:42:26.160
I can tell you I drew it
with a Niji Stylus.
00:42:26.160 --> 00:42:27.560
Isn’t that weird that I can tell
just by looking at the line
00:42:27.560 --> 00:42:29.240
what pen it was?
00:42:29.240 --> 00:42:31.240
[Charming instrumental music]
00:42:33.160 --> 00:42:34.560
It was almost a mission
of mine for a long time
00:42:34.560 --> 00:42:36.600
to show this stuff.
00:42:39.000 --> 00:42:42.880
Just to show real bodies,
people’s real sex lives.
00:42:48.880 --> 00:42:53.880
I wanted to destigmatize lesbian
sexuality and women’s bodies.
00:42:53.880 --> 00:42:56.840
It was something I felt
really passionately about.
00:43:01.040 --> 00:43:04.320
Here's one after I
introduced the characters
00:43:04.320 --> 00:43:06.320
and it's an episode where
they're all on their way
00:43:06.320 --> 00:43:09.040
to the 1987
March on Washington.
00:43:09.040 --> 00:43:11.320
[Engines revving]
00:43:18.320 --> 00:43:21.320
About four years after
I drew the first cartoon,
00:43:21.320 --> 00:43:25.920
I finally took the plunge into
creating regular characters
00:43:25.920 --> 00:43:31.000
like I had seen Howard do,
and never looked back.
00:43:31.000 --> 00:43:34.600
Every two weeks I had to further
my character's narrative
00:43:34.600 --> 00:43:38.600
and I had to weave in the
latest horror that had
00:43:38.600 --> 00:43:41.600
happened on the
political scene.
00:43:41.600 --> 00:43:43.880
Many of my characters
were also consumed with
00:43:43.880 --> 00:43:46.280
all of this stuff
that was going on,
00:43:46.280 --> 00:43:51.560
the Patriot Act and all this
sort of creeping fascism.
00:43:51.560 --> 00:43:55.280
I kept track of this all with
this crazy spreadsheet.
00:43:55.280 --> 00:43:57.880
You keep track of the episodes
across the top and down the side
00:43:57.880 --> 00:44:00.960
are all your characters.
00:44:00.960 --> 00:44:03.040
So, I would map
out my stories almost like
00:44:03.040 --> 00:44:05.360
they were spontaneously
generated.
00:44:05.360 --> 00:44:07.920
Like I put all this information
into the spreadsheet
00:44:07.920 --> 00:44:09.480
and I got a story out of it.
00:44:24.160 --> 00:44:28.760
- The first time I can
remember seeing
00:44:28.760 --> 00:44:31.040
a trans guy
represented in comics,
00:44:31.040 --> 00:44:34.120
I think it was probably in
Dykes to Watch Out For.
00:44:34.120 --> 00:44:36.720
Oh look, I exist!
00:44:36.720 --> 00:44:39.040
- You know one way or another,
we all have someone
00:44:39.040 --> 00:44:41.040
we are scared to
tell something to.
00:44:41.040 --> 00:44:45.320
And it is just a great
starting point for stories.
00:44:52.920 --> 00:44:53.920
[MariNaomi]:
I would religiously read
00:44:53.920 --> 00:44:56.320
Rob Kirby's Curbside.
00:44:56.320 --> 00:44:59.000
Wow. I really wanted to
be a gay man in New York.
00:44:59.000 --> 00:45:01.600
Cause I'm still deep in my
heart a huge fan girl.
00:45:05.880 --> 00:45:07.160
[Nicole Georges]:
I love that Jen Camper
00:45:07.160 --> 00:45:11.880
is an out Arab-American
hardcore feminist woman!
00:45:11.880 --> 00:45:15.160
[Carlo Quispe]: The first
queer comic that I saw,
00:45:15.160 --> 00:45:17.240
that I was like,
ok this is gay,
00:45:17.240 --> 00:45:19.880
and like I have to
hide this from my family,
00:45:19.880 --> 00:45:21.240
was the Wendel comic.
00:45:26.240 --> 00:45:28.240
- Most of my comics
are not about violence,
00:45:28.240 --> 00:45:33.120
but this was a scene where
Wendel and his friends
00:45:33.120 --> 00:45:35.520
are attacked by
homophobes
00:45:35.520 --> 00:45:38.120
and uh, you have a
scene such as this
00:45:38.120 --> 00:45:40.200
where Wendel is
getting hit in the face.
00:45:40.200 --> 00:45:42.120
It's very central
on the page.
00:45:42.120 --> 00:45:45.200
For regular Wendel
readers, it’s shocking.
00:45:45.200 --> 00:45:47.080
You know,
we love Wendel,
00:45:47.080 --> 00:45:48.080
we don't want
him to get hit.
00:45:51.200 --> 00:45:53.160
[Pensive piano music]
00:45:55.160 --> 00:45:57.200
I decided, well,
maybe I should
00:45:57.200 --> 00:46:01.840
have Wendel find
himself in love with a guy
00:46:01.840 --> 00:46:03.280
and form a relationship.
00:46:06.280 --> 00:46:08.280
It was an area that had
not been covered a lot,
00:46:08.280 --> 00:46:12.080
the actual development
of a gay relationship.
00:46:16.080 --> 00:46:20.200
Wendel didn't have scars
from being in the closet.
00:46:20.200 --> 00:46:21.200
Ollie, you know,
00:46:21.200 --> 00:46:24.080
had a lot of leftover
fears about consequences
00:46:24.080 --> 00:46:25.480
of being openly gay,
00:46:25.480 --> 00:46:27.680
had trouble coming
out to his parents.
00:46:27.680 --> 00:46:29.360
So that was drawing
on the part of me
00:46:29.360 --> 00:46:33.960
that remembered
that experience vividly.
00:46:33.960 --> 00:46:35.040
There's a sequence
when Ollie
00:46:35.040 --> 00:46:38.960
finally decides to
come out to his family.
00:46:38.960 --> 00:46:40.960
He's being very bold about
it and he gets his little
00:46:40.960 --> 00:46:46.040
mess letter, you know,
and he puts it in the mailbox
00:46:46.040 --> 00:46:48.040
and then has
an anxiety attack.
00:46:48.040 --> 00:46:49.640
You know,
hugging the mailbox,
00:46:49.640 --> 00:46:50.920
‘What have I done?’
00:46:55.920 --> 00:46:58.320
- Ten years or so after I
wrote Come Out Comix,
00:46:58.320 --> 00:47:01.720
there was a gay and
lesbian comic scene.
00:47:01.720 --> 00:47:04.720
It happened so fast
and it grew so huge
00:47:04.720 --> 00:47:06.720
and I met amazing people.
00:47:06.720 --> 00:47:10.400
And suddenly, I had a
whole wonderful group,
00:47:10.400 --> 00:47:13.080
national and international,
around me.
00:47:13.080 --> 00:47:16.360
It was very exciting.
00:47:16.360 --> 00:47:18.040
I’m here at a different
light bookstore
00:47:18.040 --> 00:47:21.640
for the opening of
Queer Cartoons show.
00:47:21.640 --> 00:47:25.040
And we have 51 artists
in this show,
00:47:25.040 --> 00:47:28.640
168 pages of
fabulous cartoon art.
00:47:28.640 --> 00:47:30.640
I put this show together
with my good friend
00:47:30.640 --> 00:47:33.320
Dan Seitler, who’s
a wonderful cartoonist.
00:47:33.320 --> 00:47:36.920
And we wanted to celebrate
cartoonists and the gay artists
00:47:36.920 --> 00:47:39.320
that we know,
and promote their work.
00:47:39.320 --> 00:47:41.920
[Jen Camper]: We got to do pretty
much whatever we wanted,
00:47:41.920 --> 00:47:44.320
and that was
really exciting.
00:47:44.320 --> 00:47:47.920
I’m Jen Camper and I’m
hanging out here in the bathtub…
00:47:47.920 --> 00:47:51.000
[Toilet flushes, laughter]
00:47:53.880 --> 00:47:55.600
None of us made money,
00:47:55.600 --> 00:47:58.320
but we had a whole lot
of creative freedom.
00:47:58.320 --> 00:47:59.880
- I’m Alison Bechdel
and I draw
00:47:59.880 --> 00:48:01.680
Dykes to Watch Out For
cartoons...
00:48:01.680 --> 00:48:04.080
Another thing that was terribly
exciting to me about comics
00:48:04.080 --> 00:48:08.360
was, no one was
judging it, no one was...
00:48:08.360 --> 00:48:12.360
It was like this
free play zone.
00:48:15.040 --> 00:48:18.360
There were absolutely
no rules or limits.
00:48:18.360 --> 00:48:21.040
People were drawing all
kinds of naked bodies and
00:48:21.040 --> 00:48:24.600
sexual activities and the crazier
something could be the better.
00:48:31.600 --> 00:48:34.280
[Jen Camper]: I didn't feel
like there was competition
00:48:34.280 --> 00:48:38.000
because nobody was
doing the same thing.
00:48:38.000 --> 00:48:42.280
Each of us had a really
distinctive drawing style and voice,
00:48:42.280 --> 00:48:45.000
and we all were
talking about
00:48:45.000 --> 00:48:48.880
different aspects of
queer community.
00:48:48.880 --> 00:48:51.080
[Whimsical instrumental music]
00:49:11.120 --> 00:49:13.440
[Motorcycle revving]
00:49:28.120 --> 00:49:32.120
In the 90s, every major city
had a gay newspaper.
00:49:39.680 --> 00:49:42.680
We were all doing comics maybe
for one or two newspapers
00:49:42.680 --> 00:49:44.000
and then suddenly
it was like, well,
00:49:44.000 --> 00:49:46.080
there's 50 newspapers
in the United States
00:49:46.080 --> 00:49:47.640
that we could send
our comics to.
00:49:50.040 --> 00:49:53.040
People got the idea that we
can syndicate our comics.
00:49:53.040 --> 00:49:55.320
[Charming instrumental music]
00:50:02.320 --> 00:50:04.000
[Rupert Kinnard]:
Windy City Times in Chicago.
00:50:04.000 --> 00:50:06.920
I think they offered
$25 for each strip,
00:50:06.920 --> 00:50:08.000
and I think I thought,
00:50:08.000 --> 00:50:12.880
‘Oh! Okay.
That would really help!’
00:50:12.880 --> 00:50:15.000
And then you’d get
somewhat syndicated
00:50:15.000 --> 00:50:17.880
to a couple of other papers
and then they pay you,
00:50:17.880 --> 00:50:21.600
and it starts being significant.
00:50:24.280 --> 00:50:28.880
I went from having the strip
published in college,
00:50:28.880 --> 00:50:31.280
that community,
and then in Portland,
00:50:31.280 --> 00:50:33.600
and then when I went
to the Bay Area,
00:50:33.600 --> 00:50:36.560
it was published in a
queer newspaper,
00:50:36.560 --> 00:50:39.800
Bay Times, and
then in the Sentinel.
00:50:47.480 --> 00:50:52.160
When I left the Sentinel,
the biggest step for me
00:50:52.160 --> 00:50:54.080
with my comic strip
is when it
00:50:54.080 --> 00:51:00.480
first started being
published in SF Weekly.
00:51:00.480 --> 00:51:02.760
It was like a larger
playground.
00:51:07.160 --> 00:51:09.480
I realized that
I had a unique voice
00:51:09.480 --> 00:51:12.440
in those publications
to challenge.
00:51:17.040 --> 00:51:19.760
I experienced a lot in
the gay community
00:51:19.760 --> 00:51:23.040
as an African American.
00:51:23.040 --> 00:51:24.120
So, I’m like,
I’m using this
00:51:24.120 --> 00:51:27.120
as an opportunity to
talk about these things
00:51:27.120 --> 00:51:29.040
that we should be
addressing.
00:51:35.440 --> 00:51:37.720
[Gaia Wxyz]: From the very
first time I saw an image
00:51:37.720 --> 00:51:40.400
of the Brown Bomber and
Diva of the World,
00:51:40.400 --> 00:51:42.720
I was just like,
who is that?
00:51:42.720 --> 00:51:46.720
Who are these characters,
I love them!
00:51:46.720 --> 00:51:49.400
Upon reading more of his
work, I was just struck
00:51:49.400 --> 00:51:53.080
by the level of analysis
and the intersectionality
00:51:53.080 --> 00:51:55.680
that he was able to
portray in his work.
00:51:55.680 --> 00:51:57.960
Talking about the experience
of being Black and gay,
00:51:57.960 --> 00:51:59.840
or being Black and woman.
00:52:06.600 --> 00:52:08.320
[Lawrence Lindell]:
To be Black and queer,
00:52:08.320 --> 00:52:10.920
and only know
about Rupert’s work,
00:52:10.920 --> 00:52:13.920
Rupert Kinnard’s work two years
ago at “Queers and Comics”
00:52:13.920 --> 00:52:17.000
is kind of…
it was profound to me,
00:52:17.000 --> 00:52:19.000
but also it made
me very sad,
00:52:19.000 --> 00:52:21.000
cause I’m like, how many
other Ruperts are there
00:52:21.000 --> 00:52:24.000
that I don’t know about,
that I could have used.
00:52:24.000 --> 00:52:26.000
And not only was he
making queer comics about
00:52:26.000 --> 00:52:30.280
being Black and queer but
this was way, way back,
00:52:30.280 --> 00:52:31.560
and it’s not a new thing.
00:52:31.560 --> 00:52:35.280
It would have been nice
to not have to struggle.
00:52:35.280 --> 00:52:36.560
Is it okay for me to do this?
00:52:43.560 --> 00:52:46.560
- The differences between
Rupert’s work and my work
00:52:46.560 --> 00:52:49.160
kind of reflect the times
that we were working in.
00:52:49.160 --> 00:52:52.160
You know, Rupert’s
characters were very
00:52:52.160 --> 00:52:55.240
much directly interfacing
with white characters
00:52:55.240 --> 00:52:57.240
that didn’t get it.
00:52:57.240 --> 00:52:59.560
And, here and now,
as artists
00:52:59.560 --> 00:53:02.120
we don’t necessarily
have to put a white character
00:53:02.120 --> 00:53:05.120
at the center of the
narrative anymore.
00:53:05.120 --> 00:53:08.440
- I’m privileged that I have
access to so many people
00:53:08.440 --> 00:53:10.120
who happen to
look like me.
00:53:36.400 --> 00:53:37.680
[Howard Cruse]:
Everybody takes inspiration
00:53:37.680 --> 00:53:40.000
from the generation before.
00:53:40.000 --> 00:53:42.400
After Art Spiegelman
came out with Maus,
00:53:42.400 --> 00:53:46.360
then there began to be serious
literary graphic novels.
00:53:46.360 --> 00:53:48.520
There was always the question
that could I do a graphic novel?
00:53:53.520 --> 00:53:55.520
And I thought, there's
been very little coverage
00:53:55.520 --> 00:54:00.600
about what gay life before
Stonewall in the South was like.
00:54:13.880 --> 00:54:16.160
And there was all of this
ferment in Birmingham about
00:54:16.160 --> 00:54:19.280
civil rights at the same time,
so I would be able to
00:54:19.280 --> 00:54:20.560
cover some ground
that hadn’t been
00:54:20.560 --> 00:54:23.280
covered in other
gay literature.
00:54:26.160 --> 00:54:29.240
Going into a project as long
as Stuck Rubber Baby
00:54:29.240 --> 00:54:33.240
was a big scary step.
00:54:33.240 --> 00:54:37.040
I got a contract and I had an
advance covering two years.
00:54:39.440 --> 00:54:42.720
But I realized that
to tell this story,
00:54:42.720 --> 00:54:47.720
you needed to feel the world
around the characters.
00:54:47.720 --> 00:54:52.040
It couldn't be done without
putting time into drawing
00:54:52.040 --> 00:54:54.400
in more detail
with more shading
00:54:54.400 --> 00:54:56.720
than I had ever
done before.
00:55:14.160 --> 00:55:17.080
I began to panic when
I saw that I couldn’t go
00:55:17.080 --> 00:55:19.760
nearly as fast
as I had thought.
00:55:19.760 --> 00:55:23.920
I was thinking: ‘Oh no!
This is going to be a disaster.
00:55:23.920 --> 00:55:27.960
How would I, how
would I pay the rent?’
00:55:27.960 --> 00:55:30.640
And finally, I just had to change
my attitude and I said:
00:55:30.640 --> 00:55:34.520
‘Well, I'll just have to
take whatever time it takes.’
00:55:34.520 --> 00:55:36.080
And it wound up
taking four years.
00:55:39.160 --> 00:55:40.760
A lot of people
are surprised
00:55:40.760 --> 00:55:44.160
that these are as
large as they are.
00:55:44.160 --> 00:55:46.160
These are actually
two and a half times
00:55:45.960 --> 00:55:48.960
the size that they
appear in the book.
00:55:48.960 --> 00:55:51.680
It allows me to put in detail
the large amount of
00:55:51.680 --> 00:55:53.960
cross hatching to try
to create a shading,
00:55:53.960 --> 00:55:57.680
a graduated shading
from lighter to darker.
00:55:57.680 --> 00:55:59.960
The book uses a lot of that.
00:56:04.040 --> 00:56:06.120
This is an example of
comic book conventions,
00:56:06.120 --> 00:56:09.040
so things like the dog,
00:56:09.040 --> 00:56:12.040
which intrudes into the
surrounding panels.
00:56:12.280 --> 00:56:16.560
The feeling of threat is right
at the center of the page.
00:56:16.560 --> 00:56:18.280
If possible, I like
to always have
00:56:18.280 --> 00:56:20.280
what I call an
anchor panel.
00:56:20.280 --> 00:56:22.880
The panel I most want
the eye to follow when
00:56:22.880 --> 00:56:24.280
the person turns the page.
00:56:24.280 --> 00:56:27.560
In this one it would be this but
they still need to read the
00:56:27.560 --> 00:56:30.560
panels that go before it to see
how it fits into the story.
00:56:30.560 --> 00:56:32.160
It gives coherence,
00:56:32.160 --> 00:56:37.560
so it's not just a bunch of
random rectangles.
00:56:37.560 --> 00:56:42.560
In each given layout for the page,
I try to suggest the atmosphere
00:56:42.560 --> 00:56:45.160
that is going on
in the scene.
00:56:45.160 --> 00:56:46.840
Here you have,
I wanted a certain
00:56:46.840 --> 00:56:51.560
feeling of chaos because
they are in the middle of a riot.
00:56:51.560 --> 00:56:54.000
[Dog barking]
00:56:54.000 --> 00:56:56.400
[Whistle blows]
00:56:56.400 --> 00:56:58.680
[Crowd chanting]
00:57:07.040 --> 00:57:09.160
It was a wonderful
artistic experience,
00:57:09.160 --> 00:57:11.160
as financially
disastrous as it was.
00:57:39.560 --> 00:57:40.560
[Alison Bechdel]:
For a long time,
00:57:40.560 --> 00:57:43.160
I kept getting more gay
newspapers every year.
00:57:43.160 --> 00:57:47.640
It was like this
growing thing.
00:57:47.640 --> 00:57:49.320
I was selling more
of my books.
00:57:49.320 --> 00:57:54.320
I was publishing these
collections of the comic strip
00:57:54.320 --> 00:57:56.920
and then all of a sudden
in the late nineties
00:57:56.920 --> 00:58:00.600
at the turn of the millennium,
everything started drying up.
00:58:03.280 --> 00:58:04.600
There was the internet,
but there was also
00:58:04.600 --> 00:58:09.000
the rise of Amazon.com
and Barnes & Noble.
00:58:09.000 --> 00:58:10.880
These, these, you know,
00:58:10.880 --> 00:58:12.000
these chain
bookstores that were
00:58:12.000 --> 00:58:15.000
changing the whole
publishing landscape,
00:58:15.000 --> 00:58:19.880
you know, um anything
fringe or alternative
00:58:19.880 --> 00:58:22.880
or independent was dying.
00:58:25.840 --> 00:58:29.560
[Jen Camper]:
Gay Comix stopped publishing.
00:58:29.560 --> 00:58:31.240
A lot of us were
doing great work,
00:58:31.240 --> 00:58:34.560
but we weren't really finding
places to publish it.
00:58:34.560 --> 00:58:36.160
That pissed me off.
00:58:36.160 --> 00:58:38.240
So, I decided to
do an anthology
00:58:38.240 --> 00:58:40.560
called Juicy Mother.
00:58:40.560 --> 00:58:45.840
And the cover is by Karen Platt
and it’s a big gay party.
00:58:45.840 --> 00:58:48.840
Each Juicy Mother
had a cartoon jam.
00:58:51.240 --> 00:58:57.760
And a cartoon jam works where
one person does a panel,
00:58:57.760 --> 00:59:00.040
gives it to the next person
and they do a panel
00:59:00.040 --> 00:59:01.240
and they give it to
the next person
00:59:01.240 --> 00:59:08.120
and it goes around a few
times and you get a whole story.
00:59:13.840 --> 00:59:16.200
What's fun about a cartoon
jam is you get to draw
00:59:16.200 --> 00:59:20.520
each other's comics,
but what's weird about it is
00:59:20.520 --> 00:59:22.800
you don't have control and
suddenly you've got to
00:59:22.800 --> 00:59:26.520
give up your character and
somebody else could kill them off.
00:59:26.520 --> 00:59:28.800
So, I did a
lot of cartoon jams,
00:59:28.800 --> 00:59:31.800
where I kind of edited them
and brought people together,
00:59:31.800 --> 00:59:34.200
and back in the day it
was all done by mail,
00:59:34.200 --> 00:59:36.080
and they are great,
they are crazy,
00:59:36.080 --> 00:59:38.080
they are nuts and
they are a lot of fun.
00:59:43.200 --> 00:59:45.480
[Live punk music]
00:59:52.160 --> 00:59:55.160
As the gay ghetto
was crumbling in a way,
00:59:55.160 --> 00:59:58.480
there was also the rise of the
punk and DIY movement,
00:59:58.480 --> 01:00:02.160
and so people started
making their own zines.
01:00:06.160 --> 01:00:08.560
Maybe you couldn’t get
published by a major
01:00:08.560 --> 01:00:11.160
publishing house or even
a minor publishing house,
01:00:11.160 --> 01:00:12.320
but you could make
your own zine.
01:00:22.920 --> 01:00:24.320
To make a zine,
all you need to do is
01:00:24.320 --> 01:00:27.920
write or draw something,
photocopy it,
01:00:27.920 --> 01:00:29.320
fold it, you staple
it and you make
01:00:29.320 --> 01:00:31.320
hundreds of copies and
you sell and trade them
01:00:31.320 --> 01:00:34.320
with all your friends.
01:00:34.320 --> 01:00:36.920
The storytelling
became very personal,
01:00:36.920 --> 01:00:39.280
raw and visceral.
01:00:39.280 --> 01:00:41.600
Diane DiMassa
did Hothead Paisan,
01:00:41.600 --> 01:00:44.000
and it's one of
the most amazing little
01:00:44.000 --> 01:00:47.000
self-published comics
to come out.
01:00:47.000 --> 01:00:50.160
Hothead Paisan is a
homicidal lesbian terrorist.
01:00:50.160 --> 01:00:51.560
And she's filled with rage.
01:00:54.160 --> 01:00:56.160
And she goes
through life reacting to
01:00:56.160 --> 01:00:58.560
all the injustice
that's around her.
01:00:58.560 --> 01:01:00.360
[Cantankerous instrumental music]
01:01:10.640 --> 01:01:11.640
[Nicole Georges]:
She was this almost like
01:01:11.640 --> 01:01:13.640
a cavewoman unleashed.
01:01:13.640 --> 01:01:16.320
She walked like this and
her hair was like crazy
01:01:16.320 --> 01:01:18.000
and sticking out and
she would get so angry
01:01:18.000 --> 01:01:19.320
at men that she
would grab, like,
01:01:19.320 --> 01:01:22.600
a labrys or something and
chop them up or threaten to.
01:01:22.600 --> 01:01:23.920
- We'd get away with
a lot of stuff because
01:01:23.920 --> 01:01:25.600
no one even knows
to stop it sometimes.
01:01:25.600 --> 01:01:27.000
They’re not paying
attention to us.
01:01:27.000 --> 01:01:28.600
There's a lot of
freedom there.
01:01:28.600 --> 01:01:30.600
- Right now, the
emphasis I’m seeing
01:01:30.600 --> 01:01:33.040
a lot more in the
zine community is
01:01:33.040 --> 01:01:35.360
about heritage,
about culture.
01:01:35.360 --> 01:01:36.960
It’s really more and
more artists who are
01:01:36.960 --> 01:01:38.640
going back to
their histories,
01:01:38.640 --> 01:01:41.960
back to their family
history and saying
01:01:41.960 --> 01:01:43.960
‘This is who I am,
this is what defines me,
01:01:43.960 --> 01:01:45.360
my identity.
01:01:45.360 --> 01:01:46.640
Yes, I’m a
queer person,
01:01:46.640 --> 01:01:48.640
but I’m also this
other person.’
01:01:48.640 --> 01:01:50.640
[Uplifting instrumental music]
01:01:54.920 --> 01:01:57.040
- So then when the
internet really became
01:01:57.040 --> 01:02:01.000
part of everybody's
world, people started
01:02:01.000 --> 01:02:04.080
putting their comics online
and getting responses
01:02:04.080 --> 01:02:07.000
and web comics became a
01:02:07.000 --> 01:02:10.680
huge community for
all cartoonists,
01:02:10.680 --> 01:02:13.080
particularly for people
who are marginalized.
01:02:15.000 --> 01:02:17.000
[Uplifting instrumental continues]
01:02:54.960 --> 01:02:58.920
- I was in Mississippi for my
grandmother's funeral
01:02:58.920 --> 01:03:03.000
and the very next day I was
on a two-lane highway.
01:03:03.000 --> 01:03:06.000
I encountered a car
veering into my lane.
01:03:06.000 --> 01:03:12.080
And I turned my steering wheel
sharply and went into a ditch.
01:03:12.080 --> 01:03:17.000
It was a freak accident in that
there was no damage to the car,
01:03:17.000 --> 01:03:20.400
no damage to me except my
hands could feel my legs
01:03:20.400 --> 01:03:22.160
but my legs didn't
feel my hand.
01:03:29.560 --> 01:03:34.160
Scott had to fly to the
hospital in Memphis.
01:03:34.160 --> 01:03:36.840
And there was my
mother and father,
01:03:36.840 --> 01:03:40.240
and Scott came into
the room and basically
01:03:40.240 --> 01:03:43.560
turned to the nurse and said,
‘uh, I'm his partner.
01:03:43.560 --> 01:03:47.560
I'll need a cot.
I'll be sleeping next to him.’
01:03:47.560 --> 01:03:48.560
It wasn't any of this:
01:03:48.560 --> 01:03:52.520
‘I'm wondering if it's possible
that I might be able to get a cot?
01:03:52.520 --> 01:03:53.840
I'm not sure.
01:03:53.840 --> 01:03:57.120
I'm not really related,
but he's my partner.’
01:03:57.120 --> 01:03:59.240
It was just gung-ho!
01:03:59.240 --> 01:04:01.320
My father is like,
what the hell?
01:04:01.320 --> 01:04:06.600
My mom is like, really?
01:04:06.600 --> 01:04:10.320
She didn’t have to be
the primary person.
01:04:10.320 --> 01:04:14.880
She got to see my partner
do what partners do.
01:04:14.880 --> 01:04:16.880
And boy was that
the beginning of
01:04:16.880 --> 01:04:19.880
an incredible relationship
between Scott and my mom.
01:04:22.280 --> 01:04:24.280
[Dishes clinking,
background chatter]
01:04:40.240 --> 01:04:44.240
I saw a few of John Callahan’s
drawings and work
01:04:44.240 --> 01:04:47.160
before I even realized
he’s a paraplegic.
01:04:50.880 --> 01:04:53.560
I ran into him and
he was in a chair.
01:04:53.560 --> 01:04:58.160
And that was long
before my accident.
01:04:58.160 --> 01:05:01.320
In no way was he gay,
but he knew of my work
01:05:01.320 --> 01:05:03.640
in Just Out,
so we connected
01:05:03.640 --> 01:05:06.920
as these two cartoonists.
01:05:06.920 --> 01:05:09.640
Years later I run into
Callahan and he goes,
01:05:09.640 --> 01:05:12.040
‘What’s up with you?’
‘Well there needs to be
01:05:12.040 --> 01:05:15.600
more than one paraplegic
cartoonist in Portland.’
01:05:23.280 --> 01:05:27.160
It was a little bit of
serendipity that I knew him,
01:05:27.160 --> 01:05:33.600
because there’s this
anger about
01:05:33.600 --> 01:05:38.160
the way you’re treated
and how it affects you,
01:05:38.160 --> 01:05:41.280
that makes it fascinating
to me to see how you
01:05:41.280 --> 01:05:43.280
represent that
in your work.
01:05:59.160 --> 01:06:00.640
- So, this is a
cartoon that I was doing
01:06:00.640 --> 01:06:04.920
at that difficult period
when I didn't know
01:06:04.920 --> 01:06:07.600
if I was going to be
able to keep affording,
01:06:07.600 --> 01:06:09.320
being able to afford
being a cartoonist.
01:06:15.600 --> 01:06:18.320
I was losing newspapers,
losing bookstores.
01:06:18.320 --> 01:06:19.600
My publisher said,
‘You know,
01:06:19.600 --> 01:06:23.920
the only sector of this industry
that's growing is graphic novels.
01:06:23.920 --> 01:06:25.280
You should write
a graphic novel.’
01:06:25.280 --> 01:06:26.880
And I thought, well,
01:06:26.880 --> 01:06:29.280
I've always wanted to tell this
story about my family.
01:06:36.880 --> 01:06:38.880
After graduating from college,
I was going through all these
01:06:38.880 --> 01:06:41.880
old family photos and in
an envelope of pictures
01:06:41.880 --> 01:06:43.880
of me and my
brother at the beach,
01:06:43.880 --> 01:06:45.560
there was also
a picture of this
01:06:45.560 --> 01:06:51.280
young man in his tighty
whities, lying on a bed.
01:06:51.280 --> 01:06:55.560
I stumbled along in
my blithe happy way
01:06:55.560 --> 01:06:56.840
coming out to my parents.
01:06:56.840 --> 01:07:04.080
I, I unearthed their dark,
hidden, painful secret
01:07:04.080 --> 01:07:08.800
that my father had
had affairs with other men.
01:07:08.800 --> 01:07:11.080
And boys, some of his
high school students,
01:07:11.080 --> 01:07:14.800
over the course
of their marriage.
01:07:14.800 --> 01:07:18.360
And then it was very shortly
after that that my father died.
01:07:27.960 --> 01:07:29.960
My mom said,
you know,
01:07:29.960 --> 01:07:31.640
I think he did it on purpose.
01:07:33.920 --> 01:07:35.040
[Skidding tires]
01:07:47.640 --> 01:07:50.000
You know, it's hard
to pinpoint the exact
01:07:50.000 --> 01:07:52.000
causal relationship
between everything.
01:07:52.000 --> 01:07:55.400
But yeah,
I feel like if I hadn't,
01:07:55.400 --> 01:07:58.120
if I hadn't come out
or if I hadn't told them,
01:07:58.120 --> 01:08:00.760
things would have
happened differently,
01:08:00.760 --> 01:08:02.480
you know, he
might still be alive.
01:08:02.480 --> 01:08:04.160
I don't know.
01:08:12.160 --> 01:08:13.760
Writing Fun Home was,
01:08:13.760 --> 01:08:16.160
it was hard and
I felt a little crazy.
01:08:16.160 --> 01:08:18.440
I didn't know
what I was doing.
01:08:18.440 --> 01:08:20.760
Didn't know how to write a
serious story like that.
01:08:20.760 --> 01:08:24.160
I had Howard’s Stuck
Rubber Baby as a model,
01:08:24.160 --> 01:08:26.160
but I knew that that had
taken him years and years
01:08:26.160 --> 01:08:27.840
and driven him almost mad.
01:08:30.520 --> 01:08:34.120
I spent many, many
hours trying to recreate
01:08:34.120 --> 01:08:37.080
that blurry color photo.
01:08:39.960 --> 01:08:41.080
And then I had to
draw, you know,
01:08:41.080 --> 01:08:44.960
stuff like my father
and the casket.
01:08:44.960 --> 01:08:48.360
I posed for my dead
father in the coffin.
01:08:48.360 --> 01:08:51.040
I posed for almost
everything in that book.
01:08:51.040 --> 01:08:54.040
I mean at the time it
was just a drawing aid,
01:08:54.040 --> 01:08:56.360
but it was also a way
for me to enter into
01:08:56.360 --> 01:08:59.040
the emotional
world of the story.
01:09:09.000 --> 01:09:10.720
- I fell in love with the book.
01:09:14.000 --> 01:09:18.120
I was immediately taken by the
mere accomplishment.
01:09:20.400 --> 01:09:23.080
Then when the story
unfolded, it was like,
01:09:23.080 --> 01:09:24.400
I know this person,
01:09:24.400 --> 01:09:27.880
I always wondered
about her background.
01:09:27.880 --> 01:09:31.040
Not only is it
explaining things,
01:09:31.040 --> 01:09:33.600
I'm awestruck with
every revelation.
01:09:39.000 --> 01:09:40.640
[Phone rings]
01:09:43.600 --> 01:09:46.320
- I wasn't thinking about it
reaching a mainstream audience.
01:09:46.320 --> 01:09:49.000
I didn't know who was going
to read this weird book,
01:09:49.000 --> 01:09:51.000
you know, I hoped
that the people who
01:09:51.000 --> 01:09:54.280
read my comic strip would,
would be interested,
01:09:54.280 --> 01:09:56.320
but even that I wasn't
sure of, cause it was so
01:09:56.320 --> 01:09:59.280
different and weird and it
was becoming this much more
01:09:59.280 --> 01:10:04.280
literary sounding thing that
I thought they might not like.
01:10:07.600 --> 01:10:09.440
And then it was
actually successful.
01:10:13.120 --> 01:10:15.440
Book critics read it
and reviewed it as a book
01:10:15.440 --> 01:10:18.040
and not as a comic
book, you know?
01:10:18.040 --> 01:10:21.120
So that was a huge gift and
a part of what enabled it
01:10:21.120 --> 01:10:24.040
to reach a bigger audience.
01:10:27.720 --> 01:10:31.000
Because of how comics had
been progressing toward
01:10:31.000 --> 01:10:35.120
being taken seriously as a
literary form in recent years,
01:10:35.120 --> 01:10:37.680
Fun Home made it
over that threshold.
01:10:41.400 --> 01:10:42.720
- Time magazine voted it
01:10:42.720 --> 01:10:45.000
one of the books of
the year and I thought,
01:10:45.000 --> 01:10:47.720
Alison has really
reached the pinnacle.
01:10:47.720 --> 01:10:50.480
And then the next thing I hear
are these stirrings of a musical.
01:10:55.440 --> 01:10:56.440
[Alison Bechdel]:
It is so strange to me
01:10:56.440 --> 01:10:59.440
I don’t know how
to think about it.
01:10:59.440 --> 01:11:01.240
Like the butch
delivery woman,
01:11:01.240 --> 01:11:04.840
I once saw with my Dad
in a luncheonette--
01:11:04.840 --> 01:11:07.200
how bizarre to see that
very private and what
01:11:07.200 --> 01:11:11.800
I always thought was a super
idiosyncratic memory
01:11:11.800 --> 01:11:16.520
to see it turn into this scene
in a Broadway musical.
01:11:16.520 --> 01:11:19.120
I mean, I can't even believe
I'm saying those words.
01:11:19.120 --> 01:11:23.520
♪ Wearing your short hair
and your dungarees ♪
01:11:23.520 --> 01:11:27.040
♪ And your lace up boots ♪
01:11:27.040 --> 01:11:36.120
♪ And your keys,
your ring of keys, ♪
01:11:36.120 --> 01:11:38.000
♪ I know you ♪
01:11:39.720 --> 01:11:42.000
- It was revolutionary that
the play allowed this child
01:11:42.000 --> 01:11:45.120
to have this
moment of recognition
01:11:45.120 --> 01:11:48.720
that she’s a lesbian,
and also of desire, you know.
01:11:51.400 --> 01:11:54.680
[Rupert Kinnard]:
Me and Scott saw it with Alison.
01:11:54.680 --> 01:11:58.080
Then it’s nominated
for Tony awards.
01:11:58.080 --> 01:11:59.120
And then she wins.
01:12:01.480 --> 01:12:03.080
- It was crazy.
01:12:03.080 --> 01:12:05.800
It changed everything
and it meant I got to
01:12:05.800 --> 01:12:08.800
keep being a cartoonist.
01:12:08.800 --> 01:12:12.080
I’m not even sure whose
life I'm leading anymore.
01:12:12.080 --> 01:12:13.760
[Heartfelt music]
01:12:19.160 --> 01:12:25.480
- I had met Alison a number of
years before my accident.
01:12:25.480 --> 01:12:28.440
Once the surgery was done,
I was in a back brace.
01:12:28.440 --> 01:12:30.680
I was longing to get
back to Portland.
01:12:33.680 --> 01:12:36.080
Maybe a day or two
after I'd gone to work,
01:12:36.080 --> 01:12:39.680
I got a package in the mail
and I opened up the box
01:12:39.680 --> 01:12:41.080
and there was a
little card saying,
01:12:41.080 --> 01:12:42.960
I heard about
your accident and
01:12:42.960 --> 01:12:45.400
I wanted to send
you a get well card,
01:12:45.400 --> 01:12:49.920
but then I knew other people
might want to be involved in it.
01:12:49.920 --> 01:12:51.320
Love Alison.
01:12:51.320 --> 01:12:53.160
I thought this is
from Alison Bechdel.
01:12:55.080 --> 01:13:00.240
I remember opening the box
and seeing the very first panel
01:13:00.240 --> 01:13:02.560
and then pulling it,
just watching
01:13:02.560 --> 01:13:08.000
the whole string
just unfurl.
01:13:08.000 --> 01:13:10.000
And it just really,
really touched my heart
01:13:10.000 --> 01:13:12.960
because I kept
recognizing the styles of
01:13:12.960 --> 01:13:18.000
cartoonists I really
appreciated and admired.
01:13:18.000 --> 01:13:21.680
I remember coming across the
original drawing by Alison,
01:13:21.680 --> 01:13:24.360
and actually one of my
favorite characters of hers,
01:13:24.360 --> 01:13:26.680
of course.
01:13:26.680 --> 01:13:31.080
I love the whimsy of the
Trina Robbins panel,
01:13:31.080 --> 01:13:33.960
and Jennifer Camper.
01:13:33.960 --> 01:13:36.640
I love the contrast of hers,
how dark they were.
01:13:40.960 --> 01:13:42.640
- You are going to have to figure
out the magic of it all.
01:13:42.640 --> 01:13:44.040
Here we go, do
you like that height?
01:13:44.040 --> 01:13:46.640
Is that horrible?
01:13:46.640 --> 01:13:49.040
A lesser man
would need a hammer.
01:13:49.040 --> 01:13:53.320
- I fancied myself as someone
who really appreciated
01:13:53.320 --> 01:13:56.320
the communities
that I was a part of.
01:13:56.320 --> 01:13:59.920
This was the first time
I so immediately felt
01:13:59.920 --> 01:14:03.000
embraced by the
cartoonist community.
01:14:06.000 --> 01:14:10.400
There's just something about
being in that community
01:14:10.400 --> 01:14:17.080
where you genuinely don't
feel like there's competition.
01:14:17.080 --> 01:14:21.080
All of the ways that we
represent the community
01:14:21.080 --> 01:14:26.680
and all of the ways our
work, um, is personal.
01:14:26.680 --> 01:14:29.360
It's yet one more thing that I
never want to take for granted.
01:14:34.960 --> 01:14:36.680
- We're no longer
token sidekicks.
01:14:36.680 --> 01:14:38.200
We're no longer
sad stories.
01:14:41.120 --> 01:14:44.200
- I got my mainstream work
because of the queer comics.
01:14:44.200 --> 01:14:45.800
I'm very proud to
have my queer roots
01:14:45.800 --> 01:14:47.480
and my mainstream roots.
01:14:47.480 --> 01:14:49.840
But now, I can
mix them together.
01:14:49.840 --> 01:14:52.840
- A lot of the people
coming to buy comics are
01:14:52.840 --> 01:14:55.240
actually parents, and
they're looking for material
01:14:55.240 --> 01:14:58.240
for their trans kid
who just came out.
01:14:58.240 --> 01:15:00.160
That's something that I
definitely did not see
01:15:00.160 --> 01:15:01.920
when I started
making comics.
01:15:01.920 --> 01:15:04.040
[Charming instrumental music]
01:15:16.040 --> 01:15:17.440
- Queer comics have really
created a space for
01:15:17.440 --> 01:15:22.120
complexity that didn't exist in
a lot of other comics.
01:15:22.120 --> 01:15:25.000
The space for different ways of
being a Person of Color,
01:15:25.000 --> 01:15:27.000
different ways of
being gendered.
01:15:27.000 --> 01:15:29.000
It was really amazing.
01:15:29.000 --> 01:15:31.120
It was like nothing
I'd ever seen before.
01:15:31.120 --> 01:15:33.560
[Charming instrumental music]