Template:Short description Template:Pp-pc Template:Use mdy dates Template:Infobox comics creator
Jules Ralph Feiffer (born January 26, 1929)[1][2] is an American cartoonist and author, who at one time was considered the most widely read satirist in the country.[3] He won the Pulitzer Prize in 1986 for editorial cartooning, and in 2004 he was inducted into the Comic Book Hall of Fame. He wrote the animated short Munro, which won an Academy Award for Best Animated Short Film in 1961. The Library of Congress has recognized his "remarkable legacy", from 1946 to the present, as a cartoonist, playwright, screenwriter, adult and children's book author, illustrator, and art instructor.[4]
When Feiffer was 17 (in the mid-1940s) he became assistant to cartoonist Will Eisner. There he helped Eisner write and illustrate his comic strips, including The Spirit. In 1956, he became a staff cartoonist at The Village Voice, where he produced the weekly comic strip titled Feiffer until 1997. His cartoons became nationally syndicated in 1959 and then appeared regularly in publications including the Los Angeles Times, the London Observer, The New Yorker, Playboy, Esquire, and The Nation. In 1997, he created the first op-ed page comic strip for the New York Times, which ran monthly until 2000.
He has written more than 35 books, plays and screenplays. His first of many collections of satirical cartoons, Sick, Sick, Sick, was published in 1958, and his first novel, Harry, the Rat With Women, in 1963. In 1965, he wrote The Great Comic Book Heroes, the first history of the comic-book superheroes of the late 1930s and early 1940s and a tribute to their creators. In 1979, Feiffer created his first graphic novel, Tantrum. By 1993, he began writing and illustrating books aimed at young readers, with several of them winning awards.
Feiffer began writing for the theater and film in 1961, with plays including Little Murders (1967), Feiffer's People (1969), and Knock Knock (1976). He wrote the screenplay for Carnal Knowledge (1971), directed by Mike Nichols, and Popeye (1980), directed by Robert Altman. He was recently given a Lifetime Achievement Award by the Dramatist's Guild. He lives in upstate New York with his wife JZ Holden and their three cats, Mimi, Jackson and Dezzdemona. He is currently working on a visual memoir.
Early life
Feiffer was born in The Bronx, New York City, on January 26, 1929. His parents were David Feiffer and Rhoda (née Davis), and Feiffer was raised in a Jewish household with a younger and an older sister.[5] His father was usually unemployed in his work as a salesman due to the Depression. His mother was a fashion designer who made watercolor drawings of her designs which she sold to various clothing manufacturers in New York. "She'd go door to door selling her designs for $3," recalls Feiffer. The fact that she was the breadwinner, however, created an "atmosphere of silent blame" in the home. Feiffer began drawing at the age of 3. "My mother always encouraged me to draw", he says.[6]
When he was 13, his mother gave him a drawing table for his bedroom. She also enrolled him in the Art Students League of New York to study anatomy. He graduated from James Monroe High School in 1947.[7] He won a John Wanamaker Art Contest medal for a crayon drawing of the radio Western hero Tom Mix.[8] He wrote in 1965 about his childhood:
Feiffer says that cartoons were his first interest when young, "what I loved the most."[9] He states that because he couldn't write well enough to be a writer, or draw well enough to be an artist, he realized that the best way to succeed would be to combine his limited talents in each of those fields to create something unique.[9] He read comic strips from various newspapers which his father brought home, and was mostly attracted to the way they told stories. "What I loved best about these comics was that they created a very personal world in which almost anything could take place", Feiffer says. "And readers would accept it even if it had nothing to do with any other kind of world. It was the fantasy world I loved."[9]
Among his favorite cartoons were Our Boarding House, Alley Oop and Wash Tubbs.[10] He began to decipher features of different cartoonists, such as the sentimental naturalism of Abbie an' Slats, the [Preston] Sturges-like characters and plots of others, with cadenced dialogue. He recalls that Will Eisner's Spirit rivaled them in structure. And no strip, except [Milton] Caniff's Terry [and the Pirates], rivaled it in atmosphere."[11]
Career
Cartoonist
With Will Eisner (1946–1956)
After Feiffer graduated from high school at 16, he was desperate for a job, and went unannounced to the office of one of his favorite cartoonists, Will Eisner. Eisner was sympathetic to young Feiffer, as Eisner had been in a similar situation when he first started out. He asked Feiffer, "What can you do?" He answered, "I'll do anything. I'll do coloring, or clean-up, or anything, and I'd like to work for nothing."[12] However, Eisner was unimpressed by Feiffer's art abilities and did not know how he could employ him. Eisner ultimately decided to give him a low-paying job when he found out that Feiffer "knew more about him than anybody who had ever lived," said Feiffer. "He had no choice but to hire me as a groupie."[12]
Eisner considered Feiffer a mediocre artist, but he "liked the kid's spunk and intensity", writes Eisner biographer Michael Schumacher. Eisner was also aware that they both came from similar backgrounds, despite his being twelve years older. They both had fathers who struggled to support their family, and both their mothers were strong figures who held the family together through hardships.[12] "He had a hunger for comics that Eisner rarely saw in artists", notes Schumacher. "Eisner decided that there was something to this wisecracking kid."[12] When Feiffer later asked for a raise, Eisner instead gave him his own page in The Spirit section, and let him do his own coloring.[7] As Eisner recalled in 1978:
They collaborated well on The Spirit, sharing ideas, arguing points, and making changes when they agreed. In 1947, Feiffer also attended the Pratt Institute for a year to improve his art style.[12] Over time, Eisner valued Feiffer's opinions and judgments more often, appreciating his "uncanny knack" for capturing the way people talked, without using contrived dialogue. Eisner recalls that Feiffer "had a real ear for writing characters that lived and breathed. Jules was always attentive to nuances, such as sounds and expressions" which made stories seem more real.[12]
At The Village Voice (1956–1997)
After working with Eisner for nearly a decade, he chose to start creating his own comic strips. In 1956, after again first proving his talent by working for free, he became a staff cartoonist at The Village Voice where he produced a weekly comic strip. Feiffer's strips ran for 42 years, until 1997, at first titled Sick Sick Sick, then as Feiffer's Fables, and finally as simply Feiffer. After a year with the Voice, Feiffer compiled a collection of many of his satire cartoons into a best-selling book, Sick Sick Sick: A Guide to Non-Confident Living (1958), a dissection of popular social and political neuroses. The success of that collection led to his becoming a regular contributor to the London Observer and Playboy magazine.[3] Director Stanley Kubrick, a fellow Bronx native, invited Feiffer to write a screenplay for Sick, Sick, Sick, although the film was never made.[13] After first becoming aware of Feiffer's work, Kubrick wrote him in 1958:
By April 1959, Feiffer was distributed nationally by the Hall Syndicate, initially in The Boston Globe, Minneapolis Star Tribune, Newark Star-Ledger and Long Island Press.[14][15] Eventually, his strips covered the nation, including magazines, and were published regularly in major publications such as the Los Angeles Times, The New Yorker, Esquire, Playboy and The Nation. He was commissioned in 1997 by The New York Times to create its first op-ed page comic strip, which ran monthly until 2000.
Feiffer's cartoons were typically mini satires, where he portrayed ordinary people's thoughts about subjects such as sex, marriage, violence and politics. Writer Larry DuBois describes Feiffer's cartoon style:
Author
Feiffer published the hit Sick, Sick, Sick: A Guide to Non-Confident Living in 1958 (which featured a collection of cartoons from about 1950 to 1956), and followed up with More Sick, Sick, Sick and other strip collections, including The Explainers; Boy, Girl. Boy, Girl.; Hold Me!; Feiffer's Album; The Unexpurgated Memoirs of Bernard Mergendeiler; Feiffer on Nixon; Jules Feiffer's America: From Eisenhower to Reagan; Marriage Is an Invasion of Privacy; and Feiffer's Children. Passionella (1957) is a graphic narrative initially anthologized in Passionella and Other Stories, a variation on the story of Cinderella. The protagonist is Ella, a chimney sweep who is transformed into a Hollywood movie star. Passionella was used as one part of the 1966 Sheldon Harnick and Jerry Bock Broadway musical The Apple Tree.Template:Cn
His cartoons, strips and illustrations have been reprinted by Fantagraphics as Feiffer: The Collected Works. Explainers (2008) reprints all of his strips from 1956 to 1966.[14] David Kamp reviewed the book in The New York Times:
Feiffer has written two novels (1963's Harry the Rat with Women, 1977's Ackroyd) and several children's books, including Bark, George; Henry, The Dog with No Tail; A Room with a Zoo; The Daddy Mountain; and A Barrel of Laughs, a Vale of Tears. He partnered with The Walt Disney Company and writer Andrew Lippa to adapt his book The Man in the Ceiling into a musical.[16] He illustrated the children's books The Phantom Tollbooth and The Odious Ogre. His non-fiction includes the 1965 book The Great Comic Book Heroes.
Feiffer also wrote and drew one of the earliest graphic novels, the hardcover Tantrum (Alfred A. Knopf, 1979),[17] described on its dustjacket as a "novel-in-pictures". Like the trade paperback The Silver Surfer (Simon & Schuster/Fireside Books, August 1978), by Marvel Comics' Stan Lee and Jack Kirby, and the hardcover and trade paperback versions of Will Eisner's A Contract with God, and Other Tenement Stories (Baronet Books, October 1978), this was published by a traditional book publisher and distributed through bookstores, whereas other early graphic novels, such as Sabre (Eclipse Books, August 1978), were distributed through some of the first comic-book stores.
His autobiography, Backing into Forward: A Memoir (Doubleday, 2010), received positive reviews from The New York Times[18] and Publishers Weekly, which wrote:
He has had retrospectives at the New York Historical Society, the Library of Congress and The School of Visual Arts. His artwork is exhibited at and represented by Chicago's Jean Albano Gallery.[19] In 1996, Feiffer donated his papers and several hundred original cartoons and book illustrations to the Library of Congress.[7]
In 2014, Feiffer published Kill My Mother: A Graphic Novel through Liveright Publishing. Kill My Mother was named a Vanity Fair Best Book of 2014 and a Kirkus Reviews Best Fiction Book of 2014. In 2016, Feiffer published Cousin Joseph: A Graphic Novel, a prequel to Kill My Mother. Cousin Joseph was also published through Liveright Publishing, and was a New York Times Bestseller, named one of The Washington Post's Best Graphic Novels of the Year, and was nominated for the Lynd Ward Graphic Novel Prize. A third book in the series, The Ghost Script: A Graphic Novel, was published by Liveright in 2018.
Feiffer's picture book for young readers, Rupert Can Dance, was published by FSG in 2014.
Playwright and screenwriter
Feiffer's plays include Little Murders (1967), Feiffer's People (1969), Knock Knock (1976), Elliot Loves (1990), The White House Murder Case, and Grown Ups.[20] After Mike Nichols adapted Feiffer's unproduced play Carnal Knowledge as a 1971 film, Feiffer scripted Robert Altman's Popeye, Alain Resnais's I Want to Go Home, and the film adaptation of Little Murders.Template:Cn
The original production of Hold Me! was directed by Caymichael Patten and opened at The American Place Theatre, Subplot Cafe, as part of its American Humorist Series on January 13, 1977. The production ran on the Showtime cable network in 1981.[7]
Feiffer moved to Shelter Island, New York in 2017.[21] He wrote the book for a musical based on a story he wrote earlier, Man in the Ceiling, about a boy cartoonist who learned to pursue his dream despite pressures to conform. The musical was produced and directed by Jeffrey Seller in 2017 at the Bay Street Theatre in neighboring Sag Harbor, New York.[22][23]
Art instructor
Feiffer is an adjunct professor at Stony Brook Southampton. Previously he taught at the Yale School of Drama and Northwestern University. He has been a Senior Fellow at the Columbia University National Arts Journalism Program. He was in residence at the Arizona State University Barrett Honors College from November 27 to December 2, 2006. In June–August 2009, Feiffer was in residence as a Montgomery Fellow at Dartmouth College, where he taught an undergraduate course on graphic humor in the 20th century.[7]
Personal life
Feiffer has married three times and has three children. His daughter Halley Feiffer is an actress and playwright.[24] A second daughter, Kate Feiffer, is the author and playwright of "My Mom is Trying to Ruin My Life" and other works.[25]
His third marriage took place in September 2016, when he married freelance writer JZ Holden; the ceremony combined Jewish and Buddhist traditions.[26] She is the author of Illusion of Memory (2013).
Honors and awards
- 1961, recipient of a George Polk Awards for his cartoons;[4]
- 1961, film Munro won Academy Award for animated short;
- 1969 and 1970, won Obie Award and Outer Circle Critics Award for plays Little Murders and The White House Murder Case;
- 1986, awarded the Pulitzer Prize for political cartoons[7]
- 1995, elected to the American Academy of Arts and Letters;[7]
- 2004, inducted into the Comic Book Hall of Fame;
- 2004, received the National Cartoonists Society's Milton Caniff Lifetime Achievement Award;[27]
- 2006, received the Creativity Foundation's Laureate[28]
- 2010, won a Lifetime Achievement Award from the Writers Guild of America.[4][29]
Selected works
- Sick, Sick, Sick (1958)
- Passionella and Other Stories (1959)
- The Explainers (1960)
- Boy, Girl, Boy, Girl (1961)
- The Feiffer Album (1962)
- Hold Me! (1962)
- Harry: The Rat with Women, a Novel (1963)
- Feiffer's Album (1963)
- The Unexpurgated Memoirs of Bernard Mergendeiler (1964)
- The Great Comic Book Heroes (1965)
- Feiffer on Civil Rights (1966)
- The Penguin Feiffer (1966)
- Feiffer's Marriage Manual (1967)
- Pictures at a Prosecution (1971)
- Feiffer on Nixon, the Cartoon Presidency (1974)
- Knock Knock (1976)
- Tantrum (1979)
- Jules Feiffer's America: From Eisenhower to Reagan (1982)
- Marriage Is an Invasion of Privacy and Other Dangerous Views (1984)
- Feiffer's Children (1986)
- Ronald Reagan in Movie America (1988)
- The Man in the Ceiling (1993)
- A Barrel of Laughs, a Vale of Tears (1995)
- Meanwhile— (1997)
- I Lost My Bear (1998)
- Bark, George (1999)
- Backing into Forward: A Memoir (2010)[30]
- Smart George (2020)
References
External links
- Jules Feiffer illustration represented by R. Michelson Galleries
- Template:Citation
- Template:Usurped
- Lambiek Comiclopedia article.
- Template:IMDb name
- Stossel, Sage, "A Conversation With Jules Feiffer", The Atlantic, March 19, 2010. WebCitation archive
- Adams, Sam, "Interview: Jules Feiffer", The A.V. Club, July 28, 2008. WebCitation archive
- Transcript of March 24, 2010, Feiffer interview at the Museum of Comic and Cartoon Art, published as "Backing into Jules Feiffer: An Exclusive Q&A", FilmFestivalTraveler.com, April 18, 2010. WebCitation archive
- Template:LCAuth
Template:Inkpot Award 1980s Template:PulitzerPrize EditorialCartooning 1976–2000 Template:Animation Writers Caucus Template:Authority control Template:Portalbar
- ↑ Comics Buyer's Guide #1650; February 2009; Page 107
- ↑ Template:Cite web
- ↑ 3.0 3.1 "The Jules Feiffer Interview", The Comics Journal 124, 1988.
- ↑ 4.0 4.1 4.2 Jules Feiffer, Library of Congress
- ↑ Silvey, Ed. The Essential Guide to Children's Books and Their Creators, Houghton Mifflin Harcourt (2002) p. 154
- ↑ Feiffer, Jules. "The Return of Cartoonist Jules Feiffer", Wall Street Journal, June 16, 2015
- ↑ 7.0 7.1 7.2 7.3 7.4 7.5 7.6 Feiffer, Jules. Backing into Forward: A Memoir, Doubleday, 2010.
- ↑ Feiffer, Jules. The Great Comic Book Heroes (The Dial Press, New York, first trade paperback edition, 1977), p. 12. . Ellipses after "Green Hornet" in original text.
- ↑ 9.0 9.1 9.2 Cite error: Invalid
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- ↑ Feiffer, The Great Comic Book Heroes, pp. 12–13
- ↑ Feiffer, The Great Comic Book Heroes, p. 13
- ↑ 12.0 12.1 12.2 12.3 12.4 12.5 Schumacher, Michael. Will Eisner: A Dreamer's Life in Comics, Bloomsbury Publishing (2010) pp. 98–100
- ↑ Kercher, Stephen E., Revel with a Cause: Liberal Satire in Postwar America, Univ. of Chicago (2006) pp. 340–341
- ↑ 14.0 14.1 Feiffer, Jules. Explainers: The Complete Village Voice Strips (1956–1966), Fantagraphics Books, 2008.
- ↑ "The Press: Sick, Sick, Well" Time, February 9, 1959. WebCitation archive.
- ↑ "Pow! Jules Feiffer's Ceiling Man Hits the Stage" Template:Webarchive, The East Hampton Star, April 21, 2016
- ↑ Tallmer, Jerry. "The Three Lives of Jules Feiffer", NYC Plus No. 1, April 2005. WebCitation archive.
- ↑ Template:Cite news. .
- ↑ Jean Albano Gallery – Jules Feiffer. WebCitation archive.
- ↑ Template:Cite news
- ↑ Template:Cite web
- ↑ Template:Cite web
- ↑ Template:Cite web
- ↑ Template:Cite web. .
- ↑ Template:Cite web
- ↑ "JZ Holden and Jules Feiffer: Humor and Truth Spark Outrage, Then a Union", New York Times, Sept. 17, 2016
- ↑ Gardner, Alan. "Jules Feiffer to Receive Lifetime Achievement Award", The Daily Cartoonist, January 30, 2007. Retrieved March 3, 2009. WebCitation archive.
- ↑ "2006 Laureate Prize Winner: Jules Feiffer – Arts", Creativity Foundation. WebCitation archive.
- ↑ Template:Cite web
- ↑ Brennan, Elizabeth A.; Clarage, Elizabeth C. Who's Who of Pulitzer Prize Winners, Greenwood Publishing Group (1999) p. 156