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Post by Deleted on Apr 20, 2022 13:48:21 GMT -5
This is the flip side to my "creator disappointments" thread. A number of posts in that thread have talked about positive experiences as well, but thought I'd dedicate a new conversation for folks to chime in on.
I've got one that I consider my favorite. I was at the old Mid-Ohio Con maybe 20 years ago or thereabouts. It was at a hotel that was a new location that year, and they were having some logistics issues with the space. My dad joined me at the con that year as he liked to do from time to time, even though he wasn't a comic book collector he liked the pop culture aspect of it. So at one point the two of us decided to find a spot to sit down and take a break, and there were a couple of sofas and chairs set up together in a little area out of the way that were unoccupied and we hung out there.
Shortly after we sit down, a lady walks up and sits down on one of them as well, and a guy next to her loudly proclaims something along the lines of "Jan Duursema breakout session!". So yeah it was Jan, and we were the only ones who were accidently sitting right where the "creator meet" hangout was supposed to happen. The guy who announced her couldn't be heard over the background noise, so he left to see if they could announce through a PA or something of that nature.
Meanwhile, Jan is super friendly with us and introduces herself. We do the same and get right into chatting on all things comic books as well as Star Wars since this is right around when she was working on Attack of the Clones era material. Long story short, she was just wonderful to chat with, it felt like talking to a fellow fan, you could tell she loved all this stuff and it wasn't just a job. My dad was a very sociable person, well-read and enjoyed jumping into conversations, but again not a comic book person per se. He steered the conversation at one point to something he'd been reading recently in a political science book, and I paused to see how Jan would respond. I had no doubt she'd be diplomatic because again, she's just flat out a super nice person. But she took in what my dad shared, and without skipping a beat got fully engaged in that topic and had some great thoughts of her own to share.
Right around then, the guy who was trying to announce her breakout spot shows back up, totally ignores us and basically says to Jan "I'm so sorry for our technical issues, you don't have to hang out here". Jan replies with a smile, "I'm having a good time here, thank you" and proceeds to spend the rest of the hour with just us since nobody else knew to make it over.
I've definitely met some other nice folks in the industry over the years, but that will forever be my most special memory.
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Post by badwolf on Apr 20, 2022 14:17:02 GMT -5
Yes, this is better. Let's have some positivity!
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Post by Deleted on Apr 20, 2022 14:28:37 GMT -5
I'm not one to wait in super-long lines to meet a creator. I did meet Peter David at a con, though, when I first got back into comics and was a big fan of his Hulk. He said he liked my tattoos. It's small-talk BS, but so what. It's positive, at least. It was fun going back home and telling the wife that I met the Hulk dude, who I probably mentioned (i.e. bored her with) more than any other creator at the time, and he said he liked my tattoos (none of which are comic-related).
I now regret that I didn't brave the line to meet Stan The Man at the same con, though.
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Post by Roquefort Raider on Apr 20, 2022 14:37:07 GMT -5
No particular exchange to speak of, but when she noticed me standing in awed silence near her table at the Small Press Expo in Bethseda in the '90s, Carla Speed McNeil shoved a Finder sampler in my hands with a good-natured "Here! It's free!". She was always so generous with her fans... When I ordered a few back issues directly from her a few years down the line, they came with several original sketch pages (of which I suppose she had a surfeit).
McNeil is the antithesis of a prima donna, although she has all the talent of a major star! Her material is pure gold.
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Post by Deleted on Apr 20, 2022 14:55:27 GMT -5
One of my favorite interactions with a pro was about 8 years back, when Mark Waid was the guest of honor at our local con and there was a roast in his honor. I knew the con organizer, and they needed a location, so I arranged to hold it in the banquet room of the restaurant I was working in at the time (I'm the Mike mentioned at the beginning lurking near the camera out of the shot for most of the roast. Waid was kind, funny, gracious, and a good sport through the whole evening and through my many interactions with him through the con itself and at the shop I was helping out at beforehand. In prep for the show, I suggested to the owner of the shop to do a Got Waid? promo based on the Got Milk ads of the time and use toppers for Waid's books to promo his appearance at the show. Mark got a huge kick out of that and we gave him one of the toppers. At the show, the day after, he and his the partner spent about a half hour at the table I was helping out at, going through Silver Age DC back issues. She would slide the book out of the box so only the top 1/2 inch to inch of the cover was visible and Mark would guess the title and issue number. He got it right about 95% of the time. This was also the show I brought up the gorilla baseball cover issues of Brave and the Bold and asked him about the rules of baseball in the CU and why gorillas slide into bases from foul territory, which he got a kick of, pulled out his cell to call Tom Peyer, and we ended up having a three way conversation about baseball in the DCU for about 15 minutes. Here's a video of the roast if anyone wants to check it out...it's restricted to youtube only can't post it here, only link to it Mark Waid Roast on youtubeA year later, Mark was again a guest at a local con (Gem City this time), and where I was set up in artist alley because I was doing some editing for a local studio at the time, and he came up and said hello, remembering all of us from the previous year and chatted with us for a bit before the show opened. I've seen others have less positive encounters with Mark (he is very outspoken and doesn't suffer fools gladly so I can understand how that can happen), but I have had nothing but positive experiences with him. -M
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Post by tonebone on Apr 20, 2022 15:21:00 GMT -5
This is not MY encounter, but a friend's (on my behalf?).
In the early 2000's, a friend of mine went to a con (in Pittsburgh, I think), and was determined to get Stan Lee's autograph for me. Why? Who knows... but he was determined. He somehow missed out on the actual signing (Stan was promoting his POW entertainment venture, which was just getting started). My friend got held up doing something else, and long story short, Stan has left the building. As in, JUST left. He raced down to the parking deck and there was Stan getting into his car, with the driver closing the door. As the car started moving, he ran up calling "Stan! Stan!", and the car stopped, and Stan rolled down the window. He told Stan how he promised me an autograph, and Stan whipped out a business card and signed it for him. He said Stan was no nice and polite, and so generous, and could have easily driven away, but stopped to see what his fan wanted.
Actually, I DO remember why he wanted the autograph for me... we were working at a small game studio, and we had just finished a batch of games for Stan Lee Media. I was kind of bummed that I never got to actually directly interact with Stan on the project, and then Stan Lee Media collapsed (amid Hillary Clinton campaign scandals, cocaine smuggling, and his partner fleeing to Brazil... long story). The games we developed were for the "Backstreet Project"... superhero versions of the Backstreet Boys... sigh. I still have the action figures somewhere... and that autograph... somewhere...
Anyways... Stan Lee... great guy.
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Post by EdoBosnar on Apr 20, 2022 15:50:39 GMT -5
All of my actual in person encounters with comics creators - not that many to be sure - have been positive and, yes, I guess you can say awesome as well. However, I get the feeling I've recounted them a number of times on this forum, and quick search shows that I've mentioned my brief meeting with Howard Chaykin in Zagreb at least three times (most recently last month). Same goes for when I saw Stan Sakai when he was here - only I didn't mention in that post that I also happened to be standing next to him at the opening ceremony and we chatted for about 5 minutes. He's an incredibly nice man. I also met R.M. Guera and he drew me a sketch of Festus (the old horse in Scalped) - and yeah, I mentioned that in another thread here as well. Also, I've met some of the various Croatian comics artists who were or are active on the US market on a number of occasions, most notably Darko Macan, Dalibor Talajić and Goran Sudžuka. I've become pretty well acquainted with Talajić in particular and we occasionally meet for drinks and a chat.
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Post by Deleted on Apr 20, 2022 16:27:08 GMT -5
All of my actual in person encounters with comics creators - not that many to be sure - have been positive and, yes, I guess you can say awesome as well. However, I get the feeling I've recounted them a number of times on this forum, and quick search shows that I've mentioned my brief meeting with Howard Chaykin in Zagreb at least three times (most recently last month). Same goes for when I saw Stan Sakai when he was here - only I didn't mention in that post that I also happened to be standing next to him at the opening ceremony and we chatted for about 5 minutes. He's an incredibly nice man. I also met R.M. Guera and he drew me a sketch of Festus (the old horse in Scalped) - and yeah, I mentioned that in another thread here as well. Also, I've met some of the various Croatian comics artists who were or are active on the US market on a number of occasions, most notably Darko Macan, Dalibor Talajić and Goran Sudžuka. I've become pretty well acquainted with Talajić in particular and we occasionally meet for drinks and a chat. Cool experiences! Regarding having recounted them a number of times before, it somehow reminds me that the older I get, the more frequently I've found myself saying the phrase "tell me if I've already told you this one before..."
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Post by Deleted on Apr 20, 2022 17:17:17 GMT -5
Adam Kubert was absolutely fantastic when he visited us locally....must have been around 20 years ago because everyone had an Ultimate X-Men #1 for him to sign. I was still in my teens and he chatted with me and my dealer (a 19 yr old upstart lol) as though we were old friends....
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Confessor
CCF Mod Squad
Not Bucky O'Hare!
Posts: 10,163
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Post by Confessor on Apr 20, 2022 19:29:02 GMT -5
I've never met any famous comic creators. They all hate me.
Also, I live in England where very few of the big U.S. names seem to come to meet their adoring fans.
I did enter into a short e-mail correspondence with J. M. DeMatteis four or five years back and he came across as a really nice guy, for what it's worth.
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Post by Hoosier X on Apr 20, 2022 20:00:30 GMT -5
I met Harlan Ellison back in the 1990s, and I’ve mentioned it a few times here on CCF. Are there very many people left who haven’t read it? Or maybe enough people who don’t mind hearing it again?
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Post by berkley on Apr 20, 2022 20:07:09 GMT -5
I met Harlan Ellison back in the 1990s, and I’ve mentioned it a few times here on CCF. Are there very many people left who haven’t read it? Or maybe enough people who don’t mind hearing it again? I don't think I've heard it, so go ahead!
I haven't met any creators myself, so no good or bad experiences to report. Anyone I've seen online at messageboards such as this have mostly been polite, as far as I can remember. You saw more of it on the old CBR.
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Post by Deleted on Apr 20, 2022 20:24:29 GMT -5
I'm definitely interested in hearing it as well Hoosier X ! And BTW, "awesome" can be interpreted in any positive way folks like...I spent the 80's growing up in New England, everything cool to me tends to be "wicked awesome"
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Post by commond on Apr 20, 2022 20:50:28 GMT -5
I’ve only met Grant Morrison and Warren Ellis, and they were both very engaging. I did meet Terry Pratchett once. He complimented me on my hair. I also took a short course that was run by Dylan Horrocks, a New Zealand cartoonist who produces a neat creator owned work called Hicksville and has done some work for DC. He was a nice guy and let folks borrow the comics he brought to class.
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Post by codystarbuck on Apr 20, 2022 22:01:28 GMT -5
I've met a couple of prose authors, via my time at Barnes & Noble. Rick Riordan, who wrote the Percy Jackson series of YA adventure novels, dis a local signing at the Champaign Public Library and a couple of schools and I got to interact with him at the school appearance. We were contacted to sell books at both and were set up in the school library and he came in there first, before going to the gym for the assembly. We talked a few minutes and he bought a couple of his books to give away. He was a super nice guy and an ex-teacher; so, he was really interested in getting kids to read, beyond just his book sales. he also talked about trying to sell novels, while teaching and he had a few mysteries, before he hit it big and could give up teaching, for writing.
Met Tamora Pierce, who writes YA fantasy novels with female protagonists, at another library event. She was a hoot. She started out speaking to the crowd very haltingly, like she was nervous with public speaking. She spoke softly and would have little coughs and excuse herself and you could see the crowd react to the awkward situation. Then she started speaking more confidently and in a more animated fashion and then the audience realized it had been an act and started laughing. She then talked for a while and answered questions, then signed books. She had two events and she came over and spent some time with us, in between. During her talk, she mentioned being a fan of Colleen Wing and Misty Knight, from Power Man and Iron Fist, and of Don McGregor's work and I brought that up. We ended up talking about McGregor and 70s non-superhero adventure comics and positive female chaarcetrs. We complimented her gimmick and she said she had another bit she did, where she was the flowery, artsy type, where everything is "extraordinary" and flounced around and we got her to do it for the second group, which was a big hit. She was really cool and another who genuinely cared about getting kids to read (and not just her work). She had also just done the White Tiger mini-series, at Marvel, with a female version of the character, but spoke very poorly of the experience and the attitude of the editors, at Marvel. She had a scene where the character fights someone and the artist drew the male antagonist straddling her, in a very "rapey" pose and she objected to the staging and the implication and the editors blew her off. She basically cut ties with them and refused to work on a sequel or anything else for Marvel.
We also hosted Laurel K Hamilton for a signing; but, she had security guards around her and had all of these contractual "needs," and her crowd was a rather odd bunch, which explained the need for security. Seemed kind of sad. Another manager I knew in one of the St Louis stores had had signings with her and wasn't a fan, mostly for the weird following she drew and the hassle of accommodating her demands. She made a crack about how she really looked vs the photo on her books (which looked about 10 years younger and thinner). I didn't get to interact with Hamilton; so, I had no opinion. I think she found herself with a following of people who had problems with reality and the rest of it was necessary to keep her safe.
That other manager hosted multiple signings, since they had the largest store in the St Louis batch and got to meet most of the big names. She said the one author who was a real treat was Mary Higgins Clark. Said she looked better than her author photo and was just the nicest, most down-to-earth person. The publisher would provide her with an assistant; but, she'd just have them drop her off at the front of the store, while they parked and then would just go in and introduce herself. Other authors ran the flunkies into the ground. Said she was fantastic with her fans and the booksellers.
On the comic side, I met Joe Staton, in Atlanta and chatted a little, while he sketched Captain Marvel for me (the real one). He's a bit on the shy side, as am I; so, it wasn't exactly an animated session. We both paused when Marina Sirtis, of Star Trek next Gen walked past, on her way to a talk. She was wearing a dress with a short hemline and heels and we both had to wipe off the drool. Beautiful woman, in person, and a wicked sense of humor that the series never really got to showcase. Also got to meet Wayne Vanzant, who had his book Battle Group Peiper, out from Caliber and had done work for DC and Marvel's The Nam. I talked to him for a few minutes; but, he was being pestered by two guys from a WW2 re-enactor group, who were decked out in SS gear and seemed a little too into it, for my comfort and I moved on. I got the impression they didn't think the SS were a bunch of murderers and rapists. Bob Burden was also there; but, I hadn't really read any of the Flaming Carrot, yet and this was before the Mystery Men movie. Also there was Terry Collins, who was doing some writing for Millennium and a couple of others and took part in a panel about adapting movies and tv to comics and vice versa, since he was writing Doc Savage. he had Philip Jose Farmer's "biography" of Doc with him, which was the first time I saw it ( had read the Tarzan one, as a teenager, at the library). I soon hunted down my own copy.
Met Tom Lyle at a little con in Augusta, GA and he was super cool. He did a sketch of Sgt Strike, from the Stryke! series, at Eclipse, with Chck Dixon. He had been drawing Starman, at DC, for just under a year (I think) at that point.
At a Heroes Con, I met Gil Kane, who signed a copy of THUNDER Afgents and remarked he hadn't seen one in years. He flipped through it to see if he had done an interior story; but, he had only done the cover. I had two issues at home, with his stories (Raven and Menthor); but, hadn't known he was going to be there and didn't bring them. I picked up that issue at the con. I talked for a few moments with Tom & Mary Bierbaum , who were writing Legion of Super Heroes (the whole Legion office was there, including Keith Giffin) and they were really nice. Giffen crash for a minute to make a joke, then went over to the DC booth. I watched a Navy recuriter bring a bunch of stuff to the booth for Julie Schwartz to sign, including the surprise issue they did, where he was inserted into the story. The guy was a real fan and Schwartz was very nice to the guy. Dick Giordano was there; but, I didn't get a chance to talk to him and he was hard of hearing, which made for some awkward interactions with fans. Talked with Dave Dorman, about the Kubert School, while he signed a copy of my Aliens hardocer book, where he had done cover and internal illustrations. I had applied and been accepted there; but was having trouble swinging the tuition (no GI Bill eligibility and I wasn't keen on accumulating a lot of student loan debt, with a degree already).
I met Doug Rice, twice, at small conventions in Springfield, IL and spent quite a while talking to him, as he sketched for me. The first time, we were talking about Manhunter, as he sketched Mark Shaw for me, while I was asking about the design details and his inspirations. He got the ideas for the Japanese hero show, Kamen Rider, as well as the general look of the costumes from those shows and the Super Sentai shows that spawned the Power Rangers. He steered me into that world and I ended up picking up a couple of tapes from a dealer who had Japanese stuff and ordered a couple more from him and some from another dealer. Rice remmbered me the next year and he sketched Pvt Pomru, a feline character from Dynamo Joe, while we talked several subjects. i went to pay for the sketch and he told me it was on him; that he enjoyed talking to me. I thanked him profusely. Also met Clarke Hawbaker and Len Strazewski at that same con, both of whom were great to talk to and then met Steve Lieber, who was drawing Hawkman and talked with him about the Kubert School and Kubert';s influence on his style. Another super-nice guy.
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