Archive for March, 2010

Skyppi the Skrull

Wednesday, March 31st, 2010

Contributed by Ronald Byrd

Although born “physically unsuitable” for combat, Skyppi serves the Skrull Empire as a maintenance worker for two centuries before fleeing to avoid being sent to a termination center, where Skrulls who are old and no longer “useful” are slain. Skyppi’s unspecified “unsuitability” for

combat leads one to wonder if the Skrull militia has some of the same restrictions as that of the United States. Finding haven on the planet Deniciere in the Orion Galaxy [sic], Skyppi assumes the identity of a beautiful human named Shasha and does well as a fashion model until inadvertently exposed by the Greek god Hercules and his robot sidekick the Recorder in 2385. Skyppi joins the adventuring pair and, despite his quirks such as a preferance to assume female forms, including that of a little girl, to avoid anti-Skrull sentiment, he becomes a valuable ally. Skyppi never displays any real romantic interest in anyone of either gender. While disguised as a green-skinned woman, he seems rather troubled by the attentions of the amorous Eternal Starfox,but his preference for feminine form is at least suggestive. Moreover, when the Recorder comments that Hercules does quite well at romancing women, Skyppi responds, “To tell you the truth, tin-britches…I wouldn’t know!”


Like most Skrulls, Skyppi has the power to assume any form that he can imagine, whether humanoid, animal, or inanimate. He travels alongside Hercules and the Recorder in the enchanted chariot of Apollo, drawn by flying carnivorous horses.

Skyppi first appeared in Hercules #1, vol. 2, set in known space of the 24th century. This was during the early period of Jim Shooter’s duties as Marvel editor-in-chief. In light of the recent revelation that Hercules and Northstar hooked up it makes you wonder if Hercules and Skyppi might’ve done the same.

It should be noted that Skyppi’s gender bending appeared decades before Xavin and Karolina Dean became star crossed loves in Runaways and Wiccan and Hulkling became boyfriends in Young Avengers.

Update: Skyppi has most recently appeared in Bob Layton’s 2010 Hercules: Twilight Of A God mini series. Based on a cursory look through issues to date Skyppi seems to appear only in his original Skrull form and male gender.

© and ® by Marvel Comics. Used without permission.

Rick Stone

Wednesday, March 31st, 2010

Art by John Paul Leon

Rick Stone is one of Virgil Hawkins’ (Static) close friends. We see him throughout the series, usually briefly in his role as a supporting cast member. In other issues which will be highlighted here, he figures more prominently. In issue one, he’s on the receiving end of a gay taunt from a “friend” about his performance at a school assembly the day before. He replies with: “I don’t have to listen to your limp dick gags.” Another student tells Rick to lighten up; it was just a joke.

Skip ahead to issue #5 when Rick, Virgil, and friends Chuck, and Felix are playing an intense superhero roleplaying game. Virgil gets a lucky role and an exasperated Rick says, “I wish I could get rolls like that with Airburst.” Chuck jumps in and exclaims Airburst is “so gay.” The tension escalates a little before Rick diffuses it by throwing an empty plastic soda bottle at Chuck.

Another gay taunt happens at school (issue #11). Chuck has insulted Rick by calling his shirt “fruit-flavored.” Once again, Chuck excuses himself by labeling his rude comment as a joke. Rick’s patience is reaching a limit though, and Virgil and best friend Frieda have to keep the two boys separate.

The boys are hanging out at one of their houses, talking about action movie heroes (issue #15). Virgil brings up “Captain Thunder.” Chuck proclaims, “He’s so gay, man!” Virgil questions Chuck because Thunder is strong enough to punch through mountains, and tries to enlist Rick in his argument. Instead of getting involved, this time Rick states, “he is kind of a Boy Scout” and walks away. Rick apologizes to Virgil for not sticking up with him the next day at school.

Yet again the boys are together when for no apparent reason Chuck calls Rick “Richard the Pink, Knight of the Tutu.” Again, Rick blows up, but his point is completely diffused when Chuck makes another joke, and he, Felix, Larry, and Virgil laugh.

Virgil has remained silent and non-supportive of Rick. Later, Static is on patrol when he comes across some skinheads attacking others on the street. They start to run off with Static in pursuit when one of the figures calls out for help.

It’s Rick, who’s kneeling next to an unconscious boy. Static is shocked that the boy who shouted out is Rick (he’s unaware that Static is his friend Virgil). Static asks what prompted the attack and Rick confesses it was a gay bashing (issue #16). Static flies the boys to a hospital. In transit Rick says he’s gone to a gay teen support group, and implies that he was attracted to the other boy. The skinheads attacked them when they left the meeting. Meanwhile, Static is secretly freaking out over the news is friend really is gay. The two boys are admitted, and Static flies away. Virgil is shocked to learn that Frieda is aware of Rick’s sexuality when he brings the incident up to her. Virgil decides to act as if nothing has changed (for now). At the end of the chapter, Rick, face bruised and bandaged returns to school. When questioned by his friends, Rick confesses he was gay bashed, and for the first time, puts Chuck in his place. Rick talks about a plan to organize a teen group for the school and asks his friends for support. (Issue #17)

The scene continues with the next issue with Rick angrily walking away from Chuck who’s still trying to turn it all into a joke. Later, Rick is sorely disappointed with Virgil when he protests that everyone is looking at the two of them, and telling Rick he should’ve kept the secret to himself. Virgil finds out that Frieda is angry at him for this when he calls her and a recorded answering machine greeting instructs him to see his “phony, homophobic buddies.” (Issue #18)

Rick discovers some students don’t think he’s a pariah when Frieda, Daisy (a girl that is dating Virgil) , and a new boy have lunch with him the next day (issue #19). They make plans to go to a gay rally after school that afternoon. Daisy confesses her mother is a lesbian and will go with the kids. The tension at the rally is already high between gay activists and homophobes when the kids arrive. Violence erupts when members of the Sons of Odin, apparently led by a mutant named Hotstreak, initiates intimidating actions against the gay protesters. Static appears just as things get out of control. The requisite fight involving Static and Hotstreak follows. The police take care of the other Sons of Odin and Static stops Hotstreak. With the mutant handcuffed in a police wagon, Static leaves the scene, assuming everything will be fine. However, a Son of Odin member has infiltrated the police force and creates an accident scenario that frees Hotstreak. The mutant grabs Frieda out of the crowd, and from atop a light pole threatens to harm her unless Static returns. He has unintentionally made himself a good target. It isn’t the police who shoot him though; it’s Rick from the sidelines. It isn’t elaborated where the gun comes from, but the implication is it came from Ducky, the new student. (Issue #20)

Rick is feeling guilt and remorse over the shooting as he and the rest of the gang take a subway trip to see a movie playing at a theater on the somewhat seedy Paris Island. (Issue #21) The feelings worsen after he’s realized someone will figure out he’s responsible for the shooting, and as these things work out, two police officers visit his home as he returns from walking the dog. One officer instructs the other to help kindly Mrs. Stone bring some more cookies from kitchen as a diversion to speak with Rick alone. He has a talk with Rick, and reveals that he’s figured out Rick shot Hotstreak. But he’s a compassionate, if not completely by the book, officer because he’s devised a story that will satisfy the investigation and end any attention to Rick, who quietly agrees to comply. Later in the story, Virgil comes to visit Rick. The two boys go for a walk, and Virgil awkwardly apologizes for his homophobic behavior, ending by saying: “Good. Then we could, like, be like it never happened, right? Still friends?” Rick doesn’t want to let him off so easily and replies, “As long as you remember that it did happen, sure…why not?” (Issue #22)

It’s interesting to note that Rick’s gay-bashing and coming out story happened eight years before Terry Berg’s gay bashing story written by Judd Winick in Green Lantern. Winick’s story caused a media controversy whereas as far as I know, this earlier story caused barely a ripple outside of its readership as noted by letter writers. In 1994 Bill Clinton has been in the White House since January of 1993 and with the later story, Bush has been in office for approximately the same length of time. In those eight years the Internet became pervasive and conservative/ evangelical elements in this country came to the forefront.

The last development of any kind with Rick happens in issue #27 when he gets a part time job working a hot dog cart. Rick and Virgil remain friends through the series (it ended with #44) and has a cameo appearance in #1 of the Static Shock mini series of 2001. An adult Rick appeared with Virgil at the end of the two part Milestone Forever mini (2010) though there is no relevant information to add.

Rick first appeared in Static #1 and is confirmed gay in Static #16. The character transitioned to the Static Shock animated series. Read the Wikipedia entry.  Thanks to Xrstoryteller for the reminder about this character. Both Dwayne McDuffie and Robert L. Washington III wrote Static and each presumably had a hand in crafting Rick.

© and ® Milestone Media. Used without permission.

Dr. Druid & Sepulchre

Wednesday, March 31st, 2010

Contributed by Ronald Byrd

Doctor Druid’s (Anthony Ludgate) heroic career reaches back several decades, when the sorcerer known as the Ancient One awoke and augmented Druid’s innate mystic powers; relatively little about Druid’s long career has been revealed, although it is known that decades ago he led a group of adventurers called the Monster Hunters, and in modern times he has worked alongside various better known super-heroes, including Doctor Strange and the Avengers, although he betrayed the latter team due to the manipulation of the villainous Terminatrix. In recent years, while lecturing at the University of San Francisco, Druid met student Jillian Woods and sensed an innate psychic link between them, ultimately discovering that the two had been lovers centuries ago, in previous incarnations during the time of King Arthur, when a wandering Celtic alchemist fell in love with a Christian English noblewoman, only to be slain by her family. However, against expectations, it out that David was the English noblewoman and Jillian the male alchemist; this is a rather metaphysical variation of transsexuality, one that believers in reincarnation might say is common to most if not all people, but such an example has rarely arisen in comic book history.

Unfortunately, the pair’s modern-day incarnations ultimately fare little better than their earlier ones. When Jillian is accidentally slain by a mystic artifact’s power, Druid channels her soul into a new mystic body, granting her supernatural shadow-powers. Using first the name Shadowoman, then Sepulchre, Jillian aids Druid in repelling various threats, a responsibility that is increased when Druid is, against his will, granted the power to foresee upcoming mystical disasters, which he battles with the aid of periodic gatherings of “Secret Defenders.” However, Sepulchre grows resentful of her non-human existence, and after a particularly grueling clash, Druid fakes his own death in order to encourage her to start a new life free of additional mystic entanglements. Alas, he later becomes corrupted by either insanity or evil—actually, by “dark” writer Warren Ellis—and is ultimately slain by the half-demon Hellstorm, hardly a suitable end for such a veteran super-hero.

Throughout most of his career Doctor Druid’s super-powers consisted of telepathy, mesmerism, illusion-casting, psychokinesis, limited precognition, and the manipulation of the inherent mystic energies within certain objects; in his final, more dangerous incarnation he possessed stronger but less clearly defined magical powers. Sepulchre is composed of mystical “shadow-matter” which enables her to fly, project darkness, and alter her body to a limited extent.

Druid and Sepulchre are based in Boston. Druid has been an adventurer, occult expert, lecturer, author, former psychiatrist and explorer. Woods was also an adventurer, former graduate student and holder of various low-paying jobs. They were arguably outed in Secret Defenders #16.

© and ® Marvel Comics. Used without permission.

C2E2 Gays In Comics Panel

Monday, March 29th, 2010

Chicago’s first C2E2 convention will include a discussion panel of interest to LGBT comics fans on Friday, April 16th. The debut “Chicago Gays in Comics” panel is scheduled to run from 6:45 to 7:45 in Room E351 at McCormick Place.

Chicagoland-area LGBT comics writers,illustrators and scholars discuss depictions of sexuality and gender in their own work and comics in general as well as the dilemmas of serving a niche market and/or trying to appeal to a “crossover mainstream” audience. Panelists include Dale Lazarov, Kris Dresen, Saro Spice, Joe Palmer and Tony Breed and moderator Steve Disme.

C2E2 information can be found at C2E2 website.

Hercules’ Other Lovers

Sunday, March 28th, 2010

Hercules and Hylas

By Joe Palmer

Last week there was a lot of internet buzz when at the memorial for Hercules in  Hercules: Fall Of An Avenger #1 it was heavily inferred that Hercules (and later confirmed by the writer) had at one time hooked up with Northstar, following through on the hero’s love of young men so often stripped from average recounts of Greek myths. While it’s pointless to post the panels now after other blogs and news sites have (you can look here), Hercules had plenty of other eromenoi, as the Greeks called male lovers, to talk about.

Where to begin?

Wikipedia seems a good place but numerous links in some of its articles are sometimes distracting.If you’re like me, I sometimes find myself clicking on links to new entries before having read the one I looked up. Instead, the World History of Male Love website seems a better place. It’s articles are concise and well-written, and there’s the bonus of learning about stories of male love in other cultures.

Plutarch, the ancient Greek writer among other things, wrote that Hercules had more eromenoi than the god Apollo, an apparently impressive feat since Apollo was reputedly quite fond of young men.

Hercules is said to have considered Iolaos and Hylas as his favorites. Iolaos, also youthful cousin to Hercules, accompanied the demi-god ashis charioteer on many of his Twelve Labors. Their mutual adoration inspired real lovers to pledge themselves at his tomb while the Thebans worshipped him together with Hercules and held yearly contests like the Olympics, the Iolaeia, in his honor.

Hercules next greatest beloved was the curly, blond haired Hylas, son of King Thiodamas. As legend goes, Hercules was plodding along one day in the backward land of Dryopia when he encountered the king (being very unkingly working in the field). The two of them had a misunderstanding, and Hercules, feeling insulted, killed Thiodamas. Apparently the Dryopians’ quality of life wasn’t great, and rather than risk more bloodshed they offered Hylas to Hercules. It was a win-win situation. Hylas got a boyfriend, Hercules a weapons bearer and a lover, and the Dryopians a new ruler. The pair became inseparable, and they joined the adventure when Jason was gathering an army to gain the golden fleece. Tragically, the Fates had another plan for Hylas and he was seduced by the water-nymph Dryope who became entranced by his beauty. Hercules and Polyphemos searched all night for Hylas, but it was for nothing as he’d joined Dryope in her underwater cave.

Other men said to have beloved of Hercules include: Abderus; Iphitus; Admetus, who assisted in the hunt for the Calydonian Boar; Adonis; Corythus; Nestor, a fellow argonaut and later King of Pylos; Philoctetes who inherited Hercules’s bow and arrows; Nireus; Jason, leader of the Argonauts; Stychius, and Phrynx.

The seeming pre-occupation with youths in ancient Greek myths and social relationships may seem unsettling. Bear in mind that the average lifespan was likely much shorter because of factors like war, infections, bad water, and for women, dying in child birth. Neither is it so different from our contemporary romanticized ideas of young men becoming soldiers. Today we just tell ourselves stories with slightly different ideas because of the predominance of Christianity. Just think how different the world might be today if past cultures’ ideas and practices of sexuality had never been suppressed or erased because of religious dogma.

Information in this short piece is compiled from the following article. Please read it for further information about Hercules and bookmark it for stories of other Greek gods and from other cultures.

Editorial Board, World History of Male Love, “Greek Mythology”, The Many Loves of Hercules, 1999

You might also want to check out “Lovers’ Legends, the Gay Greek Myths. Restored and retold by Andew Calimach.”

Rawhide Rides & Other Surprises

Wednesday, March 24th, 2010

Several comics caught my eye the other day while looking over both Marvel’s and DC’s June solicitations available at Newsarama and CBR. The one got me excited is Fogtown, a story about a private eye who’s a repressed homosexual living in the 1950s. At Comic Con a couple years ago I stopped at artist Brad Rader’s table and he was working on drawing a page right then. Rader talked about the project in broad terms and showed a couple different pages to me. The project seemed pretty daring so knowing it’ll be available in a few months makes me happy.

Happy is not how I feel reading artist Mike S. Miller, controversial for his orthodox Christian view on homosexuality, attached to The Authority.

Most surprising is info about a second Rawhide Kid mini. Returning writer Ron Zimmerman is paired with Howard Chaykin. At least Johnny will be drawn as a hot redhead. What are the chances that Zimmerman has read up on homosexuality in American West cowboy culture? And $3.99 for a 32 paged comic? With a parental advisory warning? Really?

FOGTOWN HC
On sale AUGUST 4 • 176 pg, B&W, 5.5” x 8”, $19.99 US • MATURE READERS
Written by ANDERSEN GABRYCH • Art by BRAD RADER • Cover by LEE BERMEJO
New from Vertigo Crime! Frank Grissel is a hard-knuckled private eye – and a deeply closeted homosexual – set in the very real world of 1953 San Francisco. Aided by his long-suffering secretary (and sometime live-in lover) Loretta, Grissel’s search for a runaway girl winds up with his becoming a suspect in a string of gruesome murders. The case takes twists and turns through the Golden Gate’s greasy underbelly: the beguiling arms of a Chinese shipping heiress (and smuggler); an unexpected reunion with the daughter he abandoned long ago; the loss of Loretta to the sadistic clutches of the high-powered “Colonel”; and finally to the horrifying, gender-bending truth.

THE AUTHORITY #23
On sale JUNE 2 • 32 pg, FC, $2.99 US
Written by TOM TAYLOR • Art by MIKE S. MILLER • Cover by PHILIP TAN
With the onboard rebellions subdued and attacks from the stowaways repelled, The Authority can once again focus on the nature of their voyage. Is the Carrier leading them to its home – or does it have some other, more sinister agenda? While passing through a vast graveyard of discarded spacecraft, the latest Century Baby detects a faint sign of life. The High goes off on a rescue mission, but what he brings back on board eclipses any danger they’ve faced so far.

THE RAWHIDE KID #1 (of 4)
Written by RON ZIMMERMAN • Penciled by HOWARD CHAYKIN • Cover by JOHN CASSADAY
32 pg Parental Advisory $3.99
“TOMBSTONE BLUES”
The best-dressed gunslinger the Wild West ever knew is back in the saddle again — and this time, he’s riding with a posse!  That’s right, pardners, it’s a brand new rip-roaring adventure of the Rawhide Kid!  When Wyatt and Morgan Earp are taken hostage by Cristo Pike and his pack of pistoleros, Rawhide has no choice but to put together a posse of the greatest western heroes in the Marvel Universe — to rescue the Earp brothers and bring Pike to justice.  Enter: Kid Colt, Doc Holliday, Annie Oakley, Billy the Kid, Red Wolf and the most overrated gun in the West: The Two-Gun Kid! We guarantee the Wild West can’t get any wilder.

Interview With Sean McGrath

Sunday, March 14th, 2010

Recently I had the pleasure to read Frater Mine, an indy series written by Sean McGrath. McGrath’s writing and characters intrigued me, and while I knew of Sean through Prism, I realized I didn’t know Sean much at all. This interview is the result of following that curiosity, and I hope in reading it you’ll also be intrigued by McGrath.

Art by Scott McGrathSean, every gay person has a coming out story and every comics fans has an origin story. What’s your comics origin and when and how did comics intersect with being gay?

Really, there wasn’t a defining moment, but rather a confluence of Saturday morning cartoons and merchandise: Super Friends, Ark II, The Krofft Super Show (with Electra Woman and Dyna Girl, Bigfoot and Wild Boy (Lord, I had a crush on Wild Boy!), Ultra Man (horribly dubbed and fuzzily broadcast from Canada), The Shazam!/Isis Hour and Megos.  Like a lot of other gay youngsters, I knew there was something different about me, and while I didn’t have a name for it, the comics and toys just let everyone else know there was something different about me.

Being gay in name though not in practice didn’t happen until I was in high school, and by then Steve Rush had introduced me to The New Mutants.  That comic resonated with me more than any before or since for two reasons: all the team members were my age, and they were just about as marginalized as I felt I was.  So, yeah, high school was high school, and I probably held my breath for all four years, but from The New Mutants I learned that being different is a strength, not a handicap.

Your name may be familiar to people because of your involvement with Prism. What were your roles with the organization? Do you have any projects you look on with pride?

I started off as a reviewer, but after Rich Thigpen, the Color Commentary editor, stepped down, he asked me if I wanted to take his place, and I jumped at the chance.  I recruited several new reviewers and had a review posted almost every week while I was there.  I think my favorite reviews that I wrote were for The Pornomicon and The Incredibly Hung Naked Justice , as well as my interview with Justin Hall and Dave Davenport .   I also contributed an interview withTerry Moore, a timeline of HIV/AIDS in comic books, and a survey of religion in comic books to three consecutive issues of the annual Prism Guide.  These I was most proud of, moreso than anything else I’d written or done for Prism.  And for about thirty seconds in 2009, I was Volunteer Chair, and gathered folks to help out at Wonder-Con, but then my Dad passed away and I couldn’t continue especially with Comic-Con being the next big event, so I stepped down.

How did you come about writing your own comics?

The first comic book I tried to make was back in 1975.  It was going to be Disney’s Peter Pan (my favorite movie at that time), but then in the supermarket one day I saw it had already been done.  I obviously hadn’t learned the truism “but not done by you” yet.

Later, DC came out with Dial H for Hero, a comic wherein the main characters would change into different heroes every month, based on characters submitted by readers.  I sent in four or five characters, but the convenience store where I got my comics stopped carrying the series.  I should check out the back issues at Austin Books and Comics to see if I was famous at a young age and didn’t know it.

The next series I came up with was called Praxis.  It came about my freshman year of college when I took “The Religious Person” with Mary Hembrow Snyder, a Marian Theologian.  She spoke about “orthopraxis” – the right action for the right time – and social justice issues.  My Praxis was going to be about heroes who would take care of the world’s problems like famine and racism and homophobia and pollution.  I’m sure you can see that there’s no good way to write a book like that without becoming overly preach-y (which it was) or the contradiction of beating people’s heads in for the sake of  Justice.  I toyed with the concept for a few years until I wrote the first two issues in 1994.  It never got off the ground in that form; however, the Praxis team made its first appearance in issue 7 of Frater Mine.  I have a plan for a one-shot issue of Praxis, but I need to finish writing it.  One of these days.

Then in 1998 when I move to Austin, I wrote a comic called Tuesday’s Child.  I actually found a local artist for help out with this series, then she disappeared.  I tried to illustrate it myself, but my drawing skills were…  hell, still are miserable.  I was never happy with what I put on a page, so I was forever erasing sketches and throwing Bristol board away.  However, that was my first big step towards finishing a script in under a month, and seriously looking into publishing my comic.

In 2003, I started to work as an editor for a comic “company” called “Affinity Comics”.  Lord, what a mess!  It crumpled under its own weight in less than a year after I left, but I learned that anyone can write a comic script and find an artist to get it into panels.  Srsly.

One of the guys from Affinity, Chris Moshier, started up Making Comics Studios and invited me and other AC refugees to join him in…  well, making comics.  I was an editor there for a short time when I decided it was just time to start writing my own comic book.  Frater Mine came along soon after that.

Making indy comics is almost always a labor of love. What’s your alter ego’s dreaded day job and other interests?

I teach English for Speakers of Other Languages for Deaf and Hard-of-Hearing students at Austin Community College.  And anything I say does not necessarily reflect the beliefs or policies established therein.  I used to teach high school at Texas School for the Deaf, but that didn’t go very well.  By the time I left, I would have rather had hatpins driven through my balls and into a stone throne than go back.  Hell, who am I kidding, I still feel that way.  I taught American Sign Language in public school for one year and actually enjoyed myself.  The problems were exactly the same, but my classroom was in a portable unit, so whatever happened in the school had almost nothing to do with me, which is how I like it.  My goal with a job is to do my best, and sometimes administration interferes with that.  I enjoy the autonomy I have at ACC, to say nothing of (most of) my colleagues, who make me feel like I’m sitting at the cool kids’ table everyday.

From Frater Mine #4

Art by Juan Romera

My teaching job actually gave me my blackest story to date: All Students Must DIE!!! It was not labor of love.  It was more like therapy.  Or a grudge fuck.  I was so fed up with the high school I was teaching at (yes, I’m looking at you, TSD) – the principals, the lack of disciple, students not doing their homework, the being told how to best teach by people who hadn’t seen the inside of a classroom since Nixon was President, spies for the admin roaming the hallways; all the normal abnormal complaints teachers have – that I had to get some of my frustration and anger out onto the page.  I would like to point out that not one of my students appeared in the book.  For long.  One of these days I’ll go back to it one day since I’m several levels of stress removed from that morass now.  I think it would be pretty popular.  I mean, who doesn’t love a revenge drama?  I sleep with my copy of Hamlet.  It keeps my tiny, hard heart frosty.  It’s very 2010.

As far as other interests go, I’m working on a comic book play for my theatre company, Weird City Theatre , called Giants in Those Days.  It will go up this coming July in Austin, TX.  I have my Orthocomics website.  My pets.  Spoiling my nephew (which reminds me, I should get him a little something soon…).  I cook like the boys are coming back from Dresden any day now.  I collect books, 3-D and electronic board games, and handheld electronic games form the 80’s.  I also like to collect custom Megos, though it’s been a while since I’ve added anything to the display shelf.  I read (and should anyone need a gift idea for me, there’s a copy of the first printing of Seduction of the Innocent with the intact bibliography I’ve been eyeing).  Oddly, I like making curricular materials.  And once in a while, I’ll breathe.

You’ve written several comics both in print such as Generic Goddess and Frater Mine and as free comics to download like Rise of the Pink Ninjas , All Students Must DIE!!! and the NSFW! Infinitesimal Situation at the Ultimate Piggly Wiggly, a parody of Grant Morrison’s Infinite Crisis and the current state of LGBT comics.  Let’s talk first about your lengthiest work to date, Frater Mine. Where did its inspiration come from?

The inspiration came from two very dear friends of mine, Mike and Erin, and being very lonely in Colorado without them.  The original Frater Mine was an outline of a story I back in 1994. It was about a magician who kept watch over a town, defending it from intruders: monsters, pirates, other magicians, what have you.  He discovers that recent magical attacks on the town are being perpetrated by a former friend. So, this magician and a third friend, a female magician, travel to the evil magician’s stronghold to face him down.  No one had any names.  The whole thing had a Dungeons & Dragons vibe to it (another major influence on my childhood), which is way different than the story I re-created in 2005.  Still, there’s a line I used in both: “Don’t you ever wonder what it would be like: the three of us together in the same room again?”  And that’s really what the first arc is about, sort of “Come and see.”

Frater Mine seems to me to more Vertigo, minus the pretentiousness a lot of readers point out, than the sanitized packaged Harry Potter Hogwarts Academy for wizardry. Does that seem accurate to you?

I’ll take the Vertigo compliment, thanks.  I’m sure my brother’s cover art has a lot to do with that as well.  I can definitely say that none of my work is sleekly packaged; it’s more prête à porter. Not that there’s nothing wrong with sleek per se, but that’s just not within the range of my personality, especially as an indy creator where there’s freedom to not be like Marvel or DC or Disney or whomever.  Robert Kirkman wisely asked his fans why if they write their own comic books with the hope of working for the Big Two one day, don’t they just make that their business instead of writing someone else’s characters and stories.  There is, of course, prestige involved in working with high profile characters, and I wouldn’t kick Dan Didio out of bed for eating crackers (metaphorically speaking), but I’m pretty sure I don’t have the right mindset for that kind of work.    Plus, I like messy and complicated.  I also like not being pretentious.

Magic and theology are a couple themes in your work, not just in Frater Mine where magic is predominant, but even in Rise of the Pink Ninjas. How did you become interested in these subjects?

Let’s call “theology and magic” by their actual name: “the occult”. I grew up in the Catholic Church, and there is nothing more occult that the Catholic Church, what with all the fancy hats and dresses; golden croizers, censers, and tabernacles; to say nothing of a virgin birth announced by an angel and the ritual eating of God through transubstantiated bread and wine; among other mysteries like Solomon’s binding of demons to his service, the nature and duty of the various choirs of angels, and not wanting to have the child Jesus as your next-door neighbor.  Given all that, plus two early encounters with spirits in my life and I had almost no choice but to become interested in the occult.

From the Frater Mine tpb

As it stands now, I’m an anti-theist: I believe that God exists, but his followers leave something to be desired.  And I’m talking about the moderate apologists as well.  I think about their perception of God as often and as intensely as they think about my genitals.  Seems only fair, right?

I also owe a lot to my hometown of Erie, PA.  We were surrounded by woods and creeks and every square inch had a spooky story to go with it.  On the city border there was a place called “Axe Murder Hollow”where gypsies supposedly lived and a bloody slaying had taken place.  The ghost of Mad Anthony Wayne rides around Erie County on his horse New Year’s Day looking for his bones.  Satan has apparently made several appearances in the Erie Cemetery.  Edinboro University had a possession case in the 70’s.  Presque Isle, the peninsula that juts out into Lake Eire, I have recently been told by my friend Mike, was home to Joe Root, who lived there for a very long time in a piano crate.  He was a magician of sorts and could see these nature spirits he called Jee-Bees.  Mike is writing a musical about Joe, which should have its debut in April.  My grandparents’ house had a spirit at the top of the staircase – funny story: my brother and I often spoke about not wanting to look at the top of the steps because we were always afraid something would be looking back.  It was just one spot though.  Walking up the staircase, we couldn’t look, but once past that point, it was all good.  It turns out that my mom had the same sensation while she was growing up in the house, but never spoke about it.  There was also on the same block an infamously haunted house.

I mentioned my play Giants in Those Days before.  Here’s another example where magic, theology and homosexuality inform my work.  Weird City Theatre got a grant from the City of Austin to put our season on, knowing that the last show would be a comic book play written by me.  Well, when it came down to it, I realized I have never in my life written a real “superhero” story, let alone a three act play.  What I ended up with is a complicated story of heroes, villains, love, the Lance of Longinus, an iron golem, the Beloved Disciple, a hypocritical preacher, and a gay superhero out for revenge.  It kinda hits all the highlights of my top ten perseverations, right?  Seeing it all in one place though makes me want to start expanding my writing horizons.

On the Frater Mine trade’s back cover you wrote: “Families and magic both carry a responsibility and a price.” If a writer’s responsibility is to tell a good story, what is the price of being a writer?

That’s an excellent question, and I wish I had an excellent answer.  When I hear “a price”, I think of “a test”, as in “can my stories last beyond the moment in which I write them?”  I don’t know that my writing has been tested – read- re-read, discussed, criticized and improved.  I sadly work in a vacuum.

Your handling of Matt, the main character who is gay, is different in that it seems to me he’s defined by other aspects first ahead of sexuality. Why go this route rather than incorporate sex and romance which seem to be fairly popular?

I think I avoid them exactly because they are so popular.  It’s pretty common in gay comics to see hands on a hard, naked body or a rocky love-of-a-lifetime romance complicated by coming-out issues, but, haven’t these all been said before?  Metaphorically speaking, it’s one more issue of Honcho or another romantic comedy with Sandra Aniston Grant. Not to pick on gay comics only, because it’s difficult to find any stories – books, movies, TV shows, what have you – that are considered popular that have something new and interesting to show the audience.  This isn’t to say that there aren’t some great takes on these themes out there – the Hard to Swallow series come to mind for the former, and…  actually, I’m hard pressed to think of a decent coming-out comic story that was published after 1998.  In my own writing, I wanted to avoid all that: the common stories, the well-worn paths, the tediously familiar, the derivative.

I have actually written about sex and romance in my comics, but I write about them in pretty cynical terms.  When Jesus “Jo Beth” March and I wrote Infinitesimal Situation at the Ultimate Wiggle Piggly, one of the things we wanted to touch on, so to speak, was the phenomena of outrageously disproportionate cocks in gay comics.  You know, the ones that look like the cores of carpet rolls.  I’m pretty sure Patrick Fillion paved the way for that, and it’s his trademark, so I’m all about giving him props for being a pioneer.  But the proliferation of cock-as-log by other artists diminished what Patrick was doing, to the point that it became almost comical instead of the realization of the fantastic.  And that was what we were trying to point out: that an artistic choice became a “thing” – it was almost expected on some level – and lost its ability to titillate.  If the volume starts at 11, where is there to go after that?  Up?  To 12, 15, 20?  Really?  Is there an upper limit to how large a cock can be drawn before it becomes grotesque or comical?

(An aside: another reason we wrote Infinitesimal Situation… was so I could use a term I made up: “Claremont Hole”, a tear in the fabric of a story into which sub-plots fall, forgotten forever.)

I’m an abysmal failure at romantic relationships for one reason or another.  And that shows in Frater Mine.  In issue two, Matt’s big declaration of being gay is one line long: he admits to using his powers to getting guys to go to bed with him.  Other than that, I’ve been pretty subtle on the whole gay angle: no rainbow flags or coming out parties or Sex in the City-esque ventings over appletinis or whatever.  Matt’s sexuality is built into him, and the statement has been made.  There’s no need to underline it twice and set it ablaze.  However, I will say that in the next few issues, Matt goes to bed with a guy he…  let’s say “likes” (yeah, there’s a bare butt and everything), but the scene is actually pretty disturbing.  There’s a stark contrast between Alberto, the sweet young thing, and Matt, whose heart is missing. There’s something a little deeper going on beyond anal penetration.  So to speak.

Family is another theme you explore here. In the first arc, there is protagonist Matt’s chosen family, and in the second one there is his birth family. There are tensions and dysfunctions in both sets of families. Would you talk about what you were exploring with these different relationships?

To say that I’m guarded is probably understating how defensive I really am.  I am, at my core, an introvert, and I don’t share anything about myself easily.  I suppose one could say that comes from spending my formative years in the closet, or maybe I was just born that way.  It seems to be six in one, half a dozen the other: either my family made me the way I am or my family made me the way I am.  In any case, the relationships I form with people are rare but meaningful.  And once I’m friends with someone, well, I’m pretty hard to shake.  I have stalker-levels of loyalty and devotion.  Less terrifyingly stated, I consider my friends to be members of my family.

The first story arc of Frater Mine, “Family Reunion”, is about three friends who after years of estrangement, reunite to run an errand for Heaven.  I wrote all three issues in about three weeks after I came back to Texas after spending the Christmas holiday with family and friends in Pennsylvania.  It’s my Christmas card to them, people whom I miss all the time.  It’s an adventure like we had when we were teenagers: something dangerous we did when our parents weren’t around or thought we were safely hanging out at Perkin’s.  I wanted to capture that excitement one has when one is young: of not having a plan, but something happens all the same.

After that, I wrote the second arc, “Here, There and Nowhere”, which, as you said, draws in Matt’s birth family – his twin brother, his nephew, his parents – and all the dysfunction therein.  Obviously, Matt is a stand-in for me (though I am desperately trying to stop making people and places so easily recognizable as being from my real life (which is where Matt’s assaulting a student comes from; he could do it whereas I could not), so I get to write about what my family means to be, even if it is more fantastical than we really are.  Two things really were the inspiration behind this arc.  The first was the birth of my nephew Dominic.  After he came along, I started to re-evaluate how safe I thought the world was and I came to a disheartening conclusion: it’s not.  And in my panic I wrote about Matt’s nephew Powers being kidnapped.  The second… well, it’s not too big a secret that I want to move back North to be closer to my family.  I haven’t lived near them for almost twenty years, and it’s time to change that.  Last summer, I spent almost two months at home, taking care of business and family matters while our father was dying from cancer.  When I left, I was sad, almost devastated (which led to a later argument with my then-boyfriend), and decided that I couldn’t miss them anymore by being 1,500 mile away.  Matt is doing the same thing: connect.  He’s also trying to save his family and being everyone back together safely; the problem is, he’s just as lost as everyone else.

I suppose the third arc will deal with either lost family members or something more like “the family of man”.  Of course, I have about two years before I get there as “Here, There and Nowhere” still has about four issues left (bi-annual publication is a bitch).

Your most recent comic is Rise of the Pink Ninjas which is about the struggle for marriage equality. You had a no holds barred attitude with the writing that I think is great. You’ve mentioned a particular comment made by Maggie Gallagher hitting a nerve with you.  Were there other events before her infamous comment leading you up to the story idea?

I started reading several of the gay political blogs about three years ago, and, while I had always known that the Religioso were set against the whole spectrum of the queer community – I went to college in rural PA, where frighteningly fanatic, anti-gay churches that held revivals in decrepit barns littered the landscape like frat boys on any given Sunday morning – I was completely unaware of how well-organized they were, and how many people uncritically accepted what they said about my genitals.  And yes, I took every anti-gay comment they make that personally.  It’s not just the cocks, balls, asses, pussies of the masses of gay and lesbian people everywhere that they slander, those are MY tender parts they’re putting up for scrutiny.

The more I read, the angrier I got.

When Maggie Gallagher, whose morality-based evaluations of the “right” and “wrong” use of my goodies, said during a debate with Michelangelo Signorelli, “Gay marriage is not a civil right; in fact, it is a civil wrong!” I finally completely lost my shit.  I was at home in PA, staying with my brother, and he had to listen to my launch nuclear invectives against Maggie Gallagher and her bastard ilk extending at least three generations out. I posted on my favorite blog, JoeMyGod, that with all the bluster one hears about the stealthy Navy SEALS or the covert assassination squads running around or even some dude with a wuxia fixation and a katana, I couldn’t believe that at least one of them wasn’t gay and on his way to have “a few words” with Maggie at her Hamptons mansion dressed in pink ninja garb.  Benjamin Ruth, who had previously drawn my nephew as Sith Lord Darth Scourge (my Christmas gift to him), commented that he thought that would be a great comic book, and it went from there.  I think I had a script done within a week, and Ben was onboard soon after that.

And don’t even get me started on those boy-fuckers in Rome and the Larry Craig types here at home.  They exemplify all that is wrong with religion, all religions.  I think that even today The Concerned Women for America signed onto rabidly anti-gay The Manhattan Declaration, saying they are just following God’s will over man’s.  I do, however, take comfort in the fact that sooner rather than later, one of them will be caught on top of the lawn boy.  That’s just how these people roll.

Regarding Pink Ninjas, how did you feel when Pink Ninjas received some attention from Joe Jervis of JoeMyGod?

I saw Joe’s posting while I was at school and it was quite the honor.  Ah, who am I kidding?  I practically gave myself a stroke waiting to share the news with someone.  Again, I keep my work and my home affairs separate.  Mostly.  Definitely in terms of my students because the Deaf Community here is small and up in everyone’s grill about whatever the hot topic of the day is, but I do have colleagues I tell things to.  I was dying to tell someone, so much so I almost blabbed to a writing class, but better judgment got a hold of me and I kept it inside.  I wound up with a hernia.

What are your views on where the LGBT community’s best interests lie politically?

I’m not sure.  Even as citizens of the United States, let alone gay citizens, I’m uncertain where our best interests lie. I don’t believe that career politicians have the slightest inkling who their constituents are or what they want to see their government do for them.

Any personal thoughts on the current state of LGBT comics and representation in mainstream, small press, and indy areas?

Nothing of my own, but I’d like to send your readers to Megan Rose Gedris’ outstanding article “Writing Gay Characters”.  One of these days, I hope all LGBT writers and writers of LGBT characters take her advice.

A good part of the 90s I lived in Houston, and the feeling of culture shock always nagged me. A few months before I left, Houston police officers had arrested John Lawrence (of Lawrence v Texas of Supreme Court fame) and now Houstonians have elected a lesbian to be mayor. What are your thoughts about the social and political atmosphere in Austin these days and how does it impact you?

The gay community in Austin is very small.  Microtesimal.  It’s been said that Austin the slowest moving orgy around: eventually everyone will have slept with everyone else within one degree removed.  There’s a certain freedom in that, and a certain backlash as well.  I mean, who doesn’t enjoy a good orgy?  But the privacy is ramped up that much more.  I can’t even imagine the fights that would break out in bars if so-and-so found out that his boyfriend had at one time been involved in a triad with so-and-so before breaking it off to trick with so-and-so on the side.  I can say, however, that the scene would go nuclear within moments.  And this is a chicken-or-egg debate, but there’s also no visible gay community of any note.  Yeah, we have a gay softball league, a monthly guerrilla bar invasion, bars bars bars, the Hill Country ride for AIDS, and even our own bathhouse, but where these people are during sunlight hours is anyone’s guess.

Before I moved here 12 years ago, I lived in DC, home of DuPont Circle and congressional pages.  The gay community was everywhere with a forum for any type of activity and The Washington Blade kept everyone in touch.  Moving to Austin where being gay wasn’t shameful, but nor was it anything to hinge a community on, I grew a bit frustrated, and eventually found other things to keep myself busy.  Which is on me, of course.  Every once in a while, I’ll get the bug to join some organization and volunteer like mad, but it eventually goes away.

Now, it feels like with the influx of New Yorkers and Californians to Austin, bringing some truly hideous sensibilities with them (the downtown skyline will never be the same, nor will I-35 during rush hour), that the gay community is playing catch-up to be visible and relevant.  The “weirdness” that Austin is touted for is going the same way as our self-appointed title as “Live Music Capitol of the World”: noise ordinances are going up faster than downtown condos, and a few years ago a band was arrested for violating such an ordinance on Sixth Street (party central) during SXSW (the annual music festival that draws acts from all over the nation).   We’re not that weird anymore.  In fact, we border on priggish.  For example, everyone seems to enjoy it when the crazies like Leslie Cochran run for mayor, and while he’s has made a good show of it, he’s never been elected.  Dan Bradford, an openly gay man, lost in Precinct 1 (where his home is located) for Justice of the Peace just last week.  And that’s Austin for me in a nutshell: the radical elements are tolerated, but they’re never going to be “respectable” enough to make it into office.

Marvel and DC call you out of the blue and offer you the opportunity to write any character or story your heart desires. What do you do?

Everyone knows my dream job is to write a comic book of the ISIS character from the 1970’s Saturday morning TV show.  That’s where generic goddess came from, but if I were offered the opportunity, I’d do her and the Marvel Family the right way for DC.

Any final words?

Are you sorry you asked?

Only that we didn’t do this sooner.

You can find Sean at his Ortho Comics blog.

Frater Mine and other McGrath items are available at Prism and from Indy Planet – Frater MineGeneric Goddess

Justice League – Cry For Justice #7

Thursday, March 4th, 2010

Martin Gray

This review appears by the graciousness of Martin Gray. When not being a missive maven on GLA’s email list, Martin frequently pens comics reviews on his blog, Too Dangerous For A Girl, where this piece first appears. Please stop by to visit him there.

I like a big stupid blockbuster as much as the next person. Massive disasters, bombastic dialogue, it’s all good . . . except when the story can’t get from point A to point B without characters who are Too Stupid Too Live.

And that sums up every hero in this book. Green Lantern, the Atom, Green Arrow, all these and more are here unable to use their skills and powers, their brains and experience, to foil the schemes of one man. Yes, the destruction of Star City is well underway as this finale issue begins, but the perpetrator, Prometheus, is in League custody. Available to end the destruction are heroes with magic rings, super strength, ultra-speed, and yet not a single building is seen to be saved. Green Lantern doesn’t so much as throw up a few supports. Firestorm carries people on lumps of pavement rather than throwing his incredible power set at the big picture. That sort of thing.

With the threat of similar destruction across the world via cunningly planted bombs, the heroes have no choice but to let Prometheus go free in exchange for deactivation codes. Because he can counter any attempt to force him to give up the information – knock out a mental maven via psychic feedback, stop magical attacks – anything. So what if Prometheus is neither magical nor telepathic, he’s The Man With the Plan and in the DC Universe (see Batman, Deathstroke etc) a bit of forward thinking always wins the day.

Burying a bomb under a river but want to keep speedsters at bay? No problem, simply arrange it so that unless the ‘exact cubic tonnage’ of water surrounds the explosive, it goes off. And so on. It’s silly, and not in a good way. Prometheus is so brilliant, and the heroes so rubbish, that when it comes down to ‘free the guy and get the codes, or let millions die’, the good guys are utterly paralysed with indecision in a laughable two-page spread. A decision has to be made and the JLA and chums decide to have a conference call. ‘What do we do?’ ‘No! No way he walks!’ ‘We’re loosing (sic)’ ‘I don’t know what to say.’

This really is excruciating stuff from writer James Robinson; it might work on TV, with quick cuts and split second flashes of dialogue, but laid out on the page it’s corny and unconvincing. And the internal monologue given to the blue Starman as he’s meant to be helping people would disgrace an afternoon soap: ‘Tony . . . can you believe it? It all came down to this? You died because of this. I feel so alone.’

Which is weird, because sometimes you can read a James Robinson comic – such as the recent Starman: Blackest Night – and be thrilled by the subtlety and smarts of the script.

Not here, where you’re more likely to laugh at the words given to poor Freddy Freeman, his lips sewn together to prevent him summoning his Marvel-powered form: ‘Yeath. Juth get m’to the dewiseth! Matgic of Shaztham!’ After a few lines of this I was expecting two magic words: ‘Thufferin thuccotash!’

The big emotional moment is the death of Lian, Roy Harper’s cute little daughter, crushed by a building. Allegedly 90,000 people perish as Star City falls but poor old Lian – whose demise was cleverly hinted at in the set-after-this Titans #21 a couple of months back – is the only corpse in the book. It sucks to be a superhero’s kid, but the tragedies are necessary for the upcoming adventures of Grim Arrow and Stumpy. Super.

The close of this story sees said Ollie Queen finally finds a target – Prometheus’ stupid helmet and the brain matter behind. As it’s the end of the mini, suddenly there is something Prometheus hasn’t planned for, while a hero is allowed to remember his skill set. The contrivances are a bit rich but nevertheless the death of Prometheus provides the most satisfactory moment of the series.

Mauro Cascioli, Scott Clark and Ibraim Roberson handle the pencils and, backed by a veritable league of inkers and colourists, produce mostly attractive, effective work. While some of the emotional beats called for by the script are a tad OTT, the artists capture them just fine. And someone had a very good time drawing Starfire’s cosmic bottom trying to escape her hips – an honourable DC tradition.

So it’s over. Seven issues, most of them annoying, and yet I bought the things so more fool me. I nearly dropped the book once or twice but my faith in James Robinson, along with the saddo aspect of having to know how the story ends, kept bringing me back. Of course, the story isn’t ending, as the plights of Ollie Queen and Roy Harper lead into a JLA special, Arsenal mini and an arc in Green Arrow’s book. We’re promised falls, rises . . . maybe some people will eat this up, but it’s not for me. I’ll stick with James’ current run on the regular JLA book, which is already proving more to my taste than Cry For Justice. I should have cried off after the first issue.

Howard Cruse Interview

Thursday, March 4th, 2010

Over at Publishers Weekly, John Seven takes the opportunity to  interview Howard Cruse about the upcoming June 2010 edition of Stuck Rubber Baby. Go read it here.