"From Off The Streets Of Cleveland!"

The August 15th issue of Entertainment Weekly has a six-page color strip, "My Movie Year," by Harvey Pekar and longtime artist Gary Dumm describing the history of his American Splendor comic and the movie adaptation slated for release across the U.S. this August/September. The autobiographical Clevelander has been doing half-page mini-review strips for the mag for several months now, but this is the first "feature-length comic" that he's ever had published in a slick national mag.

It's typical Pekar - delivered in his trademark self-deprecating yet assured voice - skidding through the years to arrive at the point where the much-discussed movie adaptation actually comes to fruition. Listening to a "Fresh Air" interview earlier this week with actress Hope Davis (who plays Pekar's wife/collaborator Joyce Brabner in the flick), I found myself chuckling at her description of Harvey on the set, scrounging up free grub with the cast and crew. In his strip, the writer also describes his near daily visits: "I used to go down to the set frequently because I liked hanging out with the cast and crew and getting free eats." Which, I guess, goes to show how close to the mark his comics really are.

I'm looking forward the film. In a year that's seen too many half-baked comic book adaptations, American Splendor promises to be the real deal. Two trade collections of Pekar's work have been re-released recently to go along with the movie buzz: one, American Splendor: The Life and Times of Harvey Pekar, reprints the first two collections of Pekar's comics from the late seventies/early eighties (American Splendor and More American Splendor), while the second, The New American Splendor Anthology, contains more recent work by the man. Both books are recommended, as is Bob & Harv's Comics, devoted just to Pekar's collaborations with cartoonist R. Crumb. (Commenting on James Urbaniak's portrayal of Crumb in the film, Pekar notes: "Some people thought, based on Terry Zwigoff's excellent documentary of Crumb, that he was kind of a cold guy. But he was always warm, understanding and helpful to me. I thought James caught that side of him very well.") All three collections are remarkably consistent: the works of a man unsentimentally inspired by the beauty and humor of mundane day-to-day life.

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Article Author: Bill Sherman

Bill Sherman is the Comics & Graphic Novels review editor for Blogcritics. With his lovely wife Rebecca Fox, he has recently co-authored a sudsy size acceptance novel entitled Measure By Measure.

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  • 1 - Steve Rhodes

    Aug 10, 2003 at 12:14 pm


    I'm also looking forward to seeing American Splendor at a preview on August 20th. Harvey is blogging (he wants lasting gigs) on his site along with Joyce and Danielle.

    Harvey has a comic in Sunday's New York Times (it is interesting to see how closely it tracks with this interview on Time's website). He also did a comic for LA Weekly on his experience at Sundance (Aaron Barnhart who has written about Harvey for years, praised the film when he saw it there).

    You can listen to the interview with Harvey and Joyce on Fresh Air and also the interview with Hope Davis.

    In San Francisco, an exhibit of his work at the Cartoon Art Museum runs through November 23rd.



  • 2 - Jim Carruthers

    Aug 10, 2003 at 1:20 pm

    If for nothing else, Harvey Pekar should be immortalized for noting in "American Splendor" that you can't get the smell of cat piss out of records, which means you can't sell them.

  • 3 - Eric Olsen

    Aug 11, 2003 at 11:46 am

    Damn good point about the cat piss: it's my excuse for not moving my vinyl to our new basement from my office, and I'm sticking with it.

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