The Spirit Section

1. The Real Beginning

by
Tom Heintjes



“Even when I was a young child, the comics spoke to me. When I was growing up, I tried my hand at all different sorts of art, but it always came back to comics. I wanted to tell stories.” Will Eisner

 


Art by Will EisnerThe YEARS in which Will Eisner grew up were formative ones for comics. Born March 6, 1917 in New York City, Eisner read newspaper comic strips as a boy, which had by that time been a popular form of entertainment for some years. When Eisner began following the "funnies", many of what are now considered the classics of the golden age had not yet debuted. And the term "comic book", which would ultimately play such a momentous role in his life, had not yet been coined.

"By the time I was eight, I was drawing," Eisner said recently. "It was something my father encouraged me to do, because he was something of an artist — a failed artist, if you will, but he always thought highly of art and wanted to see me pursue it. My father used to reminisce that I was eight when I began drawing all the time, and I would always use my drawing to tell stories." For Eisner's mother, however, the only good art was art that had market potential.

When Eisner discusses his parents, it becomes apparent where his own duality originates. His father, born in Vienna, was a man who valued creativity and art, and who himself plied his trade as a backdrop painter for vaudeville and the Jewish theatre. His mother, conceived in Romania and born on the boat that brought her to America, was a pragmatic, down-to-earth woman who fretted that her eldest son would fritter himself away; he was simply being quixotic and had to be brought back to his senses. Her question was, how to dissuade young Willie from art? Eisner is truly his parents' child: one part hard-nosed businessman and one part inveterate dreamer.

"Although my father was not what you or I would call 'literate' in the popular sense, he was literate in his own way," Eisner said. "He used to buy books because he appreciated the classics. And through that, I got early exposure to the classics, for which I eventually became very grateful. One of his best-loved books was a biography of Julius Caesar, and for that book I did a drawing of Brutus murdering Caesar. It was crude and gory, but my father really was proud."

To Eisner' s mother, making a career from art was unimaginable.

"It was my mother who was the level-headed one in the family. My father was a dreamer, and was always getting into some scheme or another, none of which paid off. But my mother had a very no-nonsense approach to things. If I showed her a painting, she would ask me how much it was worth. She actively tried to discourage me from pursuing art as a career, being certain I'd starve. And she would be ashamed to tell her friends I was an artist; to her, it would be like telling them I was a pornographer."

To add to his lower-middle-class family's modest coffers, Eisner got a job selling newspapers on Wall Street, and this also stoked a fire that was burning within him. "I got to see all the comics every day, from all the newspapers that were then being published in New York," he said. "I would take home with me at least five or six papers at the end of every day, and it was during that time that some of the field' s alltime greats were doing some of their best work.

"I avidly followed the work of artists like Popeye's E.C. Segar — although then his strip was called Thimble Theatre, George Herriman, and Lyman Young, who did an adventure strip called Tim Tyler's Luck. The adventure strips especially were very, very exciting for me, and around the time I started reading them, they were entering their heyday. It was a wonderful time for them."

Eisner said he also savored the work of the cartoonists who ran in the upper-crust periodicals such as The Saturday Evening Post and Collier's. Later, he would unsuccessfully try to break into those rarefied markets.

Eisner began reading comic strips during a time when they had tremendous popularity and a powerful grip on the public's imagination — much more so than today. A popular skip such as The Gumps by Sidney Smith or Little Orphan Annie by Harold Gray could bring immense wealth and fame to its creator, and newspaper publishers openly indulged in all manner of chicanery to attract top artists. "The comics were acknowledged as both circulation-builders and as a tool that would provide the paper with a continuity of readership, although I only learned this later," Eisner said.

"When I was eight years old, I loved them for themselves."

Although the comic strips Eisner enthusiastically devoured each day provided him with what he described as his "first exciting reading material" in the early 1920s, he didn' t experience an epiphany that he knew would drive him to succeed in that magical world. "I don't think anyone gets hit by a bolt of lightning and decides 'Ah! I'm going to be a cartoonist,' or whatever," he said. "I think one tends to move in the direction of one' s abilities. The skill with which you can best express yourself is what eventually develops into your lifelong skill. For example, I was a poor athlete, so I couldn't use athletics to push my own ego. But I could draw, so I developed that."

Art was the focus of Eisner' s zeal while he was a student, but he had other influences as well. As a boy, his appetite for reading was voracious, and some of it helped form the basis for the philosophy that would shape much of the work he would produce over his career. "My first true literary influences were the stories by Horatio Alger," he said. "This was the first reading I did where I remember being aware of the story content and what was being said. Alger's message was that you can rise above your circumstances and find success through your own diligence and hard work. And as a kid in the ghetto, that spoke directly to me. And the stories were about an average person triumphing against obstacles, and that' s a theme that I' ve returned to many times in my work. It was powerful stuff to me then. They still stick with me; they had a tremendous effect on me."

Eisner was also attracted to the pulps. "I remember just devouring the pulps from the time I was 10 or so," he said. "And I was always going to the movies, which back then were a very inexpensive form of entertainment. The movies were my Saturday afternoons. They showed the serials, which were very much like pulps, with characters like the Black Arrow. But it was mainly my fascination with pulp magazines that gave me a sense of storytelling. Really, at that time, the pulps formed the basis of popular storytelling. They were everywhere, and I read as many as I could.

"In fact, I recall my father forbidding me to read what he considered washy literature. He thought it would warp my mind. In our building, a policeman who lived upstairs from us subscribed to Flynn's Detective, which was a popular pulp of the time. And on his way out of the building in the morning, he would drop the issue in front of our door so I could come out and get it, and I would shove it under my pillow. It was like smuggling contraband."

When Eisner entered DeWitt Clinton High School, both his artistic and writing skills flourished under the tutelage of the top-notch staff the school employed. (Bob Kane, who would later gain renown as the creator of Batman, was a fellow student.) Here, Eisner created comic strips, art directed magazines created stage designs, illustrated various magazines published at his high school, and in general honed the skills that he would rely on so profoundly in a few short years. "My teachers were not particularly enamored with comic strips or the fact that I was fascinated by them, even though I was sort of a big-man-on-campus because I was one of the better artists there," he said. "They were pushing me toward illustration, and I did some illustration for the school yearbook and other school publications.

"It would be hard for me to overstate the depth of the effect my high school experience had on me," he said. "It meant everything to me, and in large part was responsible for the person I became and continue to be. I had the opportunity to try so many things, to find the things that suited me the best. I tried for a while to be a gallery painter, because I thought that was the pinnacle of what an artist could aspire to. It didn't last, though — I found myself, as I do today, always looking for the next big thing. Looking back, I can see that that' s always been my stock in trade — moving on to the next project that I can immerse myself in."

Among his early publishing ventures was a project he entered into with a classmate, Ken Ginniger. "We wanted to publish a very snooty literary magazine — I guess to be properly snooty it would have to be called a 'literary journal' — because it was a very intellectually trendy thing to do back then. We called it The Lion and Unicorn because it was something very literary-sounding. And it was full of arty drawings and verse, and we put in some Marcel Proust and Albert Camus. It also had some erotic writing and poetry, or at least what then would have been considered erotic. When it came time to prepare the plates for printing, it came to our attention that using metal plates for printing artwork was quite a costly proposition. And it was that sort of problem-solving that made these experiences so valuable to me. What I did was leam to cut wood engravings, which the printer used along with the typeset material.

"That woodcut experience was important to me, because it taught me the value of learning to work in other media," Eisner added. "It' s something I still talk to my students about, not to resist dabbling in other media. They all have value."

Although Eisner sharpened his already formidable skills at DeWitt Clinton, it was in summer school that he was challenged to aspire to new heights. He attended the Art Students League one summer, not because his family could afford the tuition fees, but because of his prodigious talent. He was welcomed because he brought with him fellow students who could afford tuition. While at the ASL, Eisner had the opportunity to study drawing under the direction of the legendary anatomist George Bridgman and painting under the redoubtable Robert Brachman. "But apart from that, I was always drawing," Eisner said. "It seemed like I never stopped. It was part of my self-education, which continues to this day."

At 19, Eisner left school and became gainfully employed, but not very. "I got a job in the advertising department of the New York American," Eisner said. I worked the graveyard shift, from nine at night until five in the morning. The ads I was working on were very small, one or two inches high and one column wide, and I would do any art the ads required, and some hand-lettering, which I was not good at. I've had to work hard on my lettering; I started out as a very poor letterer."

Eisner said this job had one important influence on him — the hours. "Since I began work at nine at night, I would have my 'lunch,' as it were, in the wee hours," he said. "My mother would have packed me something like a sandwich or a danish, and I would go outside with my lunch and sit by a dock and watch the people working. I saw all sorts of characters because of the odd hours, and I learned a lot about shadows and lighting at the same time."

Since the job at the American was not entirely to Eisner's liking, to put it mildly, he left to fend for himself as a freelancer. It was during this period, 1935 and 1936, that he was picking up a few accounts as well as putting in time as a printer's assistant. One account represented his first professional comics work, since he got paid for it. He created the art for an insert inside a hand-cleanser called Gre-olvent. "I recall getting that job through the printer I was working for, so it was largely a matter of timing and luck, as so many things are," he said.

At the same time Eisner had experienced the heady thrill of creating comics and getting paid for it, he tried to crack the lucrative magazine cartoon market. "I never had much luck at it, but I kept trying because that market was perceived as the top. Whenever editors critiqued my work, they would tell me it looked like comic-book work. And they were right."

Alger's brand of "up by your bootstraps" philosophy was a powerful motivator for Eisner, who espoused it unequivocally. He saw becoming a successfully syndicated newspaper cartoonist as a one-way ticket out of the ghetto, a way to escape the grim circumstances that relentlessly gripped many others around him. "Comic strips were moneymakers, and more than anything else, they represented a — quote — steady income," he said. "In times when a steady income was a radical concept, that meant something. I remember my mother saying to me that I should become an art teacher because I would have a steady income. And I knew what she meant by that. It was the Depression. I was determined to pursue comic art so I could provide a steady income for myself and my family, and also so I could move up a little bit."

Eisner thought he had moved up a couple of rungs on the ladder when he was hired as art director on Eve, a magazine whose target audience was affluent Jewish women. It' s easy to imagine Eisner, who loves a bawdy joke, thinking he was putting on a good one when he would strew his drawings of pugilists and other such inappropriately violent offerings among the otherwise dainty contents of an issue. He was shown the door. "I guess I was feeling my oats, what can I say?" he chuckled.

Art by Will EisnerEisner never perceived any of his stumbles as setbacks — they were all learning experiences, and much of what he learned was about to play a crucial role when he had his first meeting with the late Samuel Maxwell "Jerry" Iger, the man who would later become Eisner's first business partner, and with whom Eisner would begin his career as a creator of formidable versatility, talent and savvy.

"I remember my first meeting with Iger," Eisner said. "I had heard about a magazine called Wow! Now, Wow! was not really a comic book, it was a magazine that published some comics material. And it was published by a guy named John Henle, whose main business was manufacturing shirts, but his real ambition was to be a publisher, so he had started Wow! I went to the offices of the magazine, portfolio in hand, and I met with Iger, who was the editor. He was having a bad day. I recall he was on the phone with his engraver, who was having problems. So Iger didn't have time to look at the material I'd brought to show him, but he invited me to walk over to the engraver to check out the problem. Fortunately, I was able to solve his problem on the spot, and Iger offered me a job as his assistant. I turned down the offer, explaining to him that I really wanted to do comics, not work as an assistant editor."

But it was the beginning of a working relationship. "I sold Iger a few features. The page rate, which I forget, was nothing I was going to get rich on, but I felt like I was sitting on top of the world; I thought it was a huge conquest. A few months later, Wow! folded. And even though I was getting a small page rate, I ended up being owed money I never collected. Iger was let go, of course. There's no need for an editor at a shirt-manufacturing business."

But Wow! (the full title was Wow! What A Magazine, as distinguished from the Wow comic book published by Fawcett from 1941–948) served as an important touchstone for Eisner. While working for the magazine, he saw several of his strips hit print, including a recasting of one he had done while at DeWitt Clinton, Harry Karry, as well as a strip called The Flame, which he would later reprise as his remarkable Hawks of the Sea. In the four issues published, Eisner had art in every issue and did the cover of the third.

(Iger himself is an individual who warrants more than a footnote in the history of comics, as it was his salesmanship that opened the door for Eisner and him to set up a shop that produced material expressly created for comic books; theirs was one of the earliest shops to do so, and in the process they helped shape the fledgling field. Thirteen-and-ahalf years Eisner's senior, Iger worked as a cartoonist for the New York American, the very paper that would ten years later employ Will Eisner. While editor at the short-lived Wow!, Iger published early work by Eisner and Bob Kane, which surely merits him with a discerning eye, as well as for open-minded editing.)

Eisner, who respected Iger's abilities as a salesman and believed he shared Eisner's own belief that comic books were a medium laden with creative and commercial possibilities, approached Iger with the proposal that the two enter into a partnership to produce material for the burgeoning field.

In doing so, the groundwork was laid for the creation of The Spirit.

Author's note: I would like to thank Cat Yronwode, who has done more than any other individual to educate readers about Will Eisner's life and I am grateful for her research. TH

 


'The Spirit' and Spirit artwork TM and � Will Eisner Studios. All rights reserved.
This article originally published in The Spirit: The Origin Years #1 (Kitchen Sink Press, May 1992)
Article � Tom Heintjes. All rights reserved. Reprinted with permission.

 

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