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An interview with Bill Watterson


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BlazingGlory
Title: KANE LIVES IN DEATH!
Joined: Aug 10 2009
PostPosted: Feb 02 2010 05:28 pm Reply with quote Back to top

From: http://www.cleveland.com/living/index.ssf/2010/02/bill_watterson_creator_of_belo.html

Bill Watterson, creator of beloved 'Calvin and Hobbes' comic strip looks back with no regrets
By John Campanelli, The Plain Dealer
February 01, 2010, 5:45AM

This marks the 15th year since "Calvin and Hobbes" said goodbye to the comics pages. Creator Bill Watterson, who grew up in Chagrin Falls and still makes Greater Cleveland his home, recently answered some questions via e-mail from Plain Dealer reporter John Campanelli. It's believed to be the first interview with the reclusive artist since 1989.

With almost 15 years of separation and reflection, what do you think it was about "Calvin and Hobbes" that went beyond just capturing readers' attention, but their hearts as well?

The only part I understand is what went into the creation of the strip. What readers take away from it is up to them. Once the strip is published, readers bring their own experiences to it, and the work takes on a life of its own. Everyone responds differently to different parts.

I just tried to write honestly, and I tried to make this little world fun to look at, so people would take the time to read it. That was the full extent of my concern. You mix a bunch of ingredients, and once in a great while, chemistry happens. I can't explain why the strip caught on the way it did, and I don't think I could ever duplicate it. A lot of things have to go right all at once.

What are your thoughts about the legacy of your strip?

Well, it's not a subject that keeps me up at night. Readers will always decide if the work is meaningful and relevant to them, and I can live with whatever conclusion they come to. Again, my part in all this largely ended as the ink dried.

Readers became friends with your characters, so understandably, they grieved -- and are still grieving -- when the strip ended. What would you like to tell them?

This isn't as hard to understand as people try to make it. By the end of 10 years, I'd said pretty much everything I had come there to say.

It's always better to leave the party early. If I had rolled along with the strip's popularity and repeated myself for another five, 10 or 20 years, the people now "grieving" for "Calvin and Hobbes" would be wishing me dead and cursing newspapers for running tedious, ancient strips like mine instead of acquiring fresher, livelier talent. And I'd be agreeing with them.

I think some of the reason "Calvin and Hobbes" still finds an audience today is because I chose not to run the wheels off it.

I've never regretted stopping when I did.

Because your work touched so many people, fans feel a connection to you, like they know you. They want more of your work, more Calvin, another strip, anything. It really is a sort of rock star/fan relationship. Because of your aversion to attention, how do you deal with that even today? And how do you deal with knowing that it's going to follow you for the rest of your days?

Ah, the life of a newspaper cartoonist -- how I miss the groupies, drugs and trashed hotel rooms!

But since my "rock star" days, the public attention has faded a lot. In Pop Culture Time, the 1990s were eons ago. There are occasional flare-ups of weirdness, but mostly I just go about my quiet life and do my best to ignore the rest. I'm proud of the strip, enormously grateful for its success, and truly flattered that people still read it, but I wrote "Calvin and Hobbes" in my 30s, and I'm many miles from there.

An artwork can stay frozen in time, but I stumble through the years like everyone else. I think the deeper fans understand that, and are willing to give me some room to go on with my life.

How soon after the U.S. Postal Service issues the Calvin stamp will you send a letter with one on the envelope?

Immediately. I'm going to get in my horse and buggy and snail-mail a check for my newspaper subscription.

How do you want people to remember that 6-year-old and his tiger?

I vote for "Calvin and Hobbes, Eighth Wonder of the World."

Read more about the strip in John Campanelli's story. And see examples of his early work as an editorial cartoonist for the Sun Newspapers.


© 2010 cleveland.com. All rights reserved.

And here I though I knew all of the other forest dwelling hermits up here too.
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Ash Burton
Title: AshRaiser
Joined: Nov 10 2008
Location: Florida
PostPosted: Feb 02 2010 06:36 pm Reply with quote Back to top

GREATEST comic strip EVER. I loved C & H and grew up reading every book. I feel a little cheated that the man quit so soon to go make crappy paintings in Cleveland, but heh, most geniuses are a little crazy so its to be expected.


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username
Title: owner of a lonely heart
Joined: Jul 06 2007
Location: phoenix, az usa
PostPosted: Feb 02 2010 07:27 pm Reply with quote Back to top

pretty cool.

i believe The Far Side is the best and im a huge fan of Boondocks, but C&H wasnt bad at all.


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SoldierHawk
Moderator
Title: Warrior-Poet
Joined: Jan 15 2009
Location: San Diego, CA
PostPosted: Feb 02 2010 08:16 pm Reply with quote Back to top

Ash Burton wrote:
GREATEST comic strip EVER. I loved C & H and grew up reading every book. I feel a little cheated that the man quit so soon to go make crappy paintings in Cleveland, but heh, most geniuses are a little crazy so its to be expected.


Sums it up perfectly, although I never felt cheated. Like a TV show that knows when to quit, he did too, and left us with nothing but wonderful memories. I wouldn't trade that for another ten years of watching it slowly decline and tarnish. (I had to live through that with The X-files, and it was one of the saddest things I've ever seen, pop-culture wise.)

Plus, the last strip was just too perfect. Still makes me smile just thinking about it. "C'mon ol' buddy...let's go exploring!"

Cheers! to you Bill! Thanks for the great times!


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William Shakespeare wrote:
Love all, trust a few, do wrong to none.

 
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BlazingGlory
Title: KANE LIVES IN DEATH!
Joined: Aug 10 2009
PostPosted: Feb 02 2010 10:12 pm Reply with quote Back to top

I've always thought it ended well too, but as for his choice of retirement, well he may need a CAT scan. As a former farming nomad/current cave dwelling hermit of Ohio (Greater Cleveland no less), I gotta wonder what the appeal is for him. I'm fairly certain he's rich, if not then well off, so he could have lived someplace with better weather, government, nicer people etc.

The weather alone should have been a deterrent. Ohio is a sick geographical joke. -10 F days in winter and 90+ F days in summer, more snow and rain than you could shake a gauge at, and no real seasons. I can remember 70 F days in winter (just last year) and a week later we had an artic front blow in.

I guess it may be nostalga, but this place is not somewhere you want to live if your not midly psychotic or actually enjoy this kind of drama. (No, I'm not saying that Ohio is colder or hotter than [insert state/ country here] but we get both ends of the extreme constantly).
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Blackout
Title: Captain Oblivious
Joined: Sep 01 2007
Location: That Rainy State
PostPosted: Feb 02 2010 10:16 pm Reply with quote Back to top

BlazingGlory wrote:
I've always thought it ended well too, but as for his choice of retirement, well he may need a CAT scan.

You suck at Duck Hunt. Oh wow! You're Morgan Freeman!



 
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username
Title: owner of a lonely heart
Joined: Jul 06 2007
Location: phoenix, az usa
PostPosted: Feb 02 2010 10:17 pm Reply with quote Back to top

Eh, home is where the heart is. He left his in Ohio


Klimbatize wrote:
I'll eat a turkey sandwich while blowing my load

 
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BlazingGlory
Title: KANE LIVES IN DEATH!
Joined: Aug 10 2009
PostPosted: Feb 02 2010 10:19 pm Reply with quote Back to top

Yea, well he may want a transplant
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pineapple
Joined: Nov 11 2009
Location: Cajun Country
PostPosted: Feb 02 2010 10:57 pm Reply with quote Back to top

username wrote:
i believe The Far Side is the best

Damn, I love The Far Side. It definitely a toss up between TFS and Calvin and Hobbes for me.
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Thorton02
Joined: Mar 13 2009
Location: Arlington
PostPosted: Feb 03 2010 11:28 am Reply with quote Back to top

It's good to see that Bill is still alive, at least. It seems like he has little interest in Calvin & Hobbes anymore. I'd love to see an animated movie.


No, I don't think I will fuck Stummies.
 
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JoshWoodzy
Joined: May 22 2008
Location: Goshen, VA
PostPosted: Feb 03 2010 11:59 am Reply with quote Back to top

I say leave it the way it is. As much as I would love to see animated Calvin and Hobbs I would much rather not see it. It would cheapen it tremendously.


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Char Aznable
Title: Char Classicâ„¢
Joined: Jul 24 2006
Location: Robot Boombox HQ
PostPosted: Feb 03 2010 01:43 pm Reply with quote Back to top

I think that the biggest roadblock a Calvin and Hobbes series would face is portraying Calvin. Unless you have Watterson there 24/7, he's either going to devolve into a precocious smartass kid, or Dennis the Menace.


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SoldierHawk
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Title: Warrior-Poet
Joined: Jan 15 2009
Location: San Diego, CA
PostPosted: Feb 03 2010 04:30 pm Reply with quote Back to top

joshwoodzy wrote:
I say leave it the way it is. As much as I would love to see animated Calvin and Hobbs I would much rather not see it. It would cheapen it tremendously.


I agree. I love the idea of a movie in concept, but no execution could ever touch the comic. The voices alone would make it just...weird, no matter how good the casting was.


militarysignatures.com

William Shakespeare wrote:
Love all, trust a few, do wrong to none.

 
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