home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- <text id=91TT2616>
- <title>
- Nov. 25, 1991: Blondie, Meet Herb And Marcy
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- Nov. 25, 1991 10 Ways to Cure The Health Care Mess
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- PRESS, Page 104
- Blondie, Meet Herb And Marcy
- </hdr><body>
- <p>Long shut out of the mainstream, black cartoonists are now
- livening up the nation's funny pages
- </p>
- <p>By Janice C. Simpson
- </p>
- <p> For years, the funny pages have been no laughing matter
- for blacks and other Americans of color. They seldom saw
- themselves in newspaper comic strips, which were as segregated
- as the society whose goings-on they caricatured. Suddenly,
- however, the color barriers are falling down. As rap music goes
- mainstream and movies by black directors like Spike Lee and John
- Singleton become mass-audience hits, African-American
- cartoonists are tickling the public fancy in newspapers across
- the country.
- </p>
- <p> Four of the artists have joined the big leagues of
- national syndication within just the past three years. The most
- successful is Ray Billingsley, 34, of Manhattan, whose Curtis
- strip follows the adventures of a youngster growing up in an
- inner-city neighborhood; the cartoon appears in 200 papers,
- including the Washington Post and the Chicago Sun-Times. Jump
- Start, by Robb Armstrong, 29, of Philadelphia, chronicles the
- day-to-day experiences of Joe and Marcy Cobb, a young
- working-class black couple, in such papers as the Philadelphia
- Inquirer and the Dallas Morning News. Stephen Bentley, 37, of
- Duarte, Calif., has developed a following for Herb & Jamaal, a
- former professional basketball player and his childhood buddy
- who decide to run an ice-cream business together. This month the
- trio will be joined by Barbara Brandon, 32, of Brooklyn, N.Y.,
- the first black female cartoonist to get nationwide exposure.
- Brandon draws Where I'm Coming From, a Feifferesque view of life
- seen through the eyes of a group of black female friends.
- </p>
- <p> The young cartoonists sketch situations and issues that
- affect people of any race, but they treat them with a
- distinctively black sensibility. Says Brandon: "A lot of what
- I deal with is universal, but I do it the way we talk about it."
- Thus when Brandon's character Lydia is considering a name for
- her baby daughter, her friend suggests African-sounding names
- like Imani and Shafiq before Lydia decides to pay homage to the
- soul-and-gospel singer Aretha Franklin. Bentley's Herb wakes up
- with the universally shared problem of "morning breath"--and
- the specifically black hassle of "morning hair."
- </p>
- <p> More serious concerns also work their way into the strips.
- "My editors wanted me to keep all politics out," says
- Billingsley. "But I couldn't do that. Too much of black life is
- politics." Last summer he tackled the issues of drug abuse and
- teenage pregnancy in a series of panels in which Curtis' younger
- brother discovered a crack baby abandoned in a Dumpster by its
- 14-year-old mother. Curtis' father takes the baby to the
- hospital and, with Cosby-like wisdom, reminds his sons--and
- the readers--of the horrors of drug use.
- </p>
- <p> Such realism is a long way from the days when blacks
- showed up in comic strips primarily as demeaning stereotypes.
- "At the most extreme," says Steven L. Jones, a Philadelphia-based
- researcher in black popular culture, "they used an eight ball for
- a face, with large eyes and a line for a mouth with a shadow
- around it to represent oversized lips." The crude caricatures
- gave way to less offensive images during the civil rights
- movement. A black playmate, Franklin, joined the Peanuts gang in
- 1968; the Afro-wearing Lieut. Flap became the resident militant
- in Beetle Bailey in 1970. Subsidiary characters popped up in
- other strips. The movement got an even more important boost when
- editors drafted black cartoonists and illustrators such as Morrie
- Turner and Brumsic Brandon Jr., Barbara's father, to create new
- strips like Wee Pals and Luther, in which blacks were the main
- characters.
- </p>
- <p> When racial concerns fell out of favor during the 1980s,
- black faces faded from the funny pages as well. Wee Pals, which
- once appeared in 109 papers, is now carried in fewer than 50;
- Luther ended an 18-year run in 1986. In the '90s, however, a
- growing number of editors at major urban dailies have begun to
- look at black comics as a way to attract new readers in a time
- of changing demographics and declining readership. "My
- community happens to be largely black, and we know young readers
- turn to the comic pages," says Marty Claus, an editor at the
- Detroit Free Press. Claus is credited with igniting much of the
- renewed interest in black strips; three years ago, she actively
- solicited submissions from black artists for the newspaper, and
- now includes four black cartoonists among the 32 strips she
- carries. "If young black people see no black faces, we're
- sending a message that we may not intend," she says.
- </p>
- <p> Just putting Blondie in blackface isn't enough. Today's
- readers expect truly authentic slices of the black experience--and at the same time are more sensitive than ever about how
- that experience is portrayed. Nervous editors often urge
- artists to do stories that avoid prickly issues. "They really
- don't want a black strip. They want a Peanuts in Coppertone,"
- gripes old-timer Turner, who says he has softened the attitudes
- of some of his Wee Pals characters to appease the powers that
- be.
- </p>
- <p> The younger generation is far less conciliatory about
- making such changes. "The early complaint from the syndicates
- was that my strip was all women and it was black," says Barbara
- Brandon. Rather than alter her work, she waited two years until
- she found a syndicate that would let her do it her way. Now she
- routinely treats issues like color differences within the black
- community and the tensions that exist between black men and
- women.
- </p>
- <p> Some resistance remains: many newspapers are still
- reluctant to run more than one black comic strip an issue, even
- though black artists cover the same gamut of styles and story
- lines as their white counterparts. "You have to fight a certain
- amount of response that we already have a black strip," says
- Sarah Gillespie, director of comic art at United Feature
- Syndicate, which distributes Jump Start. But the favorable
- response to the breakthrough artists is having a ripple effect.
- Earlier this year, Gibson Greetings began marketing a line of
- cards featuring Armstrong's likable Joe and Marcy. Barbara
- Brandon is discussing plans with manufacturers to put her
- characters' faces on coffee mugs and T shirts. "Comic strips are
- the best visual barometer of the culture," says comics historian
- Jones. "They reveal the pulse and the heartbeat of what the
- country is about." Increasingly, the beat has some soul to it.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
-
-