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Call for Art for ToonFest Show

Monday, August 10th, 2009

It’s almost time of the annual Walt Disney Hometown Toonfest in lovely Marcelene, MO. I wrote about the stellar speaker lineup here, but here it is again for those who hate following links:

  • Mark Fiore- Editorial cartoonist 
  • Wiley Miller- Creator of the comic strip Non Sequitor
  • David Mowder- Hallmark Cards cartoonist 
  • Sam Viviano- MAD Magazine art director

Every year they have a wonderful show of original cartoon art, and they are once again calling for professional cartoonists to submit work for the show. Here is the call for art by show curators Paul Fell and Mike Edholm:

Dear Fellow Cartoonist:

It’s time to start gearing up for the 11th. Annual Walt Disney Hometown Toonfest in Marceline, MO, the little town where Walt spent part of his boyhood. Each year we celebrate Walt Disney’s life and work with this small-town festival that includes a parade, presentations by several nationally-know cartoonists, and a cartoon exhibit.

This year’s Disney Toonfest will be held Friday, September 18 and Saturday, September 19. As always, all events are free and open to the public.

If you have exhibited your work in previous Toonfest shows, we appreciate your participation and hope that you will be sending in two or three pieces of your work again this year. If you haven’t sent work to the Toonfest cartoon exhibit, we hope you’ll consider becoming part of our growing list of cartoonist exhibitors.

Here’s the details:

All work should either be matted or mounted on mat board or mounting board. We are no longer able to exhibit work that comes in unmated or unmounted.

While we will accept cartoon submissions right up until the day we hang the show (Thursday, Sept. 17) it will make our lives a lot easier if you can have it at the Toonfest Offices by Monday, September 14.

  1. At the end of the Toonfest exhibit we will ship your work back to you at no charge.
  2. Please be sure that your contact information is on the back of each piece.
  3. Suggested number of cartoons: 2-3
  4. The Disney Hometown Toonfest reserves the right to refuse to place work in the show that we consider inappropriate for inclusion in a family-oriented event.

Please send cartoons for the Toonfest exhibit to:

Walt Disney Hometown Toonfest

207 N. Main Street, USA

Marceline, MO 64658

Phone: 660-376-WALT (9258)

Email: toonfest@sbcglobal.net

Kaye Malins  email: kaye.malins@toonfest.net

Barb Boyd  email: barb.boyd@toonfest.net

We will look forward to seeing your work in this year’s Toonfest cartoon exhibit!

Paul Fell and Mike Edholm
Toonfest Exhibit Coordinators

So, there you have it. I have a few original MAD pages in the show from the parody of “Grey’s Anatomy”. Unfortunately I will be unable to attend this year, but if you have never been to Toonfest it is a charming small town celebration of cartooning that is well worth the time.

Disney Hometown Toonfest 2009

Saturday, July 18th, 2009

Walt Disney's Hometown ToonFest

Once again it’s almost time for the annual Walt Disney Hometown Toonfest in charming Marceline, MO. As always, this small but wonderful celebration of the art of cartooning in the boyhood hometown of Walt Disney has a stellar lineup of guest speakers. Here’s the official press release:

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:

Marceline, MO- As the summer heats up, families are anxiously looking forward to the 2009 Walt Disney Hometown Toonfest, Saturday, September 19th in beautiful Marceline, MO. This will be the eleventh year for this celebration of the life and work of Walt Disney. Director of the Toonfest, Richard Switzer and his crew of reulars are getting thier ducks lined up for what promises to be another banner year.

This year’s headliners include: editorial cartoonist Mark Fiore; creator of the comic strip Non Sequitor Wiley Miller; Hallmark Cards cartoonist David Mowder; and MAD Magazine art director Sam Viviano.

The headliners will be featured in presentations as well as a Q&A session on Saturday in the Uptown Theater. Toonfest guests can see their works on display as well as the works of a variety of cartoonists in the Cartoon Show at the Masonic Temple. The family fun will also include live music, the Toonfest silent auction, giveaways, plenty of food and beverages, exhibits, the Princess and Pirates in training and, of course, the annual Walt Disney Hometown Toonfest Parade down Main Street USA featuring marching bands, floats, Queens, Princesses and Pirates.

For more information and a schedule of events go to the Walt Disney Hometown ToonFest website at www.toonfest.net or e-mail us at toonfest@sbcglobal.net.

I wonder if the “ducks lined up” they refer to all wear sailors caps and jackets but no pants….

This event is always a good time and the hospitality of this small mid-western town is without equal. I hope I can squeeze out some time to go, if for no other reason than to get to hang out with my good friend Sam Viviano.

Disney Hometown Toonfest 2008

Monday, September 22nd, 2008

A small, quiet, rural town in the middle of Missouri is not the place one might expect to find a group of well known syndicated comic strip cartoonists (and one lowly MAD artist) gathered for a speaking engagement, but that’s just what happens every year around this time in Marceline, MO. Well, the lowly MAD artist doesn’t show up every year, but there is always a number of cartooning luminaries that speak, participate and in share their time and talents with attendees of the Walt Disney Hometown Toonfest.

Marceline might be the kind of sleepy little town that you ordinarily barely slow down through on your way from big city to big city, but it’s special in several ways. First, it’s special in the way that all similar small towns are… everyone knows everyone and the sense of community and family is tremendously strong. If the big cities and metro centers of this county are the bricks, these communities are the mortar of this nation. These people and communities like them are what makes America into what it is. The other thing that makes Marceline special is one of it’s past inhabitants, and what he took with him from Marceline to eventually share with the entire world. That Marceline resident was Walt Disney.

The Disney Home
The Disney Family Home

Disney lived in Marceline from age 4 to 9, from 1906 until 1910. His family moved there from Chicago, the big city to the small town life of farming. Disney was never shy about how Marceline was a huge influence on him and the ideas and concepts he’d later apply to his films and life’s work. In 1938, Disney wrote:

“Everything connected with Marceline was a thrill to us… to tell the truth more things of importance happened to me in Marceline than have ever happened since – or are likely to in the future.”

There is much evidence of this, from the obvious Marceline design influences in Disneyland and Disneyworld, to the small town fascination that permeated Disney’s work in film and his theme park concepts. Disney was enthralled with the idea of small town America, and all that seems to have stemmed from the time he spent as a boy in this small railroad town in Missouri.

Each years since they celebrated Walt’s birthday in 2001, Marceline puts on a weekend event called the Walt Disney Hometown Toonfest, where they celebrate not only Disney’s life and his time in their town, but cartooning as an art form. The speakers that have graced the stage in the nostalgic Uptown Theater on Marceline’s Main St. would pack the house at any comics convention or big city symposium. Cartooning giants like Mike Peters (Mother Goose and Grimm, Pulitzer Prize winning editorial cartoonist), Lynn Johnston (For Better or Worse), Chris Browne (Hagar the Horrible), Ann Telnaes (Pulitzer Prize winning editorial cartoonist), Jim Borgman (Zits and another Pulitzer Prize winning editorial cartoonist), Tom Wilson Jr. (Ziggy) and many others over the years. That’ some serious cartooning star power.

2008 Guest Artists
The 2008 guest artists (L to R): Dave Coverly, Greg Evans, Jan Eliot,
Me, Michael Jantze
, Disney “architectural miniatures” sculptor Dale Varner

This year’s ToonFest had another stellar lineup. Greg Evans (Luanne), Jan Eliot (Stone Soup), Dave Coverly (Speed Bump), Michael Jantze (The Norm and Jantze Studios) and my humble self, who these great talents acquiesced to slum with for the weekend. Seriously, though, what a great lineup of speakers. The speakers presented in the Uptown Theater, a landmark old school theater in the heart of Marceline’s Main St.

Me emceeing
Me emceeing the show

I was honored to be the emcee of the speaking event. We presented twice, once on Friday to a theater full of high school kids, and once on Saturday to the general public.

Greg Evans
Greg Evans

First up was Greg Evans. I’ve met Greg on numerous occasions and his is one of the most soft spoken and pleasant guys you will ever meet. He’s also a smart and funny person and it’s easy to see why his strip, Luanne, is so successful. He talked about how he got into cartooning, and offered some great advice. One thing he said really stuck with me, and that was about how he struggled with getting syndicated for years. Basically he was trying to be too analytical about his subject matter, trying to hard to write a strip about something that he thought was different and filled a niche that was missing on the comic’s page. He realized later he was trying to write about things he knew nothing about. Once he started writing about what he knew (his teenage daughter gave him all the insight he needed about teenage girls) he created something that resonated with readers.

Jan Eliot
Jan Eliot

Jan Eliot, creator of Stone Soup, I had never really met before. I really enjoyed spending some time getting to know this wonderful lady. Cartooning is more than a bit of a boy’s club, but despite that when a woman cartoonist get’s a chance they often hit a homerun. Jan started her strip, which would eventually become syndicated as Stone Soup, when she was a single working mom trying to raise two daughters on her own. I was impressed by her perseverance as well as her work. Her strip is beautifully drawn and written. Some of her originals were on display at the cartoon art show, and she’s very old school doing the art with a dip pen and traditional tools. I still love that look. Her story was inspirational, and she’s a terrific person.

Dave Coverly
Dave Coverly

Dave Coverly, creator of Speed Bump, probably got the biggest laughs of the day. His single panel cartoon is laugh out loud funny. I had met him several times but never really got to talk with him much, so it was great hanging out and getting to know him a little. I told him over a beer later that his artwork impressed me greatly. It isn’t just that his concepts and gags are funny, because they are, but his drawings are funny. That’s a powerful combination. Sadly we do not get Speed Bump in any of our local papers, so that’s one I’ve subscribed to online. I won’t miss another day of it. Dave’s a great talent and I can see why he’s been nominated for “Cartoonist of the Year” by the National Cartoonist Society for the last 4 years. He’s going to take that ugly statue home in the next year or two, and well deserved.

Michael Jantze
Micheal Jantze

Michael Jantze I have had the pleasure of being friends with for some years now. He’s been a speaker at our North Central Chapter meeting more than one, and we got to hang out at the Minnesota Fall Con one year ( I even took him to a Minnesota Twins game). He’s a very smart guy, and after he took his comic strip The Norm out of traditional syndication and online he’s been busy coming up with the next generation of comic strip media. He recognized that the traditional newspaper delivery format for comic strips is slowly dying, and that if comics are to survive into the 21st century they need a cost effective way to be electronically delivered to the next generations of readers. He demonstrated some of the concepts they’ve been working on, and the progression of ideas were fascinating. His studio’s “Audio Comics” are a blend of simple animatic animation, voice-over and design effects that keep the basic feel and delivery of a comic strip’s gags and pacing but become visually viable for delivery via the web or a cell phone. The future of comics unveiled in Marceline, MO!

Panel Q & A
The speakers do a Q & A after the presentations

Unfortunately the attendance at Toonfest is not exactly like the Olympics. These great speakers presented to a half filled theater, many of who were locals (who are of course welcome, but it’s out of towners we want to bring in). That’s really a shame. Marceline is not an easy place to get to (2 hours drive from the nearest commercial airport), but one would hope that line ups like these would bring in more interested people. There were some folks that traveled long distances to be there, however. There was one guy from Long Island NY, several people from Florida, a number from St. Louis and other somewhat nearby areas. I am sure they were not disappointed. I hope future years see more cartoon fans and cartoonists making the trek. It’s worth it.

On Saturday there was a parade down Main St., where all the speakers were “Grand Marshalls”.

Jan on parade!

Micheal on parade!

Dave on parade!

After the Parade the guests artists all received these wonderful plaques with a small piece of the Walt Disney “Dreaming Tree” mounted on it.

Me getting plaque
The bubbly Megan presents me with my plaque

After the Saturday speaking program there was a ceremony out at the former Disney home and farm. On the property is a huge cottonwood tree Walt called “The Dreaming Tree” where he spent a lot of time just sitting and thinking, listening to the nearby train’s whistle and watch the sky wheel above. Each year saplings from the tree, which itself is not in the best of shape after 150 years or so of life, are planted by the guest cartoonists who are inducted into the “Order of PlantEars”, followed by a visit to Walt’s beloved barn, which he called “The Happy Place”.

Dreaming Tree ceremony
The Dreaming Tree ceremony

The 2008 class of PlantEars
The 2008 order of PlantEars inductees

Jan plants a tree
Jan shows off her green thumb

The original barn disappeared after the Disney’s left Marceline, likely burned as firewood during the Great Depression, and this recreation was painstakingly built in the exactly spot. Inside are the signatures of thousands of Disney fans thanking Walt for what he gave to them and the world.

The Happy Place
The Happy Place

We also squeezed in a meeting of our local chapter of the National Cartoonist Society, the North Central Chapter.

North Central Chapter
North Central Chapter members (L to R): Mike Edholm, Me, Cedric Honstadt,
Ted Goff, Paul Fell, Eric Scott, Scott Holmes

The fest itself has lots of activities for kids like the “Princess Tea” and other fun stuff. I had a great time and the Toonfest folks, especially Kaye Malins, Barbie Boyd and Debbie Foster (as well as everyone else), treat the visiting cartoonists like family and royalty. Thanks to them and to all the cartoonists who attended and who I got to spend time with… there were more than just the speakers. Like I said, great fun.

Special thanks to car pool pal Cedric Honstadt for some of the above pictures.

Off to ToonFest

Thursday, September 18th, 2008

I’m leaving this morning on the long drive down to Marceline, Missouri to attend the annual Walt Disney Hometown Toonfest, where as I mentioned before I will be emceeing the speaker events and speaking myself. It’s about a 7 hour drive through beautiful northern Iowa (insert snare drum rimshot here), land of windmills, plains and… uh… more windmills.

Along the way there will doubtless be at least one stop at a “Kum and Go“, which seem to be at every highway exit ramp in Iowa. Until I actually stopped at one I had thought it was a drive through brothel. I was further confused by their slogan: “We Go All Out!”. Wow, that’s even more wild than in Vegas, I was thinking. No wonder Bucky Jones lives in Iowa. As it turns out, it’s just another gas station and convenience store… just with a dirty sounding name. Oh well. I can still say I got a Slurpee at the Kum and Go.

I will also be on the lookout for a Taylor’s Maid-Rite resturant, home of the “loose meat” sandwich. In case you’ve been living under a rock in Iowa, or just else anywhere else in the United States, a “Loose meat” sandwich is a scoop or two of ground beef that has been fried up not in a patty but scattered to the corners of the grill, resulting in a “Sloppy Joe” but without the tomato sauce binder. They are a lot of fun to eat because, unlike their more boring cousin the “hamburger”, the Maid-Rite doesn’t just sit there in between the bun waiting for you to take a bite. Oh, no. You have to work a little harder than that! They dribble and splat out of all sides of the bun, resulting in entertaining and challenging methods of eating like the “from down under” and “snake bite snatch” techniques. Of course no matter how you do it, at least 1/3 of the sandwich has to be eaten with a spoon. A must stop.

IF I survive the drive through Iowa, I will surely be back here on the MAD Blog with a full play by play on Monday, with PHOTOS (possibly of a Kum and Go as well). In the meantime, there will still be the usual daily postings here on the MAD Blog thanks to the miracle of pre-date blogging.

Now Speaking at Toonfest

Monday, September 1st, 2008

Last week I wrote about the Walt Disney Hometown Toonfest event in Marceline, MO and how my chapter of the National Cartoonists Society is going to have our fall meeting at the event.

Since I wrote that and began organizing our chapter’s meeting I have been tapped by the Toonfest organizers to both emcee the speaker’s presentations on both Friday (Student Day) and Saturday as well as do my own speaking presentation on both days. Looks like I just went from a spectator to a spectacle for the weekend event. Here is a link to the speaker lineup for the event, and here is the tentative schedule of speakers on both days:

Friday, September 19- Student Audience

9:00-9:15     Welcome by Kaye Malins and Kick Off from Tom Richmond
9:15-9:45    Greg Evans
9:50- 10:20    Jan Eliot
10:25-10:55    Dave Coverly
11:00-11:45    Lunch
11:50-12:20    Michael Jantze
12:25-12:55    Tom Richmond
1:00-1:30    Wrap Up, questions, etc.

Saturday, September 20- General Public

12:30-12:45     Welcome by Kaye Malins and Kick Off from Tom Richmond
12:45-1:15    Greg Evans
1:20-1:50    Jan Eliot
1:55-2:25    Dave Coverly
2:30-2:45    Break/Drawings
2:50-3:20    Michael Jantze
3:25-3:55    Tom Richmond
4:00-5:00    Audience questions and Round table

My presentation will be a Powerpoint with some of my latest work, some anecdotes about working for MAD and some talk about drawing caricatures. I will also have a few pieces in the art show. If you are a reader of “The MAD Blog” and attending, come up and say hello.

Disney Hometown Toonfest 2008

Saturday, August 16th, 2008

Back in 2005 I was a guest speaker, along with cartoonists Gary and Glenn McCoy (The Flying McCoys, etc.), Jim Borgman (Zits, editorial cartoons) and Tom Wilson Jr. (Ziggy), animation critic Charles Solomon and Disney Imagineer Vice-President Tony Bancroft in a small town called Marceline, MO at an event called the Walt Disney Hometown Toonfest. Since Missouri is part of the large geographical area covered by our chapter of the National Cartoonist Society, the North Central Chapter, many of our chapter members have taken an interest in Toonfest and have helped organize and plan parts of the event. I haven’t been able to make it back to the annual Toonfest celebration since then due to constant conflicts with my schedule.

This year the North Central Chapter, of which I am currently the chairman, has decided to hold our annual fall meeting in Marceline in conjunction with Toonfest. It makes sense to do so, since the Toonfest folks have already lined up a great program of guest speakers, as they do every year, and so all we have to do is show up, drink our fair share of beers and enjoy the festivities.

What is Toonfest, and why in Marceline, MO, population 2,500? Perhaps their website or this post from my blog will explain it more fully, but for those with link-apathy here is the short version: Walt Disney and his family lived in Marceline from 1906 to 1911, when we has aged 4 to 9 years. In that short time a lot of the things that would later become staples of Disney’s vision were indelibly planted in his mind… anyone who has ever walked down Main Street in either Disneyland or in the Magic Kingdom will recognize Marceline’s influence when they see the same streets, lamppost clocks and storefront architecture looking back at them in this small Missouri town. Disney also reportedly developed his love of drawing during this time, as well as his love or railroads and trains. There are many more examples of Marceline’s influences on Disney.

Ten years ago the town decided to honor thier hometown hero with an annual celebration. Since then Toonfest has evolved into a celebration of cartooning itself, and they have had amazing success getting some pretty high profile cartoonists to come to this out-of-the-way place and speak.

This years guest speakers speakers include “Speedbump” creator Dave Coverly, “Stone Soup” cartoonist Jan Eliot, “Luanne” writer/artist Greg Evans and “The Norm” creator Michael Jantze. There is also an exhibit of original cartoon art at the local Masonic Temple right on Main Street that runs all of Toonfest weekend.

I will be there all weekend and will have a MAD piece in the art show. I won’t be speaking but just enjoying the event and soaking up the hometown hospitality. Hope to see some of you there. Check out the Toonfest website for more details and for a schedule.

 

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