Kevin Eastman

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For the Boston Celtics assistant, see Kevin Eastman (basketball coach)

Kevin Brooks Eastman (b. 1962) is an American comic book artist. He is best known as the co-creator (with Peter Laird) of the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles. Eastman is also the current owner, editor and publisher of the magazine Heavy Metal. He lives in the Hollywood Hills with his wife Julie and their son.

Contents

[edit] Biography

Kevin Eastman was born on May 30, 1962 in Springvale, Maine. By 1983, he was "working in a restaurant and seeking underground publishers for his comix stories," having been collaborating with Pater Laird for a short while on various comics projects.[1] The following year, in May 1984, Eastman and Peter Laird self-published (for $1200) the first black & white issue of Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles. The forty-page oversized comic had an initial print run of 3000 copies, and was largely funded by a $1000 loan from Eastman's uncle Quentin, and published by the duos Mirage Studios, a name chosen because "there wasn’t an actual studio, only kitchen tables and couches with lap boards."[1][2] By September 1985, that first issue had received a further 3 printings.[3]

[edit] Turtles

Laird's newspaper experience led to the two creating "a four-page press kit[4]," that, according to Flaming Carrot-creator Bob Burden's own Mystery Men press-kit included "a story outline and artwork that they sent to 180 TV and radio stations," as well as both the Associated Press and United Press International. This led to widespread press coverage of both the TMNT property and Mirage Studios itself, creating "a demand for the interestingly-titled comic that caught everyone by surprise."[2] With the solicitation of their second issue, Eastman and Laird's Turtles comic began a meteoric rise to success, bringing in advance orders of 15,000 copies - five times the initial print run of the first issue. This, Eastman has been quoted as saying:

"basically ended up with us clearing a profit of two thousand dollars apiece. Which allowed us to write and draw stories full time: it was enough to pay the rent, pay the bills, and buy enough macaroni and cheese and pencils to live on."[1]

The Turtles phenomenon saw the duo invited to their first comics convention at the tenth annual Atlanta Fantasy Fair in 1984, where they mingled with the likes of Larry Niven, Forrest J Ackerman and Fred Hembeck (among others).[1][5]

With their (November 1985) fifth issue, Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles downsized to the more "normal" American comics-format and size, and the previous four issues were also reprinted in this size and format with new, color, covers. Also in 1985, Solson Publishing released a "How to draw" volume entitled How to draw Eastman and Laird's Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles[6] (Solson would also produce six issues of a TMNT "Authorized Training Manual" as well as a "Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles Teach Karate" volume in 1987.)

[edit] Licensing

Mirage's Turtles comic led to a widening media presence for the eponymous heroes: Eastman and Laird began to widely merchandise their property, including with Dark Horse Miniatures (who produced a set of 15 mm lead figurines for "role-playing gamers and collectors"), Palladium Books, who produced a role-playing game featuring the Turtles and with First Comics who, between 1986 and 1988, reprinted in four volumes the first eleven issues as color trade paperback collections.[2]

Palladium's RPG brought the Turtles to the attention of licensing agent Mark Freedman, and the Turtles phenomenon took off, with the various characters soon appearing on "T-shirts, Halloween masks, coffee mugs, and all kinds of other paraphernalia."[7] In December, 1987, a five-part televised cartoon mini-series based on the Turtles debuted.[8] The half-hour episodes were produced by Osamu Yoshioka, and the animation was directed by Yoshikatsu Kasai from scripts by Eastman & Laird with David Wise and Patti Howeth, with initial help from "ad agency executive" Jerry Sachs.[9] The success of the mini-series was swift, leading to a full (and ultimately a 9-year, 10-season, 194-episode run) series, with the mini-series forming the first season. Bob Burden writes:

"within days of it airing it was apparent that the TMNT would prove every bit as popular for the television audience as it had been for the comic readers. From there, Surge Licensing formed an unstoppable creative marketing powerhouse that set a new standard of excellence in the licensing and merchandising industries."[2]

In January 1988, Eastman and Laird visited Playmates Toys Inc, who wished to market action figures based on the comic book - and now animated cartoon - series, further cementing the Turtles' place in history, and making Eastman and Laird extremely wealthy, since:

"crucially... they were wise enough from the outset to properly copyright and trademark their creation, and were never tempted to give over control to anyone but themselves."[1]

[edit] Multimedia

Multiple other Turtles comics, toys, books, games and other merchandising spin-offs have subsequently appeared, overseen, if not fully created, by Eastman and Laird. Paramount amongst these are three live action films - in 1990, 1991 and 1993 - a further two TV series' (Ninja Turtles: The Next Mutation (1997) and a new self-titled 2003 series), and an animated feature film: TMNT (2007).

[edit] Eastman & Laird: separate ways

Eastman and Laird, as with many creative partnerships did not always see eye-to-eye, and their creative partnership became difficult. Speaking c2002, Laird noted that the two "didn't really have anything to do with each other for the last nine years. He had moved to California and I stayed in Massachusetts."[10]

On June 1, 2000 Peter Laird and the Mirage Group purchased all of Kevin's ownership in the TMNT property and the corporations, except for a small continuing income participation.[10] Laird believes that the reasoning was simply that Eastman "was just tired of it. He wanted to move on and has other things to spend more time on."[10]

On March 1, 2008 Peter Laird and the Mirage Group completed the buyout of Kevin's entire right, title, interest and income participation in the TMNT property and the four Mirage corporations involved in the ownership, management and protection of the TMNT. This event finalizes the transaction began on June 1, 2000. [11]

[edit] Tundra

Main article: Tundra Publishing

[edit] Foundation

While co-managing Mirage Studios, the pair talked to a number of creators about "the hardships and sacrifices they had to undergo to control their own work" and lack of creative freedoms, Eastman decided that he should address the problems head on, utilising his own personal knowledge and the duos connections to "offer possibilities for... other creators." Approaching Laird with his ideas, Eastman met with a less than positive response:

[M]y first thought was to expand the publishing arm of Mirage. But the more sane of the two partners said, "What are you, nuts?" ...[w]e were working pretty much full time just on the Turtles. Pete told me, and I agreed, that he didn't want to have anything else on his brain in terms of publishing at the time. So with his blessing, I started Tundra Publishing.[1]

[edit] Intentions & output

Eastman founded the creator-friendly Tundra Publishing in 1990, to realize personal and other projects in part "because of our [Eastman & Laird] having so much success with the Turtles."[1] Having been able to maintain ownership, copyright and trademark and thus keeping control both over "what was done with [the Turtles] and what was not done with [them]," the two came to realise that in the wider industry they were both something of an anomaly, and that, as Eastman says, they "didn't even realize we were being spoiled as much as we were spoiled."[1] As part of the initial group (with Scott McCloud, Dave Sim and others) who "got together to form the Creator Bill of Rights," Eastman felt obligated to expand it beyond theory and into practice, providing a creator-friendly forum for comics creators to work for a publisher while maintaining ownership of their work.[1]

Rick Veitch has written that:

"One of the plans was for Tundra to act as an exoskeleton for an existing self-publisher; offering marketing muscle, higher production values, printing costs paid and a page rate up front for half the action no strings attached."[12]

Moreover, Eastman provided a forum for Marvel and DC creators to work on projects that they could not otherwise realise:

"Basically, I'd meet them at conventions and they'd said they're stuck doing Spider-Man, they had a wife and a kid at home, and they had to make ends meet. But if they really had a chance, they said they'd really do this [at Tundra] and I'd hear this repeatedly. So, I went back to those artists because I had the money and said I'd give them the chance. I asked them what they'd like to do. They could pick their dream projects that they'd wanna do and I would provide the funding so that they could survive and they didn't have to do Spider-Man for a year and I'll fund the projects and I just wanted to make my money back from the profits to keep my company going."[13]

Projects (part-)realised by Tundra included: Alan Moore and Bill Sienkiewicz's Big Numbers, Moore & Eddie Campbell's From Hell, Moore & Melinda Gebbie's Lost Girls (these last two original serialised in Stephen R. Bissette's Taboo anthology, which was also part-published by Tundra[14]), The Crow Mike Allred's Madman and Dave McKean's Cages, and others.[13]

Eastman initially thought that his experience at Mirage gave him "a pretty good grasp of what a publisher should be, and what a publisher needs to do," although he swiftly realised that "Tundra was not like publishing the Turtles."[1]

[edit] Difficulties

As part of Eastman's designs for Tundra were to produce personal projects of a more adult nature than the Turtles-oriented Mirage was geared towards[15], this saw Tundra fitting in the dubious middle-ground of being "too rock 'n' roll for country, and too country for rock 'n' roll," as their intended product sat somehwat awkwardly between the comic shop and the book shop. Eastman says that he "thought that the audience was a lot larger than it actually was," citing his personal assumption that readers would "grow up therough X-Men and discover The Sandman and then Dark Knight and Watchmen and beyond." The relatively fledgling in-roads of comics and graphic novels into bookshops at the time, however, worked against Tundra.[1]

In addition, Eastman swiftly became aware that Tundra and the Turtles differed considerably, not least since the latter was successful enough to effectively run itself, with a few 'nudges' "to keep it moving along." Tundra, on the other hand, dealt in new properties, which required "building from the ground up," and was "a lot more work" than Eastman had anticipated, growing far too quickly for comfort, and requiring considerable injections of time and money, rather than being profitable itself.[1]

Speaking in 1992/3, Eastman was optimistic that the company had "finally reached the point where [it had] slowed up enough... to be giving individual projects the time and attention they require[d];" Shortly thereafter, however, Tundra merged with/was brought out by Kitchen Sink Press, closing its (solo) doors after just three years, losing Eastman between $9 and $14 million.[1][13]

[edit] Aftermath

Despite heavy financial losses, Eastman remains philosophical about his work with Tundra, drawing the analogy that:

"doing the Turtles was like going to college and doing Tundra Publishing was like getting my Master's degree. So I learnt a lot with the Turtles and I learnt the rest of what I needed to know.. when I did Tundra."[13]

He makes mention of the multiple award nominations Tundra received during it's first and second years, including Harvey Awards and Eisner Awardss, but notes that despite critical acclaim, the company was not making money on its titles, and had to cease production. He notes that Tundra was one of the earlier creator-owned companies, "before Image really took off" and before Dark Horse Comics' "Legends line."[13]

Eastman admits that Tundra tried to do too much too quickly, and ran into difficulties accordingly.[1] He also suggests that "[n]ot one book made any money".[13] He also believes that part of Tundra's downfall was tied to his offering Marvel and DC employees the chance to work on creator-owned and personal projects. He has stated in interviews that:

"In my personal opinion, we took away so many creams of the crops artists like Dave McKean, Neil Gaiman, Alan Moore, Rick Veitch, Mike Allred... [that] the two big companies had the power to go to the key distributors and made them short shell, under ship and ____ing bury these guys because now that Dave McKean is doing stuff at Tundra, the big publishers were losing money because Dave's not doing Arkham Asylum 2 and Alan Moore's not doing Watchmen 2, he's not doing Swamp Thing, but instead he's doing From Hell with Tundra...
Basically, we got the raw end of the deal."[13]

[edit] Heavy Metal

Kevin Eastman has been a longtime fan of the Science fiction and fantasy magazine, much of whose content was translated from the French, and appeared in the original Métal Hurlant publication of which Heavy Metal is only the American-licensed incarnation. He cites it (after Jack Kirby) as bringing to his attention the "second greatest influence" on him as an artist, Richard Corben.[1] He saw in its pages European art which had not been previously seen in the United States, as well as an underground comix sensibility that nonetheless "wasn't as harsh or extreme as some of the underground comix - but... definitely intended for an older readership."[1]

Discovering that Heavy Metal had been put up for sale, and with one of Tundra's stated aims being to bring a more adult sensibility (and mature, adult readers) to comics overlapping with the magazine's target audience, Eastman decided that Heavy Metal was "the final piece of the puzzle", and looked into purchasing it. Noting that:

"In my life, too many things have happened in a weird, sort of shit-luck sort of fashion," Eastman purchased the magazine in January 1992.[1]

Despite the audiences for Heavy Metal and Tundra's intended product (as well as more mature-themed comics in general) being of a broadly similar demgraphic, Eastman recognised from the start that "most of the audience who read Heavy Metal buy it off the newsstands; they're not going into comic book stores," and stated early on that his intention was to produce "numerous crossovers from the cutting edge of comics creators" to expose the magazine's readership not just to the comics industry, "but anything from the visual media that can cross over."[1]

Eastman also attempted to bring some European hardcover comics to America, using Heavy Metal to help serialise themand both defray the costs and boost readership. Initial interest, however, was "fairly cool."[1]

[edit] Art collection

Eastman purchased his first piece of original artwork ("a couple of pages that were penciled by Michael Golden and inked by Bob McCloud for Marvel Comics' Howard the Duck") at the Atlanta convention he and Laird attended in 1984.[1] Collecting subsequently became "quite an addiction" for him, and, combined with his experiences in getting his (and others') comics work recognised as "Art," led to him founding the Words and Pictures Museum.[1]

[edit] Words and Pictures Museum

[edit] Background

Eastman cites his personal interest in art collection as a primary reason for his foundation of the Words and Pictures Museum, a museum dedicated exclusively to comic book art. His interest in art collection was twofold: both "for the sheer beauty of it, but also for what [he] was learning" about different techniques and modes of working from seeing the original work up close.[1] His personal interest was also reflected in his friends, who he notes would often visit ask to see his collection, leading him to think that:

"[I]t was a shame that the only time these beautiful drawings and paintings got seen [was] when people visited [his] house."[1]

In addition to perceived interest, he recalled the reaction to comic book art in his portfolio (specifically his "best Jack Kirby homage") being considerably less than positive, an attitude which has:

..always bothered me. I can go into any museum in the country and look at a lot of different things that people interpret as art that don't even come close to what I would interpret as art! And yet these kinds of critics who were calling that material "Art" always pass judgment on what I call "Art."[1]

Combining these thoughts (personal interest and wider snobbery), Eastman recalled that "the French government has a state sponsored museum dedicated to comic books," but that America did not, and decided to rectify the situation by "open[ing] a museum that would be dedicated to a little bit of what brought us here, a lot of what's going on today, and also a look to the future of comics."[1]

[edit] Short-lived

Eastman established the museum in his hometown of Northampton, Massachusetts in 1992, and "[k]ept it open for as long as [he] could afford to keep it open."[13] Ultimately subsequent cash flow problems with Tundra, and the ebbing of the TMNT fad, led to the closure of the Museum in 1999, although it maintains something of an online presence at WordsandPictures.org.

[edit] Personal life

[edit] Julie Strain, photography and acting

Eastman is married to B-movie actress and model Julie Strain. This relationship saw Strain star in the animated film Heavy Metal 2000, based on Eastman's magazine property Heavy Metal, and the direct to video sequel to the 1981 feature film Heavy Metal.

Being married to a model led to Eastman experimenting in photography himself, producing images (primarily of his wife) which are available on the Heavy Metal website, in galleries entitled "I Shot my Wife".[16] This led to Strain taking up the camera herself, with some success, resulting in a number of books published by Heavy Metal Magazine of and by Strain-Eastman.[17]

Eastman himself has himself also acted alongside his wife in a small number of films since the mid-to-late 1990s, and has acted as producer/co-producer on a couple of films, notably St. Patrick's Day (co-produced and featuring Julie Strain Eastman) in 1997.

[edit] Other comics work

Aside from his work on multiple Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles projects, and as publisher of Tundra Publishing, Eastman has done little other comics work. He did however attempt to produce a 24-hour comic on one occasion, but failed. Deciding to continue working after the time limit had expired, this 24+ hour method is called the Eastman Variation.[18]

He is a featured interviewee in the movie Independents'.

[edit] References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y Wiater, Stanley & Bissette, Stephen R. (ed.s) Comic Book Rebels: Conversations with the Creators of the New Comics (Donald I. Fine, Inc. 1993) ISBN 1-55611-355-2
  2. ^ a b c d Bob Burden's Mysterymen Presskit: Kevin Eastman. Accessed April 22, 2008
  3. ^ ComicBookDb: Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles #1. Accessed April 22, 2008
  4. ^ Pages from the Press Kit can be seen here on Eastman's Heavy Metal website.
  5. ^ David Merrill "The Atlanta Fantasy Fair". Accessed April 22, 2008
  6. ^ MyComicShop: How to Draw Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (1985). Accessed April 22, 2008
  7. ^ Don Markstein's Toonopedia: "Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles". Accessed April 22, 2008
  8. ^ IMDb: "Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles" (1987) (mini). Accessed April 22, 2008
  9. ^ IMDb: "Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles" (1987) (mini): Trivia. Accessed April 22, 2008
  10. ^ a b c Daniel Robert Epstein interview with Peter Laird, c2002/2003. Accessed April 22, 2008
  11. ^ the 5th turtle: A final release
  12. ^ Jeff Smith, "Remembering the Self-Publishing Movement: Rick Veitch, part 1", February 17, 2008. Accessed April 22, 2008
  13. ^ a b c d e f g h "Talking to Kevin Eastman 1: Turtle Days, Turtle Nights" by Benjamin Ong Pang Kean, August 31, 2007. Accessed April 22, 2008
  14. ^ From Hell would continue to be published by Kitchen Sink Press after Tundra's demise, and both From Hell and Lost Girls are now published by [[{Top Shelf Comix]].
  15. ^ Eastman notes, however, that the initial black and white comic was considerably more 'adult' than what followed.
  16. ^ "I Shot My Wife" background on Eastman's photography. Accessed April 22, 2008
  17. ^ "I Shot My Wife" background on Eastman's photography. Accessed April 22, 2008
  18. ^ N.B. The converse method of stopping at the time limit without the comic having been completed is known as "the Gaiman variation." Scott McCloud's 24 Hour Comic dare. Accessed April 22, 2008

[edit] External links