"Tony Millionaire Interview"
DEC 2000 Product
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Tony Millionaire is the Eisner and Harvey Award
nominated creator of Sock Monkey. Imagine a classic children’s story written for a
modern audience and you have a basic idea of where Sock Monkey will take you. Worlds of Westfield Content Editor, Roger
Ash, recently contacted Millionaire about his singular creation which returns
this month in a new mini-series from Dark Horse.
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Westfield:
For people who've never read Sock
Monkey, how would you describe the book and who are the main characters?
Tony
Millionaire: In these books I really tried to remember as much as I could
about my grandparents' house in Newton Lower Falls, Massachusetts. It was a big,
very old house with beautiful smells of plaster, old waxed wood and tollhouse
cookies. My cousin Anne Louise lived there, she was a few years older than my
siblings and me, and she told us about this little tiny man that lived in the
closet. She would leave cookie crumbs for him and the next day they would be
gone. We really believed her and were kind of scared, but I remember how much
more magical that house seemed than the Deck House we lived in. My grandmother
gave me a sock monkey one day and I got to bring it home, which I was not
allowed to do with all the other old toys she had in that house, so I knew I was
bringing some of that magic into my own house.
The
comics are about that sock monkey and a friend I wrote up for him named Mr.
Crow. They run around the old house trying to find beauty and poetry in the
things they see (in the first book they think that a chandelier is a castle in
heaven) but are constantly tripped up by crunching reality. Fire, rabid bats,
weird things in the study like guns, booze and shrunken heads have a way of
ruining their idealistic view of things.
Westfield:
What can you tell us about the new mini-series?
Millionaire:
I'm taking them out of the house in the next two issues to deal with animals in
the woods. Hunting and death juxtaposed with childlike innocence will be the
name of the game. I won't say more except to say that some terrible things will
happen.
Westfield:
The stories have the look and feel of classic children's stories, yet they're
definitely done with a modern sensibility. Do you draw your inspiration from
classic stories and/or illustrators, and if so, which?
Millionaire:
The first book I ever had read to me was the great Winnie the Pooh, and I'm
not talking about that chewed up monstrosity that exists now since Disney got
their hands on it. I wonder how much Walt Disney himself had to do with that
violent act of sabotage, his early work was so brilliant. Snow White was such a
beautiful movie, it's hard to believe that his name could be associated with the
hideous monster that is now called Pooh. The illustrations of Ernest Shepard
made such a glorious dent in my head, I remember looking at them when I was a
kid, just holding them close, looking at the way he drew the grass under that
bear's foot. I fell in love with pen and ink looking at those pictures. I also
loved the drawings of Johnny Gruelle who did the Raggedy Ann books. That guy
could draw a duck wearing shoes like nobody's business! If you look at the shoes
of the "Trumbernick" in Sock
Monkey #2 Volume 2 you will notice that I stole Johnny Gruelle's shoes
directly! He also did some of the best Sunday comic strips ever.
Westfield:
Are you working on any other projects?
Millionaire:
Yes, I have a strip called "Maakies" which runs in weeklies across the
country and can be found at www.word.com every Tuesday. Fantagraphics (www.fantagraphics.com)
has just published a collection of over 300 strips which I did over the past six
years. The characters are also called Uncle Gabby and Drinky Crow, sort of a
parallel universe kind of thing. They are darker and more "adult" than
the Sock Monkey books. Saturday Night Live
animated it last year and ran a couple of episodes, maybe we'll see some more
animation soon. I could sure use the cash. I need to buy a big very old house in
Newton Lower Falls and scare some grandchildren.
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