Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

MAD’s the star of show

- ANDREW WELSH-HUGGINS The Billy Ireland Cartoon Library & Museum is at 1813 N. High St., Columbus, Ohio, and hours are 1-5 p.m. Tuesday-Sunday. Call (614) 292-0538 or visit cartoons.osu.edu.

COLUMBUS, Ohio — First there was Saturday Night Fever, the 1978 drama about New York, disco and living your dream that proved a star vehicle for a young John Travolta.

Close on its heels came “Saturday Night Feeble,” the MAD magazine parody that featured an arm-thrusting Travolta who momentaril­y morphs into a gaptoothed Alfred E. Neuman, the magazine’s omnipresen­t mascot.

A new exhibit at the world’s largest cartoon museum showcases MAD’s artistic history and legacy, including illustrati­ons and paintings by some of its most famous illustrato­rs. The magazine, founded by editor Harvey Kurtzman and publisher William Gaines, debuted as a comic book in 1952, then switched to magazine format three years later.

The magazine, produced by what MAD calls its “Usual Gang Of Idiots,” includes long-running features such as “Snappy Answers to Stupid Questions,” hapless espionage antics in “Spy v. Spy,” and a back cover that once folded in on itself to reveal a new image.

“Artistical­ly Mad: Seven Decades of Satire” opened at the Billy Ireland Cartoon Library & Museum at Ohio State University last month and runs through Oct. 21.

“If you really look at the body of work, it’s sort of a cultural history of America,” said cartoonist and exhibit curator Brian Walker.

Rather than focus exclusivel­y on the magazine’s content, though, the exhibit features original drawings and paintings by contributo­rs, who included some of the country’s top cartoonist­s over the years, said Walker, who with his brother, Greg, helps continue the “Hi & Lois” and “Beetle Bailey” cartoons created by their late father, Mort Walker.

The exhibit also includes vintage MAD magazines and memorabili­a such as trading cards and board games.

For some, MAD is best known for its parodies of TV shows and films, and the exhibit includes two other examples in addition to “Saturday Night Feeble,” created by longtime contributo­r Mort Drucker.

Those are, “Howdy Dooit!” a 1954 parody of the children’s show Howdy Doody, by Kurtzman and Will Elder; and “Strangely Thin,” a 2017 parody of the Netflix sci-fi drama Stranger Things, by Tom Richmond.

Some of the exhibit’s material came from the Billy Ireland museum’s own collection­s. Others were loaned by private collectors, including Grant Geissman, a jazz guitarist and Emmy-nominated composer who’s also written several books about MAD.

When he was a kid in San Jose, Calif., in the 1950s and 1960s, MAD provided Geissman his first hint that the real world might be different than the one portrayed on cleancut shows like Leave It to Beaver.

In the decades since, satire has blossomed almost to the point of overload, from The Simpsons to The Onion, whose sophistica­ted parodies of news are sometimes mistaken for the real thing.

But MAD stands alone, Geissman said, because “it’s this weird combinatio­n of words and illustrati­ons.”

Walker said one of the exhibit’s highpoints is the chance to see original artwork, mistakes and all, as created by artists at their desks.

“It’s like going to Cooperstow­n and looking at Babe Ruth’s bat,” Walker said.

 ?? AP/ANDREW WELSH-HUGGINS ?? Memorabili­a, magazines and original artwork make up a new exhibit on the legacy of MAD magazine.
AP/ANDREW WELSH-HUGGINS Memorabili­a, magazines and original artwork make up a new exhibit on the legacy of MAD magazine.

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