The Riverside Press-Enterprise

SEE YOU IN THE FUNNY PAPERS — FOR DECADES

Few comic strips have lasted longer than `Drabble,' drawn by Kevin Fagan of Mission Viejo

- By Peter Larsen plarsen@scng.com

Cartoonist Kevin Fagan grew up idolizing Charles M. Schulz and “Peanuts.” Now that his own comic strip, “Drabble,” is turning 45 this week, Fagan is contemplat­ing his long run in the funny pages and once again has Schulz on his mind.

“I knew Charles M. Schulz pretty well,” Fagan says from his home in Mission Viejo a week before the March 5 anniversar­y of the 1979 debut of “Drabble.” “I’d see him a couple of times a year and we’d talk on the phone regularly.

“I remember when his 50th anniversar­y was coming up for ‘Peanuts,’ ” he says. “I was on the phone with him, and he was saying, ‘Yeah, you know, 50 years, 18,000 comic strips.’ That’s how many strips he’d done in 50 years.

“I’ll never forget, he just said, ‘Where does it all come from?’ — he was talking about the ideas for the strip and all of the themes,” Fagan says. “It was a genuine statement of awe. He wasn’t fishing for a compliment or ‘You’re a genius’ or anything like that. He was just amazed by the whole thing.

“As I am kind of approachin­g that now, I realize how he feels. You know, cartooning, drawing a comic strip every day, is quite a wonderful thing to spend your life doing. Because every day I have to try to think of something that’s going to give people a smile.

“I’m thinking, as I get close to 50 years now, not a lot of people have had the opportunit­y to share a smile with millions upon millions of people every single day for 45 years or 50 years,” Fagan says.

“Drabble,” which Fagan sold to United Feature Syndicate when he was a 21-yearold college student at Sacramento State, is a comic strip inspired by the shy, slightly awkward young man he was at the time.

“(When) the strip started out, it was all about Norman, who was a goofy college kid, which is exactly what I was,” says Fagan, who led a quiet life living with his mother in Fair Oaks and Citrus Heights outside of Sacramento at the time. “I was Norman Drabble. I couldn’t get a date. You know, I was a complete moron. I didn’t know what to say.

“So it was autobiogra­phical, but of course, I would go off the deep end on things that didn’t really happen,” he says. “But a lot of it was based on my life.

“And over time, when I got married” — his wife, Christi, shares a March 5 birthday with “Drabble” — “and kids started to come, I started to relate more to Ralph, who’s the dad in the comic strip. Norman’s always been there, but he was no longer the focal point of the strip; it was kind of Ralph and the whole family.”

In an interview edited for length and clarity, Fagan, 67, talked about the evolution of “Drabble,” what it’s like to create a comic strip on your own for 45 years, the future of “Drabble” and more.

“When you do characters that are people — as opposed to animal characters — people start looking at them as real people, as people that they know and are part of their lives.”

—Fagan

“You know, cartooning, drawing a comic strip every day, is quite a wonderful thing to spend your life doing. Because every day I have to try to think of something that’s going to give people a smile.”

— Kevin Fagan, creator of the comic strip “Drabble”

Q

It’s a remarkable feat to have a career doing the one thing that you love for such a long period of time, isn’t it?

A

Well, if they had come to me with a contract when I was 21 years old and said in the contract, “You’re going to do this every day for probably the rest of your life,” I would have hesitated, I think. The contract they gave me was, “It’s going to be every day for five years, and if we like what you’re doing we’ll renew it for another five.” I’ve never really thought about it in the last 45 years until recently, as I started to look back over my life. I’m just very fortunate to have been able to spend my life doing this.

Q

You mentioned Charles M. Schulz calculated at 50 years he’d done 18,000 strips. Do you have a sense of how many you’ve done?

A

You know what, I just took out my calculator five minutes ago because I was thinking you might ask that. Forty-five years is 16,425 strips.

Q That’s an amazing number.

A

Well, you can deduct 12 from that because I got a week off in 1983 when my mother died. My syndicate said, take a week off. And then in 2008, I ended up in the hospital for some dumb thing, so I took another six days off to do that. So it’s 16,425 minus 12, whatever that is.

Q

How did it change your life to get that first contract in 1979?

A

I went from absolutely nowhere. I mean, I was in college and I was thinking, “What am I going to do?” I was thinking maybe I could be a teacher or maybe I’ll just go and get a job at the mall or something like that. I really had not even thought about my future very much. And then out of the blue they offered this contract and were flying out to meet me, and, you know, we’re in business.

I didn’t have a lawyer to talk to. I just kind of went on blind faith. I knew the syndicate that I was signing with was United Feature Syndicate, which syndicated “Peanuts” and a lot of the great features, so I knew this wasn’t a fly-by-night; this was a reputable thing.

Q The day you signed the contract, do you recall what you did? Did you celebrate?

ANo, I’ve always been a very low-key kind of guy. The vice president said, “Meet A me at the (Sacramento) airport; we’re going The strip kind of evolved, and that’s to fly out there, and we’ll sign the contract a good thing when strips evolve. And at the airport.” So I went to meet him and that’s because it was one cartoonist writing he said, “By the way, did you bring a relative and drawing the whole thing. Sometimes or friend with you to witness the signing?” the cartoonist hires other artists to write I said, “Nooo, was I supposed to do that?” and draw his strip. At that point, the strip

He says, “Is your mom home?” — because sometimes doesn’t change much, because I was living with my mom at the time — the people employed to make it, they don’t and so we drove back and in front of her we want to mess with a good thing. signed the contract. There was no celebratio­n. But when a strip is drawn by one person, I thought, “Now the work starts,” after it can really evolve over the years. I didn’t realize I signed the contract. how much it changed until a couple of years ago, I started doing a Substack newsletter (“The Daily Drabble”). It’s this day in “Drabble” history, and I pull out strips from years past. And I see strips that I haven’t looked at in 30 or 40 years, some of which I’ve forgotten all about.

Q

This goes back to what you were saying about your conversati­on with Charles Schulz: How do you understand or explain how you and Norman and Ralph and June and the rest have been able to continue to entertain readers all these years?

Q

What is it about these characters that One thing I learned early on is the newspaper has connected so much with comic syndicatio­n business is kind of strip readers? rough. Because there were several major

A

newspaper syndicates back in the day, and When you do characters that are people all of them would go into editors’ offices and — as opposed to animal characters target my strip, since I was a young guy and — people start looking at them as real people, kind of new. The salesmen would go in and as people that they know and are part of say, “Here’s the strip you need to replace with their lives. They get upset if anyone appears our strip. We’re going to give you this new to be in any kind of peril. Or, you know, strip and your readers are gonna love it. And Norman is constantly making a bad decision this guy, you know, he’s just a kid” and blah, about this and that; people get upset blah, blah. sometimes.

So it’s that fear and that knowledge that That’s one thing I learned ... because every day people are trying to replace me. I they’ve made a connection with the characters. thought, I can’t let up on this. And it turned into a lifetime, like I say, pretty much all day long of trying to think of funny things, and writing down ideas, and really working it hard. It was just that fear that I’m going to lose everything if I don’t stay on top of this.

A Qhas

“Drabble” changed much over time?

Q

We started out talking about Schulz and “Peanuts,” which he did by himself for 50 years, which is one of the longest solo runs of any American cartoonist. Now you’re at

45. What does it feel like to be close to his neighborho­od?

A

You know what, I’ve never considered myself to be in Schulz’s neighborho­od because his genius was so far beyond anything that I do. But as I get close to the numbers it’s a little shocking that I’ve been around so long, and I realize that not many people have done that.

I’ve never done the research. I don’t know how many cartoonist­s have gone to 50 years. I think there’s one today, Russell Myers, who does “Broom-hilda.” I believe he works by himself and I think he’s surpassed 50. (‘Broom-hilda’ debuted in April 1970, and with more than 19,000 strips has almost reached 54 years with Myers as its sole creator.)

Q

Do you have a plan for the future of “Drabble”? You’re going to keep going? Or is there a time when you might decide you’ll just sit on the porch and watch the grass grow instead?

A

Yeah, I’ve never had a plan. The idea of retiring is kind of scary because I don’t know what I would do. Coincident­ally, there’s another conversati­on I had with Schulz. As he got older, his family, I think, and the syndicate were suggesting that he take some time off from the strip. You know, “There’s no need to keep working so hard; you can enjoy your life.”

And I remember him saying, “What am I gonna do? Am I gonna go to the park and feed the pigeons? I don’t want to take a sabbatical.” Eventually, he did. But yeah, I mean, when you’ve spent your whole life doing a certain thing, I imagine that when that time comes I’ll be pretty lost for a while. We’ll see what happens.

 ?? PHOTOS BY ANA VENEGAS — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? Mission Viejo resident Kevin Fagan, shown in his studio in 2016, has been producing his comic, “Drabble,” for 45years, which works out to more than 16,000strips. He was a 21-year-old college student when he got his first cartooning contract in 1979.
PHOTOS BY ANA VENEGAS — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER Mission Viejo resident Kevin Fagan, shown in his studio in 2016, has been producing his comic, “Drabble,” for 45years, which works out to more than 16,000strips. He was a 21-year-old college student when he got his first cartooning contract in 1979.
 ?? ?? The knickknack­s in Fagan’s studio include memorabili­a for the “Peanuts” comic strip, which was drawn by his friend Charles M. Schulz. “Peanuts” ran for 50 years, one of the few with longer tenure than
“Drabble.”
The knickknack­s in Fagan’s studio include memorabili­a for the “Peanuts” comic strip, which was drawn by his friend Charles M. Schulz. “Peanuts” ran for 50 years, one of the few with longer tenure than “Drabble.”
 ?? ?? A notebook contains sketches. Fagan says that as he’s aged, he’s come to relate more to the father character in “Drabble” than his son, who was the focus of the strip when it began and whom Fagan modeled somewhat after himself.
A notebook contains sketches. Fagan says that as he’s aged, he’s come to relate more to the father character in “Drabble” than his son, who was the focus of the strip when it began and whom Fagan modeled somewhat after himself.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States