|

Sunday, July 3, 2005
Dan
Parent: Making Betty & Veronica Spectacular
By
Rik Offenberger
Dan
Parent is an eighteen-year Archie Comics veteran. In addition to
Archie Comics, Dan has worked on Felix the Cat and Barbie
as well as self published a number of titles. Dan took some time to
chat with us about his career.
Rik Offenberger: You attended the Joe Kubert School, was
Victor Gorelick on the board at the time?
Dan Parent: I don’t think Victor was on the board at the
time, but he used to come down once a year and check out the talent.
Offenberger: You joined Archie after almost immediately after
graduation, how did you get the job?
Parent: When I got the job, one of the other artists left the
art department to go freelance. The timing was just right, as it
happened right after graduation. I worked in the art department for
9 years after that (also freelancing from home a couple days a week)
Offenberger: You wear many hats at Archie, how is it
determined if you are the writer, artist or both on a particular
story?
Parent: Basically, I give Victor a bunch of story ideas, so I
start off writing then go right to drawing. This also helps us
incorporate the covers into the theme of the book. I will pencil
other writer’s back-up stories sometimes.
Offenberger: Is there more prestige working on the Archie
title then the other characters?
Parent: Well, I work on Betty & Veronica mostly, and I
think they’re equally as popular if not more than Archie. But
Archie is the flagship title with almost 600 issues
published, so that is pretty prestigious.
Offenberger: You have been at Archie Comics for 18 years,
what keeps the job exciting for you?
Parent: Well, I’ve been wanting to do this since I was five
years old, so I’m doing exactly what I’ve always wanted to do. I
love drawing (especially girls), so it’s perfect. And even though I
could always draw them, I’ve really gotten into the whole writing
process.
Offenberger: Your covers for the Betty & Veronica
Spectacular, even before the re-formatting are more
three-dimensional then the rest of the Archie line, how is this look
achieved?
Parent: Some covers I do myself in Photoshop, which may give
a more detailed look. But I also think of myself as a designer, so I
try to make the covers stand out from some of our other books. I
think less is more, and I think the characters should pop out, and
the backgrounds should be secondary.
Offenberger: Part of you job includes doing many of the
licensing illustrations for Archie, how were you selected and what
does it involve?
Parent: When I started, we had a big licensing department, so
I got into that right away. It was a great learning experience,
since I learned all about designing and typesetting for package
design, clothing and all things that weren’t comics. Every once in a
while art will have to be created for licensees, but now we have a
style guide, so licensees can actually have their art departments
use our digital files. When I started, everything was just starting
to switch over to computer-generated art. It makes things a lot
easier!
Offenberger: You also do toy design work, how did you get
involved with the toy companies?
Parent: It all stems from the characters I work on. If it’s
Barbie, she’s owned by Mattel, and if it’s a character like
Felix, they have licensees all over the world. And depending
on what they need, it just falls in my lap.
Offenberger: You worked on the Barbie series at
Marvel, how did you get the job?
Parent: One of the editors, Hildy Mesnick, saw my art and
asked me to try a story. She liked it, so I worked on various
Barbie comics for a few years, which also led to illustrating a
couple storybooks.
Offenberger: With Archie’s success with licensed titles like
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles and Sonic, why doesn’t
Archie pursue the Barbie license?
Parent: I’m not sure, but I would imagine it must be an
expensive license. But we did work with Mattel/Barbie on the
new Betty & Veronica, Barbie dolls, so who knows?
Offenberger: You also do a lot of work on Felix the Cat,
how did that come about?
Parent: I started work on some of their comics back in the
early nineties, and that just led into doing lots of other licensing
work for them.
Offenberger: There aren’t many Felix comics, what do you do
for them?
Parent: They only produce one comic, but I usually contribute
a story for that. I also designed their website for them, and also
work on designs for various products.
Offenberger: You also worked on Tiger Comics’ Phantasy
Against Hunger, what was that about and how did you get
involved?
Parent: Wow, that’s going back awhile. I was attending the
Kubert School at the time, and a fellow Kubie, Steve Lipsky, got the
whole thing started.
Offenberger: Getting away from the Archie work, what’s the
deal with Agnes Moorehead? The whole biography is so over the top
that I didn’t get the point
Parent: I find my own biography so boring, I figured why not
make one up!
Offenberger: How did you end up on Who Want’s to be a
Millionaire?
Parent: I’m a big fan of game shows (and TV in general) so I
went and took a test, passed it, and was interviewed on tape. Then I
got a call that I was a contestant. I was also on The Weakest
Link a couple years earlier.
Offenberger: For all the readers that haven’t been on a TV
game show, what’s the difference between sitting at home watching
the show and being on the show?
Parent: It’s much harder when there’s an audience staring at
you. Plus, you second-guess yourself much more when you’re on TV as
not to look stupid! And that’s usually where you trip up!
Offenberger: You have a verity of creator owned comics you
have done, let’s get some background on them. What is Carney
about?
Parent: The Carneys are a family of circus freaks who
try to fit in to everyday society. I created this with my longtime
friend and fellow Kubie, Bill Golliher. Bill’s also worked at Archie
for along time.
Offenberger: Carney was actually published by Archie, how did
that come about?
Parent: Archie had run some Carneys’ stories as
back-ups in other books. They liked the characters enough to give
them a solo shot. Unfortunately, the sales weren’t there, but the
book came out well.
Offenberger: Dumb-Ass Express, appears to have
Carney’s Linda-Louise on the cover, is this a spin off from
Carney?
Parent: Well, since Bill and I retained ownership of The
Carneys, we decided to do a new story for Dumb-Ass. And
she was always the most popular character, so we put her on the
cover.
Offenberger: McMann & Tate Comics published Dumb-Ass
Express, I assume this it the McMann & Tate of Bewitched fame?
Parent: Yes, that’s right.
Offenberger: McMann & Tate also published Love-o-rama 2000,
what made it the right time to do a 96 page black & white trade
paperback?
Parent: That book was basically a compilation of other
independent stuff that I’d been working on. Some of it was published
in a digest size, which didn’t suit the art well. This format worked
much better.
Offenberger: You did two issues of Secret Fantasies
for Bullseye comics; it sounds a little racy, what was this about?
Parent: These were basically a take-off on the old romance
comics of yesteryear, with sort of a new twist. They were a little
racy, but nothing you couldn’t read in a mad magazine.
Offenberger: You are doing a web comic Tween Angel, is
this something you are planning on printing down the line?
Parent: I’d like to print this at some point. It’s just
another thing in my crowded head that I had to put on paper!
Offenberger: What is the story of Tween Angel?
Parent: Basically, it’s about a young girl who meets her
maker unexpectedly (sounds hilarious, huh?) And when she gets to
heaven finds out that since it wasn’t really her time, she has to
earn her wings to stay there. She has to perform 100 good deeds, but
of course, "The Dark Side" has plans to prevent that from happening.
Offenberger: Lastly, you are working on Mystery Girl,
which seems to be less about producing a comic and more about a
multimedia campaign. Are you going to publish a Mystery Girl
comic?
Parent: I’d like to. My friend, John Williams, (another Kubie)
wrote a great story.
Offenberger: While you have a page of proposed products for
Mystery Girl, have any of them been produced?
Parent: No, this is just sort of a presentation of how we
feel the character would be accessible to licensing. We’re jumping
the gun of course, but we had fun pretending!
Offenberger: Is there anything we have not covered that you
want the readers to know?
Parent: Come visit me in San Diego in July! And I love to
hear from each and every one of you. Sometimes we artists are in our
little cocoons and we don’t get exposure to all the readers, so it’s
great to hear everybody’s thoughts and opinions!
|
Rik Offenberger has spent the last several years running
the Super Hero News service. In his free time he interviews
comic book creators. He has been published both online and
in print. His work has appeared in The Comics Buyers Guide,
Comic Retailer, Borderline Magazine, and
SilverBulletComicBooks.com. He maintains his own websites at
SuperHeroNews and
MightyCrusaders.Net. |
|