January 21, 2025

"In October 1956, Mr. Feiffer strolled into the office of The Village Voice, which had been founded the previous year, and offered to draw a regular strip for nothing."

"First titled 'Sick, Sick, Sick,' it eventually became 'Feiffer.' (He was not paid, he later wrote, until 1964.) With his signature sketchy, scribbly lines, Mr. Feiffer sought to bring to a six- or nine-panel format a level of visual simplicity and intellectual sophistication akin to what William Steig and Saul Steinberg had done with their cartoons in The New Yorker. Often devoid of backgrounds and panel borders, Mr. Feiffer’s strip focused almost exclusively on dialogue, gestures and facial expressions.... He would present a couple bickering with each other in profile, or someone in therapy, often with the speaker facing the reader.... Complacent, self-satisfied white liberals were a frequent target, and he upbraided them mercilessly.... The leotard-clad Dancer, who first appeared in 1957, was inspired by a girlfriend. She was... Mr. Feiffer wrote, 'abused and exploited by men.... but where [her male counterpart, based on himself] grew defensive and angry over the years, the Dancer retained her faith. She danced, fell, got to her feet, tripped, sailed aloft, came crashing to earth, rose stubbornly and kept dancing.'"




Feiffer also wrote the screenplay for "Carnal Knowledge" and the Robert Altman version of "Popeye," and his play "Little Murders" became one of my favorite movies from 1971:


I blogged about that movie when I re-watched it in 2021. I called it "a weird and very dark romcom about what happens when a thoroughly apathetic man (Elliott Gould) goes along for the relationship with a entirely energetically optimistic woman." And I said "I don't think there's a better bad wedding than in that movie, with Don Sutherland as the hippie priest."

Since I'm not in the mood to blog about that bishop who sermonized at Donald Trump today, I'll give you what Jules Feiffer wrote for the completely inappropriate wedding priest to say: 
"Why does one decide to marry? Social pressure? Boredom? Loneliness? Sexual appeasement? Love? I won't put any of these reasons down. Each in its own way is adequate, each is all right. Last year, I married a musician who wanted to get married in order to stop masturbating. Please, don't be startled, I'm not putting him down. That marriage did not work. But the man tried. He is now separated, still masturbating, but he is at peace with himself because he tried society's way."

14 comments:

Two-eyed Jack said...

The Phantom Tollbooth<\i> illustrations was a thread connecting Feiffer to my parents to me and to my children. RIP.

rehajm said...

May have to watch the movie- I officiate a wedding in the fall…

rehajm said...

Help me understand where else I see the cartoons? From VV I only recall Life In Hell…

Aggie said...

The Phantom Tollbooth was one of my favorites too, having read it as a child, I read it to my daughter and hope to read it to the next generation, too ! Terrific characterizations. Marco Rubio was reminding me of Dr. Dischord just the other day.

tcrosse said...

Back in the day so many of us identified with Bernard Mergendailer, in competition with Harry, the Rat with Women.

rehajm said...

Oh. Found it- Yah, kind of on brand for me but not much worth nicking…

Two-eyed Jack said...

I fail to properly close an italics directive and all hell breaks loose!

Lem Vibe Bandit said...

Italics strikes again.

James K said...

Italiacto! (Maybe).
Most of his cartoons were conventional anti-war, anti-Republican, but he could occasionally be more interesting on male-female relations, or when he strayed from the plantation (as with Reagan for example).

RCOCEAN II said...

Yeah, I vaguely remember him from the 1980s and early 1990s when i read the village voice. Amazing that he lived to 95.

RCOCEAN II said...

According to the obit that would've been after he'd been in the VV for 25-30 years or so. Incredible how many of these people got into news media positions and were kept on forever. How old was Babs Walters when she retired, 100?

RCOCEAN II said...

Seems "Little Murders" was very popular with the critics when it came out, but it only made $1 million in box office. Dark Comedy/Satire = not for the masses.

tcrosse said...

A proud moment a few years ago when I managed to dig up a Feiffer cartoon that exactly illustrated a point Althouse was making. He was the Woody Allen of cartoons.

Fritz said...

My father had a subscription to Nation back when I was a kid. About the only thing I remember about it was Feiffer's cartoons.