that, I started handing in my work in person." Luckily, Hirschfeld never joined the union. "If I had, I wouldn't be work- ing today," he laughs. "I would have had mandatory retirement at 65 or 70." Over a span of 70 years at the New York Times, Hirschfeld has seen count- less plays and has captured the like- nesses of nearly every acclaimed the- atrical personality. During rehearsals and performances, he studies gestures and makes the initial drawings on a small notebook he keeps in his pocket. He uses a HB Venus pencil, inks over the initial sketch, then erases the pen- cil. His theatrical caricatures have led the way to a new genre. In a recent tribute to Hirschfeld in the New York Times, David Leopold writes: "His is a special and, yes, a unique style. Instead of deflating his subject, a tra- dition in caricature, he joins the actors in their pantomime, capturing their characters in so few lines." Hirschfeld's subjects include taknts in all areas of the performing arts. In addition to thespians, he captures per- sonalities from the worlds of opera, television, film and music. Famous faces from David Letterman to Itzhak Perlman to Irving Berlin have been portrayed by the strokes of Hirschfeld's pen. In recreating an event, the artist has squeezed up to 60 people into one drawing. It's not sur- prisingly that he has been referred to as a "national treasure." Hirschfeld's early influences were Charles Dana Gibson, who created the Gibson Girl, and John Held Jr., illus- trator of the Jazz Age. But, he says, it was a trip he took to the Far East in 1932 that had the greatest influence on his style. "When I visited Bali I was intrigued by Japan- ese woodcuts," he says. "I learned the objective of Asian art, which is to eliminate color and emphasize the line." In 1945, Hirschfeld established a distinct trademark — hiding his daughter's name, Nina, in his graphic designs. His "Ninas" appear in hair, wrinkles, clothes, folds of sleeves or in the background. Next to his signature, he writes the number of "Ninas" to be found in each drawing. "It started as an innocent gesture," explains Hirschfeld, who thinks the Clockwise from top right: Barbra Streisand The Marx Brothers Zero Mostel and Eli Wallach in "Rhi- noceros" (1961). Says playwright Arthur Miller: "People in a Hirschfeld drawing all share the one quality of energetic joy in lift' that they all wish they had in reality. Looking at a Hirschfeld drawing of yourself is the best thing for tired b lood. " Robert Preston played the title 2haracter in "The Music Man" in Meredith Will- son's 1957 show. ON OUR JNE COVER: Al Hirschfeld caught Inoopi Goldberg in one of her many guises from her one-woman Broadway show in 1984. This portrait has the most "Ninas" of any of his drawings. Since 1960, at a reader's request, Hirschfeld has noted the number next to his name to let us know how many "Ninas" we can find in a drawing. 4/24 1998