editors: laura Berman dan borus contributing editor: miary long su..nday magazine inside: page four-books page five-features page six-week in review Number 20 Page Three Marc FEATUR h 16, 1975 ES The man who draws Prince Valant: Living in the land of Camelot By MARY LONG HAL FOSTER is a dreamy-eyed romantic - a natural for a Camelot castle and moat and a flashing white steed. He has been drawing the Prince Valiant cartoon strip for the past forty years. Born in the wrong time, he sits In his studio among his paintings and roses, an old man who has turned the trick of outwitting re- ality. The noble Valiant becomes the embodiment of everything Fos- ter says "I should have been and could have been." An antique clock chimes the hour and Foster reclines like a lazy child in a dark plush chair. Figurines of knights and ships and horses in perfect miniature stand framed in glass behind him. It's not just that he loves elegance -he needs it. Foster admits with no shame that since childhood he has constantly tried to transform "real life" into something else. "Usually," he says, "I try to change reality into something more beau- tiful - or into something roman- tic." The approach apparently has a lot of appeal. His fan mail has never been heavier. It surprises him that the Prince should main- tain his popularity in so sophisti- cated and skeptical an age. "F MEAN, VALIANT'S a bit of a prig, isn't he?" his creator challenged. "He has to be - just like- anyone who's got to be so good and pure. But it's great to knock him down occasionally - his wife is the best means for that. Sir Gawaine is also good," he says speaking of the strips most rakish character. "Gawaine can do all the things Valiant can't do. I can have him singing under a married woman's window and then, in the next panel, just show the little edge of his cloak over her balcony. That's alright, you see, because that's Sir Gawaine. He's a foil for Valiant. He's also sort of an idol of mine. I was rather-bashful as a young man and I give Gawaine all the romantic qualities and oppor- tunities that somehow always seemed to escape me." He lives vicariously through his characters in over 200 Sunday pa- pers in 14 different languages. Seven Prince Valiant books have been published. And, if you ask him, Foster will do a very funny impersonation of Robert Wagner as a 1954 motion picture Prince Valiant sobbing "TRAITOR!" at James Mason when his Highness finds himself set upon by the Vik- in ys. Foster generally hesitates be- fore he says anything, but when he sneaks, he sounds certain. The only thing that seems to bewilder thic artist, hailed as the finest il- lustrative cartoonist in the world, is the fact ha he has become an old man. "T CAME TO Florida to retire," he A saes. with a vague gesture to- ward the nalm trees outside the window. "I'd been doing Valiant since 1935 and I'm in my eighties and I'm a bit lame - you noticed, didn't you? But, I found that af- ter I got here I couldn't give my work up. For a while I had some- one else doing the illustrations for me and I'd find myself hanging over his shoulder, giving him in- structions right down to the ex- pressions on the character's faces. And all the time honestly wanting to say, "Get your dirty hands off it - it's mine!" He lets loose a roar at the sulky sound of his own words and then is serious again, cupping his hands over his eyes and shaking his head. "No, no I couldn't give it up. The character, the story, everything about it, is indelible in me." He stands then, not unsteady at all, rising above the room like a landowner inspecting the fields, and leads the way to another area of the studio. SELECTING A PIPE from among a half dozen in a round wooden dish, Foster turns his dark blue eyes directly on you. The gaze is startling. "Everything" he says, emphasing the word, "all of my work on this comic strip has been done with everyone telling me I was destined for nothing but fail- ure. When I first began Valiant, it was the era of Buck Rogers and the idea in cartooning was a total- ly futuristic trend. I thought it was great but the other artists had already atomized all the planets, what was I supposed to do for an encore? So I went back in time in- stead of forward. which evervone swore would be a fatal mistake." But the artist says he knew in- stinctively that the age of King Arthur would prove a harpy choice. "It was a very exciting time, an era of great and violent contrasts." "People were more dominant," he explains with enthusiasm, "more savage and more apt to take directly whatever they wanted. --Daily photo by MARY LONG They had their own idea of brav- ery. On one hand, life was very cheap - every little skirmish was settled by mortal combat. On the other hand, it is the age of - well, romance and chivalry - and other such dastardly things." He smiles to himself at his last words, both defensive and smug, touching his moustache with his finger tips, very much the would-be cavalier. IT IS TO this red-carpeted studio that Foster comes to sit and wait for the germ of a story to fill the weeks and weeks of Prince Valiant strips. He says he thinks over all the books he has read. He listens to music. If any incident or idea occurs to him he immediately scribbles it down. "There's a constant need for fresh material and it can be very tough. I've been with Prince Vali- ant since he was five years old and had just come to Britain" he says like a proud papa. "And now he's married with children, all of whom have to find their way into the story . . . sometimes I'm so blank I drag out an old story and keep trying to drape it over. Sometimes it's terrible." "I'VE USED a lot of poets for ideas. I've even used Balzac if you can believe it. A kind of emas- culated Balzac," he laughs. "And Chaucer always helps. What have you read? The Canterbury Tales? I like the Book of the Duchese best. Canterbury Tales is rich, like summer. But the other is like spring itself, pale green and gold. Listen - 'That she was lyke to torche bright/that every man may take of light/ Enough, and hit hath never the lesse."' "You see?" he smiles softly, "it's just like a Valentine." Then, em- barrassed he tbruptly pushes away his words with his hands and says in self-deprecation, "How did I get on Chaucer when you came to talk to me about the funny papers?" Mentioning academics makes his uncomfortable. Poverty put an end to Foster's formal education but did nothing to dim his love of art, literature and history. He describes (Continued on Page 5) Ron Dellums on his own terms: A man of both sense and By DAN BORUS SPIRO AGNEW had Ron Dellums all figured out. "That man," he exhorted his Silent Majority faithful in 1970, "is an out-and- out radical." Ron Dellums consid- ered that a compliment coming from a man who once said that if you 'e seen one slum, you've seen them all. In his thirty-nine years Con- gressman Dellums has seen his one slum and then some. Once ex- cluded from his high school base- ball team because of his black skin, he is presently representing Cali- fornia's Seventh District precisely because he is indeed a radical. "If a radical desires and works for the broadest possible change in society, if a radical wants to com- bat the suffering and corruption, if a radical wants to end repression in this country," Dellums says in his curious jive mix between Oak- land street hipster and Berkeley professor, "then I am a radical. I am proud of that. I have never shied away from that label." He doesn't look like a radical, this 6'7" man with stylishly grey- ing, sharply cut sideburns a n d tightly coiffed Afro, a snug blue Edwardian double-breasted jacket with matching white slightly flair- ed trousers, and perfect composure. He looks like a stockbroker. TTr '"1' fl'17 rfl-.t its1. 1 1 . . very little in the process? "I ain't no virgin," he says, words pouring out in creative spurts much faster than they can be captured in reporter's shorthand. "I didn't go there with the idea that I was going to change the world single- handedly. I don't think I will be- come disillusioned because I didn't come to Washington with any il- He eschews conventional politics, terming them matic cures," which fail through to root causes. (s, In Congress Dellums plug at those vested interests he calling hearings on racism Armed Services, investigat CIA, and introducing the "I don't think the four years there have cha me," Dellums says. "I consider Congress a form for my ideas and for stimulating othe work for change. I'm in Congress on my terms." Change on his own terms is what Dellums is all about. He eschews convent sensibility liberal almost gone, speaking in Ann Ar- ympto- bor about niggerism, the ruling to cut class, and the desperate need for radical action now at a time when gs away radicalism has seemingly lost its s away focus and energy. sees - "This society is a society of nig- in the gers. If the term 'nigger' bothers ing the you, substitute the term 'victim' World or 'oppressed'. This is a society run by white males over forty who do not even guarantee full participa- nged tion for all white males. So how are they going to do it for blacks, browns, reds, and women?" he be- plat- gins, his voice rising ever so slight- ly. He has a perfect tempo in his Ars to speech. own "WE NEED TO move to a more mature society. By that I Ron mean the ability to redefine 'civil- ized!'" He's the professor now, o a thoughtfully defining his terms. a a "We must come to realize the na- ture of the oppression in this coun- mafic try - that it takes civilzation away from all of us. ses. With that he reels off a checklist of America's social sins - militar- -m ism, abuse of foodstuffs, subjuga- legisla- tion of the many by the few - axpayer and pinpoints their inter-relation- iot he ship. to sup- "This current economic crisis is hat rat- valuable because it reveals to the white middle class laborers how ta,, they have been marginally treated. that," Nobody's laughing at food stamps liberal politics, terming t h e m "synptoi cures," which fail to cut through to root cau - 4O fV . :. -n: Tf :c;-_::al: °; ; s : : -: " < lusions. Politicians are followers, not leaders; they don't act, they re-act. "But I did promise my constitu- ents (California's Seventh includes Berkeley, portions of Oakland, and outlying suburban areas) I would Peace Tax Bill, a piece of tion designed to allow the to to designate whether or n wants his taxdollars going port what Dellums calls "tI hole, the Pentagon." "He's always been like V ,.r