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'Calvin and Hobbes' Creator Keeps Privacy
Associated Press ^ | October 22, 2005 | Joe Milicia

Posted on 10/22/2005 10:27:04 PM PDT by Charles Henrickson

Maybe someday, officials will put up a statue marking this quaint village as the birthplace of "Calvin and Hobbes."

Just don't expect cartoonist Bill Watterson to attend the unveiling ceremony. It's been nearly 10 years since he abruptly quit drawing one of the most popular comic strips of all time. Since then, he's been as absent as the precocious Calvin and his pet tiger, err, stuffed animal, Hobbes.

Some call Watterson reclusive. Others say he just likes his privacy.

"He's an introspective person," says his mother, Kathryn, standing at the front door her home, its yard covered by a tidy tangle of black-eyed Susans and other wildflowers. It's where Watterson grew up. Calvin lived there too, so to speak. Watterson used the well-kept, beige Cape Cod-style house as the model for Calvin's home.

You might even expect Calvin to come bounding out the door with Hobbes in tow, the screen door banging behind them. After all, the guy on the front porch kind of resembles Calvin's dad. Readers will remember him as the exasperated patent attorney who enjoyed gummy oatmeal and jogging in 20-degree weather.

Sure enough, Watterson's father, Jim, has a sheen of sweat on his neck, not from a run but from the 73-year-old's three-mile morning walk.

Watterson has acknowledged satirizing his father, who is now a semiretired patent attorney, in the strip. Jim Watterson says whenever Calvin's dad told him that something he didn't want to do "builds character," they were words he had spoken to his cartoonist son.

After "Calvin and Hobbes" ended, Jim Watterson and his son would paint landscapes together, setting up easels along the Chagrin River or other vistas. He laughed that sometimes they'd spend more time choosing a site than painting. But they haven't painted together for years.

So what's Watterson been up to since ending "Calvin and Hobbes?" It's tough to say.

His parents will say only that he's happy, but they won't say where he lives, and the cartoonist could not be reached for an interview.

His former editor, Lee Salem, also remains mum, saying only that as a painter Watterson started with watercolors and has evolved to oils.

"He's in a financial position where he doesn't need to meet the deadlines anymore," Salem says.

Watterson's parents respect — but have no explanation for — their son's extremely private nature. It doesn't run in the family. Kathryn is a former village councilwoman and Jim is seeking his fourth council term this fall. Their other son, Tom, is a high school teacher in Austin, Texas.

Bill Watterson, 47, hasn't made a public appearance since he delivered the commencement speech in 1990 at his alma mater, Kenyon College. But he recently welcomed some written questions from fans to promote the Oct. 4 release of the three-volume "The Complete Calvin and Hobbes," which contains every one of the 3,160 strips printed during its 10-year run.

Among his revelations:

• He reads newspaper comics, but doesn't consider this their golden age.

• He's never attended any church.

• He's currently interested in art from the 1600s.

Salem, who edited thousands of "Calvin and Hobbes" strips at Universal Press Syndicate, says that Watterson is private and media shy, not a recluse. Salem didn't want to see the strip end, but understood Watterson's decision.

"He came to a point where he thought he had no more to give to the characters," Salem says.

"Calvin and Hobbes" appeared in more than 2,400 newspapers during its run, one of the few strips to reach an audience that large.

Its success was rooted in the freshness of Calvin — an imaginative 6-year-old who has the immaturity of a child and the psychological complexity of a 40-year-old. As for Hobbes, the device of Calvin viewing him as alive and everybody else seeing him as a stuffed animal was simply brilliant, Salem says.

Their all-encompassing bond of friendship — being able to share joy and have fun together, yet get angry and frustrated with one another — was another reason for the strip's success.

Universal would welcome Watterson back along with "Calvin and Hobbes" or any other characters he dreams up. "He knows the door's open and he knows where we are," Salem says.

There are few signs of Watterson or "Calvin and Hobbes" in Chagrin Falls, a town of 4,000 that has evolved from a manufacturing hub centered on its namesake falls to an upscale area of stately homes and giant maple trees.

A Godzilla-sized Calvin is depicted wreaking havoc on Chagrin Falls on the back cover of "The Essential Calvin and Hobbes," released in 1988. He's carrying off the Popcorn Shop, where sweet smells have flowed from its spot on the falls for about 100 years.

Fireside Book Shop, located just out of earshot of the water's roar, carries 15 different "Calvin and Hobbes" books — customers used to be able to find autographed copies. Store employee Lynn Mathews says Watterson's mother used to deliver the signed copies to raise money for charity or just to help the book shop. That ended when the cartoonist discovered that some ended up on eBay, she said.

The demand remains, though.

"I get a couple e-mails a month from people looking for signed books," said Jean Butler, Fireside's officer manager.

Watterson and his wife, Melissa, moved earlier this year from their home in the village — a century house on a hill between downtown and the high school, where the mascot is a tiger.

As a child, Watterson knew he would be an astronaut or a cartoonist. "I kept my options open until seventh grade, but when I stopped understanding math and science, my choice was made," he wrote in the introduction to "The Complete Calvin and Hobbes."

He loved "Peanuts" as a child and started drawing comics. He majored in political science at Kenyon. Thinking he could blend the two subjects, he became a political cartoonist but was fired from his first job at the Cincinnati Post after a few months. So he took a job designing car and grocery ads, but continued cartooning, even though several strip ideas were rejected.

But Universal liked "Calvin and Hobbes" and launched its run Nov. 18, 1985, in 35 newspapers. Calvin caught Hobbes in a tiger trap with a tuna sandwich in the first strip. He spent the next 10 years driving his parents crazy, annoying his crush, Susie Derkins, and playing make-believe as his alter egos Spaceman Spiff and Stupendous Man.

Many of the best moments, though, were time spent alone with his pal, Hobbes.

"The end of summer is always hard on me, trying to cram in all the goofing off I've been meaning to do," Calvin tells Hobbes in an Aug. 24, 1987 strip, the two sitting beneath a tree.

Watterson ended the strip on Dec. 31, 1995, with a statement: "I believe I've done what I can do within the constraints of daily deadlines and small panels. I am eager to work at a more thoughtful pace, with fewer artistic compromises."

The last strip shows Calvin and Hobbes sledding off after a new fallen snow. "It's a magical world, Hobbes, ol' buddy ... let's go exploring!" Calvin says in the final two panels.

Fans cried out in letters for Watterson to change his mind. Some, like Watterson's parents, say the funny pages haven't been the same since.

"It was like getting a letter from home," Jim Watterson says of reading his son's work each morning.

People continue to ask the Wattersons if their son will ever send Calvin and his buddy Hobbes on new adventures.

"He might draw something else, but he won't do that again," Kathryn Watterson says.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; US: Ohio
KEYWORDS: calvin; calvinandhobbes; comicstrip; hobbes; ohio; treasureeverywhere; watterson
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To: Charles Henrickson

81 posted on 10/22/2005 11:48:50 PM PDT by mysto ("I am ZOT proof" --- famous last words of a troll.)
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To: caryatid

Once in a while I make sense in my own, non-existentialist, non-nihilist, un-modern, Gooberish way.

Good night.


82 posted on 10/22/2005 11:49:23 PM PDT by Choose Ye This Day ('Tis the part of the wise man to...not venture all his eggs in one basket. -- Cervantes)
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To: Charles Henrickson

83 posted on 10/22/2005 11:52:11 PM PDT by mysto ("I am ZOT proof" --- famous last words of a troll.)
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To: Choose Ye This Day
We simple folk with our simple humour are a breed apart ...

G'night Choose Ye.

LOL

84 posted on 10/22/2005 11:52:32 PM PDT by caryatid (The world according to Calvin and Hobbes ...)
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To: Flux Capacitor

And in the end, he won.
___________________________________________

I thought he lost. I thought the story was he would not even copyright Calvin and his characters fell into the public domain.

Thus his anti-capitalist stance backfired on him and he suffer his creating whizzing on the back of 25% of the pickup trucks in the US. All because he was against profits.


85 posted on 10/22/2005 11:54:03 PM PDT by JLS
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To: mysto

Calvin & Hobbes was fun. Dilbert still gets my vote, though. Brilliant, brilliant stuff.


86 posted on 10/22/2005 11:54:05 PM PDT by furquhart (Cheney-Bush '08)
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To: caryatid; Choose Ye This Day
Since y'all have chosen to buddy up, I'm going to feel free to respond to both of you at once. 1) I don't bloody care whether you like the same things I do. 2) I don't care that you choose not to read a relevant portion of the comic I recommended before passing judgment on it. 3) I don't care that you choose to insult my intelligence; quite frankly, I know with a high degree of probability that I'm smarter than you are, and Internet insults are certanly not going to change that knowledge.

Again, I apologize for having posted a link that may have expanded your horizons; I hope that you can safely return to your previous lives without too many scars.
87 posted on 10/22/2005 11:55:41 PM PDT by Turbopilot (Nothing in the above post is or should be construed as legal research, analysis, or advice.)
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To: Turbopilot; Choose Ye This Day
{{{{ Y A W N }}}}

88 posted on 10/23/2005 12:01:30 AM PDT by caryatid (The world according to Calvin and Hobbes ...)
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To: Turbopilot
thanks for providing humor late into the night.

you gave us all something to laugh at. (you)

89 posted on 10/23/2005 12:01:51 AM PDT by kpp_kpp
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To: Turbopilot

Finally! You posted something humorous!

Way to go, sonny.


90 posted on 10/23/2005 12:03:26 AM PDT by Choose Ye This Day ('Tis the part of the wise man to...not venture all his eggs in one basket. -- Cervantes)
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To: uglybiker

One of my favorites.


91 posted on 10/23/2005 12:06:11 AM PDT by Eagles6 (Dig deeper, more ammo.)
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To: kpp_kpp

You're welcome. Even though I don't enjoy seeing FR posters tossing insults as answers to intellectual discussions, I am glad when lurkers get to see who here posts analysis and who posts anti-intellectual nonsense.


92 posted on 10/23/2005 12:07:46 AM PDT by Turbopilot (Nothing in the above post is or should be construed as legal research, analysis, or advice.)
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To: furquhart

Doesn't anybody like "Get Fuzzy"?


93 posted on 10/23/2005 12:08:53 AM PDT by beelzepug (summer's over and I'm bummed)
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To: beelzepug

Here!!!


94 posted on 10/23/2005 12:09:56 AM PDT by investigateworld (Abortion stops a beating heart)
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To: Choose Ye This Day

I thought C&H's creator must've authorized those awful decals. I'm glad to hear that's not his work, because I enjoyed his comic strip.


95 posted on 10/23/2005 12:10:13 AM PDT by skr (Shopping for a tagline that fits or a fitting tagline...whichever I find first.)
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To: Choose Ye This Day

Swing and a miss. I was actually being kinda condescending to the nonsense you both had previously posted. But, thanks for playing, anyways; I imagine that if you keep reading others' posts, you'll find that reading a diversity of viewpoints can actually strengthen your arguments, if you'd only let them.


96 posted on 10/23/2005 12:11:50 AM PDT by Turbopilot (Nothing in the above post is or should be construed as legal research, analysis, or advice.)
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To: Turbopilot; All
...FR posters tossing insults as answers to intellectual discussions...

One of us seems to be posting to the wrong thread ... I thought we were discussing the FUNNY PAPERS !

LOL

97 posted on 10/23/2005 12:13:35 AM PDT by caryatid (The world according to Calvin and Hobbes ...)
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To: Choose Ye This Day
Cartoons are almost life like sometimes....


98 posted on 10/23/2005 12:14:26 AM PDT by Squantos (Be polite. Be professional. But, have a plan to kill everyone you meet. ©)
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To: beelzepug

Absolutely; "Get Fuzzy" is about the most brilliant strip in the papers today!


99 posted on 10/23/2005 12:14:58 AM PDT by Turbopilot (Nothing in the above post is or should be construed as legal research, analysis, or advice.)
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To: JLS

Watterson's characters are most CERTAINLY not in the public domain. The artist himself owns them, a result of his long-ago wrangling with Universal. The pissing-Calvin stickers are not legal by any means.

Besides, Watterson's stance wasn't anti-capitalist.... it was in deference to the idea that a comic strip can be a work of ART, and that art should not be commercially prostituted. If anything, CALVIN AND HOBBES is loved and revered not in spite of its relative commercial scarceness, but BECAUSE its creator fought to keep just anything from being done with it.

-Dan

100 posted on 10/23/2005 12:15:53 AM PDT by Flux Capacitor (Trust me. I know what I'm doing.)
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