Showing posts with label Oz. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Oz. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 2, 2025

Dynamite Wizard of Oz

A brand new comics adaptation of the 1939 Wizard of Oz movie script is forthcoming from Dynamite Entertainment. Soo Lee adapts the story and draws the full-color art for a 128-page version of The Wizard of Oz that presents some unexpected visual surprises.

The publisher, Dynamite, launches a Kickstarter campaign soon. Click here for that.

One of my paintings will grace the cover of this new Wizard of Oz graphic novel. The three other covers to choose from are by Soo Lee (who did the interior art), Alex Ross, and Jae Lee.

I'd been wondering when this project would be published. Dynamite announced it as forthcoming some time ago, but then the largest North American comics distributor, Diamond, went into bankruptcy, throwing the US comics industry into commotion and threatening lots of comics publishers, including Dynamite.

So I'm glad to see this announced for publication at last. From the material I've seen, it's a fresh and unusual take on the 1939 MGM Wizard of Oz movie.

Copyright © 2025 Eric Shanower. All rights reserved.

Tuesday, July 1, 2025

Indigogo Campaign for Horror Anthology

Today, the crowdfunding campaign for Of Dread, Decay, and Doom went live! This forthcoming horror anthology of short stories seeks your support.

I can think of many great reasons to support this book, including stories by Jonathan Maberry, Casey Stegman, and Alex Grecian. But there's so much more, including a new Oz short story by yours truly.

My story, "Courage," takes the Cowardly Lion back to the forest where he originally killed a giant spider to become king, as The Wonderful Wizard of Oz relates. The new horror lurking in the forest—a threat from beyond the solar system—is ten times as frightening as the old one. Will the courage the Lion got from the Wizard of Oz be enough to defeat it?

I wrote "Courage" a couple years ago, intending it for a horror anthology of stories based on classic children's literature. Unfortunately, "Courage" didn't make the cut. I revised the story and submitted it elsewhere, but the openings for horror stories related to L. Frank Baum's The Wonderful Wizard of Oz proved to be few. It wasn't finding a home. I wasn't surprised. It's an unsettling story grounded solidly in Baum's text. But it stands outside the traditional whimsical tone of most of my Oz writings. (Even though, in a group of cartoonist colleagues last summer, I mentioned the story and ended up laughing at the way the melding of Oz and horror made my quick summary of the story sound like a joke. But the story itself is no joke.)

Earlier this year, editor Jendia Gammon contacted me to ask whether I might be interested in submitting a story to one of her Stars and Sabers Publishing anthologies. I sent in "Courage" with the expectation that the story wouldn't fit Jendia's needs. But it was just the sort of thing she was seeking. "Courage" will appear in Of Dread, Decay, and Doom. I hope you'll read it and experience some enjoyable shivers.

Jendia Gammon and Gareth L. Powell have gathered the best new short horror from a wide swath of talent. Of Dread, Decay, and Doom debuts from Stars and Sabers Publishing in October 2025. Support the book's campaign today and reserve your copy.

Here's the link to the Indigogo campaign for Of Dread, Decay, and Doom: https://www.indiegogo.com/projects/of-dread-decay-and-doom-a-horror-anthology#/

Copyright © 2025 Eric Shanower. All rights reserved.

Wednesday, October 2, 2024

Revisiting Matilda Joslyn Gage

A few years ago, I wrote and drew a short comics biography about Matilda Joslyn Gage, one of the foremost 19th century fighters for women's rights. My story centered around Gage's erasure from history by Susan B. Anthony. The story was published in the graphic novel Mine!, an anthology published by ComicMix as a benefit for Planned Parenthood.

On Friday, October 4, from 4 PM to 5:30 PM, I'll be at the Matilda Joslyn Gage Center in Fayetteville, New York, to sign copies of my comics and books. You see, both Gage and I have a close connection to L. Frank Baum, author of the Oz books. I've followed in Baum's footsteps for much of my life and career. Gage was Baum's mother-in-law.

So, stop by the Gage Center, 210 East Genesee Street, Fayetteville, NY 13066, on Friday to see me. The Gage Center is Matilda Gage's former home and now a museum. I've visited it before and found it an inspiring place. Here's the Gage Center website: Matilda Joslyn Gage Center

Copyright 2024 Eric Shanower. All rights reserved.

Thursday, September 26, 2024

Oz in North Carolina


The University of North Carolina at Charlotte is hosting a major Oz event this weekend, September 26-28. I'll be speaking on four programs, the first at 10 AM Friday morning. If you're in the area, swing on by for the convention. Attendance is free. Plenty of events are happening through Sunday afternoon in various locations on the UNC-Charlotte campus and throughout the city of Charlotte.

Details at the website here: https://charloz.charlotte.edu/

Copyright 2024 Eric Shanower. All rights reserved.

Monday, March 25, 2024

The Patchwork Girl of Oz

I've agreed to draw covers for a comics adaptation of The Patchwork Girl of Oz, the seventh Oz book in the series by L. Frank Baum. Sound like good news?

Here's the catch: the project will only happen if you support the Kickstarter campaign. The campaign is currently running and with 24 days to go, it's more than 10% funded. But The Patchwork Girl of Oz won't happen unless enough people want to see it. So click here to pledge your support:

The Patchwork Girl Of Oz : Book One by Andy Mangels — Kickstarter

The dedicated creative team includes:

Penciller - Anna-Maria Cool

Inker - Barb Kaalberg

Writer - Andy Mangels

Colorist - Roland Pilcz

Letterer - Kathryn S. Renta

Alternate covers by Alex Ross and Eric Shanower (that's me!)

Copyright © 2024 Eric Shanower. All rights reserved.

Tuesday, September 26, 2023

Tik-Tokking to You

At last! My three volumes on The Tik-Tok Man of Oz, the 1913 stage musical by L. Frank Baum and Louis F. Gottschalk, were published at the end of July by Hungry Tiger Press.

They're all available here.

First is All Wound Up: The Making of The Tik-Tok Man of Oz. This hefty softcover volume of 440 full-color pages contains the complete history of the show with a generous load of images and photographs. It also includes L. Frank Baum's complete, newly-discovered 1913 script for The Tik-Tok Man of Oz, Baum's complete 1909 scenario titled The Rainbow's Daughter, a full biography of composer Louis F. Gottschalk, an account of Hank the Mule's career across the world, and more. 

I'm delighted to say that All Wound Up has been garnering praise from those who see it. You can purchase the book by clicking here.

Next is The Tik-Tok Man of Oz Performance Script. This 114 page volume features the script I synthesized from Baum's surviving materials to create a version that can be performed today. The words are L. Frank Baum's in this two-act musical play for nine principal roles, three minor roles, and a chorus, in a running time of about 2 hours. You can purchase the script by clicking here


The third book is The Tik-Tok Man of Oz Piano-Vocal Score. Its 194 pages hold 26 core musical numbers by Gottschalk/Baum and Schertzinger/Morosco, originally written for the show. Also included are 2 optional numbers by Cowles/Wulschner and Waters/West, interpolated into the 1913 production. The music is arranged for piano. You can purchase the score by clicking here.

All three volumes are offered as a set with a $10 discount off the total price. Click here for the complete set.

Whether you want to act, sing, or just read about Tik-Tok, the copper clockwork man of Oz, here's your chance.

Copyright © 2023 Eric Shanower. All rights reserved.

Saturday, July 8, 2023

Making of The Tik-Tok Man of Oz

My new book detailing the history of the stage musical The Tik-Tok Man of Oz, is due for release at the end of this month. All Wound Up: The Making of The Tik-Tok Man of Oz presents 440 full-color pages bursting with photos and images about the 1913 musical written by Oz-creator L. Frank Baum and composed by Broadway and Hollywood composer Louis F. Gottschalk.

I produced a revival of The Tik-Tok Man of Oz in 2014 at Winkie Con 50 in San Diego, CA. I wrote a long article for the convention program book on the history of the show. That article was the basis for the book, but I greatly expanded on the information I originally wrote (as well as correcting my mistakes). I've been working on the book intensively for the past several years, researching and collecting long-forgotten details of the show and the people involved in it.

The book offers a wealth of treasures, including these features:

  • The first publication of L. Frank Baum's original script for the show, newly located
  • The first publication of Baum's original scenario for the show, when it was titled The Rainbow's Daughter
  • Hundreds of photos and images, showing scenes from The Tik-Tok Man of Oz, the actors and production team, posters, publicity photos, advertisements, and much more
  • Capsule biographies of all the principal actors and many of the chorus members--along with photos of as many show participants as I could find
  • A biography of Louis F. Gottschalk, the show's composer, detailing his high-profile career on Broadway and in Hollywood
  • A biography of Fred Woodward, the actor who played Hank the Mule in The Tik-Tok Man of Oz and who, surprisingly, continued to play Hank the Mule for several decades afterward

In conjunction with All Wound Up: the Making of The Tik-Tok Man of Oz, my script for The Tik-Tok Man of Oz and my reconstructed piano-vocal score for the show will also be published. From Baum's and Gottschalk's surviving materials, I prepared these for the 2014 revival, although I subsequently revised a few bits in preparation for publication. For almost ten years now, I've wanted to make this performable version of The Tik-Tok Man of Oz available for others to produce. At last, that plan approaches fruition.

Hungry Tiger Press will release all three books in late July 2023. I'll announce publication and a link to order the books. Look for those here!

 Copyright © 2023 Eric Shanower. All rights reserved.

Saturday, October 16, 2021

Wind Me Up

Playwright L. Frank Baum and composer Louis F. Gottschalk created a spectacular stage show that toured North America in 1913, The Tik-Tok Man of Oz. Though generally forgotten now, remnants of the show still exist in scripts, sheet music, photographs, and published reviews of the show.

I've gathered as many of those remnants as I could find and am currently working on a book to reveal the never-before-told story of how The Tik-Tok Man of Oz came into being. You can get a taste of the forthcoming book in my presentation Tik-Tok People, originally presented at Oz Con International 2021 in July and now available to watch on Youtube.

Here's the link to the presentation: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VX_YHvMLQwM

Copyright © 2021 Eric Shanower. All rights reserved.

Wednesday, August 18, 2021

Half Price Giant Garden

What a great deal! The Giant Garden of Oz, a full-length prose Oz book I wrote and illustrated, is on sale for HALF PRICE from Dover Publications, the publisher. Here's the link: https://store.doverpublications.com/0486798356.html

This is the second edition with new cover art, a few new illustrations, and revised text.

In The Giant Garden of Oz, Dorothy Gale travels across the Land of Oz, through the air, and under the earth in a quest to save Aunt Em and Uncle Henry's farm from destruction
by giant vegetables.

One great new character is Imogene, a talking cow who gives the most unusual types of milk. Ever wonder how to get a full-grown cow into the basket of a hot air balloon? The Giant Garden of Oz has the answer to that!

I don't know how long this deal will last, so if you're interested in reading this up-to-date and thrilling Oz adventure, don't hesitate to click the link.

Copyright © 2021 Eric Shanower. All rights reserved.

Thursday, August 5, 2021

Oz Interview with Skottie Young and Me

Colin Ayres of Oz Con International interviewed Skottie Young and me about our work on the best-selling Oz graphic novel series published by Marvel.

This interview debuted at the 57th Oz Con International, which happened virtually a few weeks ago.

Now it's posted on The Oz Connection, the convention's Youtube channel,
for all to watch and listen. Here's the link: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9OyuHdoJ2Nc

Skottie and I discuss how the project started, how we approached it creatively, and our views of the project now that it's behind us.

It was great to spend an hour with Skottie again. The whole Oz series is still in print and available from your favorite comics store or bookseller.

Copyright © 2021 Eric Shanower. All rights reserved.

Monday, July 12, 2021

Return to Oz

 OzCon takes place this coming weekend and I'll be on the program.

The 57th OzCon International goes virtual over the internet again this year, due to the Age of Covid. And that means it's FREE to attend on Zoom.

But you have to sign up to get the Zoom link. Here's where to sign up: http://www.ozconinternational.com.

First, Skottie Young and I discuss our work on Marvel Comics's popular Oz graphic novel series from 2008-2013. 7 pm, Friday, July 16.

Second, I'll be on a panel about the Oz books of Ruth Plumly Thompson, the successor to Oz creator L. Frank Baum. Thompson's work is a different flavor than Baum's. I expect some controversy on this panel. 1:30 pm, Saturday, July 17.

Third, The Tik-Tok Man of Oz was L. Frank Baum's 1913 stage show, the show he expected to be his crowning theatrical achievement. Why wasn't it? Come listen to my presentation and watch a few clips from the 2014 revival I produced. 8 pm, Saturday, July 17.

Lots of other stuff happening, too. Here's a link to the complete schedule: http://www.ozconinternational.com/schedule.html. See you there!

All times are Pacific Daylight Time.


Copyright © 2021 Eric Shanower. All rights reserved.

Monday, May 31, 2021

The Disney-Oz Connection

For its 2015 convention, OzCon International, the longest-running annual Oz event, celebrated the 30th anniversary of the Walt Disney Company's 1985 feature film Return to Oz. I presented the theme-related program "The Disney-Oz Connection." I discussed all the Oz and Oz-related projects the Disney company has worked on during its history, whether an individual project came to fruition or not.

Five years passed. The world found itself in the grip of an epidemic. OzCon 2020 was held virtually because of Covid. The convention chairman, Colin Ayres, asked whether I'd record my Disney-Oz presentation as a feature for the virtual convention. Sure, I said. I revised and updated the presentation for 2020. You can watch it for free on OzCon's YouTube channel, the OzConnection. "The Disney-Oz Connection" is here:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cib_gArPPoM

I don't know how it occurred, but the presentation has a mistake. The second slide goes by too fast. In the online version, the narration for the second slide consists of only one sentence. The missing narration isn't vital to the presentation, but it sets the stage for Walt Disney's interest in Oz. Here's the full text I wrote and recorded for that slide:

Any discussion of Oz and Disney starts with Walt Disney himself. Walter Elias Disney was born in Chicago, Illinois, on December 5, 1901. Whether he was familiar with the Oz books when he was a child is unknown, but I think the chances are that he was. As a young child he listened while his mother read him fairy tales. As he grew older he became a voracious reader. He devoured the works of Mark Twain and Charles Dickens, and as a teenager he loved the adventure stories of Jimmie Dale, alias the Gray Seal.
OzCon for 2021 will be virtual again. I'll be presenting a program or two, if you're interested. Here's the link to more info on the OzCon website:

http://www.ozconinternational.com/

Copyright © 2021 Eric Shanower. All rights reserved.

Monday, May 3, 2021

The Royalest Book of Oz

The Royal Book of Oz was the first entry in the Oz book series written by Ruth Plumly Thompson, the writer who took over the Oz books after L. Frank Baum, creator of Oz, died. In an attempt to get readers to accept a new Oz author, the publisher slapped Baum's name on the book as author, despite Thompson's complete and original authorship of the text of The Royal Book of Oz.

Ruth Plumly Thompson went on to add eighteen more books to the official Oz series (as well as two unofficial Oz books, a slew of poems, a short story, and a play). Her authorship of The Royal Book of Oz has been public knowledge since the 1950s, and Thompson herself never tried to conceal the fact that she wrote the book, but some ignorant publishers continue to issue editions of The Royal Book of Oz that credit L. Frank Baum as author.

Clover Press is not one of those publishers and issued a new edition of The Royal Book of Oz about a year ago. One of Clover's reasons for the new edition was to proudly credit Ruth Plumly Thompson as author. But this new edition features much more than that.

Sara Richard newly illustrated the story in color. The new illustrations feature bold new designs of favorite Oz characters. The text has been slightly updated to eliminate several racially denigrating details. And I provided a brand new Afterword to illuminate the history of how Ruth Plumly Thompson was chosen to continue the Oz books and about the writing of The Royal Book of Oz.

You can order The Royal Book of Oz direct from Clover Press here: https://cloverpress.us/products/the-royal-book-of-oz

Ted Adams, publisher of Clover Press, has been an Oz fan since he was young. I know from talking with him that he'd be happy to publish more of Thompson's Oz books for a new generation--as long as this one sells well enough to make such a publishing program feasible. I'd like to see that happen, too.

Copyright © 2021 Eric Shanower. All rights reserved.

Monday, April 12, 2021

Quadruple Your Oz Pleasure

Volume Two
Volume Three
Volumes Two and Three of Marvel Comics's Oz: The Complete Collection bring you loads of Ozzy fun and adventure.

Volume Two contains the full comics adaptations of Ozma of Oz and Dorothy and the Wizard in Oz. 

Volume Three contains the full comics adaptations of The Road to Oz and The Emerald City of Oz.

I adapted the scripts from L. Frank Baum's classic children's book series. Skottie Young drew all the artwork. Jean-Francois Beaulieu colored it all. And Jeff Eckleberry lettered it all. These four stories were previously published as comic book series and as single volume graphic novels. Oz: The Complete Collection brings you two stories per volume.

Volume One of Oz: The Complete Collection is also still available. I posted about it earlier here.

While Ozma of Oz is perhaps my favorite of L. Frank Baum's Oz books, I want to say that I loved Skottie's and my adaptation of Dorothy and the Wizard in Oz, the fourth Oz book. While it was the first of our adaptations to not become a best-seller, I felt Skottie brought a renewed energy to the art and to the bizarre and menacing characters that infest the story. Baum wrote an unsettling, surreal journey featuring vegetable people who walk on air and live in a city of glass, a land of invisible killer bears, and silent wooden gargoyles with detachable wings. The creepy weirdness just doesn't stop till Dorothy and friends reach the Emerald City, where all the old familiar Oz weirdos conduct a ridiculous murder trial. Does that sound too odd, even for Oz? Well, you can see it all in glorious full color in Volume Two of Oz: The Complete Collection.

Skottie Young cuts loose with the character design in The Road to Oz, particularly at Ozma's spectacular birthday party. I love Skottie's version of Polychrome, the Rainbow's Daughter. We stopped with the sixth book, The Emerald City of Oz. If any spot was a logical place to stop adapting the Oz books (if one isn't going to adapt all forty), that one's it. But I still wish we'd been able to continue beyond six books. 

Copyright © 2021 Eric Shanower. All rights reserved.

Friday, February 28, 2020

Double Your Oz Pleasure

Marvel Comics is bringing their Oz graphic novels back into print in attractive, affordable paperback editions.

Recently released was the first volume, Oz: the Complete Collection, volume 1, which contains the first two graphic novel adaptations of L. Frank Baum's Oz books: The Wonderful Wizard of Oz and The Marvelous Land of Oz. I wrote the scripts, Skottie Young drew the artwork, Jean-Francois Beaulieu colored, and Jeff Eckleberry lettered. The book includes two complete stories and reproductions of all the original covers, including variants. Skottie Young supplies brand new artwork for the cover of the book, featuring characters from both stories.

The book costs $15.99, which is a bargain for more than 400 pages of comics in full color. Buy it at your local comic store. If you don't already have a regular comic store to shop at, find one at this link to the Comic Shop Locator.

The next four Oz graphic novel adaptations will be issued in two volumes. Two stories in each volume. Same format.

Here's a review of the first volume at this link.

It's been just over ten years since Skottie Young and I worked on these faithful adaptations of L. Frank Baum's Oz books. When Chris Allo at Marvel Comics first approached me to write a comics adaptation of The Wonderful Wizard of Oz, I wasn't sure I wanted the job. I worried about what the art would look like. Would Dorothy be given big tits or even guns, as so many other Oz comics have done in the past couple decades?

I was told that Skottie Young was the artist they'd chosen. I'd never heard of him, so I looked up samples of his art on line. It was fine, but I wasn't particularly of the opinion that he was the perfect artist for the project. However, knowing that literary adaptation comics aren't usually popular and disappear fast, I accepted the job, figuring that if the end result were disappointing, not many would notice it. I'd take the paycheck and move on.

Skottie and I talked on the phone. His view of the project sounded reasonable. I told him that I believed the key to the whole project would be his design of Dorothy, since she's the character that the reader must go on the adventure with. If Dorothy wasn't sympathetic in her design, the project wouldn't work. Skottie understood my view and basically agreed.

The first art sample I saw from him was a sketch of Dorothy and Toto. I knew when I saw it that a major hurdle was behind us. Skottie's design of Dorothy was spot on for the character, a young girl of the American plains in the late 19th century. She didn't look like Denslow's Dorothy, not like Neill's Dorothy, not like MGM's Dorothy. She was Skottie's Dorothy and she was just right.

I had the entire script written before I saw any of Skottie's comics pages. I didn't want any disappointing art to dampen my momentum for adapting the book. But Skottie's pages worked well. They pulled the reader into the story and they were attractive. They had heart. I wondered how much push-back there might be from Oz fans, since the look was different from any Oz anyone had seen before. But I wasn't overly concerned. The project was starting to seem like it might be a gem, even if it probably wouldn't get much attention.

When I saw Skottie's artwork for the episode where Dorothy and her companions cross the river on the raft, I finally recognized that Skottie's art was golden. The first issue hadn't been published yet and I still figured that the project wouldn't be seen very widely, but I knew for myself that it was beautiful.

The first issue finally came out in late 2008. It was a smash sell-out. I was thrilled, not only for myself, but for L. Frank Baum and for Skottie Young, too. I credit Skottie's art with the lion's share of why the project was such a success.

Marvel had approached Skottie about drawing the project three times before he accepted. Like me, he assumed a comics adaptation of a literary property would be largely ignored. He wasn't interested in spending time on a project no one would care about. Finally he gave in and drew the thing. These days, he's glad he did. He credits the Oz project with making his comics career.

Copyright © 2020 Eric Shanower. All rights reserved.

Friday, December 13, 2019

Everyody Rise

Dina Schiff Massachi recently interviewed me about comics and graphic novels for Rise: A Children's Literacy Journal. Much of the interview is about my Oz projects, but we also discuss Age of Bronze and touch on Casper the Friendly Ghost.

Click here on the link to read the interview. You'll need to page through the magazine to page 26 where the interview begins.

Copyright © 2019 Eric Shanower. All right reserved.

Sunday, December 1, 2019

Fun Ideas

Mark Arnold did a podcast interview with me, digging into my early career, talking about Age of Bronze, Oz, and Casper the Friendly Ghost.

Listen to Fun Ideas podcast #49 by clicking here.

Copyright © 2019 Eric Shanower. All rights reserved. 


Wednesday, August 14, 2019

Revisiting Royal Book

Clover Press will publish a new edition of The Royal Book of Oz by Ruth Plumly Thompson, the first book in the Oz series to be written after the death of series creator L. Frank Baum. This brand new edition will feature brand new illustrations by Sara Richard. It will also contain an afterword by me.

My afterword discusses how Thompson got the job as successor to L. Frank Baum and the publisher's ruse to ease the transition to the new "Royal Historian of Oz."

A Kickstarter Campaign is currently running to crowdfund Clover Press's publication of The Royal Book of Oz. Click here to access it and contribute. A lot of extras are available, depending on your contribution level.

Copyright © 2019 Eric Shanower. All rights reserved.

Tuesday, July 16, 2019

The Magic of OzCon

The 55th annual OzCon International will run July 26-28 at Kellogg West Conference Center on the campus of Cal Poly in Pomona, California. I'll be there. Will you?

I'm looking forward to OzCon a lot this year because of two things--an article I wrote for the OzCon 2019 Program Book and a presentation I'll be making on Friday evening at the convention. Themes of this year's OzCon include: the 13th Oz book by L. Frank Baum, The Magic of Oz, which was published 100 years ago; the life and legacy of L. Frank Baum, who died 100 years ago; and the 80th anniversary of the MGM motion picture version of The Wizard of Oz.

I've always been more of an Oz book enthusiast than an Oz movie enthusiast. So I'm amused that both my contributions to OzCon this year are tied to OzCon's celebration of the 1939 movie starring Judy Garland.

Hank the Mule, drawing by John R. Neill
For the OzCon 2019 Program Book I wrote "A Musical Bubble in Two Bottles: The History of Mamzelle Champagne." This stage musical of 1906 featured the first professional script by Edgar Allan Woolf, who went on to become one of the screenwriters of the 1939 MGM Wizard of Oz. Mamzelle Champagne is notorious as the show where Harry K. Thaw committed the "crime of the century" by killing Stanford White during opening night in full view of the audience. Every history of that murder I've seen includes a reference to Mamzelle Champagne. But I'm not aware of any detailed history written about the show itself--not before I wrote that history for the program book, I mean. It turns out that Edgar Allan Woolf isn't the only Oz connection to Mamzelle Champagne. Of course I'm not going to reveal the other connections here. Read the article.

My presentation for OzCon 2019 will be "Hank's Hidden History: The Life and Legacy of Fred Woodward." The name Fred Woodward should at least ring a bell for anyone familiar with stage and screen Oz history. Most famously in Oz circles Fred played Hank the Mule in The Tik-Tok Man of Oz, L. Frank Baum's 1913-14 stage musical. But he did so much more--more, I think, than anyone else now alive but me is aware of--including having a role in Mamzelle Champagne. (There I go, revealing another of Mamzelle Champagne's Oz connections after I said I wouldn't.) How is Hank the Mule tied to the 1939 MGM Wizard of Oz? In two ways. But I'm not going to tell those here. Really. You'll have to wait till Friday evening of OzCon 2019 to find out.

Copyright © 2019 Eric Shanower. All rights reserved.

Sunday, July 14, 2019

San Diego Comic-Con

San Diego Comic-Con opens next Wednesday evening, July 17, at the San Diego Convention Center on Harbor Drive in downtown San Diego. I'll be exhibiting at table BB-01 in Artists' Alley in the main exhibit hall.

I'll have the new color edition of Age of Bronze: A Thousand Ships, the beginning of the Trojan War written and drawn by me and in full color by John Dallaire. I'll have printed copies of Age of Bronze issue #34, a convention exclusive. A sampling of other publications I've drawn, written, or otherwise contributed to--Oz and otherwise--will also be available. And I'll be drawing sketches.

So if you're attending this year's SDCC, the 50th annual one, come by my table to say hello.

Copyright © 2019 Eric Shanower. All rights reserved.