User:Roygbiv99/Robert Triptow

Robert Triptow (born May 10, 1952 in Salt Lake City, Utah) is an American writer and artist. He is known primarily for creating gay- and bisexual-themed comics and for editing Gay Comix in the 1980s, and he was identified by underground comix pioneer Lee Marrs as "the last of the underground cartoonists ."

Career
A long-time resident of San Francisco, Robert Triptow was one of the earliest contributors to Kitchen Sink Press' anthology Gay Comix, beginning with issue #2. He succeeded Howard Cruse as editor of the series, editing issues #5 through #13 (1984–1991). During this time he edited and wrote the introduction "Art + Humor = Liberation" of the 1989 anthology Gay Comics, one of the earliest histories of the subject, which won the first Lambda Literary Award for Humor. He also co-edited and contributed to the HIV-research fund-raising and educational anthology Strip AIDS U.S.A. (1988) with Trina Robbins & Bill Sienkiewicz.

As a journalist, Triptow has contributed to The Advocate, Bay Area Reporter, Frontiers, The Sentinel, and other West Coast LGBT publications.

Triptow received his title as "the last of the underground cartoonists" at WonderCon when asked whether he considered Gay Comix to be an "alternative" comic or an "underground" comic. Lee Marrs, standing witness to the question, asked Triptow if he starved while living in the Haight-Ashbury district of San Fransisco, to which he answered yes. It was then that Marrs coined his title. This conversation was filmed and circulated widely via the internet.

In 2009, Triptow announced his plans to relaunch Gay Comics as a series of trade paperbacks under a new publisher, hoping to begin gathering comics for the collection by the end of the year. These plans were confirmed by Triptow in 2013 adding that he wants it serve as "a platform for all the queer cartoonists," however, no such series has reached publication yet.

In 2015, he released Class Photo, a wryly comedic graphic novel imagining short biographies for the individuals depicted in a 1937 school group photograph.

Personal Life
Born and raised in Salt Lake City, Utah, Robert Triptow commonly references his home state's dense Mormon population. Triptow had no exposure to gay/lesbian themed media growing up until a junior high journalism field trip to Brigham Young University on which he discovered the works of cartoonists Jules Feiffer, Gilbert Shelton, and R. Crumb in the school's book store. Triptow became inspired to begin cartooning, creating a rift between him and his conservative parents as they deemed the nature of his comics pornographic and sinful. Triptow broke away from his family in 1971, the same year he found the photograph which inspired Class Photo.

Triptow moved from Salt Lake City to San Fransisco on Halloween of 1977. He is currently married to William Blakely.

Strip AIDS U.S.A
Robert Triptow became involved in Strip AIDS U.S.A. (1988) when invited onto the fundraiser comic as co-editor by Trina Robbins, who felt unable to complete the project by herself as a heterosexual. Triptow then brought other cartoonists from Gay Comics onto the team, resulting in 136 pages contributed by over 50 different artists.

Robert Triptow's two-page comic titled "Needs" appears between The Quilt by Donelan and an untitled comic by Sharon Rudahl. Triptow considers this piece one of few in Strip AIDS U.S.A. to portray the life of an individual with AIDS. The comic features a man named Joe with a male suitor whom he romantically declines on multiple occasions until the end when the two are shown together as Joe is dying of AIDS. The comic has a dedication written underneath the last panel which reads, “for Peter, Mickey, Spig & Rig, John, Steve, Vince, Joah, Raven, Tom, Hippler, and too many others.” In 2008 only one of the individuals listed in the dedication was still alive, according to Triptow.

Class Photo
Class Photo (2015) is Robert Triptow's first solo book venture. The comic consists of the fictionalized outcomes of each individual posing for a black and white 1937 class photograph labeled "Public School 49" from Brooklyn, New York, which Triptow found with his uncle as college students under a pile of garbage in their hometown of Salt Lake City. Triptow kept the photo, hanging it on a wall in his home to laugh at with house-guests for over 20 years. In 2009 a cancer diagnosis motivated Triptow to finalize the project and proceed with publication.

Following the last page of the comic (p. 60) Triptow includes a section which provides historical context to the class photograph on which his book is based. Triptow reports that a friend's brother employed by the New York City Department of Education knew a "P.S. 49" was reserved for German and Jewish European refugee children circa 1930, adding that all the boys in the photo were likely enlisted by the U.S. to fight in World War II. This section is followed by a copy of the photograph labeled with each individual's fictional name, followed by "Pop Quiz" and "Answers" sections based on details from the comic.

At least three schools in the boroughs of New York City were called P.S. 49, but all have different names today and are charter schools with no records of their history. Two are new structures built in the 1960s or later, and the third appears to be a different building. Many years ago a friend, whose brother worked at the New York City Department of Education, told me that a P.S. 49 was set aside in the 1930's for refugee children from Germany and Jewish Europe, and that almost all the boys from the Class of 1937 enlisted in the U.S. military and suffered a high casualty rate in WWII. I've never been able to substantiate this, but perhaps someday we'll know about this for certain, in which case I will do a book about them"

"Triptow’s first solo book was inspired by a photo deeply rooted in that past. With his uncle, Triptow discovered the image under a pile of trash during a pivotal year—the same one that took him away from Salt Lake City and toward a life in underground cartooning and humor."

"But Class Photo was effectively born in 2009 out of a cancer diagnosis. “I knew it wasn’t going to kill me, but I was very sick for a couple of years,” Triptow says. “When I came out of it, I thought, I’m not going to live forever. I wondered, what was the story that only I could do? I looked at this Class Photo series, of which I’d maybe drawn nine pages. I figured I should finish this one first. I did most of the work over the last three years.”

"I will say something about Class Photo: I didn’t know what to do with it when I started it. The photo had hung on my wall for 20 years, and I had stories for all the people—one liners about what happened to them. People would come over, and we would laugh at [the scenarios]. I started drawing them into cartoons because I didn’t have anything going on, and I wanted to keep my hand moving. I had been working against deadline for so long, it took the pleasure out of cartooning for me. Then the pleasure of creating stuff came back in a big way. I look back at the first nine pages and I think, boy, the art is rough. So much time would go between each page, and the later ones. Later I’d just whip it all out. It was fluid. Now I feel really motivated to do more." -paste

Below is a list of each character with their corresponding page number in the order by which they appear:

Francis Fandango (9), Plata Androscogio (10), Rudolph Valentino Kominsky (10), Hera Wott (11), Leona Bawk (11), Roberta Mundane (12), Mrs. Goodhen (12), Gwendolyn Guadalupe (13), Fritz Beauhacker (13), Ignacio Hilario Guadalupe (13), Helen Hoo (14), Lotta Mae Twizz (15), Trudy Tranch (15), Frymetta F. Shamis (15), Chard Whitlow (16), Hedy Woptwide (16), Felix Albo [Not Pictured] (17), Morris Menthalode (18), Percival Flowers (19), Vaughn Funderburk (20), "Chuckles" McMahon (20), Fred N. Ethel (21), Precious LaFlamme (21), Zorma Driggs (22), Dewey Bemis (22), Marion ("Sharkie") DeVon (23), Mitzi Juggs (23), O. Harcourt Crenshaw-Mellon (24), Nigel Glick (24), Principal Horace Fondelle (25), Louisianna Lunt (25), Jacoba Van Domberg (26), Jan Vandervaart (26), Willa ("Waddles") Thud (27), Timothy Piffles (28), Ricky Renfield [Not Pictured] (29), Dr. Otto Von Stenchever [Not Pictured] (29), Ashtabula Krug (30), Daisy Bulch (31), Mel Fondelle (32), Lempi L. Wickline (32), Marvella ("The Frizz") Spainhauer (33), Roma Redondo (34), Cloyd Gibney [Not Pictured] (35), Cleona Batliner [Not Pictured] (35), Wally Weems (35), Scala Maestas-Spaulding (36), Landomini Consommé (37), Caspar Cluff (38), LaVerl Potter (39), "Greasy Joan" Semilar (40), Twila Bhungetti (41), Myron Bardahl (42), Belva Helleva (43), Heidi Twaddle [In Memoriam] (43), Gunther Spalch (44), Stella Jakov (45), Trixie Trotlikk (46), Felina Plug (47), Vince Vermicelli (48), Czxyzsk Sraãška (49), Cecelia LeGroan (49), Kay Kunkel (50), Philystina Wastrelle (51), Landa Hoy (52), Olive Pitts (52), Ellis Waddell (53), F. "Einstein" Newton [Not Pictured] (54), Jackman Bruner [Not Pictured] (54), Willie Beelane [Not Pictured] (54), Squincy [Not Pictured] (54), Harold Harepyn Jr. [Not Pictured] (54), Beaunetta Beauveen (55), Seminola Schwarzenweiss (55), Darthy or Daris Dee (56), Arn Garn (57), Miss Corbina Silverneaf (58), Pat Flatt (58).

Books

 * Gay Comics (ed.). Introduction: "Art + Humor = Liberation." New York: Plume; New American Library, 1989. 120p. ISBN 0-452-26229-1
 * Strip AIDS U.S.A.: A Collection of Cartoon Art to Benefit People With AIDS. (ed. with Trina Robbins & Bill Sienkiewicz).  San Francisco: Last Gasp, 1988. ISBN 978-0-86719-373-2
 * Class Photo. Seattle: Fantagraphics, 2015.  64p. ISBN 978-1-60699-886-1

Contributions
In addition to Gay Comix, his cartoon work has appeared in:


 * Robert Kirby and David Kelly, editors, (2008) The Book of Boy Trouble 2: Born to Trouble, Green Candy Press. ISBN 1-931160-65-1.
 * Camper, Jennifer, editor (2007) Juicy Mother 2: How They Met, Manic D Press. ISBN 978-1-933149-20-2
 * Camper, Jennifer, editor (2005) Juicy Mother Soft Skull Press. ISBN 1-932360-70-0
 * Gregory, Roberta (2004), Naughty Bits #40, Fantagraphics.
 * Gregory, Roberta (1999), Naughty Bits #28, Fantagraphics.
 * Gregory, Roberta (1998), Naughty Bits #27, Fantagraphics.
 * Kinney, Jay, editor (1993), Young Lust #8, Last Gasp, ISBN 0-86719-253-4.
 * Bocage, Angela (1993), Real Girl #6, Fantagraphics, ASIN B000IQUH6S.
 * Bocage, Angela (1991), Real Girl #2, Fantagraphics.
 * Bocage, Angela (1990), Real Girl #1, Fantagraphics, ASIN B000KSA71O.
 * Robbins, Trina, editor (1990), Choices: a pro-choice benefit comic anthology for the National Organization for Women, Angry Isis Press, ASIN: B002E5WBKG.
 * Leyland, Winston (1986), Meatmen #1, G. S. Press.
 * Kitchen, Denis, editor (1984), Bizarre Sex #4, Kitchen Sink Press [5th printing]

Awards

 * The first Lambda Literary Award for Humor, in 1990, for the 1989 anthology Gay Comics.
 * Special Achievement Award from the San Diego Comic Con in 1989 for Strip AIDS U.S.A.

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Artists and authors associated with Kitchen Sink
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