Eddie Hunter and Al Feldstein
I hated to hear that
Al Feldstein died yesterday, April 29, 2014, at age 88.
Al was known for
being a comicbook artist and editor of EC comicbooks. He and his boss, publisher Bill Gaines, would
meet every day and between them collaborated on a story. Sometimes they hatched out a story for the
comic TALES FROM THE CRYPT, or another horror comic, and another day it might
be a story for one of their science fiction comicbooks. They were producing a story a day.
EC comicbooks also was the publisher of MAD, which was the
brainchild of Harvey Kurtzman, which I was a big fan of. Because of public outrage EC dropped its
horror and sci-fi comics, which made Al Feldstein unemployed. However, about issue number 29 or 30 of MAD I
noticed none of the old artists were contributing and the humor was a little
more broad-based. I looked at the
magazine credits and saw that Harvey Kurtzman was no longer editor and in his
place was Al Feldstein.
I disliked Al Feldstein, he single handedly dismantled the
special brand of humor of MAD that I loved so much. But, with him, the circulation improved -
which is a bad thing, you no longer felt you were part of a secret group that
only few could understand. It was almost
like a secret brotherhood.
In the late 1990s at the DRAGONCON in Atlanta my son Adam
and I went. I came across a section that
had Al Feldstein! We talked. No one else was in line to get anything
signed or shake hands with him, like fans like to do. He told me he retired and moved out west,
Montana, I believe he said. He told me
he is doing western art now. Art like
bare rocky mountain s, formations, and ridges, Native-Americans and all that looked
west. He told me he was the editor of
MAD for 30 plus years, which I already knew.
He was a very likable kind of person.
I'm glad I got to meet him.
During the time slot that I met him I was reading up on EC's
history from various viewpoints . I
discovered Harvey Kurtzman was not such a shit-don't-stink kind of guy as I
held him to be. He alone ran MAD and at
a point he demanded 55% of the ownership.
Bill Gaines fired him and more or less pulled Al out of the unemployment
line and Al saved the publication from
going under.
I think Albert Feldstein will rest in peace.