Fuzz & Pluck creator Ted Stearn Dead at 57
He was not on the list.
Ted Stearn, one of the funniest cartoonists in alternative
comics and alternative animation, died Feb. 1 at the age of 57. According to
his family, Stearn's death was caused by complications due to AIDS.
In comics, he was known for a series of stories and graphic
novels featuring Fuzz and Pluck, a funny-animal Laurel and Hardy, if Laurel and
Hardy could be re-imagined as a self-doubting, downtrodden teddy bear and a
brash, over-confident, featherless fugitive from a poultry processing plant.
His low-paying comics work was balanced by a successful career as an art
director and storyboard artist on a long list of very cool cartoons, including
Rick and Morty, Daria, Beavis and Butt-Head, The Simpsons Movie, King of the
Hill, Futurama, Drawn Together, Squirrel Boy, and Animals.
Fuzz & Pluck publisher Gary Groth said, “Fantagraphics
published three graphic novels by Ted, and would have published as many as he
could do. We loved his work. Artistically, he was always a little under the
radar, a cartoonist's cartoonist with a quirky visual style and an off-kilter
sense of humor, pacing, and storytelling that harmonized perfectly. My
impression was that he was a bit of an odd-man-out in the indie comics scene;
he worked in animation, he taught, and he drew his comics, which he started
doing when he was a little older than many cartoonists when he could afford to.
He was taciturnly curmudgeonly, and when we'd get together at conventions, we'd
both lament the states of both the publishing and teaching professions. His
cynicism about the world seeped into his comics as wry commentary on the human
condition. Everyone who values great cartooning will mourn his loss.”
Robert Theodore Stearn was born Aug. 9, 1961, in Weymouth,
Mass., and grew up in mostly small towns in Massachusetts and Pennsylvania. “I
was always interested in comics,” he told comics auteur David Mazzucchelli. “My
grandfather was a dentist, so we would go to his waiting room and he would have
all these Richie Rich and Little Dot comics—I really liked those kind of
things—and Donald Duck... I liked the funny ones. Superheroes, I read them but
they weren’t a big influence on me.”
The small city of Lancaster, Pa. was his most metropolitan
experience until going away to college, where he earned a Painting Bachelor of
Arts degree from the Rhode Island School of Design in 1983 and a Master of Fine
Arts degree from Manhattan’s School of Visual Arts in 1992. After graduation,
Stearn worked as a graphic designer and art director in New York, while
creating a series of kinetic sculptures.
In 1992, Stearn began contributing stories to Mazzucchelli’s
Rubber Blanket anthology title. The first was a five-pager called “Beach Boy”.
Then came the series that would occupy him off and on for his entire career:
the desperate adventures of Fuzz and Pluck, a naïve teddy bear and his
ill-matched companion, a cocky rooster, who is no less aggressively ambitious
for having been plucked naked for the slaughterhouse. Stearn said the
characters represented two sides of his own personality and were intended as
antiheroic “answers to the cutesiness of Disney in the ’70s and ’80s.”
The two characters inhabit a world that is, like them, full
of surreal extremes and anthropomorphic folly — as dark as it is funny. A sign
in Stearn’s studio in the early ’90s read: “Fear and Humor are Synonymous.”
Timelessly cartoonish and yet grounded in social ills and modern atrocities
(talking animals are treated by humans as a subservient class), the series
feels like being caught in a nightmare that compels you to laugh out loud.
Simpsons creator Matt Groening was a fan, commenting,
"This epic tale of a hapless li'l bear and his defeathered friend is why I
love comics. All hail the peculiar Fuzz & Pluck and their creator, Ted
Stearn!"
Introduced in 1993 in Rubber Blanket, Fuzz and Pluck
continued their adventures in the Fantagraphics alternative anthology series
Zero Zero in 1995. In between episodes of Fuzz & Pluck, Stearn also
contributed “The Forgotten Dream of a Melancholy Chef” to Zero Zero. The first
Fuzz & Pluck graphic novel was published by Fantagraphics in 1999. It was
followed by Fuzz & Pluck: Splitsville in 2008 and The Moolah Tree, which
was released in 2017.
The Fuzz and Pluck books were published in translation in
France beginning in 2013, and the characters were, if anything, more popular
there. (Stearn has an entry in the French Wikipédia, but not in the U.S.
Wikipedia.) In 2014, Fuzz & Pluck was awarded the Prix de Séries at the
Angoulême comics festival.
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