{"id":118,"date":"2009-11-08T00:00:26","date_gmt":"2009-11-08T05:00:26","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.spacewesterns.com\/?p=118"},"modified":"2022-12-14T14:31:06","modified_gmt":"2022-12-14T19:31:06","slug":"interview-with-phil-foglio","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.spacewesterns.com\/articles\/interview-with-phil-foglio\/","title":{"rendered":"Interview with Phil Foglio"},"content":{"rendered":"
Phil is a cartoonist and comic book artist best known for his humorous science fiction and fantasy work that has appeared in many places, including Magic: The Gathering<\/em> cards, DC Comics<\/em>, Duelist<\/em>, and Dragon Magazine<\/em>. He won the Hugo Award for Best Fan Artist in 1977 and 1978, and was nominated for the Hugo Award for Best Professional Artist in 2008. He and his wife, Kaja Foglio, won the first graphic story Hugo for Girl Genius, Volume 8: Agatha Heterodyne and the Chapel of Bones<\/em>.<\/p>\n For more information about Phil and Kaja visit Airship entertainment at studiofoglio.com<\/a>, or visit any one of their three comics, now running online: What\u2019s New with Phil & Dixie<\/a>, Girl Genius<\/a>, and Buck Godot<\/a>.<\/p>\n I loved cartoons as a kid. Liked to read them, liked to watch them, liked to draw them. Then I found out that there were people who got PAID to do cartoons. My fate was sealed.<\/p>\n Again, I was an avid reader. I read everything my school libraries had, and eventually found organized science-fiction fandom, who liked my cartoons. Double bonus to them.<\/p>\n I can\u2019t rightly say. There are so many stories that fall into that category, it\u2019s hard to remember which one was \u201cfirst.\u201d<\/p>\n In my opinion, a \u2018western\u2019 is story where, ideally, one person faces down the antagonist by himself. He or she (though more traditionally \u2018He\u2019, so I\u2019ll stick to that pronoun) may have friends, or sidekicks, but all the important action is performed by him. Whereas he can occasional work within the system, usually circumstances dictate that he has to go outside said system, and use \u201cother methods,\u201d which usually consist of firearms.<\/p>\n <\/p>\n I give a lot of the background in the books, in the text pieces known as The Herodotus Complex<\/em>. It\u2019s around 1000 years in the future. Civilization has collapsed and been rebuilt. There are whole lotta aliens out there. Some are smarter than us, some are stupider, and some are just too alien to care about.<\/p>\n Back in the early 80\u2019s I found a goofball comic about psychotically reprehensible rabbits in space. I thought, \u201cI can do that.\u201d So I decided to write a goofy science fiction story that would have a gunfight or an explosion on every page. That was the first Buck Godot story.<\/p>\n <\/p>\n Buck came from a friend named John Buckley, who was an inspiration for the character. I just thought the \u2018Godot\u2019 part sounded neat.<\/p>\n It makes a nice change. It\u2019s a different mental discipline.<\/p>\n No. If anything, my head was more in the hard-boiled detective genre. It has a lot in common with the western genre. I think they were both products of a unique American writing style.<\/p>\n <\/p>\n The Winslow is a small stuffed alligator that I found in a dumpster behind my apartment in Chicago. I named it after Winslow Leach, the lead character in the movie Phantom of the Paradise<\/em>. I\u2019ve tried to put Winslow in everything I\u2019ve ever done, in one form or another.<\/p>\n My good pal Doug Rice, with whom I worked on Dynamo Joe<\/em> for First Comics, got involved with that. They needed a writer, and Doug called me.<\/p>\nHow did you get involved in Cartooning?<\/h2>\n
How did you get involved with the Science Fiction genre?<\/h2>\n
What was your first introduction to Space Westerns?<\/h2>\n
How do you define \u201cSpace Western\u201d?<\/h2>\n
What can you tell me about the Universe in which Buck Godot lives?<\/h2>\n
Where did the inspiration come from for Buck Godot?<\/h2>\n
Where did you get the name \u201cBuck Godot\u201d?<\/h2>\n
It seems that the majority of your work is in fantasy and RPGs, why delve into Science Fiction?<\/h2>\n
Buck Godot stories contain a number of analogs to Western stories (Saloon brawls, gun-fights, Hookers-with-hearts-of-gold, the lawless frontier, hired guns, etc.), were these intentional nods to Westerns?<\/h2>\n
What can you tell me about that alien fetish known as \u201cThe Winslow\u201d which features so prominently in the Buck Godot storyline?<\/h2>\n
After Buck Godot: Zap Gun for Hire<\/em> and Buck Godot: PSmith<\/em> you got involved with the 1987 and 1989 Star Blazers<\/em> comics. How did that happen?<\/h2>\n
Why did you decide to make the Buck Godot<\/em> comics available online in 2007?<\/h2>\n