RIP HARVEY PEKAR

SPlDEYSPlDEY Vegas 3,375 Posts
edited July 2010 in Strut Central


Harvey Pekar American writer, Jazz critic, Record Collector died today.

" In the ???70s, he was such an avid record collector he said he wished jazz would die as a living musical form so that the number of recordings would be finite and it would be possible to collect every one."

(Cleveland) - Famed Cleveland underground comic book writer Harvey Pekar has died at the age of 70.

Cuyahoga County Coroner's spokesman Powell Caesar confirmed the news to WTAM 1100 Monday morning.

Pekar was found just before 1:00 am by his wife, Joyce Brabner, in their home in Cleveland Heights.

Cleveland Heights Police Capt. Michael Cannon says Pekar had been suffering from prostate cancer, asthma, high blood pressure and depression. The cause of death is not yet known.

- spidey

  Comments


  • Damn! R.I.P. Harvey, and thank you for all of your efforts in comics and music. You will be missed.

  • batmonbatmon 27,574 Posts
    I ride for American Splendor the movie.

    Never read his stuff bitd.

    Rest In Peace.

  • El PrezEl Prez NE Ohio 1,141 Posts
    RIP a Cleveland legend also an advid record collector....walls and walls or raers....

    http://blog.cleveland.com/metro/2010/07/cleveland_comic-book_legend_ha.html

    CLEVELAND HEIGHTS, Ohio -- Harvey Pekar's life was not an open book. It was an open comic book.

    Pekar chronicled his life and times in the acclaimed autobiographical comic-book series, "American Splendor," portraying himself as a rumpled, depressed, obsessive-compulsive "flunky file clerk" engaged in a constant battle with loneliness and anxiety.

    Pekar, 70, was found dead shortly before 1 a.m. today by his wife, Joyce Brabner, in their Cleveland Heights home, said Powell Caesar, spokesman for Cuyahoga County Coroner Frank Miller. An autopsy will be conducted to determine the cause of death. Pekar and his wife, Joyce Brabner, wrote "Our Cancer Year," a book-length comic, after Pekar was diagnosed with lymphatic cancer in 1990 and underwent a grueling treatment.

    "American Splendor" carried the subtitle, "From Off the Streets of Cleveland," and just like Superman, the other comic book hero born in Cleveland, Pekar wore something of a disguise. He never stepped into a phone booth to change, but underneath his persona of aggravated, disaffected file clerk, he was an erudite book and jazz critic, and a writer of short stories that many observers compared to Chekhov, despite their comic-book form.

    Unlike the superheroes who ordinarily inhabit the pages of comic books, Pekar could not leap tall buildings in a single bound, nor move faster than a speeding bullet. Yet his comics suggested a different sort of heroism: The working-class, everyman heroics of simply making it through another day, with soul -- if not dignity -- intact.

    "American Splendor" had its roots in Pekar's friendship with R. Crumb, the seminal underground comic-book artist, whom he met in 1962 when Crumb was working for American Greetings in Cleveland. At the time, Crumb was just beginning to explore the possibilities of comics, which would later lead to such groundbreaking work as "Mr. Natural" and "Fritz the Cat."

    "He's the soul of Cleveland," Crumb told The Plain Dealer in 1994. "He's passionate and articulate. He's grim. He's Jewish. I appreciate the way he embraces all that darkness."

    Yet the darkness came with a humorous silver lining. As Pekar said, "The humor of everyday life is way funnier than what the comedians do on TV. It's the stuff that happens right in front of your face when there's no routine and everything is unexpected. That's what I want to write about."

    Pekar often complained that he made no money from his comics, but they did not go unappreciated. He won the American Book Award in 1987 for his first anthology of "American Splendor." He was a regular guest on "Late Night With David Letterman." He won a Peabody Award for his commentary on WKSU 89.7/FM. And in 2003, the film adaptation of his comics, also titled "American Splendor," won the Grand Jury Prize for dramatic films at the prestigious Sundance Film Festival.

    Pekar reacted to the prize with his characteristic mordant wit.

    "I'm always shook up and nervous and I've got the hospital record to prove it," he said that night. "I wake up every morning in a cold sweat, regardless of how well things went the day before. And put that I said that in a somewhat but not completely tongue-in-cheek way."


    Pekar was born Oct. 8, 1939, to Saul and Dora Pekar, who had emigrated from Bialystok, Poland. His father, a Talmudic scholar, owned a small grocery store on Kinsman Avenue, and the family -- who included Harvey's younger brother, Allen, a chemist -- lived above the store.

    He graduated from Shaker Heights High School in 1957, and went on to Case Western Reserve University, dropping out after a year when the pressure of required math classes proved too much to bear. He served in the Navy, then returned to Cleveland and a series of menial jobs before landing at the Veteran's Administration Hospital in Cleveland as a file clerk, a job he would hold until he retired in 2001.

    He was married three times, the last time to Brabner, whom he met in 1983 when she wrote to him asking for an issue of "American Splendor." They were married on their third date, and a comic book naturally followed. "American Splendor No. 10" was subtitled, "Harvey's Latest Crapshoot: His Third Marriage to a Sweetie from Delaware and How His Substandard Dishwashing Strains Their Relationship."

    They became legal guardians of Danielle Batone when she was 9 years old, in 1998, "raising her as our own," Pekar said.

    After he retired from the VA hospital, Pekar continued to write jazz reviews and "American Splendor," garnering the accolades of his peers and critics.

    In 1989, the New York Times Book Review said, "Mr. Pekar's work has been compared by literary critics to Chekhov's and Dostoevski's, and it's easy to see why."

    The filmmaker David O. Russell ("Three Kings"), who was on the Sundance jury that awarded "American Splendor" the grand prize, said, "It's really great for people to see someone like Harvey Pekar, this guy who wants to remain authentic, isn't going to buy [garbage], isn't going to the malls, keeps on collecting old jazz music that's important -- that kind of independence."

    R. Crumb said Pekar's work examined the minutia of everyday life, material "so staggeringly mundane it verges on the exotic."

    Peak himself summed it up as revealing "a series of day-after-day activities that have more influence on a person than any spectacular or traumatic events. It's the 99 percent of life that nobody ever writes about."

  • RockadelicRockadelic Out Digging 13,993 Posts
    RIP


  • RIP

    loved his comics and pithy downbeat reviews....

    the vultures are probably swirling around his record collection as we speak......

  • onetetonetet 1,754 Posts
    R.I.P. Highly inspirational dude.

  • white_teawhite_tea 3,262 Posts
    R.I.P.

    Like Batmon, never read the comic book but I loved the shit out of the movie. Storing his records on those rickety metal shelves, his wife hounding him (leaving him?) while he was busy with an Ornette Coleman review, eating White Castles with that nerd dude, filing color-coded medical files -- all that slice-of-life stuff still stays.

    Tough week for Cleveland. One commentator from the Plain Dealer:

    And the hits keep on coming...

  • El PrezEl Prez NE Ohio 1,141 Posts
    crabmongerfunk said:
    RIP

    loved his comics and pithy downbeat reviews....

    the vultures are probably swirling around his record collection as we speak......

    Both Havery and his wife sold off his collection a few years ago...no more records.

  • MjukisMjukis 1,675 Posts
    RIP. Just watched the AS movie a short while ago. So funny and on point. Never really read the comics either, just the odd one here and there. In any case, I respect and admire what I've seen of his work, and dig his worldview.

    He'll be checking the phonebook in heaven to see how many Harvey Pekars are listed for sure.

  • Mjukis said:

    He'll be checking the phonebook in heaven to see how many Harvey Pekars are listed for sure.

    Ha!

    RIP. Dude was really under appreciated.

  • onetetonetet 1,754 Posts
    has much/any of his jazz writing been collected?

  • onetet said:
    has much/any of his jazz writing been collected?

    if it doesn;t exist, it should...

    i remember reading a pretty glowing review of the eddie fischer "next 100 years" album that he did. major libraries tend to have bound copies of downbeat that you can flip through. you can also find some of his reviews here:

    http://jazztimes.com/contributors/24-harvey-pekar

    http://www.austinchronicle.com/gyrobase/Archive/author?oid=oid:73812&page=3
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