NewsPress Release - 2/16/2000
MARLBORO, VT -- A three-part lecture series entitled "Journeys
into Fear" by cartoonist and illustrator Stephen Bissette continues
at 7 p.m. Thursday, April 6, in Marlboro College's Whittemore Theatre.
The series explores the multicultural roots and the rise in popularity
of horror comics, from twelfth-century Japanese ghost scrolls to
post-modern horrors.
Bissette has been a working professional in the comic book industry
for more than twenty years, and writing professionally for more
than a decade. His early work as an illustrator appeared in the
pages of Heavy Metal, Marvel Comics' "Epic" and "Bizarre
Adventures," Scholastic Magazine's "Weird Worlds"
and "Bananas" (illustrating stories written by Goosebumps
founder and author R.L. Stine), and the graphic novelization of
Steven Spielberg's motion picture 1941(Simon and Schuster, 1979).
Best known for his multiple award-winning collaboration with writer
Alan Moore and inker John Totleben on DC Comics' Saga of the Swamp
Thing (1983-87), Bissette subsequently collaborated with Moore on
the Image Comics' series 1963 (1993), and worked briefly on Mirage
Studios' Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles; the character "Tokka"
which appeared in the second TMNT feature film, Secret of the Ooze,
was based upon his drawings.
As a writer, Bissette's interviews, film criticism, and articles
have appeared in Rutherford, Gadfly, Comics Interview, Fangoria,
and others. He also contributed chapters to the books Clive Barker,
Illustrator (1990), Cut! Horror Writers on Horror Film (Berkeley,
1992), The BFI Companion to Horror (Cassell/British Film Institute,
1996), and others. Bissette writes regularly for the Entertainment
section of the Brattleboro Reformer and is an original shareholder
and an assistant manager and buyer at First Run Video of Brattleboro.
He currently lives in southern Vermont with his teenage children,
Maia and Daniel, who also write and draw their own comics and stories.
The third and final lecture in the series will take place at 7 p.m.
on April 13. The lecture series, which incorporate hundreds of slides
and relevant archival video clips, is free and open to the public.
Donations are welcome to help the Marlboro Elementary School eighth-graders
raise money for their trip to London.
The Whittemore Theater is fully accessible. For more information,
please call (802) 257-4333. The Marlboro College events calendar
can be found on-line at http://www.marlboro.edu/calendar/calendar.html.




