In the comics, Jayson’s
roommate Arena Stage was always a scene-stealer. She stood beside Jayson from
the very first strip I drew in 1982, doling out advice and cheering Jayson on
when no one else believed in him. In real life, my friend Andrea Jartman played
the same role, and inspired this unforgettable character.
As the 1980s drew to a close, I
concluded that Arena was ready for her close-up. She had the distinct advantage
of being heterosexual, a prerequisite for success in the mainstream newspapers
of the day.
I had written myself into a
corner with a story called “Jayson Gets Engaged,” which meant that Jayson would
soon have to marry Arena — or at least he would have to try. I knew he wouldn’t
go through with it, but in the run-up to “Jayson Gets Married” I found the
opportunity to introduce the rest of Arena’s family and create a backdoor
pilot.
After Jayson rejected Arena at
the altar, she stormed off to Manhattan and into the embrace of her family’s
advertising agency. Thus was born “Arena Stage,” a daily newspaper strip that I
shopped to syndicates in 1988. Although I received some very encouraging
rejections, I never found a champion, and Arena returned to Jayson a few
stories later in “Jayson’s New Lease on Life.”
Jayson
Comics #6 publishes, for the first time ever, the five weeks of daily and
Sunday strips I created to establish the world of “Arena Stage” for mainstream
consumption.
Just
after this issue went to press, I learned that Andrea Jartman passed away in
February. I didn’t intend for this issue to be a tribute, but now it is. My
plan is to conclude the story arc from the daily strip, and tell several more
tales from Arena’s time in Manhattan, in the forthcoming graphic novel “Arena
Takes Manhattan,” which will truly be the tribute Andrea deserves, with
reminiscences and photographs aplenty.
Meanwhile,
I have the bittersweet honor of debuting Jayson Comics #6 at San Diego
Comic-Con this July. If you can’t make it there or to the other conventions I
attend this year, Jayson Comics #6 is also available for print-on-demand and
digital download at IndyPlanet, along with the other 5 issues of Jayson Comics.
Jeff I have always admired your talent as an artist and a story teller. As with most high school acquaintances we were not the "best of friends" however I was rather jealous of your incredible artistic talent and "beautiful handwriting". One thing I can say is that my desire to be as good at "printing" as you has lead to many a compliment about my handwriting. I will also always remember just how really physically strong you were. You could climb that rope in gym without using your legs and you were more talented at gymnastics than any of us "really tough football players". Honestly Jeff, I would have chosen you for any stupid gym game for my team because despite your attempts to hide behind academia you were quite an athlete as well.
ReplyDeleteI wish I had known your friend. She must have been someone who live life to its fullest... Please continue to do the same and share that with the rest of us who haven't quite been as fortunate. Warmest Regards, Rick.