So without further anything, please enjoy the VKBMKLs interview with Tomi Ungerer, told in three parts over three days. Very fine. Very fine indeed.
VKBMKL: The Mellops Go Flying was your first book for children. With the reissue of the Mellops books by Phaidon, do you remember where the idea for the pig characters first came from?
TOMI: Well, I don’t really remember, I know I was just
drawing a lot of pigs because in English I thought that we could do a lot of
things with pigs like pigmy, Pygmalion, and so on, and I started doing those
little characters, and then it turned
into a book. When I came in ‘56 to America, there was a trunk of drawings, I
already had a book about the Mellops, but it was too cruel to be published. They
were caught by a butcher to be turned into sausages and things like that. But
Ursula Nordstrom [publisher of Harper & Row] liked the pig family, she told me to conceive
of another story and I just set to work. As for the name “Mellops”, well, in
school we gave our teachers other names, I remember it was a name we gave to
our history teacher. But where the word came from, I can’t remember. We must
have been drunk and having some fun or something like that, you know. There was
no harm getting drunk in high school in those days, so anyway, that started
with the Mellops.
VKBMKLs: In the case
of The Beast of Monsieur Racine, there
are all sorts of hidden, mad things
going on within the pictures. Murdering hobos, bleeding pipes, bodies stuffed
in trunks, and a faceless self-portrait. What exactly were you thinking when
you cooked up that story?
TOMI: I’ve always been literally a lover of the absurd. I
think the absurd gives a new dimension to reality and even to common sense. And
life, you know, on an everyday basis, is
absurd, or may turn out to be absurd. There’s no reality without absurdity. And
I think this should be shown to the children especially, if it enables them to
make fun of the adults. The children are still free. They have a free imagination.
They have the innocence it takes to be free. I think this should be encouraged,
actually. Especially as my children’s books developed, I started putting more
and more details, a lot of them being perfectly subversive.
VKBMKL: I was
wondering how having a child changed your writing and drawing for children, and
in particular how having a girl for a child changed your perspective on the
world?
TOMI: None whatsoever. As I said, as a child what I went
through with my mother’s affection, with my sister’s affection being all over
me, you know with kisses and this and that, I really had my dosage of all that,
and I must say that I didn’t have much physical contact with my daughter or my
sons, even as babies. Mothers can allow themselves to something like this, I
mean I have no time for these kind of things, so…I mean, not that I was
distant, but I’ve seen so many of my friends who completely flipped over their
daughter, I mean making themselves ridiculous, and I don’t think that’s very
healthy at all. I think children should be treated as equals, and just simply
be respected. They should be listened to, children have opinions, children have
a sense of humor, and I know children…an adult should always be ready to answer
the curious child. And this is to one of the reason I put so many details, so
the children ask questions. And so this involves the parents, to give them an
answer. Questioning is so important, but we don’t question children enough
either. We should ask children questions all the time. Sometimes difficult ones
to see what their answers are. It is what I do now in the French magazine
called Philosophie Magazine, I answer children’s questions. But I tell you that
it’s a wonderful challenge, a wonderful challenge.
Continued here...
All photos courtesy of www.tomiungerer.com.
Books by Tomi Ungerer:
The Hat
The Mellops Strike Oil
Crictor
Seeds and More Seeds
The Three Robbers
Zarelda's Ogre
Christmas Eve at the Mellops'
I Am Papa Snap and These Are My Favorite No Such Stories
The Beast of Monsieur Ravine
Emile
Allumette
Book of Various Owls
Rufus
Adelaide
Moon Man
Otto
Flix
Beastly Boys and Ghastly Girls
Orlando the Brave Vulture
No Kiss For Mother
The Donkey Ride
Mellops Go Spelunking
The Great Songbook
Continued here...
All photos courtesy of www.tomiungerer.com.
Books by Tomi Ungerer:
The Hat
The Mellops Strike Oil
Crictor
Seeds and More Seeds
The Three Robbers
Zarelda's Ogre
Christmas Eve at the Mellops'
I Am Papa Snap and These Are My Favorite No Such Stories
The Beast of Monsieur Ravine
Emile
Allumette
Book of Various Owls
Rufus
Adelaide
Moon Man
Otto
Flix
Beastly Boys and Ghastly Girls
Orlando the Brave Vulture
No Kiss For Mother
The Donkey Ride
Mellops Go Spelunking
The Great Songbook
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4 comments:
Thanks so much for this! I'm a huge Tomi U fan as well. In fact I just reviewed Fog Island on my blog, The Cath in the Hat.
How wonderful! I look forward to the next installments.
What a great great honor for you!!! Thank you for sharing this fantastic interview. Looking forward to the next two parts. I made a link on my german childrens book blog: http://daslasmama.blogspot.de
Great interview, he's great!
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