From Casper the Friendly Ghost to Haunting a Comics Cosmos All His Own
by David Crumm (ReadTheSpirit.com 06/25/08)
INTRODUCING
comic artists here at ReadTheSpirit, we often ask them to tell
us about the first comic book they can recall owning. Chris Yambar
vividly recalls it was an edition of "Casper the Friendly Ghost" -- but
the story doesn't end there.
Here's how he tells the story:
I was born in 1961 and this was in the mid 1960s. I
remember it happened because my dad could no longer catch us to give us
haircuts so he bribed us to get into the car and go to the barbershop
with him. This place was in the front of a store window, I remember.
The barber was this old wartime vet who would cut hair on
the weekends. But what was so amazing about this place is that from the
floor of the store -- all the way up the walls for about three feet
were these shelves of comics. I had never seen comics before so I were
probably in the neighborhood of about 5 or 6 years old. Of course, I
was fascinated immediately.
Here was the bribe: Dad said, "If you sit still, I’ll get
you a comic." Well, it didn’t take me long to figure out that if I sat
still and got the comic and read it -- then I’d still have time to
fidget and he’d get me another comic. I learned that two was the magic
number –- I could get two comics per hair cut. If I went for three, it
meant a beating. And I started with Casper comics. Casper the Friendly
Ghost.
But there were other comics on the racks, too. And I saw
this comic called Hot Stuff. I don't remember which issue it was, but I
remember the first Hot Stuff comic Dad bought me had a yellow
background with the red little Hot Stuff character on it -- and some
white. Bright red, white and yellow? I mean, those are all the
stop-and-look colors for a kid.
So, Casper was -- you know, the friendly ghost. Hot Stuff
was drawn exactly like Casper except he had horns and a diaper and he
was the tough little guy in these Harvey Comics. He'd walk around with
his pitchfork and have all these adventures.
My Dad didn't see any problem, but my Mom was very
concerned about the imagery in these Hot Stuff comics. I mean, this
little character was drawn like a little devil.
I can remember overhearing them talk about this. My Mom
was very concerned. And I remember my Dad saying, "Well, the little guy
is wearing a diaper. How dangerous can he be?"
I thought that was funny. But I also learned that for a
thin dime, and then eventually for a thin dime and two pennies I could
get into a lot of trouble. And I began to think: If I'm not supposed to
have it, then there really must be something in there that I really
want to see!
WE
ASKED CHRIS TO ANSWER A FEW MORE QUESTIONS ABOUT HIS BACKGROUND:
WHY COMICS AS A CAREER?
Why not? A career writing, drawing and publishing comic books is just as valid as doing any other job in the entertainment field. Some of the best illustration and storytelling mythology in modern culture comes from the medium of comics. I love the art form the way Europeans love it. There is a great joy in bringing ideas across to an audience in a style that sticks in their minds and at best can be understood and received with as few words as possible. Creating a comic book is like producing a portable art gallery that can be be rolled up and stuck in anyone's pocket or square bound and shelved for future study and enjoyment.
WHERE IS ALL OF THIS TAKING YOU?
For all I know I may have hit the peak already. The joy for me has always been in the doing of the work. Currently there is some solid interest in bringing my solo and co-created characters off of the comic pages and into full animation situations. From there who can say? Everyday is filled with new opportunity and adventure. As far as I'm concerned I'll be involved in the creation of comics and whatever they birth until my season is over.
TELL US ABOUT YOUR FAMILY:
I've been married for 26 years to my wife, Maureen.
She's 48 and took an early retirement from working at a university
here. And we've got two cats: Savannah Rose and Iris Pennyworth.
TELL US A LITTLE MORE ABOUT YOUR PROFESSIONAL BACKGROUND:
I was raised Catholic, then explored other religious
traditions in the late 1970s, including Buddhism and Taoism.
Eventually, I decided to simply follow the person of Jesus and Jesus'
teachings as expressed in the Bible. In 1980, I entered the ministry
where I began to exercise my beliefs with hands-on inner city
rehabilitation outreach to those living on the streets in poverty and
addiction.
During the 1980s, musician Terry McCabe and I founded
Manna Underground Press. Together, we published The Activist (radical truth through art,
music, and social commentary), an influential independent
Christian newspaper. When the paper finally closed its doors in 1989,
we had a respectable readership in 13 countries. During this time, we
also printed several issues of Rebel
Graphics and Safe Comix.
The first issue of Safe Comix,
which I co-published with cartoonist Ivar Torgrimson, included the work
of numerous emerging artists including R. Crumb, the father of the
original secular underground comics movement.
In 1987, I began painting in the classic pop art style
and, by 1989, had my first one-man exhibition at The Butler Institute
of American Art. The show was held over. My pieces are in museums,
galleries and private collections around the globe.
In 1994, I began to publish a line of science fiction
adventure comics called Substance
Quarterly that I began with artist Gary A. Smith. That same
year, I created my most popular comic book character: Mr. Beat. In 1997
the character appeared in his first national comic book, Mr. Beat Adventures, which became a
mainstay on the independent comics scene. Other character titles soon
followed including The
Fire-Breathing Pope, Itsi
Kitsi-Happy Adventure Cat; and co-created characters with George
Broderick Jr (El Mucho Grande,
Twerp and the Blue Baboon,
Suckulina-Vampire Temp
and Suicide Blonde ), with
Levi Krause (Spells, Biker Dick ), with Layne Toth (Faith Warrior Princess), and with Robb Bihun (Edison's Frankenstein 1910).
Most recently, I created Life
Maxx, a cancer survivor superhero designed to inspire and inform
young people who have found themselves in this situation.
In addition to my own comics, I write for such popular
titles as Bart Simpson Comics,
Radioactive Man, Tree House of Horror, The Simpsons Comics, I Dream of Jeannie
and Mister Magoo.
For more information on my work, simply go to http://www.yambar.com/
Care to Read More?
We've shared the stories of other religiously inspired comic artists. Scroll down in that earlier story and you can click on individual stories about folks like Kurt Kolka, Buzz Dixon, Ben Avery and Robert Luedke. OR, here's a look at Steve Sheinkin, creator of comics about Rabbi Harvey of the Wild West.

