- Ed Subitzky
Ed Subitzky, full name Edward Jack Subitzky, is an American
cartoonist ,comics artist , andhumorist . He has also worked as a televisioncomedy writer and performer, a writer for radio of both comedy and drama, and a creator of comedy and humor in various other media. He is a member of theScreen Actors Guild ,AFTRA , and theWriters Guild of America .In the early 1970s, Subitzky became a contributing editor at "National Lampoon" magazine, where he worked with many well-regarded humor and comedy creators and performers, including
Henry Beard ,Doug Kenney ,Michael O'Donoghue ,P. J. O'Rourke , Michael Gross,John Belushi andChevy Chase . As well as his work for the magazine, Subitzky contributed to many other "Lampoon" projects.Subsequently Subitzky went on to various other kinds of humor and comedy work, including working on television and more work for radio. He has also written broadcast horror stories, and has recently contributed several pieces to a serious science journal.
Subitzky has had a longtime
day job as an advertisingcopywriter .Early life
Subitzky was born in and grew up in
Mount Vernon, New York , just outside ofNew York City . As a child he read a wide variety of comic books, and " Mad" magazine. He was greatly influenced by the work ofWill Elder andHarvey Kurtzman , both of whom he met briefly in Mount Vernon when he was about 12 years old.He was educated at what is now
Binghamton University , where he was a math major who also took many philosophy courses. A few years later he moved intoManhattan , and took cartooning classes at theSchool of Visual Arts , or SVA, which were taught byBob Blechman andCharles Slackman .Comic strips, cartoons, and humor writing for "National Lampoon" magazine
Contributing editor
Michel Choquette of "National Lampoon" magazine visited the SVA cartooning class in1972 . Choquette noticed Subitzky's work and brought him over to the offices of the magazine. Subitzky became a long-term contributing editor of "National Lampoon", where one or more of hiscomic strips ,cartoons , and written articles appeared in almost every issue of the magazine. His name remained on themasthead of "National Lampoon" from 1972 on, through the decline of the magazine in the 1980s, and almost up to the point of its eventual demise.Subitzky's approximately 100
comic strip s for the "Lampoon" included “Saturday Night on Antarius!”, “Two-way Comics!", "Eight Comics in One!” and “Come Too Soon Comics!” Many of his comic strips ran to several pages, and featured numerous very small panels.His approximately 100 articles and written pieces included “How I Spent My Summer” and "Stupidworld".
Two out of many
fumetti or photo funnies he wrote were “The Perfect Date” and “Every Red-Blooded American Boy’s Dream: Three Pretty Girls Doing Just What You Want So You Can Masturbate!"In
1974 , Subitzky wrote two sections of the infamous "National Lampoon 1964 High School Yearbook Parody ": the first piece in the yearbook, which is the Principal's letter, and "In Memorium" ["sic"] , which is a parody of a student piece.In the same year Subitzky wrote numerous sections of the "Lampoon" book,"
The Job of Sex ", which was a parody of "The Joy of Sex ".In September 1974 he guest-edited the "
Old Age " issue of the magazine [http://www.marksverylarge.com/issues/7409.html] .His writing and cartooning were reprinted in many "National Lampoon"
anthologies , and pieces of his have been included in several other anthologies, including the "Big Book of New American Humor " and more than one collection edited by the cartoonistSam Gross .Works for Radio
Subitzky was a writer for and an occasional performer on "
The National Lampoon Radio Hour ", which ran for a little over a year in 1973 to 1974. He conceptualized, and wrote all, or nearly all of, the “Public Disservice Announcements” (which were parodies ofpublic service announcements ) as well as a number of other pieces. Some selections from the "Radio Hour" work appeared on the CDalbum "Gold Turkey".He also conceived, wrote, and starred in a one hour, two-episode
radio play for "The National Lampoon Radio Hour". The play was a spoof of popularscience fiction /horror dramas, and it was entitled "The Sluts from Space". The two episodes aired on May 25th and June 2nd of 1974.Subitzky voiced the part of the science-
nerd hero, Timmy Johnson, who, by clever control of the supply of deodorants, manages to save the world fromalien invader s disguised as beautiful and seductive women. The "Sluts from Space" episodes of the show are listed in detail at: [http://www.marksverylarge.com/nlrh/nlrh740525_28.html] and [http://www.marksverylarge.com/nlrh/nlrh740602_29.html] .In
1980 Subitzky wrote numerous pieces for a nationally-syndicated series of five-minute horror stories, broadcast on radio. The series was entitled "Nightwatch".Recordings
Subitzky was the author of two "Lampoon" comedy albums: "
Official National Lampoon Stereo Test and Demonstration Record ", 1974, and the subsequent, similarly-titled album, "The Official National Lampoon Stereo Test and Demonstration Tape" on cassette tape forcar stereo in 1980. The first of these two albums was voiced by John Belushi and Chevy Chase, among others.Comedy writing and performing
Subitzky was a comedy writer on "
The David Letterman Show " for its first season on the air in1982 , and he also appeared on the show many times, in variations of a sketch which is sometimes referred to as “The Imposter". In these sketches, Letterman introduces Subitzky as someone else altogether, often a minorcelebrity , and after a few minutes of interviewing, Subitzky breaks down and admits to Letterman that he had only pretended to be the other person so that he could be ontelevision . He then runs through the audience apologizing abjectly.Subitzky reprised this role in twelve more appearances on "
Late Night with David Letterman ".The "New York Times" Op/Ed page, and magazine work
During the 1990s, Subitzky had several Op/Art cartoons published on the Opinion/Editorial page of the "
New York Times ".His cartoons have also appeared in "Natural History", "
The New Yorker ", and "", and some written pieces of his appeared in "Cracked ".cience-related work
In
1991 , he co-wrote (with his wife) a science humor piece for the "Journal of Irreproducible Results " entitled “A Call For More Scientific Truth in Product Warning Labels”, by Susan Hewitt and Edward Subitzky. This piece was subsequently quoted by both "New Scientist " and "Atlantic Monthly ". Nearly 17 years after it was first published, it is still featured (both with and without its title, attribution and introduction) on hundreds ofwebsites , including versions of the piece that have been translated into German, Dutch, Spanish and Hungarian.Since the year 2000, based on his long-term interest in
science andphilosophy , Subitzky has been contributing to apeer review edacademic journal , the "Journal of Consciousness Studies ", where he has had one cartoon, a 4-page comic strip, and three written articles published. In chronological order these include an essay "I am a conscious essay" [http://www.imprint.co.uk/jcs_10_12.html#subitzky] , the comic strip "Inkland" [http://www.imprint.co.uk/pdf/Subitzky.pdf] , the shortscience fiction story "The Voyage" [http://www.imprint.co.uk/pdf/Subitzky_Reflection.pdf] , and another science fiction short story, "The Experiment" [http://www.ingentaconnect.com/content/imp/jcs/latest] . As is also true of the product warning labels piece, most of these were published under the name "Edward Subitzky" rather than Ed Subitzky.Film-related work
Subitzky conceived, wrote, and did the original drawings for, a short animated piece which was then produced, and bought by "
Saturday Night Live ", but was not aired. He co-wrote ascreenplay , which was bought but not produced. He also wrote thelyrics for a country song which appeared as background music in a bar scene in another film ("Kandyland", 1987).Character modeling
Subitzky appeared in the Lampoon magazine as a character model in editorial photographs 54 times. In 1977 he appeared on the cover of the "
National Lampoon Gentleman's Bathroom Companion " as the Tidybowl man, and in 1988 he was featured on the cover of the March-April issue of "National Lampoon" magazine as a disappointed television viewer [http://lampoon.rwinters.com/Lampoon1988.htm] .During the 1990s Subitzky occasionally worked for the
modeling agency "FunnyFace Today", appearing in a few publications including "Redbook ".In the 1980s Subitzky was the sole actor in a television commercial for a
video game called "Mountain King".A recent parody of Ed Subitzky's comic strips
In 2006, an
Australia n magazine, POX, ran a multi-page "National Lampoon" magazineparody , which included atake-off of Subitzky's comic strips.References
External links
* [http://www.marksverylarge.com] Currently this is the major, and definitive, Lampoon information site
* [http://lampoon.rwinters.com] Shows all the Lampoon covers
* [http://stuff.mit.edu/people/dpolicar/writing/netsam/warning_labels.html] One of many sites which show the "product warning labels" piece
* [http://homepage.mac.com/hewsub/] Has two imagesBooks
* KARP, Josh, 2004 Chicago Review Press, "A Futile and Stupid Gesture"
* SIMMONS, Matty, 1994, Barricade Books, "If You Don't Buy This Book We'll Kill This Dog"
* HENDRA, Tony, 1987, Dolphin Doubleday, "Going Too Far "Magazines
* COOKE, Jon B., April 2003,
Comic Book Artist , 24, "Ed Subitzky Interview: A mind for mirth, the nicest cartoonist in comic book history off the top of his head"
* BUTCHER, Susan, & WOOD, Carol, 2006, POX (Australia), # 6, page 26, "Itsy-Bitsy Comics! by Izzy Bitzky"
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