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Bob
Rozakis
DC Comics (Executive Director of Production)
DC
Comics Executive Director of Production, Bob Rozakis aka The Answer
Man! Bob graciously agreed to subject himself to the 20 questions
battery, because he's a really nice guy, and...well... a lot of
whimpering was involved. Bear in mind that these questions were
asked in no particular order. The opinions expressed herein are
solely his and do not reflect those of DC Comics.
#1.
Q: What, exactly, are your duties as Executive Director of
Production?
A: I oversee the Graphic Services,
Production, Purchasing, and Film Library departments and am the
primary contact between DC and our two major printers, Ronalds (Quebecor)
and Quad Graphics (which prints MAD). Once the books are turned
in by the editors, Graphic Services proofreads and corrects them,
then Production deals with color separators and the printers to
get them done.
#2.
Q: How involved are you in the decision of whether or not
DC publishes a new series?
A: I am usually not involved at all.
If there is something out of the ordinary about how the art will
be done, I am consulted about what problems we might face.
#3.
Q: How did you first become in volved in the comics industry?
A: I started out as a fanboy. I wrote
over 500 letters to the editors -- had over 135 published-- in the
late 60s and early 70s. I went up to the DC offices to visit Julie
Schwartz and brought along some comics-related crossword puzzles
I'd made up to submit to fanzines to give to E. Nelson Bridwell.
Julie took the puzzles and showed them to then-VP Sol Harrison.
Sol came in and said "If you can make up ones only about Superman
and Batman, we'll buy them." That was a Friday. On Monday I was
back with nine puzzles. The puzzle pages appeared in the over-sized
Limited Collector's Editions (the first ones were actually in a
Tarzan collection, though they were not the first ones I sold to
DC) and in the 100-PAGE SUPER-SPECTACULARS. When I graduated from
college a couple of months later, I asked Sol for a job. The first
thing they had me doing was answering the mail, and some of the
letters in the box were ones I'd sent in. I then took over driving
the Comicmobile, which was an innovation Sol had come up with...
a van filled with comics that drove up and down suburban streets
in search of customers. Then it was back to the offices when summer
ended and I became Julie Schwartz's assistant editor for three years
before moving into Production in 1976.
#4.
Q: Other than DC, who have you done work for?
A: The only non-DC work I have done
was two stories for RENEGADE ROMANCE that Stephen DeStefano and
I collaborated on.
#5.
Q: Have you ever turned down a project only to see another
company pick it up and have success with it?
A: Since I am not directly involved
in that process, I'd have to say no.
#6.
Q: Of the active pros today, who are your favorites to work
with?
A: I enjoyed working with a lot of
different people over the years, bridging the gap from the "first
generation" to the current one. With a couple of minor exceptions
(working with guys who did not last long in the business for a variety
of reasons), I don't think there was anybody I worked with that
I didn't enjoy working with.
#7.
Q: What are your views on the state of the comic book industry
today, as opposed to ten years ago?
A: The electronic revolution, particularly
in coloring and separations, has made major changes in how the books
are done and what they look like. I am quite proud of the part I
played in this, having pushed DC into having books computer-colored
and sepped in the late 80s. I think we still have some way to go
along this road and that we sometimes lose sight of the fact that
our primary goal is to entertain our audience in our attempts to
out-glitz everything that's come before.
#8.
Q: Do you attribute the general drop in readership the entire
industry is experiencing with anything specific?
A: Most people point at electronic
games, the world-wide web, infinite numbers of cable-TV channels,
or something else. I think we have missed a significant factor.
When my wife started teaching in 1973, 1800 kids graduated from
the two high schools in the district. That same year, 175 kids entered
kindergarten. By 1985, the district had four less elementary schools,
only one junior high and one high school. Anybody want to postulate
a theory using that piece of information?
#9.
Q: What was your role in orchestrating DC VERSUS MARVEL?
A: I worked with my counterparts down
at Marvel, Gene Durante and Alison Gill, to get the stuff done behind
the scenes.
#10.
Q: How difficult was it to pull off the DC/Marvel crossover?
A: No more difficult than anything
else we do, except that we kept trying to keep it a secret.
#11.
Q: Is DC planning any crossovers with anyone other than Marvel
in the near future?
A: Yes, and I hear about most of them
via my AOL chat hour before anybody in the office tells me or I
see them on a schedule. There's a LOBO/ THE MASK crossover coming
up, CATWOMAN/VAMPIRELLA, and AZRAEL/ASH.
#12.
Q: Why don't you write comics any more?
A: My comics writing kinda wound down
after 'MAZING MAN and HERO HOTLINE. I spend my "free time" coaching
my daughter's softball team, teaching a creative writing class for
4-th-6th graders, and being an advancement counselor for my son's
Boy Scout troop, among other things.
#13.
Q: If you weren't in the comic book industry, what would
you want to do?
A: I'd like to have my own tv talk
show. But, in reality, I would enjoy spending my time teaching.
I spend two weeks each summer teaching a creative writing course
for gifted 5th and 6th graders in a program run by Johns Hopkins
University and enjoy it immensely. (I must-- I use my vacation time
to do it!)
#14.
Q: Are there any titles on your "must read" list?
A: KINGDOM COME was on the top of the
list. Also TERMINAL CITY, most of the Superman books, and JLA: MIDSUMMER'S
NIGHTMARE.
#15.
Q: Will DC be publishing more creator-owned titles a la PREACHER
and SOVEREIGN 7?
A: I'm sure we will.
#16.
Q: Are there any characters you've never had the chance to
work on that you always wanted to?
A: The original Justice League. During
the heyday of my writing, it was the only series I never had a chance
to write an issue of.
#17.
Q: Who were/are your idols in the comics field?
A: Julie Schwartz, who likes to say
that I was his protege, after which I quote former NY Yankees player
Yogi Berra describing predecessor as Yankee catcher Bill Dickey:
"He learned me all of his experiences."
#18.
Q: What sort of input do you have when DC and Warner Bros
are developing a character for TV or the movies?
A: None.
#19.
Q: What is Kevin Dooley's phone number?
A: 212-636-5400...just like the rest
of us here at DC.
#20.
Q: Adam West, Michael Keaton, Val Kilmer, or George Clooney?
A: Since I haven't yet seen Clooney
do it... Kilmer.
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