The Crumb documentary is ruining my life, complained Aline Kominsky-Crumb in 1993, as Terry Zwigoff’s biopic about Robert Crumb, her husband, gained acclaim, becoming a darling on the festival circuit. “Next thing you know, we’ll be invited to the Jerusalem Film Festival.” All of this drama was played out in a comic strip that appeared in The New Yorker magazine. Festival director Leah von Leer saw an opportunity and wrote to the Crumbs. “Your nightmare has come true. You are officially invited.”
Nominated for an academy award for best documentary feature, Crumb was a revealing look not only of this famous cartooning couple but Robert’s unusual family, capturing his highly eccentric and artistic brothers just before one committed suicide. Passionate for jazz, Robert had a huge record collection. Vinyl filled a room. Fearing an atmosphere of violence in their area of California, where gun ownership was de rigeuer, the Crumbs left for the south of France and lived in a multistoried house carved out of the rock on the banks of the Vidourle.
This much I knew when I encountered Robert and Aline in the lobby of our hotel in Jerusalem; I too came with a film, a documentary about the writer/composer Paul Bowles who lived in Tangier. “Did your records make it across the Atlantic?” I asked him as a way of saying hello. The Crumbs and my family—my husband Bob Salpeter, our two daughters, and my mother aged 73 and a survivor of Auschwitz --hung out. While Aline and I gabbed away getting to know one another—we had grown up in the New York City boroughs, finding our escape to Manhattan; we had ties to the Soho Weekly News-- Robert was helping my mother navigate the streets, gentle as could be. Aline dubbed her own mother Blabette, but genuinely liked mine grasping her spirituality.
My girls, Nina and Jane, played with their daughter Sophie, running through the narrow streets of the medieval town. They wanted to know if they could do the same in New York where we lived, on Third Avenue. The Crumbs made a big impression. Robert doodled in the local bistros, making drawings of the regulars. Known for his Janis Joplin Cheap Thrills album cover, his Hogarth-like sketching style, irreverent subjects, he was huge in Europe and elected to the American Academy of Arts & Letters.
Aline, an icon for feminists and women caricaturists in all media, had a more subterranean career, her self-effacing characters in the manner of the great Joan Rivers’ self-deprecating humor, and others such as Lena Dunham, who championed women for who we are. Grounded in a deep humanity, Aline kept it real in her books, and subversive magazines. A pioneer in the genre, Aline recounts her life in her graphic memoir, Need More Love, recognizing that her “Twisted Sisters” were at once a manifestation of the culture’s innermost fears about women’s power and the need to laugh at ourselves.
It breaks my heart that she is gone.
A wonderful, heartfelt tribute to a pioneering artist. Thank you, Regina.
Posted by: Catherine Hiller | December 12, 2022 at 07:39 AM