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Buffyversecomics.blogspot.com Angel : After The FallStephen Mooney - "Angel : After The Fall" Comic Book - Buffyversecomics.blogspot.com InterviewFriday 21 August 2009, by Webmaster First Tipton, then Messina, and now we welcome ANGEL artist Stephen Mooney to Buffyverse Comic Reviews! Read on to see what this gracious, talented, and supremely Irish man had to say about his work in comics. Buffyverse Comic Reviews: First of all, thanks for doing this. Let’s start off with the basics. How did you get into being a comic artist in the first place? Was it always your dream? Stephen Mooney: You’re more than welcome man, thanks for having me! I got into comics in a roundabout way, through animation. I had always wanted to draw for a living, and comics were my weapon of choice as a teenager. In Ireland there’s no dedicated college course on comicbooks, but there is a very reputable animation college in Dublin. So I figured that I could take that course and draw 8 hours a day 5 days a week, thus gaining a grounding in the same basic aspects of drawing required for comics, ie life-drawing, storytelling, layout etc. I started freelancing straight out of college, for the first couple of years mostly as a storyboard artist for ad agencies, then two years in a Dublin based animation house called Boulder Media in the background dept, and then finally to full-time comics from there around five years ago. BCR: How did you first get involved with IDW? Mooney: After 2 years on an Irish book called Freakshow I emailed (then relatively new EIC of IDW) Chris Ryall after hearing that he’d hired a couple of Irish guys in the recent past. I figured I could play the Blarney card. Chris couldn’t have been more responsive and pleasant(or better groomed), and he made me feel right at home straight away. There happened to be a CSI script on his desk looking for an artist at that very moment, and he figured I might be a good fit. After 5 years at this game I’ve come to realise that timing is 50%, and who you know is the other 50%. There are a lot’ve guys who’re good enough to draw and write these books, opportunity plays such a massive part. BCR: You’re well known for your work on ANGEL and THE MUMMY, but where can Mooney fans go if they want to see more of your stuff? Are there any other books you’ve been a part of? Mooney: Well as I mention above, I started with IDW on a CSI series called ’Dying in The Gutters’ in 2006, which was a fun whodunnit set firmly in the world of comics at the San Diego comic convention. Before that I spent 2 years on an Irish book called Freakshow, which was basically Scooby Doo as re-imagined by Tim Burton, a lotta fun. I also drew a series for Fangoria Comics at one point called ’Strangeland: Sevin Sins’, but only the first issue of that was released before the company went under. It was all completed though, and they keep threatening to release it in it’s entirety as a graphic novel, so who knows. The last two years has been pretty dominated by Angel work, with the Mummy series somewhere in between. I’ve had a few short stories here and there in Irish and British anthology books also. Tough stuff to track down, even I don’t have copies of everything. BCR: You expressed interest in working on AFTER THE FALL ever since it was announced. You even drew up a few pages of the alley fight. How did it feel when you were called in to work on the pivotal arc of issues #12-14? How were you approached? Mooney: How was I approached? It was more a case of when was I unleashed! I remember I got a mail from Chris, under the subject heading of ANGEL that consisted of one line that said ’We’re ready for you’. That was to draw the Connor and Kate segments of First Night. To say I was thrilled would be somewhere beneath an understatement. I had been badgering Chris since I came onboard IDW to let me at the Angel books, but I didn’t think I’d ever really get a shot since David Messina was doing such an amazing job there already. But Chris had let me know that sooner rather than later, big things would be happening in the Angelverse and more troops would be required. When I heard that Joss was working on a comicbook continuation to the show, that’s when I drew those sample pages up to ’audition’ for the job. I didn’t know that the artist had already been chosen for the book(the amazing Franco Urru), and I’m kind’ve glad now that I didn’t come on board until later as I don’t think my abilities were quite sharpened enough at that point. So to start on issues 6+7 was perfect for me. Those stories seemed to get a pretty strong reaction, along with Nick’s Wesley story, which I think was probably the main factor in us getting the nod from Chris and Brian to tackle those meatier arcs further on. For me, getting to draw the issue 12-14 arc was beyond perfect, as Cordelia is my favourite female Buffyverse character(followed closely by Anya and Fred, fact-fans), and this was a chance to really do her justice. I was a massive fan of her send-off in ’You’re Welcome’, so I was a little dubious about her return at first. But once the scripts started coming in from Brian those fears were allayed big-time. Click on the link : http://buffyversecomics.blogspot.com/2009/08/stephen-mooney-interview.html |