From DallasVoice.com
Super retailer
By Daniel A. Kusner - Life+Style Editor
May 1, 2008 - 5:35:53 PM
Zeus Comics owner Richard Neal expects thousands of graphic-novel geeks as CAPE 4 descends upon Oak Lawn
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| QUICK ON THE DRAW: Richard Neal shows off a Wonder Woman illustration, which was made at CAPE 2006’s Friday Live Art Show, a nightclub-like event where DJs spin while comic artists create works that are auctioned off. - DANIEL A. KUSNER/Dallas Voice |
“One customer has a shirtless superhero fetish. So at CAPE, he goes
from artist to artist and gets them to draw original sketches to add to
his collection,” explains Richard Neal, owner of Zeus Toys and Comics.
CAPE is Dallas’ annual comic and pop-culture expo — a three-day
festival that unites writers, creators, artists and comic book readers.
This weekend, Neal kicks off CAPE 4, and the festival keeps getting
bigger, stronger and better.
According to Neal, about 6,000 attended last year’s expo. And this
year, there are some changes. First of all, Zeus relocated from its old
Turtle Creek Village location, where CAPE would set up a huge tent in
the strip mall’s parking lot. The new Lemmon Avenue store is bigger,
and down the street, the tent is going up at Craddock Park for the
Saturday blowout.
The grassy setting should appeal to pet owners, and that’s why this
year’s theme, “CAPE’S Best Friend,” features a white pooch with a
superhero emblem on his chest.
CAPE definitely has a family- and kid-friendly vibe, but Neal always has a special brunch for his gay brothers and sisters.
Queer storylines are nothing new for comics. Not only are Wonder
Woman’s TV adventures famously campy, her roots also are laced with
lesbian overtones, including her favorite exclamation, “Suffering
Sappho!”
“You’ve got to check this out,” Neal says while reaching for DC Comics’
new May 8, 2008 installment “Expatriate Part 1: That Wears the Crown.”
Diana of the Gray Eyes (a.k.a. Wonder Woman) visits Nemesis in the
hospital, and when she leaves his room, autograph seekers surround her.
One fan says, “I just want to say as a gay man that I miss the heels on
your boots.”
That story was co-written by Gail Simone, one of CAPE’s featured guests
who’ll be attending the gay brunch. So will Marc Andreyko, who writes
for Manhunter, which features the gay character Creote, a former KGB
agent who is secretly in love with his master.
When it comes to satisfying his clients, Neal knows what he’s doing.
Instead of a crummy basement where the owner insults his customers —
like Comic Book Guy from “The Simpsons” — Neal is spry, adorable and
super-helpful. In 2006, Zeus won the Will Eisner Spirit of Comics
Retailer Award — the first Texas store to win in the Eisner’s 14-year
history.
The Zeus store bursts with color: The floors are stained concrete, the
lighting has gallery vibe, and on one recent afternoon, the sound
system was playing dulcet tones of Belle & Sebastian. Neal pulls
out a drawing — the design for the CAPE 4 T-shirt, a creepy-cool
hand-drawn image of Batman with a magnificent cape illustrated by James
O’Barr, the creator of “The Crow” who now lives in Dallas.
“The comic book audience has matured. They don’t want some place with
crappy carpet — they want something prettier,” he explains.
| CAPE SCHEDULE |
• Live Art Show: 40 artists will create pieces on easels while a DJ
spins. The works are auctioned off. Proceeds benefit the Ronald
McDonald House of Dallas. Last year’s event raised about $4,000.
Friday, May 2 at 9 p.m. at St. Pete’s Dancing Marlin, 2730 Commerce St. 214-698-1511.
•
CAPE: Comic book and art festival, meet more than 80 writers and
artists. Saturday, May 3. 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. at Craddock Park, 3300
Hawthorne Ave. Free.
Writer workshop panel discussion at 11 a.m: Web Comics panel at 2 p.m.
Costume contest — best superhero, best anime/cartoon character, most original and pets “best sidekick” category — at 4 pm.
• Free Comic Book Day: 7,000 free comics will be given out at Zeus Toys and Comics, 4411 Lemmon Ave.
Saturday, May 3. 11 a.m.- 8 p.m. 214-219-TOYS
• Big Gay Brunch: May 4 from 10:30 a.m. to noon. Frida’s, 4000 Cedar Springs Rd. $25. |
This article appeared in the Dallas Voice print edition May 2, 2008.
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