Megawacky Max
- Hello, Craig. Thanks for the interview. There are two important points here: 1) My english won't help some times, so, I'm sorry if you don't understand parts of the text. 2) I haven't seen most of the Hey Arnold! episodes. I mean, get ready for a kind of different interview. Can you work with this?
Craig Bartlett
- Sure, looks like english to me.
Megawacky Max
- Okay, let's begin. I'll start with a wide know request. Tell me about you and your past.
Craig Bartlett
- Born Seattle 10-18-56. Grade school in Seattle, wanted to grow up to be an artist or a secret agent. High school in Anacortes, WA. Developed love for nature and solitude in my teenage years because I lived in the country, miles from friends. Graduated H.S. '74, Museum Art School in Portland, Oregon, foreign study in Siena, Italy, finally graduated Evergreen State College in '81. Somewhere in last year decided to drop fine art and pursue animation. First job at Will Vinton Studios '82-'88, a full filmmaking apprenticeship. Learned stop-motion animation on features, shorts, commercials (Will is the California Raisin guy). Came to Los Angeles to do "Penny" cartoons for "PeeWee's Playhouse" in '87, moved to LA for good in '88. Created Arnold summer '88 in short film "Arnold Escapes from Church." Made 3 Arnold shorts '88-'90 in my living room. Hired at Klasky Csupo to be story editor and director, first season of "Rugrats." At K/C I met the future Arnold writers, and the Nick execs who ended up greenlighting "Hey Arnold!" pilot episode in January '94. Produced 8-minute pilot that eventually became the episode "24 Hours to Live." Original version premiered as the short before "Harriet the Spy," Nick's first movie. Arnold premiered October '96 in Nick's new primetime slot, Mondays and Wednesdays. By then we had a whole season of 20 eps, and after 5 years of continuous production, Nick has ordered a total of 100 eps, a TV movie, and a theatrical feature. I'm currently working on shows 85-100, the TV movie, and the feature.
Megawacky Max
- Did Matt Groening help you in the pilot episode?
Craig Bartlett
- We pitched our story to him, and he gave us good notes. In particular, he suggested that since the kids are promised a fight, that the show should end with a fight. We agreed, and show Iggy and Joey fighting in the end, even though they're ignored by the crowd. He loved Grandma's fly, and suggested that he become a recurring character.
Megawacky Max
- Did you help him in any of his projects?
Craig Bartlett
- I drew Arnold comics for his magazine "Simpsons Illustrated."
Megawacky Max
- What about a crossover between Matt and Craig's mind? What kind of show would we get?
Craig Bartlett
- Matt and I both find crossovers scary, though I've always wanted Homer to stumble into one of our scenes. I love Homer -- he's one of the greatest cartoon characters of all time.
Megawacky Max
- Have you ever visited pages related to Hey Arnold? (what a dull question...)
Craig Bartlett
- Sure, I visit Phoebe's site a lot. I've used Phoebe and Dons' links to check out all the sites.
Megawacky Max
- How do you feel when you see such a fanaticism for something YOU created?
Craig Bartlett
- It's very, very flattering. It proves to me that Arnold and Helga are living, breathing characters in the minds of others. What could be better than that?
Megawacky Max
- Did you ever expect your show would be such interesting for all sort of people? I mean, a lot of people with very different ages.
Craig Bartlett
- We wanted all ages to like it. You put something out there and hope.
Megawacky Max
- Okay, this is a risky question. (Answer risky questions ONLY if you want to) Did you ever read any Fan Fiction from any fan?
Craig Bartlett
- I've read some fanfics, but I have to read so much Arnold writing for a living that it's hard to read stuff I'm not actually making this week.
Megawacky Max
- What do you think, in general, of the fan's fanaticism? It's just fine, or totally exaggerated?
Craig Bartlett
- Fanatics are cool. Helga is a fanatic.
Megawacky Max
- How's a normal day in a cartoonist's life?
Craig Bartlett
- I live two miles from the studio in sunny, bucolic Burbank, so my commute is easy. I work with the fifty or so people in the Arnold crew, and we concentrate on twenty or so stories at any given time, including movies, episodes, and books. It's a dream life, if what you're after is creativity. It can be stressful, because there are a lot of people to make happy. Oddly enough, people manage to be miserable in almost any situation. My mom always told me this, though, so I can handle it.
Megawacky Max
- What's your secret to handle all that? Hot showers? Caffeined coffee cups? Long naps? ... Breakfasts with raspberries?
Craig Bartlett
- Everything you mentioned but the naps. I can't take naps, they conk me out. I rollerblade and shoot baskets and walk in the hills. And I plan vacations, trips, interaction with people outside this insane LA showbiz community.
Megawacky Max
- Another risky question. I have seen most of the fans "hate" Lila. Did you expect this?
Craig Bartlett
- Yeah, 'cause Lila is very cartoonily "perfect," designed to drive more real, ironic, and intelligent people like Helga crazy. I'm impressed by the hatred she inspires. I credit it to the fans' intense, identifying love for Helga.
Megawacky Max
- Okay, there's a movie project, right?
Craig Bartlett
- Yes, I've written draft two. Paramount still has to greenlight the production of the movie. "Any day now."
Megawacky Max
- Will we know Arnold's last name in the movie?
Craig Bartlett
- I don't think so.
Megawacky Max
- Will we see any "lost character" again in the movie, like Vincent (Pigeon Man), Stoop Kid, Sam the Sewer King, Mr.Smith, Torvald or Nocturnal Ned?
Craig Bartlett
- Most of the above will appear in our TV Movie "Arnold Saves the Neighborhood."
Megawacky Max
- I won't ask about Arnold and Helga's relationship in the movie 'cause it's kind of a predictable thing, but... What about Gerald and Phoebe's? Will they say "the words" to each other during the movie?
Craig Bartlett
- I doubt it. Mostly they'll keep it to meaningful eye contact.
Megawacky Max
- After the movie... Will we see new seasons?
Craig Bartlett
- Who knows? I suggest that everyone who reads this, sit down and write a letter to Nickelodeon, demanding them.
Megawacky Max
- (We'll do, Craig) Will Eugene have a "Lucky Day", someday?
Craig Bartlett
- Maybe. Eugene has plenty of bad luck in the movie.
Megawacky Max
- EXTREME risky question. What could happen if Arnold's grandparents have an accident (let's put them in a hospital. I don't want any down, specially for such a good characters like Phil and Gertrude). What would happen with Arnold and the boarding house? Could Arnold manage a whole boarding house and its -nutty- boarders?
Craig Bartlett
- I don't think I could do that to Arnold... things are bad enough for him without parents!
Megawacky Max
- Can you tell us Peapod Kid's real name? Or... Is "Peapod" actually his real name?
Craig Bartlett
- He's simply known as Peapod Kid; it refers to his role in "Downtown as Fruits."
Megawacky Max
- Do you travel?
Craig Bartlett
- When I was in my twenties, I thought travel was the most important thing you can do. I love to travel.
Megawacky Max
- Have you ever been in *ahem* Argentina, or South America? (the fans throw empty soda cans to Max)
Craig Bartlett
- In 1992-93 I went around the world making a world's fair film called "Postcards." One of seven countries we filmed was Brazil. I shot scenes of the Carnaval in Rio. I loved Rio, but did not make it to Argentina.
Megawacky Max
- Will the characters be in fifth grade, someday?
Craig Bartlett
- We thought about it, but decided that, like Charlie Brown, the characters should stay forever fourth graders... like the series chronicles one endless, incredible year. But "The Patakis" is a spin-off I'm working on that picks up when Helga is a teenager.
Megawacky Max
- What could happen if Oskar wins the lottery?
Craig Bartlett
- He'd somehow manage to lose all the money.
Megawacky Max
- What happened with Mai Hyunh? Will we see her again?
Craig Bartlett
- We almost brought her back this season for "Family Man," a Mr. Hyunh show, but changed our minds. Mai is doing fine, has a job, loves her dad.
Megawacky Max
- What do you need to work at Nickelodeon?
Craig Bartlett
- You mean experience? Many people that work here came with an art school background but no actual animation experience. It helps, but is not required. So Nick is a good place for artists who are starting out in television.
Megawacky Max
- Is it hard to think in new ideas for episodes?
Craig Bartlett
- Somehow we always come up with 40 more premises every year. I actually find it easier than ever; the characters have such rich histories now, and there are so many of them. But it's still hard to come up with good "Arnold" eps.
Megawacky Max
- Where do you (or the writers) get ideas from, basically?
Craig Bartlett
- Many of the stories are based on things that actually happened to us as kids, then embellished to be funnier. Steve likes to get ideas from old Andy Griffith episodes. It's hard not to reference some TV show or other. "The Simpsons" has already done just about every possible kid storyline in the universe.
Megawacky Max
- Who are the two most important people in your life, and WHY? (not your family members. I know families ARE important)
Craig Bartlett
- Well, the top ten truly are in my OWN family, and my siblings, parents, relatives. How can I list two people before my wife Lisa, and my kids Matt and Katie? They teach me stuff every single day. But non-family members Jim Lang and Tuck Tucker are very important, both for the same reason: I can't imagine making stuff without Jim's music or Tuck's drawings, and that applies to future projects beyond Arnold.
Megawacky Max
- You are quite open with us, the fans. Do you think the other show's creators are as the open as you among the fans of their own shows?
Craig Bartlett
- I imagine. I mean, they must have websites too...
Megawacky Max
- Thanks a lot, Craig. Interviewing you was one of my life goals. Thanks for creating such a COOL show, thanks for introduce that football head kid to us and thanks for this interview. Thanks for all, Craig. And please... do never change.
Craig Bartlett
- 'kay!