A New Look at Anne Frank
Two comic book veterans—who authored the graphic adaptation of the 9/11 Report—train their talents on the young diarist
- By Jamie Katz
- Smithsonian.com, January 25, 2011, Subscribe
Forty years ago, Ernie Colón was drawing Casper the Friendly Ghost and Sid Jacobson was his editor at Harvey Comics, where they also churned out Richie Rich, Baby Huey and dozens of other titles. They worked together again at Marvel Comics (The Amazing Spider-Man, The Incredible Hulk) after Jacobson was named executive editor in 1987. Over time, they came to enjoy a close friendship and creative rapport while adhering to a fairly simple modus operandi. “I write the script,” Jacobson says, “and Ernie does the drawing.” Well, it’s not that simple, he adds. “There’s always the proviso that if you have a better way of doing it, please don’t follow what I’ve done.”
In recent years, their production has turned from the serials to the serious. Jacobson and Colón’s The 9/11 Report: A Graphic Adaptation, distilled the 9/11 Commission’s 600-page official findings into a more vivid and accessible form; it was a best seller in 2006. While the authors employed such familiar comic book devices as rendering sound effects (“BLAM!” go the 1998 bombings of U.S. embassies in East Africa), the graphic version was anything but kid stuff. It skillfully clarified a complex narrative, earning the enthusiastic blessing of the bipartisan commission’s leaders, Thomas H. Kean and Lee H. Hamilton. The book has found a niche in school curricula, as well. “It is required reading in many high schools and colleges today,” Jacobson says proudly.
When The 9/11 Report came out, there was “astonishment,” he says, at their groundbreaking use of graphic techniques in nonfiction. “But this was nothing new to us,” Jacobson says. “At Harvey Comics, we had a whole department on educational books. We did work for unions, for cities, we did one on military courtesy, for the Army and Navy. Early on, we saw what comics can be utilized for.”
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The authors’ latest work, published by Hill and Wang in September 2010, is similarly ambitious: Anne Frank, a graphic biography commissioned by the Anne Frank House in Amsterdam. For Jacobson, 81, and Colón, 79—a pair of politically aware grandfathers who both came of age in New York City in the 1940s—doing justice to the historical and psychological dimensions of the project summoned all their storytelling craft. As an example, Colón points to the challenge of rendering the much-mythologized figure of Anne as a credible, real-life child and adolescent. “I think the biggest problem for me was hoping that I would get her personality right, and that the expressions that I gave her would be natural to what was known of her or what I found out about her,” he says.
Two-thirds of the book takes place before or after the period Frank chronicled in her celebrated World War II diary, beginning with Anne’s parents’ lives before she was born. Their families had lived in Germany for centuries, and Anne’s father, Otto Frank, earned an Iron Cross as a German Army officer during World War I. Still, he was sufficiently alarmed by Hitler’s anti-Jewish fervor to seek safe haven for his family in the Netherlands soon after the Nazis took power in 1933. The refuge proved illusory. In 1940 the country was invaded, and the book’s middle chapters focus on the Franks’ two-year captivity in the secret annex of 263 Prinsengracht in Amsterdam, the crux of Anne’s Diary of a Young Girl (which she herself titled Het Achterhius, or The House Behind).
Unlike the diary, the graphic biography includes the aftermath: the family’s betrayal by a secret informer, their arrest and deportation, and their ordeals in Auschwitz, where Anne’s mother died, and Bergen-Belsen, where the emaciated Anne and her sister Margot succumbed to typhus in March 1945, just weeks before the camp’s liberation by British soldiers. The sole survivor, Otto, soon returned to Amsterdam, where he was given Anne’s journal by Miep Gies, one of the courageous Dutch citizens who had befriended and sheltered the Franks. Gies had placed the book in her desk for safekeeping, hoping to return it to Anne someday.
The biography concludes with material about the publication of the Diary, its popular adaptations for stage and film, and Otto’s lifelong determination to honor his daughter by committing himself “to fight for reconciliation and human rights throughout the world,” he wrote. He died in 1980, at the age of 91. (Miep Gies lived to 100; she died in January 2010.)
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Comments (6)
The first time I read anne's diary is on a news paper with my older sister. I was 11 back there, no story has ever made me so interested. Starting from that moment, I keep tracking that news paper and never missed a part. After wards I bought the book and finished the story. Words can't explain who Anne really was. If possible, I think Anne is the only one who is gifted the capacity to do that. She was a big hearted girl who could see the bright side of situations even at their very worse. She was a person of dreams and goals and an inspiration for most of us to be who we really are and never let darkness stop us. I wish god never gave chance for someone like hitler to exist; but after all, like Anne, I believe that it has a bright side. Cause' if Anne never died, who would believe that her diary was wrightn by a 15 year old kid. No one will know how smart she really is. I wish Anne spends her time in heaven watchin hitler pay for what he did in hell.
Posted by Selam mekonnen on February 2,2012 | 01:41 PM
Anne Frank was born in Frankfurt, Germany. Twelve days, later, little baby Anne and her mother, Edith, came home from the hospital. Her father, Otto, was a businessman. Edith stayed at home caring for Anne and Anne's older sister, Margot.
Posted by Gabrielle Rettinger on February 18,2011 | 10:29 PM
I hope that future teachers will share* more time with such worthwhile reading of this and similar work, even at the expense of Shakespeare which to many is merely a frustrating trip through antiquated fiction in a "foreign language."
*(I don't use the word "spend" when so much good comes of the time.)
Posted by Ed Allen on February 6,2011 | 02:56 PM
In 1959 I played the role of Peter in a small local theater production of "The Diary of Anne Frank"....40 years later I was thrilled at the opportunity to visit the Anne Frank house in Amsterdam where a docent took a photo of me - in Otto Frank's office (which is not on the regular tour) - holding Shelley Winters' Oscar - for her portrayel as "my mother" in the film version. Ms Winters had placed the Oscar at the house on display. I also had another tourist take a photo of me standing in Peter's room! I have been in many small theater stage productions, but none so emotionally moving as "Anne Frank."
Posted by Jim Weyant on February 3,2011 | 07:36 PM
A small correction: Het Achterhuis means the backside of the house, not a house behind. The frontside was the office, they had rooms at the backside, de achterkant!
God bless
Margriet
Posted by Margriet Nelson on January 27,2011 | 01:31 PM
I believe Suzuki Etsuo and Miyawaki Yoko already did a comic/graphic novel on the life of Anne Frank. It was fist published by Kodansha in 2001. It's a decent read too.
Posted by Philip Schienbein on January 26,2011 | 01:47 PM