Ghetto Klown: A Graphic Novel


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Description

This Eisner Award nominee, a graphic novel adaptation of the award-winning Broadway play Ghetto Klown, is a "hilarious Hollywood memoir" (Lin-Manuel Miranda, from his introduction) and "autobiographical dynamite" (Pulitzer Prize-winning author Junot D?az).

Tony Award winner John Leguizamo lays bare his life story in this graphic novel illustrated by artists Christa Cassano and Shamus Beyale.

He shares memories of his early years as an actor on stage, on television, and in major motion pictures opposite some of Hollywood's biggest stars--including Al Pacino, Patrick Swayze, and Steven Seagal--and working for directors Baz Luhrmann and Brian De Palma.

Leguizamo also opens up about his loves and marriages, while addressing self-doubt and melancholy in a way that enlightens and entertains.

"[John] is a pioneer in theater and comedy, not just for Latin people, but as much as any comic or playwright I've ever seen or read. No one makes me laugh louder than this man. We are better because of him." --Sof?a Vergara

"The graphic novel of Ghetto Klown captures the infectious spirit of John Leguizamo's live performances with the same surprising humor and cultural insight. These pages make John seem like the coolest super hero in New York." --Jesse Eisenberg

Author: John Leguizamo
Publisher: Abrams Comicarts
Published: 11/19/2024
Pages: 208
Binding Type: Paperback
Weight: 1.20lbs
Size: 8.90h x 6.00w x 0.80d
ISBN13: 9781419715198
ISBN10: 1419715194
BISAC Categories:
- Biography & Autobiography | Entertainment & Performing Arts
- Comics & Graphic Novels | Nonfiction | Biography & Memoir
- Comics & Graphic Novels | Hispanic & Latino

About the Author
John Leguizamo's 40-year career in show business includes turns in iconic movies such as Carlito's Way, Romeo + Juliet, Moulin Rouge!, Chef, and Disney's Encanto, as well as six award-winning one-man Broadway shows. As writer and performer, Leguizamo created the Off-Broadway sensation Mambo Mouth, (Obie, Outer Critics Circle, Vanguardia Awards), Spic-O-Rama (Dramatists' Guild Hull-Warriner Award for Best American Play, Lucille Lortel Outstanding Achievement Award for Best Broadway Performance, Drama Desk Award for Best Solo Performance), and a third solo show, Freak, which completed a successful run on Broadway in 1998. A special presentation of Freak, directed by Spike Lee, aired on HBO, winning an Emmy Award for Outstanding Performance in a Variety or Music Program. In Fall 2001, Leguizamo returned to Broadway with Sexaholix . . . A Love Story (Outer Critics Circle Award nomination for Outstanding Solo Performance and Tony Award nomination for Best Special Theatrical Performance). Sexaholix also aired as an HBO Special in Spring 2002 and toured widely. In 2018, he received a special Tony Award for Lifetime Achievement. He lives in New York City. Christa Cassano is a visual artist and storyteller. She was nominated for an Eisner Award for co-adapting Ghetto Klown into a graphic novel, contributed to the RESIST! newsletter distributed at the Women's March on Washington 2017, and the comix anthologies A.P.B.--Artists against Police Brutality and Schmuck. She was artist in residence at Yaddo and the Atlantic Center for the Arts, a two-time Lloyd Sherwood Grant recipient, a winner of the EspoArte2000 Award for Excellence in Contemporary Art, among others, and is a former member of Hang Dai Studios in Brooklyn. She illustrated a visual life of Native American artist T.C. Cannon for the Museum of Modern Art in 2021, and appears in a Netflix documentary on the Fairbanks Four. Shamus Beyale grew up in the Navajo Nation in New Mexico, where he fell in love with reading, movies, video games, comic books, and drawing. After graduating from high school and receiving a Gates Millennium Scholarship, he attended the School of Visual Arts in Manhattan to study cartooning and graduated with a BFA. He has helped out on art direction for the DC Universe Online video game, published works from Zenescope Entertainment, and has storyboarded numerous TV commercials. He lives in Brooklyn with his wife. Drew Friedman is an award-winning cartoonist and illustrator whose work has appeared in publications such as RAW, Heavy Metal, National Lampoon, MAD, The New Yorker, Rolling Stone, the New York Times, the Wall Street Journal, and others. Since the beginning of his career in the 1980s, his work has both satirized and paid homage to celebrities and prominent pop-culture icons. As a portrait artist, Friedman prefers to draw subjects who interest him, from controversial political figures to famous Jewish comedians to legendary comic book creators. Friedman's incredibly detailed, sometimes gruesome, always deliberate pen-and-ink style has been praised by the likes of Kurt Vonnegut and R. Crumb. In 2000, Friedman received awards from the National Cartoonist Society for Newspaper Illustration and Magazine Illustration, and in 2014 he received the Inkpot Award at San Diego Comic-Con. Lin-Manuel Miranda is an award-winning composer, lyricist, singer, actor, producer, and playwright. He is the creator and star of the Broadway musicals In the Heights, which won four Tony Awards, and Hamilton, which won the Pulitzer Prize and 11 Tony Awards, and Disney's Encanto. Miranda's accolades include three Grammy Awards, an Emmy Award, a MacArthur Fellowship, and a Kennedy Center Honor. He lives in New York City.