Mr. Natural (comics)

Mr. Natural

Mr. Natural
Publication information
Publisher Apex Novelties, Print Mint, San Francisco Comic Book Company, Last Gasp, Kitchen Sink Press
First appearance Yarrowstalks #1 (May 5, 1967)
First comic appearance Zap Comix #1 (Feb. 1968)
Created by Robert Crumb
In-story information
Full name Fred Natural
Species Human?
Place of origin Earth
Partnerships Flakey Foont, Shuman the Human, Devil Girl
Abilities magical powers, cosmic insight

Mr. Natural (Fred Natural) is a comic book character created and drawn by 1960s counterculture and underground comix artist Robert Crumb. Enormously popular during the underground comix fad of the 1960s and 1970s and still enjoying a cult following today, Mr. Natural has been endlessly merchandised as a decorative plastic statue and on bumper stickers, posters, T-shirts, etc. The character first appeared in the premiere issue of Yarrowstalks (the May 5, 1967 issue).

Publication history

After debuting in Yarrowstalks, Mr. Natural made appearances in other underground newspapers such as the East Village Other, Bijou Funnies, and Yellow Dog. He made his first official comix appearance in Zap Comix #1 (Feb. 1968). He was a regular in Zap for the balance of the 1960s until appearing in his own three-issue title, originally co-published by The San Francisco Comic Book Company and Apex Novelties.

Crumb created original Mr. Natural strips for The Village Voice from February 2, 1976, to November 29, 1976, which were first collected in Mr. Natural #3 (Kitchen Sink Press, 1977).

After a ten-year hiatus, Mr. Natural returned in the pages of Crumb's solo series, Hup (Last Gasp), and then after another gap, in Mystic Funnies #1 (Alex Wood, 1997). The character hasn't made a new appearance since 2002.

Mr. Natural's various appearances were collected in The Complete Crumb Comics vol. 4, "Mr. Sixties!" (Fantagraphics, 1989), The Book of Mr. Natural (Fantagraphics, 1995), as well as The Complete Crumb Comics vol. 11, "Mr. Natural Committed to a Mental Institution!" (Fantagraphics, 1995).

Characterization

At first appearance, Mr. Natural is a mystic guru who spouts aphorisms on the evils of the modern world and the salvation to be found in mysticism and natural living. He has renounced the material world and lives off anything he can get in exchange for his nuggets of wisdom. Usually depicted as slightly overweight (although his size varies), he is bald with a long white beard, and wears a gown which makes him resemble the Old Testament God or a prophet.

Crumb's bearded guru is too unapologetic to be called a con man. Despite his renunciation of the material world, he's an unrepentant sybarite. His straight talk, while refreshing, can get him into trouble, as when he was kicked out of heaven for telling God it's "a little corny" in "Mr. Natural Meets God".[1] But he may be the only Crumb creation who is genuinely likable.[2] Mr. Natural's aphorisms, such as "Keep on Truckin'", are seemingly at odds with his image as a sage, and his inventions are at once brilliant and crackpot.[3]

Mr. Natural has strange, magical powers and possesses cosmic insight; but he is also moody, cynical, self-pitying, and suffers from various strange sexual obsessions. He is endlessly being accosted by would-be disciples seeking the truth (among them such long-running Crumb characters as Flakey Foont and Shuman the Human). He typically regards them with amused condescension and a certain grudging affection, although his patience often wears thin and he takes sadistic pleasure in making them feel like idiots. While he is typically very cool and in control, he sometimes ends up in humiliating predicaments like languishing for years in a mental institution.[4]

In recent years he has entered into a tempestuous relationship with Devil Girl, another popular Crumb character.

According to a biography written and illustrated by Crumb, "Fred Natural" had been a jazz musician and then faith healer in the 1920s,[5] which would mean that he was "born" in the early years of the 20th century, and by the time of his first encounters (set in the San Francisco area) in the 1960s, was a 60-year-old man. However, in Crumb's illustration of the 1920s faith healer, Fred Natural looks approximately fifty, which would make him one hundred years old in the earliest Flakey Foont encounters.

In the "biography", "Fred Natural" leaves America and travels for many years in Asia, which is where he picks up his unique combination of wisdom and chicanery.[5] For a time he worked as a taxicab driver in Afghanistan.[6] He returns to the U.S during the Beat era of the 1960s, and is drawn to the San Francisco Bay area by nubile girls and people willing to listen and pay for his improvisational spirituality. He exhorts his disciples to eat only his own line of "Mr. Natural Brand Foods", and to listen to his broadcasts on WZAP Radio.[6]

A theme in Mr. Natural is the inability of generations in the United States to connect, with each generation rejecting the one before it. Mr. Natural is a "grandfather", and not a "father", to the clueless Foont. In one strip, Natural teams with Foont's grandfather — who resembles Snoopy's father in Charles M. Schulz's Peanuts cartoon — but Foont's grandfather, a rugged frontier type, finds Foont so decadent that he attacks him.

Perhaps Mr. Natural's most famous aphorism is, "Mr. Natural sez, Use the right tool for the job" — spoken on seeing Flakey Foont unloading a truck full of bowling balls with a pitchfork. Asked, "What does it all mean?", he responds, "Don't mean sheeit..."

Inspiration

Barry Miles writes that Mr. Natural is a lampoon of Maharishi Mahesh Yogi.[7] In the film Comic Book Confidential, Crumb says that he was inspired to draw the character when he heard then radio DJ David Rubenstein, jokingly calling himself "Mr. Natural".[8]

A conscious model for Mr. Natural would be various louche and disreputable Great Depression survivors who'd gone through the Second World War in various capacities such as war correspondent, and who'd volunteered for service in the Spanish Civil War, only to discover, in the McCarthy era of the 1950s, that their background made them unemployable and who developed various sorts of scams to prey upon the postwar Baby Boomers' search for enlightenment.

Crumb has acknowledged that one inspiration for Mr. Natural was a character called The Little Hitchhiker from a comic strip called The Squirrel Cage by Gene Ahern, which ran from 1936–1953. An homage is sometimes read into this (see external link, below). Mr. Natural also somewhat resembles an E. C. Segar character, Dr. O.G. Wotasnozzle. Mr. Natural's one-piece yellow outfit bears a resemblance to Richard F. Outcault's early comic strip The Yellow Kid. There is also a real "Mr. Natural" who claims he was part of the inspiration for Crumb's comic character, possessing permission to use R. Crumb's image of Mr. Natural to represent himself on his published materials, and has lived in Haight-Ashbury, San Francisco since the 1960s teaching his own music learning system.[9]

In 1973 a pornographic film called Up in Flames was made, featuring Mr. Natural and the Fabulous Furry Freak Brothers. The film was made without the knowledge or permission of Robert Crumb or the Freak Brothers' creator, Gilbert Shelton.

The character appeared, unauthorized, stamped on the blotter paper of a popular form of LSD[10] in the 1970s.

A Martin Rowson cartoon in the July 24, 2008 edition of The Guardian featured the recently arrested Radovan Karadžić in the guise of Mr. Natural.[11]

In the AMC series Breaking Bad, the criminal lawyer Saul Goodman calls Jesse Pinkman "Mr Natural" upon Jesse lighting a joint in Saul's office in season 5, episode 11.

List of appearances (selected)

Solo titles

Other appearances

References

  1. R. Crumb's Head Comix (Viking Press, November 1968).
  2. Burgess, Steve, "R. Crumb", Salon (May 2, 2000)
  3. Varnum, Robin and Gibbons, Christina, The Language of Comics Univ. Press of Mississippi, 2001 ISBN 978-1-57806-414-4 p111
  4. Crumb, R. "Untitled," The Village Voice (Oct. 18, 1976); later republished in The Complete Crumb volume 11: Mr. Natural Committed to a Mental Institution! (Fantagraphics, 1995).
  5. 1 2 Crumb, R. " "The Origins of Mr. Natural," Mr. Natural #1 (San Francisco Comic Book Company, Aug. 1970)
  6. 1 2 Crumb, R. The Book of Mr. Natural, Fantagraphics Books (December 27, 1995) ISBN 978-1-56097-194-8 p.5
  7. Miles, Barry, Paul McCartney: Many Years from Now, Macmillan, 1998 ISBN 978-0-8050-5249-7 p.401
  8. Mann, Ron, director. Comic Book Confidential (Cinecom Pictures, 1988).
  9. Music Theory Decoded, by Mr. Natural & Lynne Vanne. Published by Mr. Natural's Electric Classroom (March 7th, 2001) ISBN 978-1-257-01983-0
  10. "Erowid LSD (Acid) Vaults : LSD Tablet and Blotter Contents, 1968–1974 (Microgram and PharmChem)". erowid.org.
  11. Rowson, Martin (23 July 2008). "The night Karadzic rocked the Madhouse" via The Guardian.
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