Posted in: Comics | Tagged: 2000ad, avatar press, Bob Rickard, Brian Eno, Comics, dan dare, dez skinn, entertainment, hercules, IChing, Jim Baker, John Hicks, Kevin O'Neill, Louis Andrade, Mark Pilkington, mgm, mitch jenkins, Pressbutton, Robert Graves, Selene, Steve Dillon, steve moore, steve parkhouse, Strange Attractor, Telguuth, The Fortean Times, The Trigrams of Han, warrior
Alan Moore Celebrates Friend Steve Moore's Achievements And Discusses Planned Posthumous Works

Alan Moore celebrates Steve Moore's impact on many cultures in the following interview:
Hannah Means-Shannon: What's your take on how people have reacted to the passing of Steve Moore and what still needs to be done to secure his legacy? Are there works that might not be done yet, out there yet, or release yet?
Alan Moore: For one thing, it's going to take everybody a long while to actually unpick Steve's cultural importance because it was an importance which spread over so many different cultures. His contribution to The Fortean Times, for instance. Bob Rickard has acknowledged that without Steve's help and encouragement in those early days, who knows whether The Fortean Times would have survived to become the institution that it is at present? With all the things that have grown out of that.

As for his contribution to comics, I think that the current comics landscape would be unrecognizable without Steve Moore. Steve more or less created even the idea of a "comics scene" in this country when he put together the first comic convention in 1969. Within two or three years, Steve was tired of the enterprise. He was tired of comic conventions and he was withdrawing from his fan involvement. I tended to drift away from the fan scene at roughly the same time. When I was later exposed to it, it was very different to the one that Steve had created. But those first two or three years, those first two or three conventions, even though they were attended by only perhaps a few score of people, more likely a few dozen, if you look at the list of attendees, there were all of these names: my own, Jim Bakie, Steve Parkhouse, Kevin O'Neill. All at the first convention in 1969 that I went to.
These were most of the people in attendance. It's like Brian Eno's quote about the Velvet Underground, regarding how they only sold a few thousand copies of their early albums, but all of those people went on to form bands. And that's something of what Steve accomplished simply by being in the most progressive part of British comics in the late '60's when he was 16 and 17 years old. He was able to be massively influential.
And then he, of course, was at the forefront of nearly everything innovative that happened in British comics after that. When 2000AD started up, Steve was there creating the Future Shocks format, and then scripting the revived Dan Dare. I think he would have been happier scripting an un-revived Dan Dare but that wasn't his brief. And of course, Warrior. Steve was the person who put that together for Dez Skinn, who wrote the contracts for it, who assembled a lot of the talent. Without Warrior, I probably wouldn't have been working in American comics, and a lot of things that did happen perhaps wouldn't have happened. So Steve's importance there is monumental. His importance as a human being is going to take a little bit of consideration.
Concerning the time around Steve's death, the funeral was quite wonderful. It was not an entirely tragic time. There was a luminousness about it. That's the best way that I can describe it. And yet there are various loose ends.

But we've given it to the brilliant counter-cultural historian John Hicks, who has gone through it. He's made a couple of small alterations to it where he thinks it has been necessary, but I've read it as well and I think that it's finished. It seems like a wonderful book. It'll probably be coming out from Strange Attractor. And that is probably how Steve would most probably like to be remembered, as a Classical scholar.
William Christensen at Avatar Press has expressed an interest in the Pressbutton work. I think the people at 2000AD are agreeable to collecting his Telguuth strips at the same time that Mark Pilkington at Strange Attractor will be collecting Steve's exquisite Telguuth prose stories. The Pressbutton material, which Steve had just received the rights back to recently, had originally appeared in Warrior. It's a character that Steve originally created for Three-Eyes McGurk and His Death Planet Commandos strip that Steve and I worked on for Dark Star, a West Coast Music magazine. It kind of grew out from there into the series version by Steve Dillon, with various incarnations and spin-offs from it. Steve had just gotten all of the rights back [at the time of his death] and he was looking forward to seeing Press Button back in print in some way. And William Christensen has expressed some interest in that, so we're working on that at the moment as some sort of Commemorative Edition. There's a load of stuff that's going to be going on for a while yet, and there's a 30 Years Dream Record [of Steve's]. Mitch [Jenkins] and I have got a project in mind that might provide a really excellent home for that.
There is a lot of Steve Moore's legacy left to unpack. The Hercules film is not part of it, and that doesn't need to be unpacked. It needs to be buried. It's been an unusual time on all sorts of levels. There have been things that have needed addressing, and continue to need addressing, but I'm probably going to end up with one of the finest and most worrying collections of swords in the country [from Steve Moore].













