The Mary Sue Interview: Marisa Acocella Marchetto Talks Ann Tenna

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At Comic-Con last week, The Mary Sue’s Sam Maggs had a chance to chat with New Yorker cartoonist and author of the critically-acclaimed graphic memoir Cancer Vixen, Marisa Acocella Marchetto. Marchetto’s new graphic memoir, Ann Tenna, comes out in hardcover on September 1st.

The Mary Sue: So what can you tell us about Ann Tenna?

Marisa Acocella Marchetto:Ā Honestly this is an idea Iā€™ve had for, no kidding, twenty years.

TMS: No way.

Marchetto:Ā Twenty years. Ā And she was a tween, she was a teen, at one point we were going toĀ do an animated series on the web, but that was a while ago. I kind of always needed to figure the exactĀ right way to do it, to do her justice. She always had the Ann Tenna hair, she wasĀ always a gossip columnist, at one point, twenty years ago when I did the scripts for theĀ web series, I nicknamed her Gossip Girl, isnā€™t that crazy?

TMS: Oh my gosh, no! Alas.

Marchetto: Alas, yeah.Ā After Cancer Vixen came out I started writing Ann Tenna because I knew IĀ just had to do this book. I had to get her out of me and I thought about where IĀ wanted to take her story. Honestly, the whole thing was formed by having a life-threatening diagnosis because it made me think about where Iā€™m going, what kind ofĀ legacy or what kind of life do I want, and what do I want to leave behind? I thoughtĀ about karma, I thought about energy, I thought about where you go afterwards, andĀ of course, I created my own kind of science fashion heaven.

TMS: Right, and sheā€™s in a car accident right? And thatā€™s her kind of transformativeĀ experience?

Marchetto: Sheā€™s in a car accident. I wanted her to actually die and meet her higher selfĀ cause I thought about potential, about my potential and was I living up to it? AndĀ thatā€™s something everyone thinks about, you know? The super you versus who youĀ really are, so thatā€™s the actual content, thatā€™s where the book came from.

TMS: Thatā€™s cool so you said she was originally a teen, and then a pre-teen, and nowĀ sheā€™s sort of in mid-life, but so often we see these mid-life change stories aboutĀ dudes, and they buy a motorcycle and that how they get over it or whatever. This isĀ obviously a sort of transformative life experience for a woman. Did you feel like thatĀ was an important story to tell?

Marchetto: I thought it was a really important story because having that diagnosis was aĀ transformative experience, and I also thought this isnā€™t something people reallyĀ think about, you know? Where are you going in your life, what are you connectedĀ to? Are you going to be connected to your cell phone 24/7 like I am now?Ā Instagramming, tweeting, or do you want to have a conversation one-on-one aboutĀ how you relate to the person you love, how you relate to your friends, all that.

TMS: Yeah, that makes a lot of sense. Sheā€™s a gossip columnist, obviously and sheĀ sort of decides to be a columnist for good. Do you think thereā€™s something inherentlyĀ bad about being the kind of person that reports on those things, or does she kind ofĀ struggle with how to be that kind of reporter?

Marchetto: I think itā€™s about intention, her intentions werenā€™t necessarily benevolent,Ā letā€™s just say that. I mean I know gossip columnists who are amazing people whoĀ only want to put the truth out there. I donā€™t think gossip is bad, actually. I donā€™t thinkĀ gossip columns are bad because when theyā€™re written with the right intention theyĀ can be by good people.

TMS: This is your graphic novel debut, you illustrate often but this is your first?

Marchetto: Actually, this is my third graphic novel. I mean, you now what? Not a lot ofĀ people realize that, but this is my third graphic novel, I wrote my first one twenty yearsĀ ago at a time when nobody even knew what they were, so the landscape has reallyĀ changed.

TMS: So how is writing a graphic novel different for you than cartooning orĀ illustrating or straight writing?

Marchetto: This is so much more rewarding and so much harder.

TMS: I find those things usually go hand in hand.

Marchetto: They do. I love the whole craft of graphic novels, I love writing them, I loveĀ immersing myself in them. Itā€™s like, itā€™s weird. When you do it, sometimes the realĀ world just drifts away, and I canā€™t even have a conversation. I love the immersion, IĀ love the process. Itā€™s cool because when youā€™re a graphic novelist, youā€™re the writer, youā€™re the artist, youā€™re the set decorator, youā€™re the script girl, youā€™re the makeupĀ artist, you know, you do wardrobeā€¦

TMS: Itā€™s your vision.

Marchetto: Itā€™s your vision. And I canā€™t tell you how many times the director in meĀ wanted to fire the script girl because she got the hair wrong.

TMS: Thatā€™s amazing.

Marchetto: Kind of driving me crazy, like ā€œoh my god the script girl needs to be firedĀ then but I need to hire her back because sheā€™s me. Itā€™s me all the time!

TMS: Thatā€™s so funny. Do you have any favorite graphic novels of your own?

Marchetto: I love Epileptic, have you seen that one?

TMS: Yeah.

Marchetto: I love that, itā€™s one of my favorites.

TMS: My last question is, can we expect to be able to see more of Ann?

Marchetto: I hope so, Iā€™m like, obsessed with Ann. I canā€™t let her go, you know, Iā€™ll go toĀ sleep and be like, ā€œAnn is going to do this.ā€

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