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Sam J. Jones - with a mighty hand, a mighty heart

It was on my birthday that I received a personal email from Sam J. Jones, responding to my request to interview him about Richard Amsel's FLASH GORDON poster while at ComicCon Palm Springs later in the month. "Yes of course," he wrote, "looking forward to it, a great artist."



Naturally, I was thrilled. 1980's FLASH GORDON is a fantasy classic, and a fond memory from my childhood. It also has gained considerable fandom and a new appreciation over the years; like BIG TROUBLE IN LITTLE CHINA, audiences are finally recognizing the film's unique sense of fun and humor. FLASH is no longer a guilty pleasure -- it's a really good movie!


I'm happy to say that Mr. Jones is every bit as gracious and generous as his film counterpart. Watching him interact with fans -- including fellow military servicemen, whom he'd greet with a warm "Semper Fi!" -- and take his time posing for photos without any attitude or condescension, makes me wish that more cinematic heroes would follow his example.


On Amsel's poster, Mr. Jones said, "Are you kidding me? Look at that! This is the number one at my table. Out of all the posters to choose from, Richard's is the number one. It's got everything going for it -- it's rich, it's vibrant..." He then laughed, "It has ME!"


Mr. Jones even donated a signed copy of one of his Amsel poster reproductions for us to include in our forthcoming crowdfunding campaign. Three times I had offered to pay for it, and each time he refused to accept my money. He even signed another poster, personalizing it to me -- and yet again, he refused my offer to pay for it.


Yeah, that's a mighty guy all around.


Special thanks to www.heroesforhire.us for helping me contact Mr. Jones for this interview.







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Website designed and maintained by Adam McDaniel. All featured photographs, reproductions, and scans of Richard Amsel's artwork are presented here via Fair Use Laws, for the purposes of educational insight, historical analysis, and creative criticism, and are not intended to infringe on any copyrights; images came from either the public domain, my own personal research and scans, or were expressly provided to me for inclusion on this site. All original content, including writing and commentary, including the article "The Art & Artistry of Richard Amsel: American Illustrator" © 2008, 2020 by Adam McDaniel. All rights reserved, and registered with the Writers Guild of America. The documentary "AMSEL: ILLUSTRATOR OF THE LOST ART", the book "RICHARD AMSEL", and Amsel's work as featured in this website are through an exclusive agreement with the Richard Amsel estate.

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