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Spillit Prom

Maybe, you didn’t go to your prom; maybe, you did but it was pretty unmemorable … or maybe you did but don’t remember it all, or you wish you could erase that night from your memory altogether. In any case, you probably have a story to tell, and unless you’re fresh out of high school, the opportunity to talk about it probably doesn’t come up too often. Luckily, the folks with Spillit have curated the perfect moment and environment to do so this Thursday with its Spillit Prom.

Spillit’s typical format is a slam, where people can put their names in a bucket to be drawn to tell a true, personal story, usually prompted by a theme for the night, on stage. Audience members then vote from the 10 or so chosen storytellers to select the winner of the night, who will have the chance to return to Spillit’s Grand Slam event in November.

But the Spillit Prom goes beyond a typical slam by completely immersing you in the prom theme: The winner will be crowned as prom royalty before a night of dancing kicks off, complete with the expected decorations, a buffet by Black Sheep Catering, and you in your best prom garb. 

One thing that this prom doesn’t include, though, is that teenage anxiety about being judged by or in comparison to your peers. Instead, the night promises to be one of friendly competition. “One of the things people say is that they don’t want to tell a story because they’re not that funny,” Josh Campbell, Spillit’s creative director, says. “And I always say people want to connect more than they want to laugh, so sometimes there’s the really heartfelt stories that are the best of the evening, where as someone tells their story there’s a silence that comes over the room and everybody is in their feels a little bit. … You’ll laugh; you’ll cry.”

If the idea of standing on stage and telling a personal story to an audience gives you the heebie-jeebies, don’t worry, it’s not compulsory. If, however, you gain a bit of courage after a complimentary drink and perhaps another purchased from the bar, no one’s stopping you from dropping your name in the bucket. Plus, audience members are encouraged to write answers to an audience participation question that Campbell will announce at the start of the night, and Campbell will read out the responses in between stories, which last about seven minutes each.

Through this event and others by Spillit, Campbell says, “What we’re trying to do is change what people think of a storytelling event. [When it comes to storytelling] a lot of people think of rocking chairs or campfires or the children’s section of a library for storytime.” Storytelling, to Campbell and Spillit, is about connection and gaining new perspectives and inspiration. With that, Campbell hopes that Spillit can offer more specially themed events, like this one, that go beyond a slam. 

For more information on Spillit Memphis, visit spillitmemphis.org. Purchase tickets here

Spillit Prom, 409 S. Main St., Thursday, April 21st, 7-10 p.m., $35.

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Book Features Books

Matt Bowers’ Memphis: Superheroes in the Bluff City

Matt Bowers

Bluff City-based illustrator Matt Bowers loves Memphis. It’s why he set his new superhero comic book here. “I love this city,” Bowers says. “I want to tell stories that I would want to read, and set them in this city.”

Bowers, a freelance comic illustrator and letterer, has written, illustrated, and lettered a comic book ode to the little city on the big river, and he’s releasing the first issue of the ongoing series — which he calls simply Memphis — with a book-signing at 901 Comics, Saturday, October 26th, at 10 a.m.

Matt Bowers

Of the book, Bowers says, “It’s basically my take on ‘What would it be like if there were superheroes in this city?’” And, true to the funky nature of the city, the superheroes it breeds in Bowers’ books aren’t the run-of-the-mill variety. Memphis intertwines three storylines following a trio of vastly different characters. “They’re all in this area, but they don’t necessarily know each other,” Bowers explains.

There’s China Monroe, a bounty hunter and private investigator; Pigeon, a winged homeless woman with a desire to help people who, like her, have been neglected by society at large; and the Power Angels, a corporate concern culled from contestants on the popular Battle Quiz television program and bankrolled by the mysterious, wealthy Mr. Jones. “They can’t stand the name,” Bowers says of the Power Angels. “They think it’s sexist, but they want to do good. They want to be superheroes.”

Bowers has been working on Memphis for some time. He has released some issues digitally, but he’s given the issues some extra attention for the original print run on the Bad Dog Comics label. “I re-lettered it. It’s kind of like a remastered version,” Bowers explains. And though Bowers writes, illustrates, and letters the comics himself, he happily admits he has had some valuable assistance from a source close to his heart — his wife, Kristin Heath.

Matt Bowers

“When I finish each issue, I have my wife read it. And then she gives me notes, and she helps me with the dialogue,” Bowers says. “We went to middle school together in Bartlett,” Bowers says. “And reconnected like 30 years later. Now we’ve been together 10 years.”

“She got diagnosed with cancer, and we’ve just been focused on getting her through that, getting her treated and out the other side,” Bowers says. Happily, Kristin is now cancer-free, which, it turns out, helped give Bowers the push he needed to publish in print. With more time on his hands, Bowers says he was primed for 901 Comics co-owner and Bad Dog Comics owner Shannon Merritt’s suggestion that Memphis was perfect for print. “Shannon started publishing,” Bowers says. “One day, I was walking around the shop, and he said, ‘You know, you ought to let me publish your book,’ and I was like, ‘Let’s do it!’”

Matt Bowers

“It’s just really good work,” Merritt says. “The art’s really, really good. It’s on par with anything else on the shelves.” Merritt adds, laughing, that it would be a missed opportunity for the comics company with “901” in its name not to jump at the chance to publish a book called Memphis.

“Memphis is in each story,” Bowers adds. “That’s the one thing that’s always constant.” The illustrator has taken pains to be sure that the book pays homage to its namesake, as he has included familiar landmarks in many of the backgrounds.

“In the new issue I’m working on, China takes her friends to Spillit,” Bowers says. “Kristin and I have gone a bunch of times. We even took my mom, and she loved it.” Bowers has even been working with Leah Keys and the Spillit staff to incorporate regulars into the stories.

Also fitting for Memphis is the role music has played in the comic. “Music is a huge influence,” Bowers says. “Each issue starts with a quote from a song. … A bass line, a beat, or a lyric will just trigger something in my head.” The styles the characters wear are influenced by music and pop culture as well, with many of the characters looking like fans of punk and new wave. Though that could easily be a nod to Memphis’ history with alternative music, Bowers says its as much a reference to another of his loves, the indie comic series Love and Rockets.

Bowers has also lettered comics for Scout Comics and Short Fuse Media. “That was one thing I was still able to do while Kristin was going through chemo,” Bowers says. “It’s creative, but it’s not as focused as this.” Bowers motions to a just-opened box of the first issue of Memphis.

Of Memphis, one more thing must be said: The art is stunning. Bowers’ style will surely appeal to fans of alternative comics of the ’80s and ’90s. The marriage of his indie style and more mainstream, superhero-based content creates an interesting contrast. And Bowers shows no signs of slowing down. Issue No. 1 is on stands now, with the second issue slated for a December release. And after that? “I’ve got the first 50 issues plotted,” Bowers says with a laugh.

And that unmitigated ambition? Yeah, that’s pretty “Memphis,” too.

Matt Bowers signs copies of his new, ongoing comic, Memphis, at 901 Comics, Saturday, October 26th, 10 a.m.