August 6th, 2007

AS: How long have you’ve drawn for publications and when were you first asked to commission an illustration for a book?
GZ: My first commissioned illustration came in 1972, a gouache painting entitled DUNBAR’S MASSACRE, for Burt Garfield Loescher’s THE ST. FRANCIS RAID, volume four of his series, THE HISTORY OF ROGERS’ RANGERS. Since then my work has been published fairly steadily, even while I worked in the downtown rat race for 15 years as an art director. I quit the field in 1987, and devoted myself full-time to historical/western/military illustration and writing.
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August 6th, 2007

AS: How were you introduced into the Alamo?
JE: Born in 1950, I am a classic Baby Boomer. As with most Baby Boomers, I have now reached that very comfortable and convenient stage in life wherein my age, my IQ, and my waist size are all approximately the same. Also, as with most Baby Boomers, Hollywood introduced me to the Alamo.
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August 6th, 2007

AS: What was the most happy “Alamo” experience you’ve ever taken part in? Most exciting?
MB: Both the most exciting and happy experience had to be when Tony Pasqua and I performed inside the Alamo for the Alamo Descendants Ceremony on March 5th 1995. We performed a song we had written with Tony’s brother Willie called, Memories of the Alamo. This is included in the At The Alamo CD. We had our wives there, Nancy Boldt and Linda Pasqua, as well as many Alamo friends. I wasn’t nervous…until it was over. Than we played at The Menger Hotel Bar till about three in the morning. It was a night I will never forget.
A close second is the night we spent with Walter Lord at the Alamo restaurant in New York City. You can’t go no better.
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August 6th, 2007

AS : How has the buzz been about your new book, David
Crockett: Hero of the common man?
BG: It has received favorable mention in Kirkus Review,
Library Journal, Book List, and a very good review in
the Western Writers of America’s Roundup magazine. I
was in the local rare book shop today and they told me
that none other than the candidate for Texas governor,
Kinky Friedman, bought a copy yesterday, so don’t be
surprised if he starts using some of Crockett’s
campaign tactics.
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August 6th, 2007

AS: How long have you been a student of the Alamo?
NH: Like most ‘Baby Boomers,’ I reckon that I can trace my Alamo origins back to Disney’s 1955 DAVY CROCKETT AT THE ALAMO episode. (And I can still remember how my mother sacrificed the rabbit fur lining of her winter coat to make ‘coonskin’ caps for my brother and I.) It wasn’t until 1960, however, upon viewing the trailer for John Wayne’s upcoming film THE ALAMO, that I became a die in the wool Alamo devotee. There was just something about that trailer, with its fleeting glimpse of the Waynamo facade that got me entranced. The day after seeing the film, I picked up my first Alamo book, William Weber Johnson’s THE BIRTH OF TEXAS. I was 7 1/2 years old.
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August 5th, 2007

AS: What obstacles did you face in creating the set? It’s understood that there were some political problems within Disney while The Alamo was in production.
MC: Considering the scale of what I was proposing and attempting (the largest standing set ever built in North America) I encountered few genuine obstacles or problems in creating the Set. The transition of Ron Howard from Director to Producer, and the hiring of John Lee Hancock to Write and Direct, was a surprisingly small hiccup. The Disney Executive to the project was Bruce Hendricks, also a Texan, and University of Texas at Austin alum, and John Lee Hancock’s Texas Credentials were such that I was allowed to maintain the course that had been determined prior to all of these transitions.
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August 5th, 2007
by Victoria Reynolds


On Thursday, June 28, Mark Lemon’s presentation for his upcoming book, The Illustrated Alamo, 1836, was presented in the Georgian Room of the St. Anthony Hotel in San Antonio, Texas. The presentation, organized by the San Antonio Area Foundation, hosted Mr. Lemon’s speech. Shown during the presentation was a slideshow containing images from the upcoming book that details the Alamo’s appearance as it stood in March of 1836. The ground-breaking depictions of the mission-fortress are the most detailed, and arguably authentic, representations of what the Alamo looked like on that fateful day in 1836.
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August 5th, 2007

AS: What process did you go through to land the role of Micajah Autry in The Alamo?
KP: I had been retired from acting for several years when the Alamo auditions came up. At the time my agent called I was writing and producing documentary films for my own independent production company. I got the script and was assigned several roles to look at. The script was good. Maybe even great….
As an actor, I have always been known for my research and preparation. By the time I went down to Austin to meet John Lee and read for M. Autry, I had lost 15 pounds, grown a full-length beard (the casting director had asked that all male actors audition with facial hair), read the script through 5 times, read 4 complete histories of the Alamo, memorized 30 pages of dialogue (I think I read for 4 roles that day), and watched a dozen or so films including 3 documentaries on the Mo, The Wayneamo (twice) and John Lee’s the Rookie.
I read for John Lee. John Lee hired me.
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August 5th, 2007
AS: When were you first approached to work on The Alamo? And are you a fan of the subject?
DO: I was approached almost 2 years before filming by original producer Todd Hallowell to do some uniform research and figure out a realistic but cost effective costume budget. Ron Howard the first director then asked me to design the film. I became really inspired by the subject after reading and immersing myself in the research. The best thing about working in film is that you are always doing something different. Sometimes things you wouldn’t ever think you would be interested in turn out to be really fascinating.
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August 5th, 2007
AS: In the recent Alamo film, we could see you amongst the delegates of the Provisional Government. Most notably reacting to James Bowie walking in on Houston and Grant about to get into it. Tell us about your experience on the set and how long the process took.
FT: I worked on those scenes for the greater part of a week. It was miserably hot in those clothes — somebody in 1836 should have invented Bermuda shorts and t-shirts — but it was an amazing experience. I mentioned earlier the post card I’d like to send to six year-old me — well, imagine how much I’d like to tell that kid that he would someday be in an Alamo movie, even if it was just a cameo role. And of course, I was one of the eight Alamo guys gathered together by Ron Howard in 2002 to talk things over. That was a great, great day for me. Plus, the hotel gave us each a chocolate Alamo. I saved it in the freezer for a few months but eventually ate it.
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