From Deseret News archives:
Artwork of '60s icon lives on in his widow's Manti home
Rat Fink fans will gather for 3rd annual reunion this weekend
She didn't even know he was an icon.
"I had seen some of his monster drawings," she said. "I knew they existed. I remember my brothers having some of his trading cards in the '60s."
But now, seven years later and four years after Roth's death, Ilene Roth has turned her home into a veritable museum of a curious subject for Manti Ed's rebellious answer to Mickey Mouse: Rat Fink.
And although the sleepy pioneer town of 3,070 is visited more often by attendees to the town's LDS temple and its annual Mormon Miracle Pageant, this weekend it is the meeting place for enthusiasts of the hot-rodding rodent and its impressive creator during the third annual Rat Fink Reunion.
Ilene says she couldn't be happier.
"This has been the greatest thing in my life," she said, speaking both of her marriage to Ed and her subsequent involvement in preserving his work.
That work began, she says, almost immediately after Ed died suddenly of a heart attack in 2001.
"The morning he passed, he was talking about doing animated videos," she said. "The night before, he was welding in the garage."
It's all present in the house, including pictures of all the models of hot rods he built in California when he was still unknown. It was while building those from scratch, pioneering the use of fiberglass in cars and taking them to shows that Rat Fink was born. At the shows, Ed would popularize his cars by selling T-shirts he had painted with custom-drawn monster rats, complete with large teeth, cool cars and flies buzzing around their heads.
But while his shirts sold fast and his cars met with success, his rebellious icons met with resistance in the early 1960s, says Tim Petro, an enthusiast from Cleveland. Petro says Ed was interested in creating a nonconformist, unashamed character as a counter to Mickey Mouse.
"He wasn't taken very well in California, where he was airbrushing," he says. "People wouldn't let their kids buy his T-shirts."
But as the '60s culture evolved and rebellion became more of a norm, the popularity of Ed's work, both his car models and his characters, exploded. For example, in 1963, Ed licensed two of his model designs to a company that distributed model cars for a royalty of a penny for each model sold. When more than 3 million were sold, Ed pocketed about $30,000.
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