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Interview with Crystalfury Sakura (of SailorAstera.com) interviewed me on April 14, 2010 about my past involvement in the Sailor Moon fandom. It was a lot of fun! The original interview appears here on Family of Moonlight, a blog about Sailor Moon and its fans. Sakky was knd enough to give me permission to repost the interview on Incyanity. Shai–or as I admired her, Crystalfury–started making fan senshi for the Sailor Moon universe more than a decade ago. In the late 90s, her group of friends were known as the Crystalstars and they were one of the most popular fan senshi teams online! As a new fan senshi creator, I really admired their character development and the awesome designs they had. Shai took some time to talk to me about her relationship with fan character creation, the Sailor Moon fandom in general, and a bit about her writing. You can see some of Shai's work on her site, Incyanity. When and how did you first discover Sailor Moon? My oldest piece of canon Sailor Moon artwork is from 1997, so it would have been around then. I was sixteen and in grade 10. Sailor Moon was one of those "after school cartoons" that aired on YTV and was probably a "this show is on before another show I want to watch, so I might as well watch it too" scenario. Then, one of my friends (who would later become Crystalfyre) randomly asked me one day, "Hey, have you been watching this show...?" Everything went from there.How long after did you start making your own characters? It couldn't have been more than a few months. My oldest surviving piece of Sailor Starfury artwork is from 1998, but I know I did a few pieces before then which are lost. Starfury definitely showed up before school let out in 1997, because I specifically remember having a conversation in the girl's washroom with Crystalfyre about our senshi and what might be good ideas for the rest of our friends if they were interested.Tell us a little about the Crystalstars and how they were formed into a team. How many of your friends were involved in the project and who owned which senshi? Crystalfyre's Sailor Starfyre came first, and my Starfury right after. At the time, Fyre was just starting to get interested in art and mimicking Sailor Moon (as well as a few other animes) was how she taught herself to draw (as did the rest of us). She doodled the character one day, and before I knew it, I'd done one too. The other senshi came very quickly after that.The Crystalstars had really unique and outlandish outfits for their day. What inspired you and your friends to branch out with their designs? Thank you! I don't know that we specifically had any particular thought process in mind, other than thinking the canon senshi outfits were rather bland. Certainly we wanted to stand out and avoid potentially being considered lame copycats!A lot of the fan characters created today have very long and detailed profiles. Did you and your friends go into that much detail with your characters? More or less. The profiles were probably long for their day, though I don't think we saw any point in going into too many specifics like the characters' favorite book, for example. We did want our characters to feel like they had a life before the story started, especially given they were adults.The Crystalstars (and Sailor Orion!) were a huge source of inspiration to me. Did you guys think you were inspiring other fans to create fan senshi? Maybe? lol It's hard to say. Mainly I think we just set out to create something neat that could be enjoyed by us and other people. Certainly we were surprised at how strong a following the project generated and how passionate people were about it. While I can't remember anyone specifically saying they were inspired to create their own senshi after discovering ours, I do know many people told us they were inspired to try drawing for the first time because they wanted to gift us with art. This was both exciting and humbling!Speaking of Sailor Orion, were you friends with or did you know Meghann McCall (the owner of SailorOrion.com)? If so, did you keep in touch? We are acquaintances, yes. In addition to her fanfic I read some of her early original work. At one point when I worked for a publisher I expressed interest in acquiring said work for publication. Unfortunately that offer didn't go anywhere due to some unrelated events and she went on to get herself published with a different house. These days I follow her on LiveJournal and every time she gets a new title out I am jealous. : ) She's a fabulous writer and very deserving of her success.When you left the Crystalstars you mentioned that you were disillusioned with the fandom. Without getting into the specifics, what kind of things lead you to feel disconnected with it? Over time the fandom became very demanding. The Crystalstars' popularity was at an all-time high but some fans would post hateful messages in our guestbook if we didn't update "on time"; our characters, art, and even the actual written story kept getting stolen, etc. By then we were also trying to keep up with art requests and commissions on top of going to university and trying to have real lives. The complete disregard some people had for our offline commitments was appalling.After taking a long hiatus from the fandom you made a partial return in the last few years. Did you expect people would remember your character? How has the response been? It's one of the reasons I came back. : ) Comments like, "Hey, aren't you one of those Crystalstar people?" and "OMG I can't believe I found your site again, I remember when you were a Crystalstar!" come my way from time to time. So, I always knew there were people out there who would be interested in a return. After a while I found myself rediscovering the good things about why I liked Sailor Moon so I thought, why not? For fun. It's a good distraction from the "serious" writing I do, something I can work on when I need a break.What would you tell fan senshi creators who are feeling like their characters aren't getting any attention? Attention is honestly not important. Don't create and put a character online because you want attention; create and put a character online because it makes you happy. Sure, it's still there to be shared with the fandom, but anyone who comes to like or even admire your character is icing on the cake. The validation that comes with attention is sorely tempting but it's not worth getting caught up in a popularity contest. Do it for yourself first and foremost. The only expectations that matter are yours.Even though your involvement in the fan senshi community has waxed and waned, do you think you'd be likely to create any new senshi in the future? This is kind of a trick question. : ) Right now I am restricting myself to writing ficlets, which are each meant to be short and stand-alone pieces instead of chapters of a big epic story. This is how I hope to avoid getting burnt out on fanfic again. Yet, each ficlet will still contribute to a greater story for Starfury. This puts me in a position where I can spend some time crossing over into other people's fics (if they'll have me) or just writing something on my own. "Something on my own" may inevitably require more senshi, but I can't say for certain just now. It depends on where Starfury ends up. : )Tell us a little about the original stories you are working on and where we can learn more about the non-Sailor Moon aspects of your writing. Everything I am writing is on my website, Incyanity. I post this in-progress work (behind login protection) online to help myself stay motivated and focused. Because a great deal of who I am entails being an editor, I often get trapped in the endless cycle of editing my work to death, which in the past has meant I never actually got any of it done. In this sense, a small bit of obligation is all right: knowing there is someone waiting to read the next chapter keeps me pushing forward to just get my stories written. I can indulge the editor in me later. : )You mention on your site that you think writers who intend to be published should dedicate most of their time and energy into their original works. Have you been published? What are your broader writing aspirations? I have been published, though in a round-about way. I worked many years as a freelance editor and contributed to a number of novels which are commercially available. I've also contributed to some other professional projects online. Although these pieces do not specifically carry my name (though I am named in a few Acknowledgments), a piece of me and my writing is nevertheless in those works, which is pretty cool in and of itself.Thanks for taking the time to chat with us! Any last thoughts for the fans? You're welcome! It was my pleasure and I appreciate being considered. |
![]() Sakura admired Starfury and drew Sailor Astera with her in 2000. ![]() Starfury's old form. ![]() Starfury's new form. |
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