People Weekly, August 15, 1994 v42 n7 p69(1).
Howling success: an inflatable doll turns out to be a real Scream for Robert Fishbone.
TENSE? ANXIOUS? TREMBLING WITH existential dreador just O.D.-ing on caffeine? Maybe what you need is a good scream. Or better yet, the Scream. You can buy one for around $28. These Screams arent loud; they are tasteful and suitable for home or office. They are the inflatable Scream dolls of Robert Fishbone, 4 1/2-foot high simulacra of Edvard Munchs famous 1893 expressionist painting. (Scream Jr., which sells for $10 and is meant for desktop shrieking, stands just 19 inches tall.)
Fishbone, 43, whose St. Louis-based On the Wall Productions has sold 100,000 of the inflatables in the last three years, mainly through catalogs and museum shops, thinks the dolls are perfect emblems of our angst-ridden times. "A lot of people have a certain level of panic in their lives," he says.
Fishbone and his wife and partner, Sarah Linquist, 42, werent always into Munchie-see, Munchie-do. They are actually serious muralists. In 1991 they created a series of cutout displays based on famous paintingsincluding Munchs. "Everyone said, Thats great, " says the New Jersey-born Fishbone, who uses only his surname professionally.
Soon, he says, "the idea of an inflatable just popped into my head." The initial run of 12,000 dolls was a hitand sales soared when the actual Munch painting was stolen for three months earlier this year. "Weve done somewhere between $1 million and $1 1/2 million gross in a little over 2 1/2 years," says Fishbone, whose other offerings include the Mona Lisa, a Pin the Ear on Van Gogh party game and a Little Happy Guy inflatable, an antidote to the Scream. "Moneywise, we do much better than we could do painting murals."
CAPTION: "I think every therapists office should have one," says Fishbone of his Munchkins.