Author: P.J. Holcombe


Edition: Model Aviation - 1993/06
Page Numbers: 153, 154
,

Mike Fulmer, AMA's New Museum Curator

By Pierson J. Holcombe

Have you seen any of these movies?

Selected films

  • The Empire Strikes Back
  • Return of the Jedi
  • Raiders of the Lost Ark
  • Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom
  • Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade
  • Dragonslayer
  • Empire of the Sun
  • Always
  • The Rocketeer
  • E.T.
  • Star Trek III: The Search for Spock
  • Cocoon
  • Back to the Future (Parts I and II)
  • The Golden Child
  • Die Hard 2

If you have, then you've seen the handiwork of modeler supreme Mike Fulmer. Mike is the curator for AMA's new museum in Muncie, Indiana, at the Frank V. Ebling Complex.

Mike grew up in Nebraska, where he built models in a basement with his pal Vince Mankowski, who is now AMA's executive director. Both Mike's and Vince's fathers were World War II pilots.

After serving in the Marines, Mike moved to southern California and began a decade-long career as a welder. At the same time he ran a shop where he built street rods, race cars, and motorcycles.

His reintroduction to modeling came in 1979, when a customer asked him to build a scale model of an antique Cord automobile. The customer happened to be a television producer who introduced him to some friends in San Francisco. Those friends worked for Industrial Light and Magic, George Lucas's special effects company. He was hired on the spot and entered the glamorous but exhausting world of movie production.

He has modeled many things: spaceships, flying bicycles, boats, snakes, trees, cars, zeppelins, and, of course, airplanes. Some of the models cost up to a quarter of a million dollars.

His other Hollywood exploits include writing screenplays and performing stunts for Harrison Ford in the Indiana Jones films. After 12 years at ILM, Mike started his own company, Speedwings. He left Hollywood because he wanted to relax and because new computer technology was making traditional model-making less essential in movies. The advent of the Video Toaster, a Commodore computer–based software and hardware package, allows even low-budget productions to have high-quality special effects.

Mike has high ambitions for AMA's museum. "In three to five years, our Muncie site is going to be a showplace. I want to make it a showplace that everybody can enjoy. It's about magic and having fun. That's what this museum should be about. It's about the dream we all have about being kids again.

For me and a lot of guys my age, the circle's closing. This is a great opportunity for me to leave something behind."

Transcribed from original scans by AI. Minor OCR errors may remain.