Erik Figi left his hometown of Baraboo to pursue his dream of screen writing in the cutthroat world of Hollywood.
The UW-Madison graduate, who has a more than 20-year career in the military, did some military technical advising and other background work in the film industry. But after 11 years and his writing dream squelched, Figi returned to Wisconsin in 2016 with his wife to be closer to family and work in public relations with the Wisconsin Air National Guard’s 115th Fighter Wing at Truax Field.
He had no idea that when he began looking for a house in Madison that his writing career would get a major boost and propel him into the fantastical world of one of the state’s most legendary artists.
Figi’s Realtor was Tya Every Kottler, the daughter of Tom Every, who is better known as Dr. Evermor.
And when Kottler realized that she was trying to find a house for an aspiring writer, the creative wheels she inherited from her father began to turn. Kottler has always thought her father’s metal art would make a good movie, television show or video game. So when Figi and his wife showed up at Preferred Title for the closing of their Far West Side home, Kottler slid across the table an envelope containing a drawing of the Forevertron, the 300-ton centerpiece of Evermor’s art park along Highway 12 south of Baraboo.
Nearly three years later, Figi is well settled into his house and immersed in a plan to bring Dr. Evermor’s sculptures to life in the form of a serialized television show.
“Talk about twists of fate,” Figi said. “You can’t get anymore fated than that.”
Every, who turned 80 in September and lives in a Sauk City nursing home, began collecting old newspapers to turn in to collection centers for cash when he was a child. His love of salvage grew, and for years he had his own salvage company. In the 1970s — before he took on the Evermor name — Every helped Alex Jordan collect and build the House on the Rock near Spring Green.
But in the early 1980s, Every had a falling-out with Jordan and a short time later began working on the Forevertron. It towers 50 feet high, is 120 feet wide, was built over three years and it includes an old compressor from a lumber company, a huge faux telescope and a former decontamination chamber from NASA. That project led to hundreds of sculptures and the creation of the park located across the highway from the former Badger Army Ammunition Plant.