LURKIN’ PROGRESS
We’re hard at work to bring each issue to your screen and are still putting this one together!
Enjoy!
ALL ABOUT
BORIS KARLOFF HIS LIFE IN PICTURES COMMENTS ON HIS DEATH by CHRIS PETER LORRE
BORIS KARLOFF
: Born November 23, 1887. Died February 2, 1969. In between became a living legend and household name. Made 1 50 films and millions of fans. This was his final, favorite portrait picture, so inscribed by him to the man who took it, our staff photographer, Walter J. Daugherty.
THE KING IS GONE
Karloff Called to
Death’s Domain
This has been a rare, strange time for me. All day, the first day, the phone rang: an FM fan called me all the way from Wisconsin; I talked to Robert Bloch, George Pal, Ray Bradbury; cabled Christopher Lee. In the ensuing days the deluge of mail came, till tears trickled from my mailbox.
There is something I can’t explain to myself. When Lon Chaney died in 1930, I was 14 years old and had seen all of his pictures since I was 7: HUNCHBACK, PHANTOM, LONDON, MONSTER, UNHOLY, etc. He was my boyhood favorite yet for some weird reason I have
no memory of his death, of having been shocked to read about it in the papers or hear about it over the radio. (Of course we had no TV yet).
But with Boris Karloff—! The loss is heartfelt and acute and multiplied manifold times by my sense of participation with you all in a common heartache. There was no filmonster magazine when Chaney died, something his fans and friends could turn to for a memorial. We are blessed that FM exists so that we can turn this entire issue over to a tribute to Boris Karloff.
And this is not the end of Boris Karloff in our pages: there will be more—much more—about him in our next issue. And beyond.
He gave us 50 years of his life and 155 pictures. We can no longer say, “0 King, live forever.” Instead, will you join me in your heart and beam this thought into the great beyond: 0 King, love—forever!
A TOUCHING TRIBUTE
A lonely, cold and whistling day. That clothes the wind-swept world in gray. This a day for the children of Poe And for those who dream of long ago. On this day has died a king
Who wore no crown or royal ring, who ruled no kingdom, had no command
Except the power of a gentle hand. No matter how frightful his disguise, A love for children shone thru his and in return they called him king
“King of Monsters”—but no sting Did that title strange contain. Only honor for his reign.
The reign is over; the king is gone;
But from the past his works live on: Masterpieces do not die
In them he’ll ever be nearby. And in the night, above the towns, A full moon shines on English downs. Mary Ellen Rabogliatti
Thank you, Maiy Ellen. We think this will touch a common chord in all our readers.
THE IMMORTAL FRANKENSTEIN
Mr. Karloff has not died alone for a part of every fan who loved him dearly, as I did, died with him. A part of him will go on living forever in every fan. and in each person who will ever see FRANKENSTEIN on the late show.
SHERI McADAMS, Riverside, Calif
DETAILED DISCUSSION OF
“THE DEATH”
I have some real bad news for you: BORIS KARLOFF died Sunday, Feb. 2, in a hospital near London, England. I am really shocked to hear about Mr. Karloff’s death. Another era has ended. Karloff was another one of Hollywood’s most beloved, respected actors. His death marks the end of a very fine career in the entertainment world. He was 81 years of age when he passed away. Boris Karloff has now passed on from life, he has now joined LON CHANEY SR., BELA LUGOSI, PETER LORRE, SIR CEDRIC HARDWICKE, CHAS. LAUGH-TON, CLAUDE RAINS, BASIL RATH- BONE and many others who have
(whether performer or a non-performer) contributed during their lifetime to the fantasy world.
BARTON MacLANE, a character ac-tor, died Jan. 1, 1969, at the age of 66 years. He played in 2 horror films, THE CRY OF THE WEREWOLF and THE MUMMY’S GHOST. I am really heartbroken to hear about BORIS KARLOFF’S death. Of all the mon-stars, I think he was the best in his entire career as a fine actor. He was a decent, sincere, considerate, kind,
sympathetic, gentle man who had a love for his profession. I certainly hope you give this gentleman a real good obituary, cause he deserves one.
Please number all of the films BORIS KARLOFF starred and appeared in, from the first film to his last film, and put down the film studios and the correct years they were all made.
(We’ve done our best but are aware of one tiny mistake so far that can be corrected right within this issue. In the 1940 film BLACK FRIDAY his name was not Dr. Soval but Dr. Sovac. We prob- ably don’t have to ASK readers to point out any further errors to us but we will anyway; and most especially we would appreciate any additional information
on possibly overlooked Karloffilms. Even as we wrote the foregoing words we dis-covered one more omission in our Checklist: THE DAY-DREAMER, Embassy Pictures, 1968, in which he was the voice that menaced Thumbelina. What can anyone tell us about a purported Karloffilm, THE MYSTERY OF WENT- WORTH CASTLE? British title of an American film?
What a nuisance! —overnight the let-ter we were copying has somehow got misplaced just when we meant to give its author’s name & city. So late in put- ting this issue together now, don’t have time to stop and search for it. Sorry about that! Maybe it’ll turn up before
the Fang Mail dept, is finished, in which case we’ll be sure to tell you his name.)
HIS HEART’S IN THE RIGHT PLACE
I was greatly shocked to learn this morning at 7 of Boris Karloff’s death. I would like to ask of you a favor. Please forward this card of sympathy to Mrs. Karloff immediately. (Gladly.)
PAUL HASSE
Dallas, Tex.
Famous monsters
OF FILMLAND INCORPORATING MONSTER WORLD
JAMES WARREN founder & publisher
FORREST J ACKERMAN editor-in-chief
BRILL & WALDSTEIN art direction
RICHARD CONWAY managing editor
WALTER DAUGHERTY special photography
OUR COVER:
Gogostein! The Great Popular Favorite! His Interpretation of the Star of the #1 Karloffilm
4 FANG MAIL
Completely Defanged This Time. Entirely Devoted to YOUR Devotion to Our Departed Hero.
7 LAST RESPECTS
Lon Chaney, Peter Lorre’s Widow, Fritz Lang and George Pal Speak of Boris Karloff.
8 KARLOFF IN THE MAGIC CASTLE
All About One of His Last Big Public Appearances.
22 THIS WAS HIS LIFE
The Night that National Recognition Deservedly Came to Oui King.
23 LAST RESPECTS
Christopher Lee and Robert Bloch Speak of Boris Karloff.
24 THE KING & I
The Editor met Mr. Karloff Ten Times. Here He Shares with You. Memories of One of the Most Memorable of Those Prized Occasions.
31 LAST RESPECTS
Vincent Price, William F. Nolan and The Dracula Society Presi-dent Speaks of Boris Karloff.
32 KARLOFFILMS CHECK LIST
A Scorecard we’ve Compiled on King Karloff’s Motion Picture Appearances
34 FRANKENSTEIN!
Feature Filmbook (Part I). You’ll Say It’s Too Good to be True! Plenty of Words, Plenty of Pictures—All Thrilling & Chilling. When Your Hair has Turned to Silver, This Filmbook will be Among Your Golden Memories!
53 LAST RESPECTS
John Carradine and Elsa Lanchester Speak of Boris Karloff
54 THE GRAVEYARD EXAMINER
We’ve Dug Up an Old Favorite Again. By Fan Demand: YOUR Department on Clubs, Penpals, Fanzines, Amateur Movies, Swaps, Etc.
59 MYSTERY PHOTO
Santa Claus Comes Early This Year.
60 YOU ASKED FOR HIM
Two Pages of Nothing But Pictures of the King. A Dozen Great Fotos of Mr. Greatest-
Famous Monsters of the filmland July 1969 # 56 published monthly by Warren Publishing co price 50c copy subscription price 1 year, $3.0 in the US. Elsewhere $4.00 editorial office at 22 east 42nd street, new York, NY second class mail privileges authorized at New York, NY and at additional mailing offices contributions are invited provided return postage is enclosed, however no responsibility can be accepted for un-solicited material entire contents copyrighted 1969 by warren publishing Co nothing may be reprinted in USA subscriber change of address give were notice send an address imprint from recent issue or state exactly how label is addressed send old address as well as new.
YOU CAN DEPEND ON “PHOTON’’
PHOTON is an amateur magazine a “filmonster fanzine”—that for a num-ber of years has been “devoted to the serious study of science fiction, horror & fantasy motion pictures.” Its editor writes the following.)
It is a time of great sadness for mil-lions of fans & non-fans alike. The King is dead. I have been working hard on my new issue, trying to get it out by early March. With the passing of Karloff, I feel that it would not be complete without a tribute to Him from you, the editor of FM. Would you, perhaps, write a small tribute to Karloff for PHOTON. (Sorry, absolutely not—only a LARGE tribute to one so worthy.)
Boris Karloff shall not die!
MARK FRANK
801 Ave. C
Brooklyn, N.Y. 11218
We give you Mark’s complete address so you can do yourself a favor and get his Karloff Memorial issue of PHOTON. Just send 60c for your postpaid copy, an issue we’re sure you’ll treasure always.
WORDS OF WISDOM
I write this letter a little sadly but not with a tragic sadness; I feel we should all grok Mr. Karloff (feel loving appreciation for him) as a great man who lived happily and died with much accomplished. Few people could ask for more.
GREG BEAR
San Diego, Calif.
FM has always been like a part of my life. I have been interested in motion pictures ever since I was a child and then a purchase of FAMOUS MONSTERS made horror my main “diet”. My only wish is that Hollywood wakes up soon to the fact that the reason horror films aren’t at their millennium is because of such overused material. There is so much yet to be filmed. I get sick of looking at new horror films, always hoping for something fresh. So all I have is my own films and the late movies on TV.
I hope FM never has to stop publications, for any reason. As LIFE magazine is to news & events. FAMOUS MON-STERS is to horror movies.
RICHARD HADDARD
Huntington, N.Y.
Thank you. There’s life in the 56-issue-old “boy” yet. We hope even those who usually have some adverse criticism to express about FM will have some appreciation of this issue.
And the next! —for that matter, for with the conclusion of the Film book of FRANK ENSTEIN and further features about Karloff, the Memorial will really be in two parts.
A FAMOUS FIRST
I’m proud to announce that I was the first person to check “An Illustrated History of the Horror Film” out of the Richmond Public Library! And, alto I didn’t agree with the author’s opinion of NOSFERATU (the first movie version of DRACULA), I found it an interesting,
well-written, enjoyable book.
CONRAD WATSON
Richmond, Calif.
“HE LIVED WELL & DIED LOVED”
Mr. Karloff isn’t with us anymore and that’s a loss it will be hard to faceup to and realize for a while. But in a way he’s still here. My initial reaction on hearing the sad
news was to scribble a few lines hastily, to put my thoughts down:
He lived well & died loved; and in that sense he will never die. A more full life would be rare, a greater dignity& charm even rarer. As he has entertained generations, so will he entertain generations more. It may be said that Boris Karloff, the man, is dead—but Boris Karloff, the artist, the image, the loved & loving soul—he is immortal.
“The Master will never die” and in its truest sense, that still applies. Some tribute should be made to the Monster Man who loved children but tributes in his case aren’t essential. He
was his own tribute and his own me-moriam.
Nevertheless . . .
G. REGINALD URSO
La Jolla, Calif.
“RIGHT NOW, SOMEWHERE
IN HEAVEN” . . .
We weren’t around in 1930 when Chaney Sr. passed away but it couldn’t have been a sadder day than when the world awoke to the news that King Karlof had died. Our phone began ring-ing at 8:30 in the a.m. when a friend phoned from Brooklyn to tell us the news. We had just been talking to an English friend of ours currently living here about Mr. Karloff. The fellow had an uneasy feeling that Boris would soon be passing from our midsts and he wanted to write him as soon as possible before it was too late.
One of the proudest moments of our collecting career came 2 years ago when
in answer to a mamoth letter Mr. Karloff was kind enough to personally auto-graph some of our stills. They mean a lot to us now. What we’re happy about is the obvious fact that he did lead such a full, rewarding life right up to the end. It wasn’t a case like Lugosi who died a tragic figure, penniless, ravaged and for-gotten. The same applied to Sir Cedric.
But with King Boris it was as he always wished that it would be. He received front page stories across the country, including the New York Times—the ulti-mate respect. (Sadly, tho, the Times chose to run a foto of Glenn Strange! in one of the few mistakes in their sterling history.) Cronkite, David Brinkley among others had things to say about him. Brinkley recounted a story told to him by a friend; that when Karloff finally entered the pearly gates they might not recognize him if he weren’t garbed as Shelley’s Frankenstein creation. The coverage & reverence paid him were be-fitting his deservedly legendary status in this world. Right now, somewhere in heaven, Boris is renewing acquaintances with Bela, Lionel, Basil, Edward Van Sloan and all of the other friends who passed on earlier.
Our great concern now is that Mrs.Karloff won’t be pestered in future years by leeches who want stupid things like the pillow he slept on or the Frank-enstein head bolts. We can’t think of anything more cruel or thoughtless than such a practice. She deserves her privacy and a much-needed rest.
STEVE & ERWIN VERTLIEB
Philadelphia, Pa.
We are proud to number such con-siderate fans among our constant Readers
KARLOFF MYSTERY (SOLVED)
I recently came across a fact concern-ing Karloff’s career that I have never seen in your magazines and I wondered if you knew about it. The fact is that Karloff appeared in the 1939 Universal serial THE PHANTOM CREEPS which starred Bela Lugosi. I saw a feature version of the serial just 2 days before Karloff’s death. He is not given billing and appears as a double for Lugosi in a scene where Lugosi is supposed to be lowered into a volcano to get a meteor-ite. Karloff is wearing a helmet and only his eyes are visible but those eyes are
Karloff’s!
CONTRIBUTIONS submitted for publication should include Name S Address on each Letter & Drawing. The editor would LIKE to hear from YOU end to see a FOTO of each writer(please PRINT your name on back of picture).Write to:
Fang Mail Dept.
FAMOUS MONSTERS
22 East 42nd St.
New Yock, N.Y. 10017
LON CHANEY
Says of BORIS KARLOFF
They wanted me to go on television and talk about him but I had to turn them down because, to be honest with you, I didn’t know him that well. And you all know me—I’m not the gushy type. Just let me say that it was a pleasure to work with him—way hack in ’45 when we made HOUSE OF FRANKEN- STEIN together, and in ’52 in THE BLACK CASTLE and some years later when we did that Route 66stunt when I played my Dad’s role of the Hunchbackand Karloff was his own best creation, the Franken-stein monster. I was glad to get the chance to carry on his role in GHOST OF FRANKENSTEIN, and like everybody else in show business, I guess we knew his death was to he expected, all the same it’s sure hard to think of an actor like him gone after all the years he was active on the screen. He and I both got an award from the Dracula Society, and to all its members and the readers of this magazine, who I know will miss him most of all, let me say I’m sure it was a blessing to have so many people Care about him at his age.
Rest in Peace, Boris Karloff.
LORRE & KARLOFF in YOU’LL FIND OUT, RKO 1 940.
GEORGE PAL
His death really hit me hard even though I had never met him. He was the kind of person you in-stinctively wanted to meet. I wish I could have used him in one of my films. God bless him. And God bless you, George. The best use to which you could put the Time Machine that H. G. Wells loaned you, I feel at this time, would be to go back40 years and bring us a young Boris Karloff to make more pictures for us till 2009, when it would be time for another rescue. He was the king we all really wanted to live forever . . . FJA
PETER LORRE’S!
WIDOW
Celia Lovsky, told us the following over the phone:
“He teas a wonderful man.
“I did the last Playhouse 90 with him, the hour and a half long television show written by Rod Serling called ‘In the Presence of Mine Enemy’.
“Peter knew him, of course. They did ‘You’ll Find Out’ and ‘The Boogey Man Will Get You’ together, and toward the end of Peter’s life, those two comedies that they enjoyed doing so much: ‘The Raven’ and ‘The Comedy of Terrors’.
“You can’t imagine what a fine gentleman he was. Peter liked him immensely.”
Celia Lovsky
(Miss Lovsky played the beautiful elf-eared dictatrix of Spock’s planet in the Star Trek episode known as “Amok Time”; Lon Chaney Sr.’s mother in THEMAN OF A THOUSAND FACES; had a cameo role in Geo. Pal’s most recent science fiction film, THEPOWER; and once played Alraune Mandragore, the soulless female Frankenstein, on the stage in Ger-many.)
FRITZ “M”LANG
I regret I didn’t meet him ’til the last year of his life. It was at dinner at Robert Bloch’s. Forry Acker-man was there. He can tell you I liked Karloff immensely.
KARLOFF
In the MAGIC Castle an evening with Frankenstein and his friends
Horrorwood, Karloffornia
King Boris the Benign of Great Britain last April flew 6000 miles in a magic jetodactyl,
in the body of a huge mechanical thunderbird with bones of steel and wings of fire. He came to participate in a reception in his honor given by loyal subjects of his far distant exotic king-dom of Hahliwud.
In a super secret appearance known before-hand only to a select few, the King (affectionately referred to by his civilian title of “Mr.Frankenstein”) was given what was later re-ported around the world as “his first major press party in 40 years. “The party took place on the premises of the world-famous Magic Castle, up the hill behind the equally fabulous Gruman’s Chinese Theater where King Kong (in person) once ruled the forecourt in 1933.
Later that evening, as the hour grew close to midnight, millions of Californians learned that
the legendary King of Karloffomia had been in their midst. They learned this when their television sets temporarily became terror visions, for414 minutes of an absorbing interview with the elder statesman of fright films. The news worthy meeting with Mr. Monster had been filmed several hours earlier.
Scant blocks away on Hollywood Blvd., had passersby known that around 7 p.m. Boris Kar-
loff was just up the hill in the “haunted” house, the inside crowd, consisting primarily of 50 local, national & international reporters, would more than likely have swelled to smothering proportions.
Among the celebrities present I noted Don {Mask Maker) Post, Robert (Deadly Bees) Bloch, Donald (Dracula Society President) Reed, Alex {She-Creature) Gordon, Ruth {Atomic Submarine) Gordon, Verne {Men Be-hind the Masks) Langdon, Mr. Karloff’s Agent,
Milt {Magic Castle Owner) Larsen—and the Editor of FAMOUS MONSTERS.
FAMOUS MONSTERS was the only horror magazine represented at the press conference
and hence we are able to bring you this exclusive interview.
thousand-dollar decorations
Decca Records, sponsors of the unique event, had decorated the Castle in colorful, karloffull,
expensive style. As one walked thru the entranceway, the eye was immediately arrested by
an attractive banner which proclaimed to the world in no uncertain terms that this was a
Welcome to An Evening with Boris Karloff & His Friends, the title of the King’s new hit
album, which he thrillingly narrates from a script written by FM’s editor. “I turned down a pre-vious script that was offered me,” said Karloff, “because it was too flippant, too full of whimsy. The narration I recorded is a straightforward documentary of my life & times in the make-believe world of monsters.”
I recognized Langdon & Larsen, who co-sponsored the creation of the record, and step-ped up to them, asking “How is the record selling?”
“Tube be or not tube be?” wonders BK as he holds test tube before his scientific gaze in the simians’ care pic, THE APE.
Image Title :His electrocuted corpse about to be brought back to life in THE WALKING DEAD.
“Like hotcakes in Alaska,” responded Lang-don.
“Like cold cakes in Africa!” echoed Larsen.
And I learned during the course of the evening that they weren’t kidding, when Decca’s per-
sonal representative informed me that Holly-wood’s largest record shop had completely sold
out of the album during its first week, before any publicity had been put out. Such is the magnetic drawing power of Karloff . . . and his friends!
(His friends include Bela Lugosi, Lionel At will, Colin Clive, Ernest Thesiger, Elsa Lanchester, Edward Van Sloan, Maria Ouspenskaya and Dwight Frye.)
into the inner sanctum
In the lobby was a rare original poster from SON OF FRANKENSTEIN. (Firmly affixed to
the wall.) There, in bright litho-colors, was Basil Rathbone, poised with syringe in hand; there, bearded broken-necked Bela as Ygor; and there, inevitably, the Frankenstein monster: Karloff.
I signed the register, noting the many important signatures ahead of mine, and then, as
directed by the (g) hostess, spoke to the wise old (carved) red-eyed owl on the door leading
to the Inner Sanctum.
“Open, Sesame,” said I, in the best tradition of the Arabian Nights.
“Sez hoo?” hooted the owl.
“Sez me!” I repeated.
And a shelf of books creaked open like a secret panel in THE CAT & THE CANARY or the
rock door in the side of the mountain that led to Murania, THE PHANTOM EMPIRE.
As my eyes grew accustomed to the dark interior I observed a roomful of people & posters.
Some of the people I didn’t recognize; all of the posters I did. The reception room was profusely papered with one sheet, lobby cards & magnificent stills (kind that make collectors drool) from FRANKENSTEIN, BRIDE OF FRANKEN-
Image Title: A towering performance in Universal’s TOWER OF LONDON, 1939.
Image Title : Radioactive hands of death in THE INVISIBLE RAY (Univ. 1936).
STEIN, THE MUMMY, DRACULA, FRANK-ENSTEIN MEETS THE WOLF MAN, THE
BLACK CAT, THE RAVEN, THE WERE-WOLF OF LONDON and many other hits star-
ring Karloff and famous cinema companions of old. In fact the room looked more like the prize den of a 10-year-veteran of FAMOUS MON-STERS or the offices of FM itself in New York.
I wondered at the incredibly decorated walls, and how Decca rated …
slop press!
Karloff had not yet arrived at this point so I singled out his agent as a source of information.
I had heard rumors that Karloff was in town to make a picture. I assumed it was for AIP. I was astonished to learn otherwise. It seems to have been shot—in great secrecy—on the 20th-Fox lot. A Roger Corman project. And here’s what will kill you:
It’s called BEFORE I DIE! (Not to be confused with DOOMED TO DIE which he did for Monogram in 1940 or BEFORE I HANG which he made the same year for Columbia.)
And the plot?
You won’t believe this!
Like right out of Forest Lawn:
“It’s about a 79-year-old actor,” I found his agent telling me, “who has specialized in horror films all his career. In fact, it’s almost the biography of Boris!”
Who could ask for anything more?
(However, several weeks after getting the “inside dope” from Karloff’s agent, I read a re-
port in the press which was completely different. The news release made it sound as the BEFOREI DIE were based on the tragic happening in Texas of the deranged student who climbed upon a tower and gunned down so many innocent people. Was the report mistaken or the agent? Only time will tell. In any event, no Karloff fan will want to miss BEFORE I DIE.)
The ghoul & alex gordon
I recognized producer Alex Gordon and re-membered from the story on him in FM how he
had been frustrated as a teenager because he was underage, in England, to see Boris Karloff in THE GHOUL. By now Karloff had arrived at the Castle and was surrounded by friends, well-wishers, photographers & reporters. As Gordon was just walking away from Karloff’s table, I approached him and asked if he’d learned any-thing interesting he might share with FM’s readers.
“For my favorite magazine?” he beamed. “Al-ways glad to oblige. I just talked with Boris
and reminded him that I was still searching fora print of THE GHOUL. He laughed and said,
‘Well, don’t search too hard!’ I’ve heard it wasn’t one of his favorite films. Nevertheless, I’m determined to see it.”
“Maybe you should remake it,” I offered as a spur-of-the-moment solution.
“You know,” Gordon said, “Forry Ackerman suggested the same thing to me! It would be
great if I could get Boris to repeat the role. And I’d put Forry in the picture too!”
FJA as Sir Cedric Hardwicke—? Ernest The-siger?!
mystery title identified
FM’s Australian correspondent, Chris Collier, had come up thru the mails with a title which
had the experts stumped:
BIMI.
Claimed Collier: “BIMI was the name of a Karloffilm released in Argentina in 1932 or ’33.” But it is omitted from all lists of Karloff’s film career. I intended to ask the Ultimate Authority himself about the lost picture, but suddenly I found my ears pricking up like Jean Marais’ in BEAUTY & THE BEAST, for Alex Gordon was saying:
“Ah, yes—BIMI. That was like when they took the Herman Brix serial, THE NEW AD-
VENTURES OF TARZAN, and put the chap-ters together into a complete picture, which was released as TARZAN & THE GREEN GOD-DESS.
“Or when the BUCK ROGERS serial became ROCKET SHIP, or FLASH GORDON became
MARS ATTACKS THE WORLD.
“BIMI?” We hunched forward and cocked an attentive ear, for by now 50 people were crowd-ed into a relatively small space, and the hubbub was deafening.
And the revelation came.
All collectors of Karloffilm titles, attention: you may now add this information to your files: BIMI was the full-length version title of Karloff’s early serial with Dorothy Christy &
Wm. Miller
KING OF THE WILD!
old mystery—new mystery
But hardly had one mystery (BIMI) been solved than a new one popped up. I saw Robert
Bloch move away from Karloff’s circle, his headshaking, a perplexed gaze in his eyes.
“What’s up, Bob?” I asked.
Being Bob Bloch, he answered: “A corpse, hanging from gallows, fresh for Dr. Franken-
stein & Fritz.” Then he continued: “Seriously,
Image title: Who could hold a candle to the King himself when he played in one of his own segments of TV’s Thriller?
Image title : Im-ho-tep, 3700-years-dead in the dust of Egypt, revived by Universal in 1932.
Karloff just told me something that has me baffled. .
“which was?”
“That he was directed by Lionel Barrymore ir. an MGM picture called THE GREEN
GHOST.”
“THE GREEN GHOST? I remember a YEL- LOW TICKET from MGM but he sure wasn’t
in that, tho I think Barrymore was. He couldn’t have been thinking of THE BELLS, could he?”
“No, he said it was the first talking mystery they made at MGM.”
“Wasn’t that THE UNHOLY NIGHT?”
“I think you’re right.”
“But where does THE GREEN GHOST come in?”
“That was 1929, in the days of THE BAT, THE CAT & THE CANARY, THE TERROR
and all kinds of mystery plays that were being adapted from the stage. THE GHOST TRAIN
was another. Maybe THE UNHOLY NIGHT became the final title after Karloff left the pic-
true, and it was called THE GREEN GHOST while he was shooting it.”
During his official press interview a short time later Karloff again brought up his appearance in THE GREEN GHOST but nothing was settled at the time about the picture. I am inclined to
believe that it was the film I remembered—THEUNHOLY NIGHT—and that Bob Bloch’s ex-planation was correct.
the voices from below
Thru the din of conversation I vaguely began to be aware of “other” voices, oddly different,
oddly familiar voices, coming from somewhere else in the Magic Castle.
My ears took me toward the source of the sound: underground. That thunder, electrical
crackling as of a lightning storm or a high-voltage laboratory or both, that distant howling
of wolves, bits of dialog such as “I bid you—welcome” . . . “It’s moving—it’s alive!” . . . “Even a man who is pure in heart.” etc.—yes, they were definitely drifting up from the cellar.
Dared I descend?
A sign at the head of the stairs warned that below lay the dungeon of Dracula.
Just then a young couple that I recognized as FM readers came bounding up the stairs with
flushed faces. “There’re monsters down there! “they shouted to me as they took the stairs two
at a time. “Frankenstein . . . Dracula … the Wolf Man!” But then they laughed as they pass-
ed me: “All on record. They’re playing Boris Karloff’s record downstairs in Dracula’s den.
You should go and hear it. It’s great.”
I had one-foot downstairs when I heard Verne Langdon call out, “Ladies & Gentlemen, Mr.
Karloff is about to conduct his interview,” and I hastily joined the members of the press. I was fortunate in finding a seat exactly next to FM’s editor, who in turn sat directly next to the King himself. On Karloff’s other side sat his constant companion, his wife.
As Karloff looked up at his audience, seated in a semi-circle of chairs on an incline, he im-
mediately set the tone of relaxed good humor by joking, “I hope my jury will be as kind as it
locks!” Everyone laughed and began asking him questions.
the career of karloff
He started off by telling us how he left Eng-land for Canada in 1909. He first got a job as a
lumberjack. The next year, while working in a forest chopping down trees, and getting pretty tired of the heaviness & monotony of the work, he heard of an opening as an actor. “It was in a stock company whose reputation was so bad that no one would work for it,” he said.
“But I decided I would. I left my ax in the air!”
In 1910 he gained experience as an actor by appearing in 106 new plays in 53 weeks!
In 1913 he came to the USA for good. “And, indeed, America has been good to me.
“I got my first movie job as a $5-a-day extra in a film with Doug Fairbanks Sr. That was HIS
MAJESTY, THE AMERICAN in 1919.”
In answer to a question from the audience about Bela Lugosi—
To be concluded next issue. Read Don’t misswhat Karloff has to say about BELA LUGOSI
. . . LON CHANEY SR. . . . the original FRANKENSTEIN . . . his wife . . . Boris Karloff
“JR.” . . . etc!
KARLOFF IN THE MAGIC CASTLE
PART 2: CONCLUSION
Just before Intermission
And a new mystery was bom: THE GREEN GHOST. Karloff mentioned a couple of times
during his visit to the Castle that he appear-ed in such a picture. But experts such as Alex
Gordon, Bob Bloch, even FM’s editor, were baffled.
Now go on with the story . . .
about bela-
“Mr. Karloff,” a reporter asked, “what could you tell us about Bela Lugosi? Were you good friends?”
“No, we really didn’t socialize. You see, our lives, our tastes, were quite different. Ours was simply a professional relationship. But I have warm recollections of him as a
fine actor and a great technician. And I’ll tell you a story on myself, about Bela:
“It was during the making of SON OF FRANKENSTEIN, the 3d & lastime I played the monster.” (Purists insist that he played the role 4 times but I was interested to note—and record for posterity—that the Master himself did not refer to his brief resurrection of the Monster on TV in the Route 66 seg-ment.) “Bela was a big man, and I was sup-posed to pick him up and carry him. I put one wrist beneath his knees, the other be-hind his neck—and lifted.
“I hadn’t lifted a pound!”
Eyebrows lifted and a gale of laughter rose at this anecdote. Karloff continued. “I met Lon Chaney Sr. He did all his own make-up, you know—de-signed & executed it. A fine actor. I think it a dead certainty I wouldn’t be sitting here now if Chaney had lived and done FRANKEN-STEIN.
“I had made GRAFT at Universal and James Whale saw me and wanted me to test for the
part of the monster. I had no idea of the im-portance of the role but Jack Pierce knew, he
stalled the test 2 weeks while working on the make-up and the make-up sold the part.
“Don Post commented from the audience: “It was the most impressive, frightening film
to that time.”
MRS. monster… and the
“son”of Frankenstein
All this while a charming quiet blond lady had sat by Mr. Karloff’s side; his wife. One of
the reporters asked: “How does Mrs. Karlofffeel about your fiendish performances?”
Karloff was not embarrassed to admit: “My wife is a woman of great taste—she has seen
very very few of my pictures!”
After the laughter died down, he added: “In fact it was only last year that she saw
FRANKENSTEIN for the firstime.”
The Karloffs are very good friends of the Blochs, and later on Mrs. Karloff remarked to me: “You know, Elly Bloch & I are in the same boat, so to speak—we’re both cowards
where our husband’s films are concerned! That remarkable Mrs. Bloch flies her own
airplane—but she’s never seen Bob’s PSYCHO or any other of his scary pictures. Says she’s
be frightened to death!”
FM’s editor on.ce showed me a foto of a fair-ly fleshy individual, a sort of Victor Buono
type, signed “Boris Karloff Jr.” or “the son of Karloff”—something like that, I forget ex-actly what. I had often wondered about it, being aware that Karloff has a daughter but having been unable to track down any evi-dence that he had a son. I was mulling over in my mind if it would be advisable to ask him this question publicly, wondering if there were some private sorrow attached to the son and the inquiry might Jrove tactless, when suddenly it popped out of the mouth of someone else.
The answer was quite simple and caused Karloff no pain.
“Ah, yes,” he said. ‘”Tony’ Karloff. No re-lation whatsoever. But many years ago, this
young man wrote and asked permission to use the name, in connection with some mystery
stage act he was putting on, I believe, and I attached no particular value to the name at
the time so I gave him permission to go-ahead.”
bela . . . “the bells” . . . and frye
One very interesting question was cleared up:
“Mr. Karloff, did you ever see Bela Lugosi do DRACULA?”
And the answer, an affirmative:
“Yes, on the stage.”
Another question: “Can you tell us any- thing about Dwight Frye?”
“Not really. We met when he played the swarf in the first FRANKENSTEIN. I know
nothing about his outside life.” (He may not have been aware that Frye died in ’46.)
Robert Bloch asked: “About your make-up in THE BELLS-”
Karloff anticipated his question. “You mean the Caligari-type make-up,” he said. “Ah, yes—that was over 40 years ago . . .1926, to be precise, I believe. The first make-up they gave me made me look like Svengali, and lionel Barrymore, the picture’s star, said, ‘No, that’s no good,’ and, since I was sup-posed to be a sinister mesmerist, he went to work transforming me into a kind of Werner Krauss. A marvelous man, a great man, Lionel; so stimulating to work with.”
looking backward
The week after Karloff’s party, this story was released by Associated Press Movie-TV
Writer Bob Thomas:
Hollywood, Apr. 12—Last week they gave Boris Karloff a party—the first in his honor
during almost a half-century in Hollywood.
The occasion was the release of a Decca al-bum, An Evening with Boris Karloff & His Friends, which features scenes from the actor’s films including FRANKENSTEIN, BRIDE OF FRANKENSTEIN & SON OFFRANKENSTEIN.
The site for the party was natural enough: The Magic Castle, a spooky old mansion off Franklin Ave. where magicians meet. It’s a club where diners & drinkers are sometimes joined by vampires & monsters, presumably imitated by Magic Castle personnel.
Karloff seemed at home in such surround-ings and he responded with his usual good humor. Unlike some stars who resent being typed in their most famous roles, the London-born actor (real name: William Henry Pratt) has always spoken affectionately of the cliff-browed monster he first played in 1931.
“I am a very lucky man,” he reflected. “Here I am in my 80th year (he’ll reach the mark Nov. 23) and I am still able to earn my bread & butter at my profession. I am one of that very small family of the human race who happens to thoroughly enjoy his work. If I didn’t enjoy it, I wouldn’t go on.”
Despite a leg brace to aid an arthritic knee, he maintains an active schedule. He & his wife now live in a London flat and a cottage in Hampshire, England, but he comes here twice a year for films. During the past year he also made an I Spy in Spain and starred in THESORCERORS in London.
Karloff is now in his 1 1th year of a Reader’s Digest radio program which is carried by
400 U.S. stations. He tapes the daily show wherever he goes.
He had a lively run in recent years making horror pictures for American-International,
along with pals Lon Chaney Jr., Basil Rath-bone & Peter Lorre—”I miss Peter terribly;
he was a delightful man and a truly original actor—there was none like him.”
“I’m here to finish up BEFORE I DIE, which is a story similar to that campus sniping in
Texas,” he said. “I also hope to get the script of the next film, which I’m looking for-ward to. I understand it’s a jungle film, and I play a kind of Albert Schweitzer.”
Boris Karloff as Albert Schweitzer??!!
Peter Bogdanovich, 26, wrote BEFORE IDIE to bring “a new dimension to horror. “He costars in his own script with Karloff. And, incidentally, the title has been changed to TARGETS.
“TARGETS,” says Bogdanovich of his pic-true, “contrasts two kinds of horror, the kind
represented by Boris Karloff and the sense-less kind so prevalent today—a man walks into a beauty shop and kills 6 people or climbs a tower and starts sniping away. In the past people were killed usually by strangulation or by a knife. Now a machine does it for you. The horror of modern killing is that you can kill somebody and not get blood on you—not be physically stained.
“With Boris I have tried to exploit his screen character.” Basically, Boris plays himself! A
79-year-old character actor, famous for a life-time of portraying horror parts. (Excuse me—
Karloff hates the word. Let us rather, indifference to the grand old star who has so deftly delineated so many macabre roles, re-fer to them in the language he prefers, “tales of terror.”)
karloff & kevin
Hollywood critic & reporter, Kevin Thomas, recorded this anecdote:
The chauffeur-driven limousine pulled up to the drive-in box office. Tuxedo-clad Boris Kar-
loff leaned out the rear window and asked to speak with the manager.
Altho the lights & cameras made clear that he was acting, the patrons of the Reseda Drive-
In, long accustomed to seeing him on the screen, were no less startled to find him in such an unlikely setting. Indeed, it was the firstime in his life that Boris Karloff had ever been at a drive-in—inperson.
And when it came time to complete the climax of TARGETS, inside the crowded out-
door theater he soon took the play away from the movie that was being shown.
a final word from
the fine old gentleman
As he concluded his interview at The Magic
Castle, Karloff observed:
“My leg in a steel brace . . . operating with only half a lung . . . why, it’s a public scandal
that I’m still around! But, as long as people want me, I feel an obligation to go on per-
forming. After all, every time I act I provide employment for a fleet of doubles!”
THE END (IS NOT YET)
O KING, LIVE FOREVER!
The month-long exhibit in honor of the phonograph album “An Evening with Boris Karloff and His Friends in the principal show window of Hollywood’s top record shop at Sunset & Vein. (Courtesy Wallich’s Music City.)
During the 1950s, the greatest honor bestowed upon a fa-mous personality on television would be to hear his name mentioned, look up with a curious glance and hear the familiar voice of Rlaph Edwards an-nounce . . .
“THIS IS YOUR LIFE!”
It was an honor reserved for the true giants of public life the motion picture superstars,
the sports heroes, the humanitarians.
That the greatest terror star of them all should receive such tribute on network television
just days before his birthday that November night is not surprising. It was, however, a
tremendous surprise to the soft-voiced Englishman when Ed-wards’ announcement caused
him to look up from his paperwork, astonished.
“Boris Karloff . . . This is your life!”
TO those watching the pro-gram at home, it may have seemed strange to see such abroad, warm and grateful smile capture the face that three times had been buried upon the blue-gray greasepaint, high forehead and metal clamps of the Frarik-enstein Monster. Now, every
trace of the terrible had vanished. This was Karloff the man, Karloff the feeling human being, receiving the thanks for a genre of films he had shared with Chaney in creating.
After being ushered to the CBS studios, Karloff’s image filled the television screen in the
form of a number of stills from the original Universal FRANK-ENSTEIN, the film that owed
him so much, and to which he owed the same.
Ralph Edwards proceeded in his narration with the biography that is already preserved in
the minds of Boris Karlofffans, recounting the master’s portrayal of such fantastic creations as THE MUMMY and THE GHOUL. It would be only repetitious to include a life story here.
Two particular incidents on the program were, however, especially significant and interesting.
First, Karloff was given the two doorknobs from his old Universal dressing room. Again, viewers saw that wide grin but Karloff didn’t let the matter end right there. No, his quick mind clicking for a possible laugh, the actor placed the two doorknobs at his neck, simulating the tiny electrodes that once protruded from each side.
Doorknobs either side of his neck, however, were still not the real thing. The introduction of
another guest from Boris Kar-loff’s past proved even more memorable. He was the man who, in a sense, helped to create the Frankenstein Monster as much as Henry Frankenstein
himself . . . and I’m-ho-tep, the living Mummy, and the twisted faced killer Bateman of THE
RAVEN.
He was the man with whom Karloff himself worked out the final make-up that was to identify the Monster in FRANK-ENSTEIN . . .
Jack Pierce!
The make-up genius of the talkie era, taken from us in1968, less than a year before the sorrowful death of the beloved Boris Karloff—he was there to take the place he earned in the Englishman’s life.
And while Karloff had already been given the pair of make-believe plugs, now he would receive the real things from Pierce.
The two neck electrodes of the Frankenstein Monster!
NEARLY two decades had passed since the actor had worn them, to renew the electrical energy of the Monster in THE SON OF FRANKENSTEIN.
Boris Karloff’s sense of humor was hinted at on his THIS ISYOUR LIFE special when one
of the guests related a typical incident of the 1930s. The actor had been invited to a large Hollywood party at which all the guests wore tuxedoes. When the master arrived, he was at-tired like all the others—with one exception. He carried with him a box that looked suspiciously like … a tool box! What made the tuxedoed guests stand back in abject astonishment and then laugh was the fact that it actually was a tool box! Karloff then marched straight forward into the kitchen, removed his jacket, sat on the floor, opened the box and proceeded to tinker with theplumbing!
Boris Karloff had been paid the homage he deserved on coast-to-coast TV. It was a birth-
day present, yet more, for it showed him that to his peers and fans he was more than just
a Monster, a Mummy, a Mad Doctor. He was Boris Karloff, and loved primarily, for that
simple fact.
And it was Karloff the man that Ralph Edwards addressed with those wondrous words . . .
“Boris Karloff . . .
THIS IS YOUR LIFE!” E1IVI
CHRISTOPHER
LEE
wrote by hand from London:
“We are all terribly distressed—it is a gap in my life and the end of an era in the Cinema. We shall not see his like again.
“As I explained in my cable, Erie [Mrs. Karloff] does not want flowers and the funeral is entirely private for family only. She is bearing up wonderfully.
“I believe the end was peaceful anti indeed it must have seemed a blessing.”’
Then, the next day:
“As a follow-up to my letter of yesterday:
“I can quite understand how you are feeling—
you are one among countless thousands who will mourn the passing of a noble human being.
“He was a master of his craft, who gave pleasure to millions for many years and whose work will serve as an object lesson for years to come to many more.
“I always found him a wise and understanding friend, with a fund of warmth & humor and above all, of indomitable courage & cheerfulness in the face of great physical adversity.
“He truly loved his fellow men”
Christopher Lee has played roles originated bv Kar-loff—the Frankenstein monster, the Mummy. For a period, he was a next-door neighbor to Karloff and his daughter was born on Boris’ birthday!
ROBERT BLOCH
reminisces:
The news of Boris Karloff’s passing came to me as a great shock. Only a week before, Mrs. Karloff had written to assure me that he was comfortably con-valescing. She relayed his request that I accept an award for him at a forthcoming banquet where we were both to be so honored. “We often talk of the last lovely evening we spent at your house,” she wrote,
“and hope we shall see you here again before too long.”
“Here”, of course, was the Karloffs’ country place, where my wife and I spent a sun-dappled Sunday in July of ’68. Although it was by no means their first meeting, my wife persisted in addressing him as “Mr. Karloff” and that always amused him. “Please, my dear—surely you remember my name is Boris,” he teased. “Ask your husband”—this with a mock scowl in my direction— “he knows only too much about me.”
Mrs. Karloff escorted my wife on a tour of their cozy English cottage and returned to exhibit a photo-graph to me. “You may know a lot about Boris,” she said, “but here’s a picture of the monster you’ve never seen.” I gazed upon the delicately sensitive features of a chili, whose wide eyes peered wistfully out at me from a Victorian setting across a span of75 years. We talked, as we often did when we were together, about that long lifetime, so rich in mem-ories. And after luncheon we retired to the terrace, basking in the afternoon’s glow and listening to the muted murmur of the river winding past the ground.
THE King & i
BORIS KARLOFF granted me an interview & it is my pleasure to share it with you.
by Forrest J Ackerman
NEXT to Lon Chaney Sr., whom In ever met, for years the man in monsterdom that I most wanted to meet was Boris Karloff. It was not enough that I had once seen him briefly backstage after a performance in ON BORROWED TIME and acquired his autograph on a copy of the anthology he engineered, “And the Darkness Falls”. It was not enough that once in my life I saw Peter Lorre, stood next to Charles Laughton, watched Lon Chaney Jr.act, observed Basil Rathbone on asset, regarded a funeral bed on which Colin Clive lay dead, called Tor Johnson “friend”, have seen Elsa Lanchester & Rod Serlina & Fritz Lang & Brigitte Helm & John Car-radine & Fredric March (Dr. Jekyll)& Spencer Tracy (Mr. Hyde) in per-son, been in Vincent Price’s home, saw Dwight Frye on the stage in DRACULA, and that Bela Lugosi &I were friends while the final curtain was slowly descending on his life.
No, above all else I always wanted to really meet Boris Karloff, to con-verse with him a short time, to ex-press I my appreciation to him for the pleasure he has given me in the pas:30 years.
Jim Nicholson of American-Ir.:er-national was thoughtful enough: arrange it for me late last year I was during the filming of THE RAV-EN. Sam Sherman, our editorial di-rector of SCREEN THRILLS ILLUS-TRATED, was visiting Hollywood from New York, and I took him along to the studio with me. It was Sam who first spotted Karloff. He suddenly nudged me & said, “There he goes now. Now’s your opportunity. You can catch him in his dressing room.”
i meet my favorite
I high-tailed it to the cubicle into which Mr. Karloff had just vanished. He had just eased himself into a chair when I approached the open-door of the little room and, placing one foot on the first stair & insert-ing my head part way into the room, I asked, “Would it be alright to come in a moment? “He was very gracious. “Why, yes, of course,’ he said, his world-famous
voice sounding just as it had in THEBLACK CAT, THE INVISIBLE RAY, THE MUMMY and so many others. I introduced thyself as the editor Of FAMOUS MONSTERS.
“I have a set of your magazines, “he replied. This neither flattered nor surprised me as I had visited the seta few days earlier, missed him, and left the magazines in a package on
a table for him.
“I have enjoyed your pictures for over 30 years,” I said. “Since FRANKENSTEIN—that was about1931, wasn’t it?”
“Yes,” he said, “that was about the beginning of it.” I knew that, historically speaking, his statement his wife, sitting comfortably in front of his hearth in his home in Eng-land, instead of here on this soundstage, about to climb, unaided a steep flight of stairs, then have to clamber up some rubble.
The scene he was about to shoot was practically the end of the picture. It was just after the grand ex-plosion following the duel of wizards. Dust & debris were still falling out of the air (studio workers studiously pumping vile vapors in his direction). He did the scene where he
tried to repair or change a dress for his wife by a wave of his hand; un-successful, he bowed his head & said, “I guess I just don’t have it anymore.”
astute observation
A voice at my side spoke. I has been so engrossed in watching BorisKarloff act that for the moment I had half-forgotten the presence of my friend & fellow editor by my side.“
just don’t have it any more” was echoing in my ears when Sam Sherman committed to me under his voice, “Oh yes he does!” And it is indeed true. At 75, Boris Karloff has lost none of his touch, his magic, was far from accurate, for it is re-corded that as early as 1916 (in fact
the year I was born) he appeared in a picture, THE DUMB GIRL OFPORTICI … in 1919 was in the Doug Fairbanks film HIS MAJESTY, THE AMERICAN. . . acted in Kos-mik Films’ 15-part serial THE HOPEDIAMOND MYSTERY in 1921 and, the same year, appeared in THECAVE GIRL . . . etc. However, I knew what he meant, that figuratively speaking his career began with his immortal portrayal of the Frank-enstein monster, and I did not make
a point of questioning his statement.
Just then someone opened the door& called him away momentarily to answer the phone. I took advantage of his temporary absence to soak In the atmosphere, to realize that I was
sitting in the dressing room of Boris Karloff and that in a few minute she, like his indestructible monster, would return!
the return of karloff
When Mr. Karloff did indeed re-turn, I asked him about THE BELLS. “Ah, yes,” he replied, “the silent film with Lionel Barrymore. I played a strange physician in it, a practitioner of mesmerism.” We might have discussed the picture & other of his early performances but at that mo-ment another individual appeared at his door, a man who turned out to be a mutual friend, producer Alex Gordon. As I recall (and it is too late at 2 o’clock in the morning as
I type these words to call & doublecheck it i Alex’ brother produced the British Karloffilm CORRIDORS OFBLOOD that is about to be released in this country, Alex & Boris chatted
briefly & then it was time for Mr. Karloff to enact a scene—Roger Cor-man was calling for him on the set.
the shock of my life
I HAVE seen Karloff in roles like the original RAVEN where he was quite twisted and THE TOWER OF LONDON where he had the bandy legs & club foot and in THE BLACK
ROOM but from his TV appearances as host of Thriller I thought of him as standing quite erect, very tall & straight. It was, therefore, a terrific shock to me to observe how truly
bent he is in real life. It seemed to me that, walking naturally, he was almost more doubled over, more crablike in his appearance, than I had ever seen him when putting on an act on the screen. At that moment I felt a great compassion for him; in a telepathic world he would have heard in his head a sincerely meant message from me that would have said, “Dear Mr. Karloff, mochas I personally love you & want you to live forever & go on acting for-ever, I wouldn’t ask you to go on acting at the age of 75.” I wondered why he wasn’t 6000 miles away with his mesmeric attraction—if any-thing, I would say after witnessing his performance in THERAVEN that he is more powerful than ever. Lost minutes with my master He autographed my photoplay edition of FRANKENSTEIN and let Sam& me pose for pictures with him,
then he sat. On a stool, reading some “wild lines”, hamming it up, enjoy-ing himself hugely & making me feel that apparently, I was wrong in feel-ing concern about him. Despite his shortness of breath, the arthritis or whatever it is that curves him so cruelly, he obviously was having fun Unlike Lugosi, that poor old narcotic-ic-ruined shell of a man in the last years of his life, it is evident that Mr. Karloff does not have to keep going for financial reasons. Like to-day’s elder statesman of singers, Maurice Chevalier, Boris Karloff evidently continues his motion picture& TV career primarily because he loves his work, his fans.
Before flying back over the North Pole to home, he made one more picture now awaiting release: THETERROR, in color. He’ll be back la-ter on this year, for further roles with Lorre & Price.
If & when you read the lines of this interview, Mr. William Henry Pratt, I want again to say “thank you”. My hat’s off to you, my head ‘sin the clouds & my heart’s wishing you all the warmest. In these sentiments I’m sure well over a hundred thousand readers of this magazine
simultaneously join me. In chorus we say: “O King, liveforever!” END
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NO. 6 -HOLIDAY ISSUE
NO. 10- SUPER HEROES
PRAISED by
VINCENT PRICE
To me Boris Karloff was not only a great actor but a dear and longtime friend. W’HAT I admired most about him was his enormous gratitude to the public and movie makers who made it possible for him to have such a long and productive career. He often spoke of it and with great feeling and always with humor. That humor was of course the secret of his charm, humor and genuine concern for hisfriends.1 worked with him from the beginning of my
career. THE TOWER OF LONDON, right up till the end of last year when we did the opening Red Skelton Show together. His amazing fortitude at that time only went to confirm my very deep respect for him as an actor and person. The whole show was de-vised to allow Boris to play it in a wheelchair hut on his first entrance dress rehearsal night he sensed a chill from the audience at seeing him to their mind completely crippled. He set his mind to play-ing it standing up and on that gruelling day of the show he went through every run-through on his feet he was needless to say wonderful as usual and the audience loved him as did all of us on the show. One of my favorite movies was with Boris, Peter Lorre and Basil Rathbone, THE COMEDY OF TERRORS. What wonderful fun they all were and how I shall miss them all. All of them were highly intelligent, extremely kind and vastly amusing men. None of them felt other hut privileged to have had a faithful public for so many years.
1 am proud to have worked with all of them and to have counted them among my closest friends.
Editor’s Note: This handwritten letter (two pages) was sent by Vincent Price from New York
to our Hollywood office. We at FM have long known him to be a fine, sincere, cooperative gentlemen; this act of kindness only adds to our respect for him as a human being.
THE DRACULA
SOCIETY’S
PRESIDENT TELL US:
Just a few days before his death I received the following letter from Boris Karloff:
“Jan. 17. Dear Mr. Reed:
“I am more than proud that your Society has voted me a special Mrs. Ann Radcliffe Award.
“Unhappily I trill not be in Hollywood at the time but I would be more than happy if you could persuade my friend Mr. Robert Bloch, whom 1 am happy to see is also receiving an Award, to accept on my behalf. I am writing Mr. Bloch by this same mail to ask him if he will be kind enough to do this for me.”
Our 7th Annual Awards Dinner will take place on April 19th hut among the 250 chairs in the Holly-wood Room of the Knickerbocker Hotel will be an empty chair reserved in memory of the King of Horror Films, Mr. Boris Karloff, who in spirit will always be with us.
Pro/. Donald A. Reerf
Our “MEAL WITH
A MONSTER”
INTERVIEWER COMMENTS:
Karloff is dead. An era ends . . . Shocked by the sad news, yet expecting it, I asked myself: what can be done to preserve his memory. Many things, of course. Books, articles, essays, photo stories . . . but NOW what can be done? No one will ever replace him. He reigned supreme in his genre.
The king is dead. I count myself lucky to have known him—even for an afternoon!
William F. Nolan
THE KARLOFFHUMS
1928
The Love Mart (small part) First National
Burning the Wind (villian) Universal
Vultures ol the Sea (?) Mascot serial
1929
Little Wild Girl Fr.-Can. villian) Trinity
The Fatal Warning (villian) Mascot serial
The Devil’s Chaplin (small part) Rayart
Phantoms of the North (Fr.-Can. vil.) Biltmore
Two Sisters (villian) Rayart
The Unholy Night (Hindu servant) MGM
The Green Ghost (alternate title of above)
King of the Kongo (heroine’s dad) Mascot set.
Behind That Curtain (murder suspect) Fox
1930
The Bad One (prison quard) UA-Schenck
The Sea Bat (half-breed villian) MGM
The Utah Kid (bandit) Tiffany
Mother’s Cry (murder victim) Warners
1931
King of the Wild (sheik) Mascot serial
The Criminal Code (prison trustee) Columbia
Cracked Nuts (revolutionary) RKO
Young Donovan’s Kid (scarface Cokey Joe) RKO
Smart Money (Sport Williams/gambler) Warners
The Public Defender (crook) RKO
I Like Your Nerve (butler) Warners
Five Star Final (vil. ex-preacher) Warnes:
The Mad Genius (viHianous father) Warners
The Yellow Ticket (soldier) Fox
The Guilty Generation (beer baron) Columbia
Graft (Terry/a murderer) Universal
FRANKENSTEIN (THE MONSTER) Universal
Tonight or Never (waiter) United Artists
Business and Pleasure (sheik) Fox
1919
His Majesty, the American (Mexican bandit) UA
The Prince and Betty (bit part) Pathe’
1920
The Deadlier Sex (Ft.-Canadian trapper) Pathe’
The Courage of Marge O’Doone (Can. trapper) V
The Last of the Mohicans (Ind. villain) AP
1921
Without Benefit of Clergy (Ahmed Khan/vil.) P
Hope Diamond Mystery (vil. high priest) serial
Cheated Hearts (Mexican bandito) Universal
1922
Cave Girl (half-breed kidnapper) First Nat’l
Man from Downing Street (Maharajah) Vitagraph
The Infidel (island ruler) First National
The Altar Stairs (Hugo) Universal
Omar the Tentmakerfa caliph) Universal
1923
A Woman Conquers (French-Canadian) First Nat’l
The Prisoner (bit part) Universal
1924
Dynamite Dan (foreman/Tony Garcia) Sunset
1925
Parisian Nights (sadistic Parisian apache) FBO
Forbidden Cargo (ship’s mate) FBO
Prairie Wife(Mex. half-breed) Metro-Goldwyn
Lady Robin Hood (villian) FBO
Never the Twain Shall Meet (So. Seas vil.) MG
1926
The Greater Glory (bit part) First Nat’l
Her Honor, the Governor (criminal) FBO
The Bells (Caligari-like mesmerist) Chadwick
Eagle of the Sea (pirate) Paramount
Old Ironsides (pirate) Paramount
Flames (Blacky Blanchette) Assoc. Exhibitors
The Golden Web (murder victim) Gotham
Flaming Fury (small part) FBO
Man in the Saddle (small part) Universal
The Nickel-Hopper (“big bohunk”) Pathe’
1927
Tarzan and the Golden Lion (native cheif) FBO
Let It Rain (small part) Paramount
The Meddlin’ Stranger (villian) Pathe
Phantom Buster (villian) Pathe
Soft Cushions (villian) Paramount
Two Arabian Knights (sheik) United Artists
1932
Alias the Doctor (autopsy surgeon) Warners
Scarface (mobster) United Artists
The Cohens & Kellys in Hollywood (himself) Uni.
The Miracle Man (Nikko/con man) Paramount
Behind the Mask (narcotics pusher) Columbia
The Mummy ( lm-ho-tep/Ardath Bey) Universal
The Old Dark House (mute scarred butler) Uni.
wight World (night club owner) Universal
The Mask of Fu Manchu (Fu Manchu) MGM
1933
The Ghoul (Prof. Morlant/living dead) GB
1934
The House of Rothchild (Baron Ledkrantz) UA
The Lost Patrol (Sanders/relig. fanatic) RKO
The Black Cat (Hjalmar Poelzig w/Lugosi) Uni.
House of Doom (English title-of above)
Gift of Gab (himself w/Lugosi) Universal
1935
Bride of Frankenstein (the Monster) Universal
The Raven (Bateman w/Lugosi) Universal
Black Room (twins Anton/Gregor Berkman) Col.
1936
The Invisible Ray (Janos Rukh w/Lugosi) Uni.
The Walking Dead(Ellman) Warners
Charlie Chan at the Opera (Ravelle) Fox
The Man Who Lived Again (mad scientist) GB
Man Who Changed His Mind (Eng. title of above)
Dr. Maniac (re-release title of above)
The Brain Snatcher (re-release of above)
Juggernaut (Dr. Sartorius) Grand National
The Demon Doctor (alternate title of above)
1937
Night Key (Dr. Mallory) Universal
West of Shanghai (Gen. Wu Yen Fang) Warners
The Warlord (alternate title of above)
1938
The Invisible Menace (Dollman) Warners
Without Warning (alternate title of above)
Mr. Wong, Detective (title role) Monogram
1939
Son ol Frankenstein (Monster w/Lugosi) Uni.
The Mystery of Mr. WongiWm. Wong) Monogram
Mr. Wong in Chinatown (title role) Monogram
Phantom Creeps (Bela serial ‘Invis. Ray frames) U
The Man They Could Not Hang (Henryk Savaard) Col
Tower of London (Mord) Universal
The Fatal Hour (Mr. Wong) Monogram
1940
British Intelligence (spy Valdar/Schiller) WB
Black Friday (Dr. Soval w/LugosiKDr. Saval) Uni
The Man with Nine Lives (Dr. Kravaal) Columbia
Behind the Door (English title of above)
Devil’s Island (Dr. Chas. Gaudet) Warners
Doomed to Die (Mr. Wong) Monogram
Before I Hang ‘Dr. Garth) Columbia
The Ape (Dr. Adrian) Monogram
You’ll FindOut (Judge Mannering w/Lugosi) RKO
1941
The Devil Commands (Dr. Blair) Columbia
1942
Boogie Man Will Get U (Prof. Billings w.’Bela) Col
1943
None
1944
The Climax (Dr. Hohner) Universal
1945
House of Frankenstein (Dr. Niemann) Universal
The Body Snatcher (cabman Grey w ‘Lugosi) RKO
Isle of the Dead (Gen. Pherides) RKO
1946
Bedlam (Mr. Simms) RKO
1947
Lured (Mr. Van Dougan) United Artists
Personal Column ( alternate title of above)
Secret Life of Walter Mitty (Jewel thief) RKO
Dick Tracy Meets Gruesome ( Gruesome) RKO
Dick Tracey’s Amazing Adventure (Eng. of above)
Unconquered (Chief Guyasuta) Paramount
1948
Tap Roots (Tishomingo) Universal
1949
Abbott & Costello Meet the Killer (Swami Talpur)
A & C Meet Boris Karloff (English title of above)
None
1950
1951
The Strange Door (servant) Universal
1952
The Black Castle (Dr. Meissen) Universal
The Emperor’s Nightingale (narrator) Rembrandt
1953
Colonel March Investigates ( Col. March) Panda
Colonal March of Scotland Yard (same as above)
Sabakadhe General) United Artists
The Hindu (alternate title of above) UA
A&C Meet D’r. Jekyll & Mr. Hyde (only Dr. J.) U
Monster of the Island (smuggler) Romano Films
The Juggler of Our Lady (narrator) Fox
1954-1955-1956
None
1957
Voodoo Island (Dr. Knight) UA
Silent Death (re-release title of above)
Fraikenstein-1970 ( Dr. Frankenstein) Allied
Corridors of Blood (Dr. Bolton) Producers Assn.
Doctor from Seven Dials ( Eng. title of above)
1959 thru 1962
None
1963
The Raven ( Dr. Scarabus) AIP
The Terror (Baron Von Leppe/Eric) AIP
Days of Thrills and Laughter (filmclip of K.)
1964
The Comedy of Terrors (Amos Hinchley) AIP
Black Sabbath (narrator & Wurdulak) AIP
Three Faces of Terror (Eng. title of above)
Bikini Beach ( walk-on as himself) AIP
1965
Die, Monster Die! (Nahum Witley) AIP
Monster of Terror (Eng. title of above)
Mondo Balordo (narrator)
1966
Ghost in the Invis. Bikini (Hiram Stokely) AIP
The Venetian Affair (Dr. Pierre Vaugiroud) MGM
1967
Blind Man’s Bluff (blind sculptor) Made in Spair
Mad Monster Party ‘voice of puppet) Embassy
1968
The Sorcerers (Prof. Monserrat) Allied Artists
Targets (Byron Orlock) Paramount
1969: To Be Released
Curse of the Crimson Altar (Dr. Marshe) AIP
The Fear Chamber (good scientist) Azteca-Col.
Isle of the Snake People (heroine’s dad) Az-Col.
House of Evil (menace) Azteca-Columbia
The Incredible Invasion (mad scientist) Az-Col.
Some Known Foreign Titles of Karloffilms
Black Castle: Mystery of the B. Castle (French)
Black Friday. Friday the 13th (French)
Black Room Mystery: Baron Gregor (French)
The Climax: The Passion od Fr. Hohner (Belgian)
D. Tracy Meets Gruesome: D.T. vs the Gang ( Fr.)
Frank 70: The Devil’s Lab of Dr. Rambow (Germ.)
The Ghoul: The Living Ghost (French)
Juggernaut: Crime on the Riviera (Belgian)
King of the Wild: Bimi (Argentinian Feature)
The Man who Lived Again: Switched Brains (Fr.)
The Mask of Fu Manchu: The Mask of Gold (French)
The Old Dark House: Call of the Flesh (Belgian)
The Old Daik House: The Gray House (Belgian)
The Old Dark House: The House of Death (French)
The Old Dark House: A Strange Evening (French)
The Old Dark House: In a Sinister House (Mex.)
The Strange Door Buried Alive (Belgian)
The Strange Door The Castle of Terror (French)
Str. Door: Behind the Doorsof Horror (German)
Uncommon Abbreviations used in Checklist: AP,
Associated Producers. FBO, Film Booking Offices.
GB, Gaumont-British. MG, Metro Goldwyn. P,
Pathe. RKO, Radio-Keith-Orpheum. U, Universal,
UA, United Artists. V, Vitagraph. END
FRENKENSETIN
King Karloff’s Greatest Film Of the Man Who Made A monster
BEWARE…
Out of the blackness of the sound stage, a finely-attired gentleman steps forth, halting within the single spotlight. He is Edward Van Sloan and he bears a message from the President of Universal Studios.
“How do you do?” he begins. “Mr. Carl Laemmle feels it would be a little unkind to ‘present this pic-ture without a word of warning. We are about to unfold the story of Frankenstein, a man of Science who sought to create life after his own image without reckoning on God. It is one of the strangest tales ever told. It deals with the 2 great mysteries of Creation—Life & Death. I think it will thrill you; it may shock you; it may even—horrify you . . . So, if any of you feel you’d not care to sub-ject your nerves to such a strain, now’s your chance to—er— Well, we warned you.
Chapter 1
FIENDS AT THE FUNERAL
The solemn, soul-stirring words of invocation roll thru the air of dismal midnight, creeping un-easily thru the miasma that pervades the mediaeval graveyard, somewhere in Central Europe. Beneath the ebony sky, in the center of the nectro-politan assemblage, the black-garbed priest stands with the flag of death—the dreaded skull & cross-bones—, mumbling the rites of the dead over the body within the coffin. Beside him is the sexton, holding aloft a lantern, and about him are gathered the family & friends of the deceased—two or three weeping women and a number of saddened, care-worn men, many of whom are mourning the loss. The peasants, their hats in their hands, grimly view the open grave.
Shattering the deathlike stillness & silence that follows the prayer—soundless save for the sobs of the pallbearers—a church bell tolls in the distance. It echoes, reverberating over the deserted country-side, and it is soon joined by others, in noticeable contrast with the mournful mood that now encom-passes the scene.
Four of the peasants slowly lower the coffin in to the grave with jerky movements of the ropes and one aged woman—the bereaved widow—begins to wail pitifully but is comforted by an equally elder-ly man with tufts of windblown white hair scat-tered at random about his bald head.
Two nearly unseen figures peer between the slats of the moss-clad picket fence surrounding the cemetery, their eyes peer from among the long-untouched weeds. Concealed by the shadows, the pallid Dr. Henry Frankenstein (Colin Clive) watches the ceremony, while beside him squirms his short hunchbacked assistant Fritz (Dwight Frye). The dwarfish Fritz, his twisted visage &glowing eyes moving impatiently in the dark, raises his head for a better view and immediately
Henry seizes the tattered shirt on Fritz’s shoulder. “Down! Down, you fool!” he growls, scarcely above a whisper.
Fritz reluctantly returns to the dark shadows to witness the proceedings, altho with far less visibility.
The funeral is ended. The peasants take a final look at the coffin, then silently depart behind the priest. The sexton tilts the lantern upon his shoulder, following the others, and soon the flag of death recedes out of sight.
Chapter 2
TO RAISE THE DEAD
A man is dead. May God have mercy upon his soul . . . for Dr. Henry Frankenstein will surely not let his body rest peacefully in the warm moist earth.
One man remains behind in the graveyard for his work has just begun—he is the gravedigger.
He removes his coat & hat and tosses them aside spits on his hands, rubbing them together. And gripping the shovel in his calloused hands, he be- gins the task of filling the grave. He hurls the sod & gravel down upon the coffin, creating a minia- ture avalanche of sound, and presently the grave is entirely covered. As if he were an aging familiar of Mother Earth, burying one of her fallen children, he pats down the loose earth firmly with the spade. At last he shoulders his coat and tosses on his hat and, throwing the shovel over his shoulder,
abandons the cemetery.
Hurriedly, Henry & Fritz leap over the fence, clambering over into the nebulous necropolis, and they excitedly hurl their coats to the ground, fall-ing to work at reopening the grave-violating the sanctuary that only Death offers.
In the background, behind a crumbled & crumb-ling picket fence and among several gnarled trees, the statue or is it a statue? —of the Grim Reaper looks on, clothed in a shroud of uncertainty, its misshapen, bony hands clasped about the cruci-form sword upon which it leans. Its horrible bone-white death mask catches & reflects the glow of the spectral clouds, tinted lightly by the rising moon’s pallid brilliance. It stands, perhaps, to serve a purpose similar to that of a scarecrow—to frighten away hovering spirits of the dead, maybe even demons
A veritable demon himself, Henry shouts, “Now, Come on!”
Fritz & he heave up one end of the coffin but they cannot quite get it out of the now open grave. The two are obviously having some difficulty with it for it weighs as much as both of them combined.
“Hurry! Hurry!” Henry urges, glancing up at the sky. “The moon’s rising—we’ve no time to
lose.”
Distracted and perhaps a little frightened, Fritz drops his shovel on the coffin lid and the resulting crash compounds the nervousness that Henry al-ready has acquired.
“Careful!” he growls.
“Here it comes!” Fritz cries excitedly.
Finally, the coffin is slowly shoved up onto the cemetery lot, as the sober-faced harried Henry
somberly & forcefully raises up the end still: n the grave. Fritz jumps out of the grave and crouches down on the ground, almost sitting, and with the aid of Henry pulls the coffin onto the ground. Henry crawls from the pit and goes to the dirt-encrusted casket. An almost imperceptible, thin-lipped smile upon his face, he pats the coffin lid fondly and the hollow sound roams thru the con-fines of its interior.
Satisfied, Henry mutters: “He’s just resting waiting for new life to come!”
Chapter 3
THE GIFT OF THE GALLOWS
The devilish pair make their way laboriously up a slope and along a bumpy country path, as Fritz
FRANKENSTEIN—Universal
Released December 1931
The Players
Dr. Henry Frankenstein (mad genius)
COLIN CLIVE
Elizabeth (his frightened fiancee)
MAE CLARKE
Victor Morris (her devoted friend)
JOHN BOLES
THE MONSTER (the classic of horror)
BORIS KARLOFF
Dr. Waldman (alias Van Helsing)
EDWARD VAN SLOAN
Fritz (the demented assistant) DWIGHT FRYE
Baron Frankenstein (crotchety papa) Frederick Kerr
Vogel the Burgomeister (pompous) Lionel Belmore
Hans the Woodman (Forester!) Forrester Harvey
Maria (the daisy that didn’t float)- Marilyn Harris
BASED on the world famous novel by 19-year-old Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley : Mrs. Percy B. Shel-ley. ADAPTED by John L. Balderston from the PLAY by Peggy Webling. SCREENPLAY by Gar-rett Fort & Francis Edwards Faragoh. DIREC-TOR: James Whale. CAMERAMAN: Arthur Edeson. SETTINGS: Herman Rosse. PRODUCED by Carl Laemmle Jr. MAKE-UP : JACK PIERCE. This Film book Actionized by G. John Edwards
from tape script by Pete Claudius. Special Editing by Forrest J Ackerman.
pantingly pulls—with Henry lending a lesser amount of energy from the rear of the vehicle—the wooden cart bearing the coffin & corpse. Before them lies the gallows. A body is outlined against the night sky—the body of a criminal, who now hangs lifelessly by his neck from the thick wooden post. The languid wind causes the body to swayback & forth ever so lightly, turning nearly un-noticeably.
They leave the cart a few yards away and Fritz gazes at the corpse nearby. “Here we are. Look !
It’s still here!” he snorts excitedly.
They advance toward the hanged man and Fritz, holding the lantern in one hand and a short, bulb-tipped rod in the other, peers fearfully up at the corpse from his contorted stature.
Henry calmly pokes him in the back, ordering
“Climb up and cut the rope.”
Fritz turns to him with a questioning gaze for this prospect holds no joy for the superstitious
lout. “No!” he babbles, his voice trembling openly. Henry frowns at Fritz impudence. “Go on. It can’t hurt you.” He hands him a dull pocket knife.
“Here’s a knife.”
Glancing fearfully at his master, Fritz reluctantly takes it and ascends the gallows like a slithering beast—true to his actual nature. He straddles the crossbeam and, the knife in his teeth, crawls along it until he is over the corpse. Removing the knife from his mouth, he carefully begins to saw away at the rope.
“Look out !” Fritz warns.
Looking down half fearfully, he watches as the corpse drops to the ground before Henry, who
Coffin-robbing for unorthodox Science’ most secret & daring experiment.
“That body has never lived, with my own hands.”
Henry Frankenstein tells Dr. Waldman (Edward Van Sloan). “I created it. steps back slightly.
“Here’s the knife,” Fritz calls, hurling it to earth at Henry’s feet. Then he swings from the
crossbeams like a repulsive baboon, slavering,
“Here I come!” And he jumps to the ground again. Henry examines the body of the hanged criminal while Fritz looks on wide-eyed, his lips twisted out of shape.
“Is it all right?” the diminutive ghouls inquires. Henry spits angrily. “The neck’s broken. The
brain is useless! We must find another brain.”
Chapter 4
THE CRIMINAL BRAIN
In the large auditorium-classroom within the Gold Stadt Medical College nearby, a night session is in progress. There are gathered a score of well- dressed gentlemen & women, looking on attentively as two doctors cover a corpse, wheeling it away on the operating table. They pass a 6-foot human skeleton, which one of the doctors accidentally brushes against, and it bobs up & down, a rid’cu- lous look upon its fleshless face, to the great amusement of the medical students. Giggles begin to echo thruout the room.
The distinguished professor of anatomy, Dr. Waldman (Edward Van Sloan), resumes his lecture. Beside him, on the desk, are two large glass jars, each containing a brain in formaldehyde solution. The jars are labeled alternatively: NORMAL BRAIN & ABNORMAL BRAIN.
The doctors leave the room. Waldman turns once more to the first jar intoning: “And in con-
clusion, ladies & gentlemen, here we have one of the most perfect specimens of the human brain that ever come to my attention at the University.
And here” He points to the second jar. “—the abnormal brain of the typical criminal.” He indicates the various regions of the brain with his pencil point. “Observe, ladies & gentlemen, the scarcity of convolutions on the frontal lobe as com-pared to that of the normal brain, and the distinct degeneration of the middle frontal lobe.
All of these degenerate characteristics check amazingly with the case history of the dead man, whose life was one of brutality, of violence & murder.
Both of these jars will remain here for your further inspection. Thank you, gentlemen. The
class is dismissed.”
Waldman departs from the auditorium and the students file out behind him in no apparent hurry. The door is locked and presently, after a brief moment of undisturbed silence, the twisted face of Fritz appears outside the window, contorting and peering into the latent laboratory. With his ever-present little rod, he pries the window open and stealthily enters.
He prowls around in the room, crawling thru the rows of seats, engulfed in the darkness, and makes his way to the desk and pair of brains. Unnoticed, the skeleton stands in the shadows beside him as he stares with fascination at the strange things in the foul-smelling liquid.
His ragged coat brushes against the “spectator”, “Sit—DOWN!” Henry tries to teach his creation. and, sensing something nearby, he wheels about very sharply. The scene that greets Fritz’s super- stitious eyes is that of the large skeleton, looming over him, jiggling & bouncing in an alarming, menacing manner. But he is not as fearful as one might imagine. Instinctively drawing a quick breath, he grabs the skeleton and halts its motion, as he gazes up at the fearful thing with a look of pure consternation—half apprehension & half be-wilderment. Then he turns and lifts up the jar designated NORMAL BRAIN, worming his way toward the window, but unexpectedly
Clang!
The dull but startling sound of something metal-lic being struck resounds from the darkness
Half paralyzed by fear, letting a tiny gasp es-cape his misshapen lips, his trembling hands re-
lease the jar and the brain soon finds itself lying amidst a pile of broken glass, scattered tissue &splashes of formaldehyde.
Fritz manages to calm himself and, realizing his inexcusable mistake, seizes the remaining jar
—marked ABNORMAL BRAIN—and scrambles out the window.
Chapter 5
A LUNATIC’S LETTER?
Candlelight bathes the photograph of Henry Frankenstein in a pallid blue-amber aura, the flames flickering eerily from a nocturnal draught. Sitting in the half-light of her room, Henry’s fiancée Elizabeth (Mae Clarke) gazes fondly at the unmoving image. Suddenly, she is disturbed from her pleasant pastime by the erratic trembling of the candle flame and the maid opens the door, entering the room.
“Herr Victor Morris,” she announces.
Elizabeth rises to her feet and Victor (John Boles)—a mutual friend—steps in.
“Victor!” she gasps joyfully. “I’m so glad you’ve come.”
“What is it, Elizabeth?” he asks.
She holds up a letter and Victor glances at it, nodding:
“Oh—you’ve heard from Henry?”
“Yes,” she replies. “The first word in four months. It just came. Oh, Victor—you must help
me.”
Victor senses there is something wrong and readily offers assistance.
“Of course, I’ll help you!”
They walk across the room and, standing beside the candles, Elizabeth shakes the letter at Victor.
“I’ve read this over & over again, but they’re just words—that I can’t understand. Listen
” She quotes from the letter, which reads:
You must have faith in me, Elizabeth. Wait. My work must come first, even before you. At night the winds howl in the mountains. There is no one here. Prying eyes can’t peer into my secret . . .
“What can he mean?” she asks, interrupting herself.
Victor is too absorbed to offer any interpretation. He inquires, “What does he say then?”
She continues. I am living in an abandoned old watch tower close to the town of Gold Stadt. Only my assistant is here to help me with my experiments.
“Oh … his experiments,” mutters Victor, some- what relieved.
Elizabeth clutches the letter. “Yes—that’s what frightens me. The very day we announced our engagement, he told me of his experiments. He said he was on the verge of a discovery so terrific that he doubted his own sanity.” She looks skyward.
“There was a Strang look in his eyes . . . some mystery . . . his words carried me right away. Of course, I’ve never doubted him, but still I worry I can’t help it. And now, this letter! Oh, this un- certainty can’t go on!” She & Victor sit down.
“I must know! Victor, have you seen him?”
“Yes—about 3 weeks ago,” he replies. “I met him walking alone in the woods. He spoke to me of his work, too. I asked him if I might visit his lab-oratory. He just glared at me and said he’d let no one go there. His manner was very strange.”
Elizabeth moans. “Oh, what can we do? Oh, if he should be ill
” She rises, her eyebrows knitted.
Victor too is concerned about Henry’s welfare but manages to conceal it fairly well. He assures her: “Now, don’t worry. I’ll go to Dr. Waldman, Henry’s old professor at medical school. Perhaps he can tell me more about all this.
“Victor, you’re a dear,” she smiles.
He looks fondly at her, declaring, “You know
I’d go to the ends of the earth for you.”
“I shouldn’t like that. I’m far too fond of you.”
Victor murmers, “I wish you were.”
Elizabeth — Henry’s betrothed — turns away, sadly. “Oh, Victor.”
Tense scene for Henry (with torch) and Dr. Waldman, with syringe, as Monster hesitates in doorway to its prison.
‘Oh, come away, Fritz, leave it alone,” doctor pleads with sadistic dwarf.
“I’m sorry.” He gets up, starting to leave, and Elizabeth & he shake hands.
“Goodnight Victor—and thank you. Thank you.”
He smiles. “Goodnight. And don’t worry. Promise?”
“I won’t.”
Victor departs from the room and walks across the hell toward the door but he is halted by a short cry from behind him.
“Victor!” It is Elizabeth again, hurrying after him.
He turns. “What is it?”
“I’m coming with you.”
Surprised, Victor babbles: “But, Elizabeth—you can’t do that!”
“I must!” She whirls about, going upstairs, I’ll be ready in a minute.”
Before Victor can offer another word of objection, Elizabeth has gone to get her coat.
Chapter 6
DARK REVELATIONS
Victor & Elizabeth are soon seated before the desk of venerable Dr. Waldman in his office. On his desk are a number of test tubes, containing a rain-bow array of chemicals, a microscope & numerous scientific tome. Along the wall there is a cabinet that houses more chemicals, other dusty books and—10 skulls! Waldman, fingering his eye glasses nervously, listens with extreme interest to the grim narrative of the two visitors.
“Young Frankenstein,” Waldman adds, “is a most brilliant young man, yet so erratic he troubles me.”
Elizabeth sobs, “I’m worried about Henry. Why has he left the University? He was doing so well—and he seemed so happy with his work !”
Eagle-eyed, craggy-featured Waldman frowns.
“Well, you know his researches in the fields of chemical galvanism & electrobiology were far in advance of our theories here at the University. In fact, they had reached a most advanced stage. They were becoming . . . dangerous. Herr Frankenstein has greatly changed.”
“You mean, changed as a result of his work?” Victor queries.
“Yes, his work—his insane ambition to create life!” Waldman confesses.
Victor looks down at the floor, meditating.
“How?” cries Elizabeth, worriedly. “How? Please tell us everything—whatever it is.”
“The bodies we use in our dissection room for lecture purposes were not perfect enough for his experiments, he said. He wished us to supply him with other bodies—and were not to be too particular as to where & how we got them.” He smiles painfully, continuing: “I told him that these demands were unreasonable and so he left the University to work unhampered. He found what he needed elsewhere.”
Victor laughs. “Oh—the bodies of animals! Well, what are the lives of a few rabbits & dogs?” Waldman looks sharply, seriously at him. “You do not quite get what I mean. Herr Frankenstein was interested only in human life—first to destroy it; then recreate it. There you have his . . . mad dream.”
“Can we go to him?” Elizabeth begs.
“You will not be very welcome.”
“Oh, what does that matter?” she wails. “I must see him. Dr. Waldman, you have influence with Henry. Won’t you come with us?”
“I am sorry but Herr Frankenstein is no longer my pupil.”
“But he respects you. Won’t you help us to take him away?”
Waldman rises. “Very well, fraulein. I warned you, but if you wish it … I will go.”
Chapter 7
THE TOWER OF POWER
The elements whirl thru a vortex of black clouds& howling winds. A storm is rising. The ominous clouds are looming over the ghostly tower, circling like ravenous vultures, and thunder peals in the mountains far away.
Within the laboratory in the tower, Henry & the loathsome Fritz are adjusting the myriad devices& instruments that dominate the weird chamber’s interior. Huge coils & monstrous cathodes & gig an-tic transformers stretch toward the heavens from the laboratory’s oaken floor. The wraithlike lights flash & sizzle and the coils buzz & hiss in a never-ending array of Science’s most astounding creations. The pygmy-like Fritz is on the ramparts, tightening the electric absorbers and Henry meanwhile, stands beside the large operating table, suspended from the ceiling by four chains. The table itself is partially covered with a sheet, the contours of which reveal a human form of monstrous proportions. Henry turns from examining the cryptic figure and stands below the skylight, shouting up to the roof.
“Fritz!”
A voice rings above the sound of thunder & wind: “Hello!”
“Have you finished making those connections?”
“Yes—they’re done.”
“Well, come down soon!” calls Henry. “Then help me with the schedule! We’ve lots to do !”
Quasimodo-like, Fritz slides down the rope to the laboratory, where he finds Henry uncovering the flat and board like, gauze-wrapped feet of the thing upon the table. The hunchbacked dwarf snarls and eyes nearly popping out, shakes his fist at the inert form.
“Ooh—the fiend!” he spits.
The thunder rumbles overhead but Henry is un- disturbed by all this turmoil. His eyes flash as he snaps: “Fool! If this storm develops as I hope, you’ll have plenty to be afraid of before the night’s over! Go on—fix the electrodes!”
Fritz fastens the electrodes, charging them, and Henry dons a pair of earphones. As he turns a
nearby dial, he listens eagerly to the wild crackling of static. He seems pleased by the results of the tests.
“This storm will be magnificent!” Henry shouts.
“All the electrical secrets of Heaven . . . and this time we’re ready! Eh, Fritz! Ready!”
Suddenly he hears a gasping noise behind him and, surprised, turns. “What’s the matter?”
“Look !” grunts Fritz, pointing to the operating table. A pallid, gray-green & inanimate hand hangs limply over the side of the table, having fallen from beneath the sheet.
Smiling, Henry reassures him. “There’s nothing to fear. Look—no blood, no decay . . . just a few stitches.” He pulls the sheets back father, revealing the massive head swathed in bandages. “And look—here’s the final touch: the brain you stole, Fritz. Think of it! The brain of a dead man . . .waiting to live again in a body I made! With my own hands—my own hands . . . Let’s have one final test! Throw the switches!”
Henry covers the head once more and he & Fritz assume their positions at various instrument pan-els. The two turn dials, push buttons & yank levers and the machines suddenly come to animated life, crackling & flashing momentarily. An electrolytic flame rises along a coil with in a cylinder of glass. An arc of bluish light crackles to & for thru a suspended transparent sphere. And a spiral streak of energy winds itself, serpent-like, about a spark-ling cathode. Henry sees that everything is seemingly in order, satisfactorily prepared for the ex-experiment—the final, ultimate experiment . . .
Fritz cuts the power off and once again only the rolling thunder is intermingled with the silence. Henry mutters excitedly:
“Good! In 15 minutes, the storm should be at its height. Then we’ll be ready . . .!”
Chapter 8
UNWELCOME VISITORS
But Henry’s plans are premature. For the moment his dreams are annihilated by the reverberate-tons of a hollow knocking sound from the door downstairs.
“What’s that?” Henry barks.
Fritz replies, “There’s someone there!”
The booming continues. “Quiet!” shrieks Henry.
“Send them away! Nobody must come here!” He gives Fritz a lantern, goading him down to the stairway, but suddenly he careens him around toward the operating table. “Here!—cover this!”
The two yank the sheet up over the pale figure and Henry again sends Fritz to the stairway. “Who-ever it is, don’t let them in!”
All the way from France, and direct from the screen, this “candid” shot of the Karloff Ranken- stein.
“Leave ’em to me,” Fritz grins broadly, turning to hobble down the tortuously winding staircase. As he returns to his work, Henry mutters angrily to himself: “Of all the times for anybody to come!”
Fritz scampers hurriedly down the broken steps while the irritating knocking continues to resound.
“You think I like it? Not much!” he growls to himself. “I’ll show ’em a thing about it at this time of night! Got too much to do!”
Once more the knock echoes thru the tower. “Can’t be bothered!” he swears. “Wait a minute! All right, all right! Wait a minute!”
Fritz finally reaches the ground floor and opens a tiny window in the door. Thru the barred open- ing he sees Waldman, Elizabeth & Victor, standing outside in the storm. Their coats are huddled about them and torrents of rain beat down on them.
“Dr. Waldman’s here” Victor begins, but with-out even as much as listening to what he says,
Fritz spits: “You can’t see him! Go away!” With that, he slams the window shut in their faces.
Fritz, balancing himself with his rod, returns to the laboratory, still muttering to himself. “All
right—knock! You can’t get in!”
The group, finding their efforts at knocking fu-tile, moves back from the door. They stand out in front of the tower and call up to the window of the laboratory, in which lights flicker & flash in a dazzling assemblage.
“Henry !” Victor shouts. Waldman shouts after him: “Frankenstein!”
“Henry!”
“Frankenstein!”
Annoyed, Henry finally goes to the window, peering out into the murky blackness of the fitful storm.
“Open the door!” calls Elizabeth.
“Let us in!” Waldman cries.
Henry, however, cannot see who is shouting.
“Who is it? Who is it? What do you want? You must leave me alone now !”
“It’s Elizabeth! Open the door!”
Henry realizes that the unwelcome visitors war-rant special attention. He & Fritz reluctantly
trudge downstairs to answer them. Henry yanks open the little window and immediately is greeted by a chorus of voices:
“Henry!” cries Elizabeth.
“Frankenstein!” Waldman demands.
Victor joins in: “Henry!”
But Henry is only more annoyed. “What do you want?” ….
“Open the door!” Victor demands, and Eliza-beth pleads, “Let us in!”
Henry, leading the way, is followed by the three up the baroque stairway to the door of the laboratory where Henry hesitates. He turns to the others.
“Are you quite Sure you want to come in?”
The question is answered by their nods and grimly—somewhat vengefully, altho with a note of resignation—he replies, “Very well.” He hurls open the door and one by one they all file into the bizarre environment of Henry Frankenstein. How-ever, before they can even protest, Henry has locked the door from the inside and slipped the key securely into his pocket. Turning, he sees their be-wildered expressions, so he answers the unasked inquiry.
“Forgive me,” he explains, “but I am forced to take unusual precautions. Sit down, please.”
The trio is reluctant to follow his suggestion.
Henry’s fiery look singles out Victor in particular.
“Sit down!” he hisses.
Victor outright startled by the vicious command, eases himself down onto the convenient cot. Henry then turns to instruct Elizabeth to do the same but in a less fearful tone of voice:
“You, too, Elizabeth. Please.”
She seats herself but Henry fails to notice that Waldman is not numbered among the congregation: He has wandered away into the interior of the laboratory. Unobserved, Waldman is standing over the carefully-wrapped body on the operating table, regarding it with a mental outpour of questions. He reaches toward it, preparing to take a closer, more rewarding look at the lifeless body.
Meanwhile, Henry informs the others: “A moment ago you said I was crazy. Tomorrow, we’ll see about that!”
The fiendish moron Fritz catches sight of Wald-man. “Don’t touch that!” he shrieks with an out-burst of animalistic passion.
The lightning flashes and the thunder roars.
Henry wheels about and rushes to the aged doc-tor, who slowly rises from inspecting the inert
corpse, and he silently but meaningfully points to the remaining chair. He stares with blazing
countenance at Waldman.
“I’m sorry, Doctor,” Henry mutters, leading him to the chair “but I insist. Please.”
Waldman contemplates Henry’s change since the University days and then sits down quietly,
without objection. He is instantly hurled a semi-arrogant refutation of his theories by Henry:
That Fritz just won’t give up on the monster, will he? Well, he won’t last till the end of the picture that way! (MORE GREAT PICTURES NEXT ISSUE!)
“Dr. Waldman, I learned a great deal from you at the University—about the violet ray, the ultra-violet ray, which you said is the highest color in the spectrum.” Eyes glowing, Henry bends closer to him, almost whispering. “You were wrong.
Here in this machinery I have gone beyond that. I have discovered the great ray that first brought life into the world.
Waldman is but mildly impressed for he has come to believe that Henry is unbalanced. As do
all men of science he asks for more information.
“Oh—and your proof?”
“Tonight, you shall have your proof,” he replies.
“At first, I experimented only with dead animals . . . and then, a human heart, which I kept beating for 3 weeks. But now—I am going to turn that ray on that . . . body—” He points to the motion-less form. “—and endow it with life!”
As Henry stands and points toward the covered figure, Victor & Elizabeth appear just as confused as they feel but Waldman still is reluctant to accept his explanation—to step across the eternal bound-ary between Science & the Supernatural.
“And you really believe,” says he, taunting, “that you can bring life to the dead?”
Henry corrects him sharply. “That body is not dead; it has never lived. I created it—I made it
with my own hands from the bodies I took from he graves the gallows, anywhere! Go and see for yourself.” He rises and turns to Victor & Eliza-beth. “You, too.”
Calmly, Waldman gets up, walking to the operating table in the other corner of the room and he silently peers at the unmoving patchwork of corpses, sewed together into a single being.
Victor & Elizabeth remain in their seats, too terrified to rise. Without a word of any sort except for a nodding, “Yes, yes” Waldman returns to his seat once more. Henry is somewhat amused by the group’s reaction.
Henry stands before the corpselike creation, leaning back against the operating table, and he
looks up at the ceiling, his eyes sparkling wildly.
“Quite a good scene, isn’t it? he muses. “—One man . . . crazy, three very sane spectators!”
Part 2 (Conclusion) in many more pages of Exciting Words & Thrilling Pictures plus Frauken- stein Film Facts—in the next Great Issue of FAMOUS MONSTERS (#57) on sale June 26.
Haunt your newsstand for it!
8mm HOME MOVIE
HORROR SHOCKERS
ON FILM!
Own these fabulous terror thrillers for your very own. Now the same films that you read about in the pages of FAMOUS MON-STERS can come alive on your home screen. You can run them again and again for the chill of your life.
True weird classics, these productions represent the work of leading Hollywood producers, directors and casts. All films are approx. 200 feet in length, which is one COMPLETE reel.
THE BRIDE OF
FRANKENSTEIN SPEAKS
The director and the make-up man could not make a figure of hate out of him as Frankenstein’s mon-ster. It seems as if he taught the audience the de-rightful game of pretending to he frightened. The director, James V hale, set him in situations of total
loneliness hut it was the beautiful inner spirit of Karloff himself that gave him the ability to feel compassion and transfer that emotion to the audience.
I would have liked to have known him better. I got to know him a little in the first film that Charles Laughton ever made in Hollywood. THE OLD DARK HOUSE, and of course when I was the Bride of Frankenstein (in name only).
Years later he came to our house to talk about a play to Charles. Always extraordinarily gentle and modest, it eventually dawned on his vast public that he was a highly intelligent and rather sophisticated person.
Elsa Lanchester
JOHN
CARRADINE
Seen here as Dracula with Boris Karloff as Dr. Niemann in HOUSE OF FRANKENSTEIN (1945), was not available for comment at time of publication.
Graveyard Examiner
The ‘’last Act of Boris karloff’’
Bill Warren with BORIS KAR- LOFF. This magazine made it possible for FM fan Bill to
fulfill a lifetime ambition and meet his favorite actor; and here, in ‘The ‘Last Act”, he
shares that thrilling encounter with The King with readers of The Graveyard Examiner.
The old man rocked back and forth on the bench before the pipe organ, his arthritis-crippled fingers playing over the silent keys. Behind and above him flames erupted with the hiss of gas. Dirt fell loosely from the ceiling, the turning water wheel caught fire and improbably halted. With thudding finality, a beam fell.
“Cut!” the director yelled.
“Hurry up, right away.” As he called, the special effects crew dashed up to the raised area of the dungeon with fire extinguishers and quenched the flames on the floor. Those on the walls were turned off backstage.
The old man, almost un-noticed, made his way off the platform to his ever-present wheelchair.
‘Thanks, Boris,” the director called.
Boris Karloff had finished the last scene for HOUSE OFEVIL, what was to be one of the two last films he would ever make.
And I saw it. Me, Bill Warren, who began reading FM at the age of 1 4 with #1, to whom even seeing the latest Karloffilm was a thrill.
FM’s editor had called me saying that if I wished I could go with him to the small sound stage on santa Monica Blvd. the next day and watch Boris Karloff make the first of 4 films he was to make in one month, at the age of 80.
That first day, we looked around the small cramped soundstage, trying to find Kar-loff. We noticed him at last, seated to one side in a wheel-chair. No one was speaking to him and he appeared to be quietly drowsing. He was made-up for the part of the kindly scientist of ‘THE FEARCHAMBER” whose evil as-assistant takes control of an experiment in terror.
After the director spoke to him, we talked briefly with Karloff as FM’s photo-grapher Walt Daugherty took some pictures, ones I shall treasure all my LIFE. Karloff was friendly but seemed to have some trouble speaking. The weather was stifling hot, and as he only had one half of one lung to breathe with, speech was not easy for him.
But he answered our questions, some of which I am sure he had been asked many times before — but he answered all, graciously and honestly. (For instance, he ad-mitted he disliked the makeup and costume for the monster in “SON OF FRANKEN-STEIN” and pointed out that they went back to the style of the first two films in “GHANT”.
He autographed some stills for both Forry and me — Forry told him it would be quite all right to sign some of them simply “B.K.”, taking into consideration that it was an effort for him to write.
We ceased our interview then as they were preparing to shoot a scene without Kar-loff. The huge doors of the sound stage were shut only long enough for the scene to be shot, for the air was thick and heavy.
We returned the next week when “ISLE OF THE SNAKEPEOPLE” commenced shooting but did not meet Karloff then.
The film being shot the last week was ‘THE INCRED-IBLE INVASION” in which Karloff played a scientist who accidentally sets free force-creatures. (One of the electrical props used in the laboratory should have been familiar to him as it had been used in both “FRANKEN-STEIN” and “BRIDE OFFRANKENSTEIN.”)
Again Karloff was seated out of the way to one side, holding an oxygen mask to his face and studying his. lines. A friend of the editor’s, JonBerg, and I hovered around him, trying to keep visitors to the set off his neck.
One mother dragged her child up to the tired old actor and saying that if I wished I could go with him to the small sound stage on Santa Monica Blvd. the next day and watch Boris Karloff make the first of 4 films he was to make in one month — at the said, “See, he played Franken-stein.” The child said, “You mean Herman Munster?”
Karloff either chose to ignore similar banalities or simply did not hear them; al-though, when spoken to, he would reply kindly and warm-ly, as if they actually knew who he was. When these people left, 1 am sure they took with them a new respect for “the man who played Frank-enstein.”
And 1 developed a new respect for him myself, for shortly thereafter Karloff be-gan to shoot his scenes.
The call came for him to enter the set. I felt strong sympathy for this resolute and brave old man, who experienced great pain in even walking. But when he heard the director call, the years fell Sway and he rose easily to his feet and suddenly appear-ed to be 20 years younger.
The chance to work, to dis-play his craft, made a Youngman of him again.
In watching Boris Karloff work in bits and pieces (the way all movies are shot) for the rest of the afternoon, I discovered something – Boris Karloff must have been one of the most conscientious ac-tors in films.
He had studied the script carefully, so that he knew the personality of the part he played, learning not only from his own lines but from those said about him. As a result of such study, if the same little bits of dialog action had to be done several times for one reason or another Karloff was able to vary the delivery of his lines slightly on each take, changing inflection &emphasis but always keeping completely within the bounds of the personality he was portraying.
I commented on this acting style to him. “I’ve done it all my film career,” he said. “It
prevents one from becoming too stale, you know.”
This practice, which I am told is rare among movie ac-tors, is the mark of a true traftsman.
In a later scene, Karloff was required to bolt a door. He did this and suddenly a look of pain crossed his face and he slumped against the wall. I gasped and started for-ward, so convincing was his acting — but that was what it was – acting. I stepped back, embarrassed; but as I did so, I saw the other visitors to the set also stepping sheepishly back. They had also been fooled.
And then, later that day, the picture was over; he made a short farewell speech to the crew and he left the soundstage. After this, he returned to England for a few months, and returned again to the United States and Hollywood. He made ‘The White Birch “segment of Name of the Game and was on The Red Skelton Show and The Jonathan Win-ters Show. At the end of 1968 he went home to England for the last time.
And I saw him act. I also was able to say to him on my behalf and for all lovers of fantasy films everywhere: “Mr.Karloff, I can’t begin to tell you how much I think of you. I have loved you all my life. You are my favorite actor.” I literally found myself un-able to say more.
Karloff smiled and patted my hand resting on the arm of his chair. He was somewhat
embarrassed as he spoke. “Why, thank you, young man. I’ve done my best and it is good
to know someone cares.”
Good by, Boris Karloff. You were well-loved.
IN MEMORIUM
by GREG BAZAZ
This column is dedicated to one of the greatest horror actors ever bom. Of course, we are talking about Boris Karloff who passed away on February 3, 1969 at the age of 81.
When looking back at the almost 150 movies he made, one would have to rank Kar-loff an equal to such greats as: Lon Chaney, Bela Lugosi, Basil Rathbone, Edward VanSloan, etc.
To every one reading this magazine, Karloff was much more than just an ordinary horror actor. For more than two generations he has been striking terror into the hearts of men, women, and children of all ages. His many movies have been classics in their field, with each new one as good as the last. Anyone who has ever seen his movies knows that he was certainly the King of them all. Each time we see Frank-enstein, or The Black Cat, or The Invisible Ray, we feel the same excitement, the same thrills that were felt when we first viewed the original.
It is our hope that in the generations to come, Boris Karloff will continue to send chills up and down the spines of millions of fans to come. Each time an old Karloff film is revived it proves that he never really died; he lives on eternally in all our hearts.
GRAVEYARD
EXAMINER
RETURNS
We’re back from the grave, and with a new editor! Greg Bazaz, a senior student at Northern Valley High School, Old Tappan, New Jersey, takes over the Editor’s job of the Graveyard Examiner. The newspaper resumes publica-tion after being discontinued in issue #24 of FM.
For you newer fans who have recently begun to read FAMOUS MONSTERS, the Graveyard Examiner is the Official Newspaper for all its readers. Our policy is to print as many of your names, draw-ings, and especially your pic-tures as we can. Also, we’ll be bringing you the final and of-ficial word on the world of Monsterdom. This gives all of you more of a chance to see your names in print.
This issue’s ASK GREG Department is composed of questions asked of Forry Ackerman, Editor In Chief of FM. From now on, though, all your fans should send your ASK GREG questions to:
“ASK GREG”
c/o The Graveyard Examiner
Famous Monsters Magazine
P.O. Box 5987
Grand Central Station
New York, N.Y. 10017
See you next issue ….
ASK GREG
A free service to readers of FAMOUS MONSTERS. We cannot reveal the home ad-dresses of stars like Chris Lee& Vincent Price, nor person-alities like Ray Bradbury &Robert Bloch, nor under take to answer questions that would take a month. But for reasonable requests (see fol-
lowing examples) Greg will be happy to consult his own (and Donovan’s) brain for answers.
1. In which of the Franken-stein movies did Lon Chaney play the monster?
Ans. Lon Chaney Jr. played the Frankenstein monster in THE GHOST OF FRANKEN-STEIN, the fourth in the series.
2. How many movies did Bela Lugosi play Count Dracula’’
Ans. 3. DRACULA. MARKOF THE VAMPIRE, and AB-BOTT & COSTELLO MEET
FRANKENSTEIN.
3. What was the name of the movie in which Boris Karloffplayed the monster’s maker?
Ans. Boris Karloff played the creator in FRANKENSTEIN1970, but also played the
monster’s reviver in THE HOUSE OF FRANKEN-STEIN. END
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Black E. Lagune of Draku Lake, Transylvania, writes: “The LUGOSI MEMORIAL EDITION is being avidly sought after by collators here at prices up to ten and a half ghoulars.”
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COLLECTOR’S
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FAMOUS MONSTERS
PAPERBACK
FAMOUS MONSTERS re-prints the best from our first 5 years of publication—avail-able at a bargain price in permanent paperback book form! A full 160 pages of rare out-of-print pictures of Boris Karloff, Bela Lugosi, the Chaneys Sr. & Jr., Christopher
Lee . . . all your favorites!
FANTA CLAUS
We confess!
This is the worst Mystery Photo we have ever run. Worst, that is, from the standpoint of being difficult to guess, for it is surely the easiest of all the past 33.
And in some ways, it is one of the BEST we have ever run, being of the great star blessed by all who has now gone to his rest.
Thank you, “Santa Claus”, for 50 years of pictures— 155 of them from 1919 till now—and every perform-ance a present.
A fan, Phil Moshcovitz, prepared this picture of you in one role you never played but in which we know you would have been superb.
You can’t fool us, Frankenclaus! We know that’s you, BORIS KARLOFF. And you deserve an Eternal Christmas.
ANSWER
TO MYSTERY PHOTO NO. 33
The ghastly ghoul in a frizzy tizzy who looks like a refugee from the pages of Eerie or Creepy is in realityan Amateur Make-up Artist.
Late last year this lucky contestant won a prize for horribleness in a con-test sponsored by Minolta, featuring the Autopak. “This horror make-up contest autopak ’em in,” said the
Minolta People, and sure enough it did.
Details can be found on page 2 of the Nov. 25, ’68 issue of U.S. News & World Report.
YOU AXED
Our regular YOU AXED FOR IT department this issue is devoted entirely to BORIS
KARLOFF and the following representative group of his admirers:
Caesar Desiano ——Jan Kovalcik —–Julia Blair —-
Kevin Thomas —— Laine Liska —— Sharon Phelps
—— Kenneth Brown —— Kurt Rosecrans —— Julia
Reino —— Darwin Niles Jr—— L. E. Bloch —— Riki
Pinckard —— Susan Wald —— Bill Palmer —— John
Tuson —— Gordon R. Guy —— Ben Inserra —— Wm.
Keller —— Chris Lindner —— Anthony Golembrews
—— Peter Parkinson —— Denn’s Chartier —— Tom
Rushmore —— Joe Kucera —— Andy Braun —— Lon
PAGE 60