Showing posts with label Vampira. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Vampira. Show all posts

Monday, October 27, 2014

COUNTDOWN TO HALLOWEEN (Day 28): ELVIRA, MISTRESS OF THE DARK


Six years after the death of Larry Vincent, who starred as Horror Host “Sinister Seymour” on “Fright Night” on KHJ-TV in Los Angeles, producers began the task of rebuilding the show in 1981.



They decided to go with a female host and went to the original hostess of horror films, Maila Nurmi, to see about reviving “The Vampira Show” with a new actress portraying the vamp.  Nurmi worked on the show for a little while, but it didn’t work out when they would not hire her choice to play Vampira—Lola Falana.



So the station sent out a casting call and after seeing around 200 potential hosts, picked Cassandra Peterson to be their host.  They left it up to her to create the image.  Cassandra and her best friend, Robert Redding, based their original look on Sharon Tate’s character from “The Fearless Vampire Killers”.  Tate was a red-head in that role and a vampire waif.



When the producers balked and told her to wear black instead, they came up with the sexy punk/vampire look and gave her the “Valley Girl” mannerisms and speech patterns.  And so “Elvira, Mistress of the Dark” was born.



Born in Kansas, Cassandra Peterson grew up in Randolph, until the area was flooded intentionally to created Tuttle Creek Reservoir.  Cassandra had severe burns over 30% of her body as a toddler when she overturned boiling water onto herself and had to have skin grafts.  This may be why that at an early age, she was fascinated with horror-themed toys over the usual dolls that girls usually played with at her age.

By her teens, Peterson was a go-go dancer at a local gay bar.  Right after High School graduation, she drove to Las Vegas and became a showgirl at “The Dunes” where she met Elvis Presley, who encouraged her to pursue a singing career.

In the early ‘70s, Peterson moved to Italy and was the lead singer of two Italian rock bands “I Latins Ochanats” and “The Snails”.  At this time, she ran into Federico Fellini on the street and he invited her to be in his movie “Roma” in a small role because she reminded him of his wife.  She had a tiny role as a showgirl in the James Bond film “Diamonds are Forever”, played a topless dancer in “The Working Girls” and probably posed for the cover of Tom Waits’ album, “Small Change”.  Peterson doesn’t really remember doing it, but admits that it looks like her.

(Click to Embigify)

Back in the states in nightclubs and discos, she toured with a musical/comedy act, “Mammas Boys”.  By 1979, she joined “The Groundlings” in L.A. where she created the persona of her Valley girl character who would eventually become Elvira.  In 1981, she auditioned for the third “Gilligan’s Island” TV movie in the role of Ginger Grant, just before KHJ-TV offered her the horror host position.  She was also a radio personality on KROQ from ’82-83.



The popularity and notoriety of Elvira and “Movie Macabre”grew rapidly with her tight-fitting, low-cut, cleavage-displaying black gown and satirical, sarcastic edge—she specialized in double entendres and ratings soared.  She hosted the show from 1981-1985 and did several specials.  Elvira was the first nationally syndicated TV Horror Host.

Soon the character evolved from cult figure to a brand and by the mid-1980s and well into the ‘90s Elvira was associated with costumes, comic books, action figures, pinball machines, model kits, calendars, beer, trading cards, perfume and dolls.





At he height of her popularity in 1988, the feature film “Elvira, Mistress of the Dark” was released.  Co-written by Peterson, the movie featured Elvira inheriting all of her late great-aunt Morgana’s earthly possessions: a home in the most conservative town in the country, Fallwell, Massachusetts, a poodle that may not be what it seems and a spellbook that Elvira mistakes for a cookbook.  Hijinks, of course, ensue.



In 2014, Elvira is hosting “13 Nights of Elvira” for Hulu—beginning October 19th through Halloween.  This series features all new material and some of the films are: “Cannibal Women in the Avacado Jungle of Death”, “Evil Bong”, “Seed People”, “Shrunken Heads” and on Halloween itself George Romero’s “Night of the Living Dead”.



Here’s Elvira’s 1986 MTV Halloween Special, care of a fella named Rockula and the power of VHS (beware the blur—I guess the signal was a bit top heavy):


In 1993, CBS did a pilot for a weekly sitcom for Elvira,
but it was a bust…




And now Elvira has a new song and video called “Two Big Pumpkins” written by Fred Schneider of the B-52s and Third Man Records released it onto the unsuspecting public—the single features heat-reactive ink on the sleeve that reveals Elvira when warmed:




Essential Sites Cited:



Monday, October 20, 2014

COUNTDOWN TO HALLOWEEN (Day 20): VAMPIRA

(Click to Vampira-Size)

Maila Nurmi moved to New York and then Los Angeles to pursue a career in the entertainment industry after graduating from high school in Astoria, Oregon.

By 1944, she was fired by Mae West, allegedly because West feared being upstaged in her play “Catherine Was Great”.  On Broadway, she recieved great attention appearing in the horror-themed midnight show “Spook Scandals” in which she screamed, fainted, lay in a coffin and creeped around a mock cemetery.  She was a high-kicking showgirl at the Earl Carroll Theatre and a chorus line dancer at Florentine Gardens.


(Click to Vampira-Size)


By the ‘50s, she was supporting herself by posing for pin-up photographers for men’s magazines.  She modeled for Alberto Vargas, Bernard fo Hollywood, and Man Ray.  She had an uncredited role in Victor Saville’s film “If Winter Comes” (1947).


(Click to Nurmi-fy)


The idea for Vampira began when, in ’53, when Nurmi attended choreographer Lester Horton’s annual Bal Caribe Masquerade in a costume inspired by Morticia Addams of The New Yorker cartoons of Charles Addams.  Her alluring appearance in tight black dress against her pale skin caught the attention of television producer Hunt Stromberg, Jr. who wanted to hire her to work for KABC-TV.






The name Vampira was the invention of Nurmi’s husband, Dean Riesner.  The chracterization of the character was influenced by the comic strip “Terry and the Pirates” and it’s character the Dragon Lady and the evil queen from Disney’s “Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs”.
(It is of special note, then, that she was the model for Maleficent, the evil witch from Disney’s Sleeping Beauty, in 1956.)


(Click to Vampira-Size)


And so, Vampira was the first television host of horror movies.  “The Vampira Show” premiered on May 1, 1954 after a preview entitled “Dig Me Later, Vampira” aired the previous night.  Each episode began with, well, this…



The show was an instant hit, and a month later she appeared as Vampira in a skit on “The Red Skelton Show” with Bela Lugosi, Peter Lorre and Lon Chaney, Jr.  At the same time, LIFE magazine ran an article on her with a photo-spread showing her show-opening entrance.


She would then introduce the film and mock it while reclining on a skull-encrusted couch.  Her bits would be the same ones most horror hosts use to this day… puns with a macabre spin, guest-stars like her pet spider, Rollo.  She ran as a candidate for Night Mayor of Hollywood with a platform of “dead issues”.  KABC would have her cruise around in a chauffeur-driven ’32 Packard with the top down in the back seat while holding a black parasol.

(Click to Nurmi-fy)

In 1955, the show was cancelled (in the early days of TV these guys couldn’t keep a hit going for anything!), Nurmi retained the rights to the character and name and took them to rival station, KHJ-TV which gave her a show for a short period.  And that was the end of her Horror Hosting career.



Her decline in Hollywood was sharp and by 1956, when she was struggling with employment making $13 a week, she agreed to appear in Ed Wood’s movie, “Plan 9 From Outer Space” for $200.  She knew it was professional suicide.  By the ‘60s, her career was nearly nonexistent.

(Plan 9 with Bela--Click to Lugosi-splode)


She calls what happened to her a kind of “blacklist”, that for whatever reason, post war America wasn’t quite ready for what she and the Beat movement promised.  It is strange that someone could come so close to major stardom and then just drop off the map.  But then, loads of horror hosts were seemingly dropped for no good reason, so I don’t necessarily buy into that.

(Click to Goth-Punk-Out)


What did happen is that she proved the worth of local hosts with talent taking the leftovers of Hollywood and spinning it into ratings gold while making sitting home in the dark, watching movies a hell of a lot more interesting.





A very interesting article/opinion piece about Vampira here:


Sites Cited




Sunday, October 5, 2014

COUNTDOWN TO HALLOWEEN (Day 5): TARANTULA GHOUL

I first heard the name Tarantula Ghoul on my search of Horror Hosts for this year’s Countdown to Halloween.  Being that she was a Portland-based host (on KPTV’s House of Horror) who only had a show for two years in the late 1950s, I didn’t think too much of it.  Add to this the fact that there are no known video recordings of her show and its hard to believe many people do know about her.



The fact that she was a female host in the ‘50s made her  exceptional, of course.  Other than Vampira who was a pioneer to both men and women in the art of hosting, there were no other women doing it until Moona Lisa in 1963.  Why not cover Vampira, you ask?  No worries, dear reader, it’s a lenghty month and we’ll have time for her later.





Suzanne Waldron was Tarantula Ghoul a vampy monster of ceremonies, referred to affectionately by her fans as “Taranch”.  Those fans wondered whatever became of her for years as her show seemed to end suddenly.  All they had to prove her existence was a few articles, photos and ads for her show.

CLICK THE PICTURES TO READ THE ARTICLES


It’s a real shame, because the antics and bits her show produced seem really innovative and quite witty.  Very Morticia Addams, actually.  She attacks the Highway Commission for removing the few decent death traps left, kids the D.A.R. with her own organization, the D.S.W.T. (Daughters of the Salem Witch Trials).  Active in the Black Cross instead of Red and lectures on Second Aid as opposed to First.  She advises audiences to “Smoke the Big-O”, in tones of evil, “—OPM Cigarettes!”



Her sense of pageantry was bold as she would have a different set piece with each feature… for Frankenstein the lab was recreated for her operating table entrance.  For Mummy films she made an entrance from a sarcophagus.  For Murders in the Rue Morgue she did the show in French with English subtitles.  King Kong was presented as a This is Your Life satire with a large audience of costumed monsters paying tribute to a live chimp named Kenya, an alleged great, great grandson of Kong.





Characters and creatures on her show are Milton, a retired grave-robber turned gardener; a boa constrictor named “Baby”; a rattlesnake and "Sir Galahad",  a tarantula.  At home, Suzanne had a Great Dane named “Frankenstein”.



Well, one blogger eventually did discover what happened to Tarantula Ghoul after contacting one of her sons for information about the host.  Suzanne got pregnant and wasn’t married at the time and so she was quickly off the air.  She did go on to act in theater and commercials in Portland in the decades since, until the family moved to Omaha, where the former Tarantula Ghoul died of cancer, just shy of the age of 50 in 1982.



Little did I know that I own a few pieces of Tarantula Ghoul’s work.  In fact, her voice-work is a fairly popular thing come this time of year.  Her song “Graveyard Rock” is a popular tune for Halloween parties and events.  "King Kong" is the other tune and it features more of her singing and is more a throwback to the swing period with jazzy elements.  I’ve had it on my digital devices and my Halloween mixes for years.  It is her voice that takes the songs beyond mere novelty and makes it work on another level.  And I suppose that song and the other that she did with “The Gravediggers” are the only recordings of her voice out there.

Enjoy both of her songs here…

"Graveyard Rock"

"King Kong"


And here are most of the sources for tonight's blog...
if I've left you off of the list, my bad...






Wednesday, October 1, 2014

COUNTDOWN TO HALLOWEEN: DAY 1


And here we go again!


If you are unfamiliar with the Countdown to Halloween, let me catch you up.
There is a community of bloggers out there who celebrate the season by dedicating their blogs, twitters, tweets, tumblrs and even their facebooks to the entire month of October
 and the great finale of it, HALLOWEEN.


And you are currently viewing one of those blogs.

Each and every day of this month, I'll be here with some new Halloween... THING.
Most likely multiple things as I like to overdo it most of the time.
I figure why throw a grenade when you can throw three grenades to make sure you hit something.


Well this year my main focus will be Horror Hosts--those fine and dedicated broadcasters who took to the airwaves to broadcast macabre movies out to all the kiddies and insomniacs out there who wanted more than just a movie with their cereal or tv dinners!  Those people who watch the flawed film alongside us and point out faults and follies while getting just as big a thrill as we do at home!


From the Cool Ghoul to Penny Dreadful, from The Advisor to Zacherley, from Vampira to Dr. Scar, from The Creep to Bob Burns, from Elvira to Deadly Earnest (all three of them!) I'll be giving you the lowdown on some of the most celebrated hosts of horror to ever reach the air.  It'll be educational for you and me as I'm learning as I go as much as I knew before--and more!

So stay tuned, kiddies, and don't cover your eyes!

You wouldn't want to miss the gore!


Postscript:
It's the 60th anniversary of
THE CREATURE FROM THE BLACK LAGOON...
I will do something this month featuring my favorite creature.
He is, after all, the most persecuted of all the Universal Monsters...
the poor guy just wants a girlfriend and the world just keeps getting in his way.
Stupid air-breathers.



Now I leave you with three pictures of a creature that never was,
never will be,
and yet IS...
BEHOLD!




Tuesday, October 22, 2013

THE COUNTDOWN TO HALLOWEEN: DAY 22

(Dracula, the Polygamist)

A series of images of the "Brides of Dracula"
in all their various incarnations...

















And now The Misfits with "Vampira"



And don't forget that at 4:30pm ET on TCM,  A PLACE OF ONE'S OWN will be playing.
It is a ghost tale about a retired couple who move into a long-abandoned house
that is rumored to be haunted by the previous owner.  Soon, their hired 
helper, a young woman, becomes changed, possessed by
the spirit that lurks in the house.