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I guess that they all had “bad hair days” as new distaff members of the living dead?  [easter_huh] [easter_undecided]

And, come to think of it, the newly-arisen vampire, Roxanne Drew, also looked like she was doing her best Phyllis Diller impression, what with that decidedly wild and unkempt hair style of hers.  [easter_shocked] [easter_evil] [easter_wink]

PS Can you imagine if the “distinctively” coiffed Aunt Hannah Stokes had become a vampire? Oy vey!!!   [easter_shocked] [easter_evil] [easter_grin]
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A question I forgot to pose (probably because it's not related to the point I was making): What in the world is it about female vampires that when a woman dies and rises as a vampire, suddenly every hair on her head seems to be tease up to within an inch of its undead life?! Some of Scream, Blacula, Scream's female vampires, far from looking scary, look ridiculous. And it's not just a phenomenon linked to the '70s because it even continues today (though thankfully not in shows like Interview with the Vampire).
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Oh, MB and Gerard,

You’ve cited one of my favorite 1970s horror films, “Blacula,” starring the late, distinguished Shakespearean
actor, William Marshall. I mean, after only one year after Dan Curtis had pulled the plug on the beloved “Dark Shadows,” we DS fans were somewhat provided with some consolation by the release of this terrific vampire film. “Blacula” did help to take away some of the sense of loss when DS went into daytime television history.

And, in addition, to Mr. Marshall, there were some other wonderful actors, who were just beginning their acting careers in this film, like Denise Nicholas, Vonetta McGee, the late Gordon Pinsent and the late Thalmus Rasulala as Dr. Gordon Thomas, an LAPD pathologist, who investigates the strange and grizzly murders in Los Angeles. Dr. Gordon Thomas reminded me both of psychic investigator Dr. Peter Guthrie and the redoubtable Professor T. Elliott Stokes on DS. In fact, I was pleasantly surprised to see Mr. Rasulala in this exciting film because I had just seen him as El Gallo, the pirate/narrator, in the long-running off-Broadway musical, “The Fantasticks,” at the Sullivan Street Playhouse when Mr. Rasulala was then known professionally as Jack Crowder. Believe me, Mr. Rasulala could sing very well in addition to being a fine dramatic actor.

No doubt, Vicky, Carolyn, Mrs. Stoddard, Roger and, especially Burke Devlin, would have enjoyed watching Mr. Marshall at the Collinsport Cinema in his role as the distinguished Prince Mamuwalde, vampire extraordinaire!
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Calendar Events / Announcements '24 I / Re: Scream, Blacula, Scream
« Last post by Gerard on Today at 01:05:54 AM »
On my cable package, there is a collection of movie channels that belong to STARZ that are included, rather than a subscription.  They play both Blacula and Scream, Blacula, Scream on a regular basis.  I saw the former in the theater, but, for some reason, never saw the latter on the big screen.  I finally saw it on TV on some local late-night monster movie show.  Now, it's repeated quite frequently on the afore-mentioned STARZ affiliate.  (Usually, both films are aired back-to-back.)  When it rains, it pours.

Gerard
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TV TONIGHT

Interview with the Vampire
1 HR 10 MIN * 2024 * TV-MA
Drama / Horror / Interview / Entertainment / Paranormal * NEW
S2 E2 * "Do You Know What It Means To Be Loved By Death?"
Armand joins the interview, and he and Louis tell Molloy the story of how they met.
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WORTH WATCHING

Interview with the Vampire (Sunday, 9/8c, AMC: streaming on AMC+): Louis (Jacob Anderson) and Claudia (Delainey Hayles) arrive in post-WWII Paris, where they are swept up in the flamboyant intrigue of the Theatre des Vampires, the macabre setting for Louis’s fateful meeting with Armand (Assad Zaman).
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