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Topics - Gothick

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46
Calendar Events / Announcements '24 I / Grayson Hall podcast
« on: September 23, 2019, 09:18:49 PM »
Fans,

Melody Clark, one of Grayson's fan club presidents from the late 1970s (and editor of the zine Shades of Grayson) leads this interesting conversation about Grayson as the lead-off episode of her new podcast, "Fan Flak."

https://anchor.fm/melody-clark/episodes/Fan-Flak-a-celebration-of-the-life-of-Grayson-Hall-e56s8v

DS fans Taeylor and Cassie, both of whom used to post here, are the other participants. Some fun stories and some very moving ones are told.

My only very slightly critical comment is that the topic of Grayson's favorite actress came up, and the name Kim Hunter was mentioned. In the interviews I've read (including a tape recording I heard of Grayson talking to fans), Grayson mentioned Kim Stanley, not Kim Hunter, as her favorite actress. A completely understandable mistake. Kim Hunter is at least somewhat remembered thanks to Planet of the Apes, but Kim Stanley is only really known to film buffs for her bravura performances in such movies as The Goddess and Seance on a Wet Afternoon. Kim Stanley also appeared in a memorable episode of Night Gallery in 1971.

There are some technical difficulties with this first episode. The sound goes dead 3 or 4 times. You just have to be patient and let the recording play and eventually, it comes back.

I am excited about this new series because Melody is so interesting to listen to, and she's promising Nancy Kersey and R.J. Jamison among future guests.

G.

47
Fans,

At least a few DS fans also watched STRANGE PARADISE, which was produced in Ottawa, Canada and syndicated on Metromedia and a bunch of other TV stations with some repeats during the early to mid 1970s. DS producer Bob Costello along with writers Ron Sproat and Joe Caldwell eventually worked on SP (after they had departed DS). For the first few months, every episode was written by Ian Martin, an actor-writer who went on to script many episodes of the 1970s CBS RADIO MYSTERY THEATER which was my favorite late night radio show back circa 1973-76.

I wrote this remembrance of my initial 1969 viewing of SP for my friend Curt's blog:

https://maljardinblog.wordpress.com/2019/09/08/happy-50th-anniversary-strange-paradise/

Best, G.

48
This is a video of part of the 1980s production of Lillian Hellman's playThe Little Foxes starring Elizabeth Taylor (in a truly ghastly faux Southern accent). It was obviously shot by somebody with a camcorder in the audience. Humbert Allen Astredo appears, somewhere around the five minute mark I think. I haven't had the chance to do more than have a glance at it--he is debonair and flawless, as always.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8_yi-Ga6Iy4&

G.

49
Forget that banal Art Wallace teleplay "The House"--this 1956 episode of MATINEE THEATRE seems like the real precursor of Dark Shadows, particularly in the form in which it became wildly popular in 1967-69:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GEOl6kaZ8RE&list=WL&index=138&t=138s

Cast includes matinee idol Tom Tryon (who later became a successful novelist), Marshall Thompson, and veteran character actress Helen Wallace as brooding housekeeper Della.

G.

50
A friend of mine watched this and thought it was a hoot. I don't have a Netflicks sub, so haven't seen it. I did spot a clever parody of the old Orson Welles Paul Masson wine commercials in the trailer.

https://mashable.com/article/frankensteins-monsters-monster-frankenstein-review/

G.

51
Calendar Events / Announcements '24 I / OT: As the Stomach Turns
« on: August 02, 2019, 03:20:31 AM »
Fans might get a kick out of this old skit from the Carol Burnett Show. There are a couple of others on YT.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WSR26q244p8

G.

52
Fans,

I'd never seen either of the early 70s Blacula films starring legendary Shakespearean actor William Marshall. Today I happened to notice that the second one, Scream, Blacula, Scream (which I think played on a double bill with Dr Phibes Rises Again in a lot of theaters), is available to view on youtube. Complete film here:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=99SS1PnW7Jk&list=WL&index=125&t=144s

It was a surprise to me how many nods there seem to be in this to DS, both the original show and hoDS, in particular.

Best, G.

53
Calendar Events / Announcements '24 I / OT: Phantom of the Soap Opera
« on: July 10, 2019, 06:09:27 PM »
Some of you might enjoy my friend Kev's review of a 1988 soap-themed mystery novel, THE PHANTOM OF THE SOAP OPERA by Judi Miller.

G.

Kev's review (includes spoilers):

Jamaica Plains, Mass., 1962. Party girl Emily abandons unwanted lovechild 'Noonie' to the dubious care of Mrs. Jackson's private "Orphanage" as punishment for (a) not being born a girl and (b) losing his job on a soap opera (the character was killed off). Noonie tries to change Mama's mind by throwing on a dress and chasing after her car. The other abandoned kids laugh at him. Beaten, drugged and abused at the 'Orphanage,' Noonie is eventually admitted to a psychiatric ward. His only fond memory of his time with Mrs. Jackson is assisting Joe the handyman in his work. Joe taught him how to use tools.

New York City, 1987. 'The Master' aka 'The Soap Opera Stabber,' is loose in Manhattan, murdering starlets with a trusty screwdriver, specifically those who play, audition, or are considered for the part of 'Heather' in "the hottest soap opera on the air." To celebrate its 25th anniversary, the All My Days team are planning "the most spectacular soap wedding ever filmed for television" - comparisons are drawn with that of Charles and Princess Di. Tragically, Kristi Marlowe doesn't live to enjoy overnight superstardom. One evening she invites a surprise visitor into her dressing room. A single blow from behind heralds a reign of terror!

The writers decide against "retiring" the Heather character, instead persevere with a hastily improvised script which sees the bride-to-be involved in a near fatal car accident. Comatose and bandaged from head to toe, 'Heather's life hangs in the balance as Wanda Furman, 'Crystal' in rival soap Shining Light, auditions for the part. 'The Master' is not best pleased and Wanda dies from multiple stab wounds.

Jessica Lee, the former child-star, is a controversial, deeply unpopular choice for Heather MK III. Hardly has she pulled on her costume than All my Days creator and chief writer Irma "Czarina of the soap opera" Hood, is petitioning for her to be sacked. The Phantom Stabber strikes again.

Detective Theresa 'Terry' Morrison of 20th Homicide is assigned the case. With three famous stars dead, it is imperative the police apprehend the killer before he-she strikes again. Terry rooms with Dierdra Miles, aka Joy on Shine A Light, the latest version of Heather, whose lucrative salary takes into account that "It's not a traditionally lucky role."

The chief suspects include everybody, but especially:

Aunt Beulah, a twisted, possibly demented harridan who has been with the soap from episode one. Probably the last person to see Kirsti alive, she loathes young actresses and revels in their murders. On the one occasion she is glimpsed sans blouse and wig, Aunt Beulah looks very much like an Uncle Beulah.

Maxwell Schwartz, an old school casting couch director who favoured Jessica Lee for the Heather role. Did he murder Kirsti and Wanda to bag the female lead for his latest conquest?

Kevin Gardner, a young hot head with romantic connections to all the victims. Kevin is a "serious actor," currently employed as a waiter, and despising it. Almost as much as he despises those of his vocation who sell out by appearing in soaps. Walking out on Deirdra, he takes all his belongings. And her screwdriver.

Irma Hood. Chief writer. As far as she is concerned, former child star Jessica Lee is entirely devoid of talent and should not be allowed anywhere near All My Days. Irma lives through her beloved characters. Would she kill for them?

Alan Alders. Dierdra's handsome thirty-something co-star on Tomorrow's Just Another Day. A screwdriver-owning alcoholic misogynist, who ..... was raised in an orphanage!

Bob Morrison, Terry's husband and fellow cop. Furious at being constantly outshone by the little missus, he good as demands she pack in her career and become a proper slippers-ready-when-I-get-home housewife like any normal woman. Terry angrily refuses and decides against informing him of her pregnancy.

Dawn Emory. Plays bit-parts on all the soaps. "She was dressed like Theda Bara in a black-beaded cloche hat and a complete black 1920s costume. Her shoes were black and in period. Only her stockings, patterned and lacy, spoke of the 1980s. She dangled a sequinned black cigarette holder from her mouth. No cigarette." Never in the frame, not even thrown in as a red herring, but, with everyone else seemingly gone AWOL from a Murder She Wrote shoot, her fashion sense raises sagging morale.

Walter Smith, gregarious editor of hot gossip mag, Soap Opera Scoops. Amiable, disgusted by the crimes and eager to do all he can to assist the police, still he blows a gasket when Terry confides that she's planning to raise her child as a single parent.

And who or what is Ignatious Xavier?

Everyone agrees that Terry is much too beautiful to be a detective and "You could be a soap star." The detective duly bags a speaking part as a Wedding guest. At least she'll be close at hand should a TV audience of millions prove temptation too great for the killer to resist. As if everyone weren't already stressed out, the episode is to be shot 'live.' A cop advises his pal that, should 'The Master' try his or her luck, "Let's keep cool, humor him, and wait for further orders. After all, Oswald killed Ruby on live TV."

54
Fans,

I'd somehow never caught up with (and don't even recall ever hearing about) Dan Curtis's 1977 TV movie CURSE OF THE BLACK WIDOW:

https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLap9g0hLZfxnWLj-ML5q3tFMZE9lz913v

It seems as if this may have been intended as a kind of re-boot of the KOLCHAK franchise, featuring Tony Franciosa's PI character, Higbie. The latter is a rather more mainstream type of character than Carl Kolchak, and there are fewer comic touches. The impressive cast includes Donna Mills, Patty Duke, and June Allyson, with cameo roles for June Lockhart and Dan Curtis's own daughter Tracy.

I thought this was a solid example of a typical 1970s movie-of-the-week thriller. The score by Robert Cobert is very reminiscent of the music composed for the Kolchak films.

You need to seriously suspend disbelief for certain things the script does, and the "twist" ending is telegraphed way in advance--but I thought it was fun!

G.

55
Calendar Events / Announcements '24 I / Music by Robert Cobert
« on: June 25, 2019, 08:59:23 PM »
Fans,

The most obvious DS connection to this 1961 series, 'WAY OUT, hosted by Roald Dahl, is the music by Robert Cobert. This episode, written as a tour de force for legendary actress Constance Ford (who wound up as a regular on another soap), probably has other DS connections if one probed far enough. Teleplay was by Sumner Locke Elliott, and executive producer was David Susskind. The play seems to have been suggested by Jean Cocteau's famous one-act monodrama "The Human Voice," in which Grayson starred in the summer of this year, in a production at Pennsylvania's Hedgerow Theater.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=f_XX7AABsPU&list=PLQDQPZ3HQdzKaIecvPVGVQVCswLT0Bphy&index=5&t=0s

There was a nod to "The Human Voice" in what used to be known as the "Grayson Solo" episode during the 1967 storyline, when Dave Woodard's ghost was haunting Julia with harassing phonecalls.

All the surviving episodes of 'WAY OUT now seem to be available on you tube.

G.

56
I still find it hard to believe that the publicity about a remake of the old Sixties TV show THE BANANA SPLITS as a hardcore splatter movie isn't somebody's twisted idea of a joke... but now, there's a trailer:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0R1-ZZTcTBY

This thing is going straight to video release, but guess what? There's going to be a television screening. Now, where would that happen? Whee else but on the home of the last standing outpost for extreme schlock left on the airwaves... the "SyFy" network!

G.

58
Of interest to some of you. The article mentions Dana Gould, who Wikipedia tells me is a comedian. I'm not sure why this conversation has the epochal import Wallace describes in his blurb; I leave that to you, gentle reader, to discern.

http://www.collinsporthistoricalsociety.com/2019/06/dark-shadows-fall-on-fangoria-in-july.html

As the article states, the editor of Fangoria will be discussing the John August screenplay next month on the new Collinsport Historical Society podcast. For those curious about the original script, it should be an interesting discussion.

G.

59
Fans,

The author (and a star) of this send-up of DS, "The Complete series of Dark Shadows, ABRIDGED" posted a video of the production of the play here:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iySpezQq4sk&feature=youtu.be

For those who may have interest. It is the complete play.

G.

60
Calendar Events / Announcements '24 I / OT: Cybernauts go Blu
« on: May 13, 2019, 11:56:50 PM »
The video viewable on this page promoting a new release of a trio of episodes from the classic 1960s British series THE AVENGERS is quite cool:

https://networkonair.com/coming-soon/3044-the-avengers-the-cybernauts-trilogy-blu-ray-

G.

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