Monday, October 31, 2016

Dark Shadows 50th Anniversary In Hollywood, California



Happy Halloween.

As a new arrival to (too) sunny Southern California, we were at loose ends for a way to celebrate the holiday.  We were also saddened that the heroic efforts necessary to move us from New York to California necessitated our missing the Dark Shadows 50th Anniversary in Lyndhurst.  So … imagine our delight upon learning that we could celebrate both Halloween and the Dark Shadows 50th in Hollywood.

The West Coast Dark Shadows 50th Anniversary Celebration took place at the Hollywood Women’s Club on October 29th.  Despite some logistical problems, the event was a great success to devotees who have kept the show alive in their own unique subculture.

We are only an occasional visitor to the imaginary world of Collinsport, Maine.  The show was often derivative and labyrinthine in its plotting; but, it is also strangely irresistible.  And most important, it was a study in mood above all else, and as a distillation of the Gothic sensibility, it was hard to beat.

The gathering started with a slate of bloopers from the original program (bloopers that aired … most of the series was shot in a single take).  The first celebrity guest was John Karlen, who played Willie Loomis, the Renfield cognate to vampire Barnabas Collins.  Now in his 80s a quite frail, Karlen is a wonderfully crusty character who told terrific stories of 1960s New York.  He also related with relish that actor Jonathan Frid was at his best with a vodka in hand; Frid was delighted with the show, said Karlen, as it afforded him the ability to have a great New York apartment and view.

One of the more interesting guests was Mary O’Leary, who worked as booker and press agent for Frid’s various one-man shows.  She was a great source of anecdote and provided wonderful insights into the somewhat mysterious Frid.

The show’s composer, Robert Corbert, a dapper and salty 92 year old, regaled the crowd with stories of working with the mercurial and flamboyant Dan Curtis.  It is not every convention when a 92 year old jokingly puts the make on a young woman asking a question from the audience (“I’m 92 so don’t expect much, but I’m a great kisser”), and Corbert was the highlight of the event.

A panel with the first season stars: Kathryn Leigh-Scott and James Hall (the original Willie Loomis) was diverting, as well as a group discussion with Jerry Lacy, James Storm (who had to leave for a coughing fit) and Lisa Richards.  Lacy was quite amusing, but we wish he had more to say about Woody Allen and his stint in Play It Again, Sam.

It was interesting to see original series swain Roger Davis age into an entrepreneurial architect who spent a great deal of his time on stage talking about suing previous business partners.  More interesting was his chatting about an exchange between the then-26 year old Davis had with then-37 year old Tab Hunter.  Davis told Hunter that the studio was grooming him as “the next Tab Hunter.”  Hunter’s reply seemed to be both amused and wary:  “oh….?”


Actress Lara Parker, who so memorably played Angelique in the original series (and was, perhaps, the most compelling character after Barnabas Collins), was on hand to debut her new Dark Shadows novel, Heiress of Collinwood.  This is her fourth (and final) novel in the series, and the actress was battling a severe case of laryngitis, which prevented her from reading from her new book.  But she graciously took questions from the audience, and helped turn her appearance into more of a discussion than a presentation.  Many people in the audience provided theories on the reason Dark Shadows has proven so enduring … and she told stories of how the cast would attend the dailies and cringe – cringe – at their performances.  “We were all so … stilted,” she recalls.  “But … Dark Shadows is one of those things that gets better as time goes on.  Because it was so risky, and so unique.  And we were NY actors who didn’t guy the material … it was over-the-top, but not tongue-in-cheek.  We made it work.”


Parker also noted an important distinction:  Dark Shadows was an exercise in Gothic Romance, and not in Gothic Horror.  Gothic Romance has imagination – it generates terror, not horror.  She said, “Horror is your reaction to what has already happened.  You draw away from it, not toward it.  Terror is a delightful, creepy … expectation.  It’s a mood rather than a reaction.”

We read the first three of Parker’s novels with great interest … and found The Salem Branch to be particularly wonderful.  In it, she slightly refashioned Barnabas Collins into a sort of undead aesthete.  Now human and dealing in antique carpets, more of his Oscar Wilde-ish underpinnings come to the foreground, making his character more rounded, interesting and consistent.  It is a wonderful book, and a shining example of all that Dark Shadows can be when done with intelligence and panache.

In the months to come, we will be writing on how Dark Shadows is a continuation of the great Penny Dreadful tradition, and how the series owes much of its canon to Varney the Vampire.


Monday, September 26, 2016

I Bid You Welcome



Welcome to this, the inaugural posting on the House of Dracula blog.

I have been thinking much about the aesthetics of the Gothic as Halloween approaches.  As I coast into my 54th year, I continue to be amazed at how adults have successfully co-opted the holiday.  When I was a boy, Halloween was primarily a children’s holiday, and when most adults thought about it (if they did at all), it was as a nuisance.

All of that has changed.  For 2016, the National Retail Foundation (NRF) predicts that 69.1 percent of Americans will celebrate the Halloween holiday this year.  To do so, they will spend $8.4 billion (billion!) – with 44.4 percent of them starting their Halloween observance in the first two weeks of October.

This figure has been steadily increasing; for 2007, for instance, Halloween spending was “only” $5.1 billion.  This year, we will spend more than $350 million on costumes … for our pets.

People of my generation remember that Halloween was quite a big deal to us as children, but we were mostly on our own.  Halloween costumes from the Ben Cooper company arrived in October, along with some plastic pumpkin satchels and some cardboard window decorations – and that was it.  Today, each and every retail store (from card shops to food stores) has some kind of Halloween selection.  The broad array of choice and quality in Halloween products is remarkable.  These include candelabrum, snow globes, coffin-shaped jewelry boxes, plaster gargoyles and gnomes, monster bookends, dining and bedroom sundries, let alone more perishable items, like black plastic curtains and crepe paper wall coverings.  If anyone were seriously interested in spooky décor, one could furnish their home during the Halloween season and be set for the year.

Obviously we love Halloween here in the House of Dracula, and eat all of this up.  But seekers after Halloween kitsch will be disappointed in upcoming posts.  We have a connoisseur’s interest in the Gothic, and you will find more about Varney the Vampire or Anne Radcliffe (1764-1823) here than you will the latest splatter film.  For us, the Gothic is a mood and sensibility; and we’ll be tracing the aesthetics of the Gothic that is more in line with Poe’s Roderick Usher than someone like Rob Zombie

The “Goth” subculture will also get little coverage, as we think this a vulgarization of Gothic sensibilities.

We will touch upon the literature and the graphic arts, and cover film as well -- though most of the Gothic Cinema we will examine starts around 1920 and ends with the lesser Hammer Films of the early 1970s, with obvious outliers.

So, Welcome to my house! Enter freely. Go safely, and leave something of the happiness you bring.

After all … the Master is waiting.



Go to Your Local Big Lots! Store to Find the True Meaning of Halloween!