FRIGHT TIME







Boris Karloff

Birth name William Henry Pratt

Spouse 'Evelyn Helmore' (1946 - 1969) (his death) 'Dorothy Stine' (1928 - 1946) (divorced); 1 daughter Sarah 'Helen Soule' (1924 - 1928) (divorced) 'Montana Laurena Williams' (1920 - ?) (divorced) Olive Wilton (1909 - ?)

We Remember you Boris.......

Boris was the original inspiration for the first illustrations of the Incredible Hulk.

Interred at Mount cemetery, Guildford, Surrey, England, in the Garden of Remembrance.

Great-nephew of Anna Leonowens.

Father of Sara Karloff.

Received a Tony nomination in 1956 for his dramatic role in 'The Lark.'

Shares a birthday with his daughter Sara Karloff.

A distant relation to Quentin Crisp (born Denis Pratt).

Considered a late bloomer in Hollywood. Frankenstein premiered when he was 44 years old.

Pictured on two of a set of five 32¢ US commemorative postage stamps, issued 30 September 1997, celebrating "Famous Movie Monsters". He is shown on one stamp as the title character in Mummy, The (1932) and on the other as the monster in Frankenstein (1931). Other actors honored in this set of stamps, and the classic monsters they portray, are Lon Chaney as Phantom of the Opera, The (1925); Bela Lugosi as Dracula (1931/I); and Lon Chaney Jr. as Wolf Man, The (1941).

Personal quotes

On whether or not he resented being typed as a "horror star": "One always hears of actors complaining of being typed - if he's young, he's typed as a juvenile; if he's handsome, he's typed as a leading man. I was lucky. Whereas bootmakers have to spend millions to establish a trademark, I was handed a trademark free of charge. When an actor gets in a position to select his own roles, he's in big trouble, for he never knows what he can do best. I'm sure I'd be damn good as little Lord Fauntleroy, but who would pay ten cents to see it?"

"When I was nine I played the demon king in Cinderella and it launched me on a long and happy life of being a monster."

Salary Frankenstein - 1970 (1958) $25,000 Voodoo Island (1957) $25,000 King of the Kongo (1929) $75/week Targets (1968) $22,000 Raven, The (1963) $30,000

Biography from Leonard Maltin's Movie Encyclopedia: Hollywood's most successful boogeyman, a gaunt, bow legged actor whose menacing mien scared the bejesus out of several generations of film fans, was in fact one of the movie colony's most popular citizens, and by all accounts a gentle, sensitive, highly cultured man. The scion of a family of British diplomats, he eschewed foreign-service work in favor of acting, emigrating to Canada and eventually touring with small companies all over North America. He made his screen debut as an extra in The Dumb Girl of Portici (1916), but didn't approach film work in earnest until 1919, when he appeared in the Douglas Fairbanks starrer His Majesty, the American

By now billed as Boris Karloff, he played supporting roles-mostly heavies- in dozens of minor features and serials throughout the 1920s, including The Hope Diamond Mystery (1921), Nan of the North (1922), Dynamite Dan (1924),Lady Robin Hood (1925),Eagle of the Sea (1926), Tarzan and the Golden Lion (1927), King of the Kongo (1929), and The Fatal Warning (1929). He appeared in a few A movies, too, including 1926's Old Ironsides and 1927's Two Arabian Knights Although Karloff spoke in soft, cultured tones, he affected a harsh, guttural voice in his early sound films, which included The Unholy Night (1929), The Sea Bat (1930), Public Defender, Smart Money, Business and Pleasure and The Mad Genius (all 1931).

Karloff, who had resigned himself to working as a character actor, was more than happy to assume a role originally offered to Dracula star Bela Lugosi, who refused it on the ground that he would be unrecognizable under heavy makeup in a part with no dialogue. So Karloff played the lumbering monster in Frankenstein (1931), a physically demanding assignment that made him a star. Makeup artist Jack Pierce and director James Whale helped him flesh out the characterization, which enabled him to steal the picture from top-billed Colin Clive.

Karloff spent the next several years alternating horror films with more prestigious major-studio productions. He scared moviegoers witless with his starring turns in The Old Dark House, The Mummy, The Mask of Fu Manchu (all 1932), The Ghoul (1933), Bride of Frankenstein, The Black Room (both 1935), and The Walking Dead (1936), in addition to three films that teamed him with his partner-in-menace Lugosi:The Black Cat (1934), The Raven (1935), and The Invisible Ray (1936). He also took colorful supporting roles, playing a sleazy reporter in Five Star Final (1931), a gangster in Scarface (1932), an anti-Semitic nobleman in House of Rothschild a religious fanatic in The Lost Patrol (both 1934), a kindly inventor in Night Key and a suspicious opera singer in Charlie Chan at the Opera (both 1937

As the horror cycle waned in the late 1930s, Karloff found himself mired in undistinguished B films, including West of Shanghai (1937), The Invisible Menace (1938), and British Intelligence (1940). He starred as a low-rent Charlie Chan in several "Mr. Wong" mysteries for Monogram, the best of which was The Mystery of Mr. Wong (1939). Back at Universal, he played the Frankenstein monster for a third and final time in Son of Frankenstein and then supported Basil Rathbone in an elaborate costume drama with horrific overtones, Tower of London (both 1939).

By now typecast as a movie menace, Karloff worked during the 1940s almost exclusively in B horror films and thrillers, including The Man With Nine Lives (1939), Before I Hang, You'll Find Out (a horror spoof that teamed him with Lugosi and Peter Lorre), The Ape (all 1940), The Devil Commands (1941), The Boogie Man Will Get You (1942), The Climax (a cut above his usual 1940s' vehicles), House of Frankenstein (both 1944, this time as mad scientist rather than monster), and Dick Tracy Meets Gruesome (1947). The "murder man" (as he was sometimes billed) spoofed his screen persona in the 1941 stage production of "Arsenic and Old Lace," enjoying a lengthy Broadway run as that play's menacing madman (but, unfortunately, missing out on repeating the role in the movie).

He was well served by RKO producer Val Lewton, whose stylish, low-budget chillers ranked head and shoulders above the usual run of horror films; his assignments in Lewton's The Body Snatcher (1945, which again teamed him with Lugosi), Isle of the Dead (also 1945), and Bedlam (1946) were among his most memorable of the decade.

Karloff got a few nice supporting roles in A films of the immediate post WW2 era, including The Secret Life of Walter Mitty (1947), Unconquered (1948, as an Indian), and Tap Roots (1949), but by the 1950s he was working almost exclusively in dreary, low-budget horrors (in both senses of that word) that traded on the success of his earlier films.Abbott and Costello Meet the Killer, Boris Karloff (1949), The Strange Door (1951), The Black Castle (1952), Abbott and Costello Meet Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde (1953), Voodoo Island (1957), The Haunted Strangler andFrankenstein-1970 (both 1958) saw an aging Karloff going through the motions with obvious professionalism but little enthusiasm.

He fared better on Broadway during the 1950s, playing Captain Hook opposite Jean Arthur as Peter Pan, costarring with Julie Harris in "The Lark," and participating in a number of live TV plays as well. He starred in the filmed TV series "Colonel March of Scotland Yard" (1957-58), and hosted "Thriller" (1960-62) in addition to guesting in dozens of dramatic series, anthologies, sitcoms, and variety shows throughout the 1950s and 1960s.

Producer Roger Corman used Karloff in several of his colorful, all-star horror films and spoofs of the 1960s, including The Raven, The Terror (both 1963, built entirely around an unfulfilled three-day commitment Karloff owed Corman), and The Comedy of Terrors (1964). Bravely, the aging master subjected himself to the indignities of Bikini Beach (1964) and The Ghost in the Invisible Bikini (1966), in addition to a quartet of Mexican-made horror cheapies, all of which were released posthumously. Karloff's swan song was Targets (1968), a modestly budgeted thriller directed by Peter Bogdanovich, which had the star playing an elderly horror-film actor. It was an offbeat role that Karloff obviously relished, and he delivered his best performance in years.

Since the early 1960s he'd been afflicted with respiratory problems, and frequently retired to a wheelchair and an oxygen mask between scenes. He died in 1969, still a much beloved screen star.

Horror-ography

The Bells '26

King of the Wild '31

Frankenstein '31

Behind the Mask '32

Old Dark House '32

The Mummy '32

The Ghoul '33

Black Cat '34

The Raven '35

Bride of Frankenstein '35

Black Room '35

The Man Who Changed His Mind '36

Walking Dead '36

The Invisible Ray '36

Tower of London '39

Son of Frankenstein '39

The Ape '40

Black Friday '40

Before I Hang '40

Devil Commands '41

The Boogie Man Will Get You '42

House of Frankenstein '44

Climax '44

Isle of the Dead '45

The Body Snatcher '45

Bedlam '46

Abbot and Costello Meet

the Killer, Boris Karloff '49

Strange Door '51

Black Castle '52

Abbot and Costello Meet

Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde '53

Monster of the Island '53

Voodoo Island '57

Frankenstein 1970 '58

The Haunted Strangler '58

The Terror '63

The Raven '63

Comedy of Terrors '64

Black Sabbath '64

Die, Monster, Die! '65

The Sorcerors '67

Targets '68

Curse of the Crimson Altar '68

The Fear Chamber '68

Isle of the Snake People '68

Cauldron of Blood '70




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