Freaks


10:00 pm - 11:30 pm, Sunday, October 26 on Northbay TV (45.8)

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About this Broadcast
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Tod Browning's cult classic about the relationship between a circus "little person" and the beautiful trapeze artist who marries him for his inheritance, but runs afoul of his fellow sideshow colleagues and their code of honour.

1932 English
Drama Horror Romance Mystery Cult Classic Circus Suspense/thriller

Cast & Crew
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Harry Earles (Actor) .. Hans
Olga Baclanova (Actor) .. Cleopatra
Wallace Ford (Actor) .. Phroso
Leila Hyams (Actor) .. Venus
Roscoe Ates (Actor) .. Roscoe
Henry Victor (Actor) .. Hercules
Daisy Earles (Actor) .. Frieda
Rose Dione (Actor) .. Madame Tetrallini
Daisy Hilton (Actor) .. Siamese Twin
Violet Hilton (Actor) .. Siamese Twin
Edward Brophy (Actor) .. Rollo Brother
Matt McHugh (Actor) .. Rollo Brother
Olga Roderick (Actor) .. Bearded Lady
Johnny Eck (Actor) .. Boy with Half a Torso
Prince Randian (Actor) .. Hindu Living Torso
Schlitze (Actor) .. Herself
Pip (Actor) .. Pinhead
Pete Robinson (Actor) .. Living Skeleton
Koo Koo (Actor) .. Bird Girl
Josephine-Joseph (Actor) .. Half Woman-Half Man
Martha Morris (Actor) .. Armless Wonder
Frances O’Connor (Actor) .. The Living Venus de Milo
Angelo Rossitto (Actor) .. Angeleno
Elizabeth Green (Actor) .. Stork Woman
Albert Conti (Actor) .. Monsieur Duval, the Landowner
Michael Visaroff (Actor) .. Jean the Caretaker
Murray Kinnell (Actor) .. Sideshow Barker
Ernie S. Adams (Actor) .. Sideshow Patron
Louise Beavers (Actor) .. Maid
Elvira Snow (Actor) .. Pinhead
John Aasen (Actor) .. Giant
Demetrius Alexis (Actor) .. Mr. Rogers
Jerry Austin (Actor) .. Knife-Throwing Dwarf
Mathilde Comont (Actor) .. Madame Bartet
Burgess Meredith (Actor) .. Carny Caller
Frank O'Connor (Actor) .. Herself
Edward S. Brophy (Actor) .. Rollo Brother

More Information
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Did You Know..
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Harry Earles (Actor) .. Hans
Born: January 01, 1901
Died: January 01, 1985
Olga Baclanova (Actor) .. Cleopatra
Born: January 01, 1899
Died: September 06, 1974
Trivia: Baclanova is a Russian actress who first appeared onstage at age 16 with the Moscow Art Theater. She moved to the USA after visiting on tour with a Soviet company in 1923. Her first important film role was with Emil Jannings in silent Street of Sin (1928). Along with some Broadway work, she went on to star in several films; most notably, Baclanova was the bewitching trapeze artist who marries a midget for his money in the horror classic Freaks (1932). Retired from the screen in 1933, but in 1943 made one more supporting appearance (in Claudia); Baclanova also hosted a radio show in the late '30s.
Wallace Ford (Actor) .. Phroso
Born: February 12, 1898
Died: June 11, 1966
Trivia: Once there was a film historian who opined that Wallace Ford was in more movies than any other character actor of his prominence. This is unlikely, but Ford was certainly kept busy in roles of all shapes and sizes during his 35-year movie career. Orphaned in infancy, Ford grew up in various British orphanages and foster homes (his search in the mid-1930s for his natural parents drew worldwide headlines). He first set foot on stage at age 11, playing in vaudeville and music halls before working his way up to Broadway. His inauspicious feature-film debut was in Swellhead (1931), a baseball melodrama which lay on the shelf for nearly five years before its release. He went on to play wisecracking leading roles in such "B"s as Night of Terror (1933), The Nut Farm (1935) and The Mystery of Mr. Wong (1935); the critics paid no heed to these minor efforts, though they always showered Ford with praise for his supporting roles in films like John Ford's The Informer (1935) and Alfred Hitchcock's Shadow of a Doubt (1943). He occasionally took a leave of absence from films to accept a stage role; in 1937, he created the part of George in the original Broadway production of Of Mice and Men (1937). As he grew balder and stockier, he remained in demand for middle-aged character roles, often portraying wistful drunks or philosophical ne'er-do-wells. Wallace Ford ended his film career with his powerful portrayal of Elizabeth Hartman's vacillating father in A Patch of Blue (1965).
Leila Hyams (Actor) .. Venus
Born: May 01, 1905
Died: December 04, 1977
Trivia: Born into a family of vaudevillians (her parents were the popular "bickering" comedy team of Johnny Hyams and Leila McIntyre), Leila Hyams started out as a juvenile performer. Leila's movie career was an outgrowth of her many appearances in magazine advertisements of the 1920s. She often played conventional ingenues, though she was allowed a bit more three-dimensionality in such roles as a baseball team owner in The Busher (1927), the prime murder suspect in The Thirteenth Chair (1929), and the wisecracking circus-artiste heroine in Freaks (1932). Hyams' finest film hour was as the good-natured saloon girl who teaches Roland Young how to play the drums in Ruggles of Red Gap (1935). Retiring from the screen in 1936, Leila Hyams maintained her show business contacts through the activities of her husband, agent Phil Berg.
Roscoe Ates (Actor) .. Roscoe
Born: January 20, 1895
Died: March 01, 1962
Trivia: Mississippi-born Roscoe Ates spent a good portion of his childhood overcoming a severe stammer. Entering show business as a concert violinist, the shriveled, pop-eyed Ates found the money was better as a vaudeville comedian, reviving his long-gone stutter for humorous effect. In films from 1929, Ates appeared in sizeable roles in such films as The Champ (1931), Freaks (1932) and Alice in Wonderland (1933), and also starred in his own short subject series with RKO and Vitaphone. Though his trademarked stammer is something of an endurance test when seen today, it paid off in big laughs in the 1930s, when speech impediments were considered the ne plus ultra of hilarity. By the late 1930s Ates's popularity waned, and he was reduced to unbilled bits in such films as Gone with the Wind (1939) and Dixie (1942). His best showing during the 1940s was as comic sidekick to singing cowboy Eddie Dean in a series of 15 low-budget westerns. Remaining busy in films and on TV into the 1960s, Roscoe Ates made his last appearance in the 1961 Jerry Lewis comedy The Errand Boy.
Henry Victor (Actor) .. Hercules
Born: October 02, 1898
Died: March 15, 1945
Trivia: Born in England but raised in Germany, Henry Victor began his film career in 1916. During the silent era, the tall, muscular Victor played leads in such literary adaptations as Portrait of Dorian Gray (1917) and She (1925). When talkies came in, Victor's thick Teutonic accent precluded future leading roles, though he enjoyed a substantial career as a character actor, specializing in brutish Nazis during WWII. Henry Victor's best-known talkie roles include the sadistic strong-man Hercules in 1932's Freaks and the beleaguered Nazi adjutant Schultz in the Ernst Lubitsch classic To Be or Not to Be (1942).
Daisy Earles (Actor) .. Frieda
Born: January 01, 1907
Died: January 01, 1980
Rose Dione (Actor) .. Madame Tetrallini
Born: January 01, 1877
Died: January 01, 1936
Daisy Hilton (Actor) .. Siamese Twin
Born: February 05, 1908
Violet Hilton (Actor) .. Siamese Twin
Born: February 05, 1908
Edward Brophy (Actor) .. Rollo Brother
Born: February 27, 1895
Matt McHugh (Actor) .. Rollo Brother
Born: January 01, 1894
Died: February 22, 1971
Trivia: Actor Matt McHugh was born into a show business family, joining his parents, his brother Frank, and his sister Kitty in the family stock company as soon as he learned to talk. Matt came to Hollywood to repeat his stage role in the 1931 film adaptation of Elmer Rice's Broadway hit Street Scene. He continued to have sizeable film assignments for the next few years (notably the bourgeois Italian bridegroom Francesco in Laurel and Hardy's The Devil's Brother [1933]) before settling into bits and minor roles. A dead ringer for his more famous brother Frank McHugh, Matt projected an abrasive, sardonic screen image; as such, he was utilized in such rough-edged roles as cab drivers, bartenders and mechanics. Matt McHugh's best screen opportunities in the '40s came with his supporting roles in the 2-reel comedy output of Columbia Pictures; he appeared in the short comedies of Andy Clyde, Hugh Herbert, Walter Catlett, The Three Stooges and many others, most often cast as a lazy or caustic brother-in-law.
Olga Roderick (Actor) .. Bearded Lady
Johnny Eck (Actor) .. Boy with Half a Torso
Born: January 01, 1908
Died: January 01, 1991
Prince Randian (Actor) .. Hindu Living Torso
Born: October 12, 1874
Schlitze (Actor) .. Herself
Pip (Actor) .. Pinhead
Pete Robinson (Actor) .. Living Skeleton
Born: April 16, 1879
Koo Koo (Actor) .. Bird Girl
Josephine-Joseph (Actor) .. Half Woman-Half Man
Martha Morris (Actor) .. Armless Wonder
Frances O’Connor (Actor) .. The Living Venus de Milo
Born: September 08, 1914
Angelo Rossitto (Actor) .. Angeleno
Born: January 01, 1908
Trivia: Diminutive American actor Angelo Rossitto was a fixture in American movies for more than 50 years, usually in highly visible supporting and extra roles. Born Angelo Salvatore Rossitto, he entered movies in his teens during the height of the silent era, making his first known appearance in The Beloved Rogue, starring John Barrymore, in 1926. Standing less than four feet tall, with dark hair and a grim visage, and billed at various times as Little Angie, Little Mo, and Little Angelo, Rossitto was a natural for pygmies and circus dwarves, often of a sinister appearing nature; his presence could help "dress" a carnival set or the setting for a fantasy film. He played the dwarf Angeleno in Tod Browning's Freaks at MGM, a pygmy in Cecil B. DeMille's The Sign of the Cross at Paramount, and one of the Three Little Pigs in the Laurel & Hardy-starring vehicle Babes in Toyland. Off camera, he was also a stand-in for Shirley Temple in several of her films. Rossitto didn't become a well-known figure, even among movie cultists, until he went to work for Monogram Pictures during the early '40s, in a series of low-budget horror films and horror film spoofs starring Bela Lugosi, often cast in tandem with the Hungarian-born actor as a kind of double act. His presence added to the bizarre, threatening nature of the films and he became as well known to fans of these low-budget movies as Lugosi, George Zucco, or any of the other credited stars. His role in the first of those Monogram productions with Lugosi, Spooks Run Wild, also starring the East Side Kids, deliberately played off of Lugosi's and Rossitto's sinister seeming images. In between his Poverty Row Monogram productions, the actor fit in small parts at Universal, including Preston Sturges' The Sin of Harold Diddlebock, and he was one of the jesters tormenting the blinded Samson in DeMille's Samson and Delilah. Rossitto, along with his younger contemporaries Jerry Maren, Frank Delfino, and Billy Curtis, was one of Hollywood's busier little people in the years after World War II. Rossitto can be spotted in carnival scenes in Carousel, appeared as the smallest of the "Moon Men" in the low-budget Jungle Jim movie Jungle Moon Men, and played the leader of the aliens in the late-'50s sci-fi satire Invasion of the Saucer Men. Many of Rossitto's appearances were in roles without character names, constituting highly specialized, uncredited (but highly visible) extra work, and he may have been in as many as 200 movies.On television in the late '60s and early '70s, he portrayed a life-sized puppet in the series H.R. Pufnstuf and played a hat in Lidsville. Rossitto was a sideshow huckster in the cheap cult horror movie Dracula Vs. Frankenstein, and as late as the mid-'80s was seen in a small role in Something Wicked This Way Comes and in the featured role of the Master-Blaster in Mad Max: Beyond Thunderdome. Although work in 200 movies and television shows sounds like a lot, most of those appearances involved only a single day's or a single week's work, rather than full-time employment. He made his regular living from the 1930s through the 1960s at a newsstand in Hollywood just outside the gate of one of the studios; he joked that when he was needed for a film, they would simply pass the word directly to him on the street and he would report.
Elizabeth Green (Actor) .. Stork Woman
Albert Conti (Actor) .. Monsieur Duval, the Landowner
Born: January 29, 1887
Died: January 18, 1967
Trivia: Born Albert de Conti Cedassamare, Conti was a career soldier in the Austrian army who came to America after the close of World War I. Like many impoverished postwar Europeans, Conti was obliged to take a series of manual labor jobs. While working in the California oil fields, Conti answered an open call placed by director Erich von Stroheim, who was in search of an Austrian military officer to act as technical advisor for his upcoming film Merry Go Round (1923). A better actor than most of his fellow Hapsburg empire expatriates, Conti was able to secure dignified character roles in several silent and sound films; his credits ranged from Joseph von Sternberg's Morocco (1930) to the early Laurel and Hardy knockabout Slipping Wives (1927). Though he made his last film in 1942, Albert Conti remained in the industry as an employee of the MGM wardrobe department, where he worked until his retirement in 1962.
Michael Visaroff (Actor) .. Jean the Caretaker
Born: November 18, 1892
Died: February 27, 1951
Trivia: Burly Russian actor Michael Visaroff launched his film career in 1925. Like many of his fellow Russian expatriates, Visaroff claimed to be of noble lineage, which enabled him to land such roles as Count Bosrinov in Disraeli (1929). From the early '30s until his death, he was usually cast as innkeepers, most memorably in Universal's first two Dracula films and in Laurel and Hardy's The Flying Deuces (1939). Michael Visaroff's funniest film appearance was as the homicidal maniac ("She's the first wife I ever killed!") who shares a jail cell with W.C. Fields in Man on the Flying Trapeze (1935).
Murray Kinnell (Actor) .. Sideshow Barker
Born: January 01, 1888
Died: January 01, 1954
Ernie S. Adams (Actor) .. Sideshow Patron
Born: June 18, 1885
Died: November 26, 1947
Trivia: Scratch a sniveling prison "stoolie" or cowardly henchman and if he were not Paul Guilfoyle or George Chandler, he would be the diminutive Ernie S. Adams, a ubiquitous presence in scores of Hollywood films of the 1930s and '40s. Surprisingly, the weasel-looking Adams had begun his professional career in musical comedy -- appearing on Broadway in such shows as Jerome Kern's Toot Toot (1918) -- prior to entering films around 1919. A list of typical Adams characters basically tells the story: "The Rat" (Jewels of Desire, 1927), "Johnny Behind the 8-Ball" (The Storm, 1930), "Lefty" (Trail's End, 1935), "Jimmy the Weasel" (Stars Over Arizona, 1937), "Snicker Joe" (West of Carson City, 1940), "Willie the Weasel" (Return of the Ape Man, 1944) and, of course "Fink" (San Quentin, 1937). The result, needless to say, is that you didn't quite trust him even when playing a decent guy, as in the 1943 Columbia serial The Phantom. One of the busiest players in the '40s, the sad-faced, little actor worked right up until his death in 1947. His final four films were released posthumously.
Louise Beavers (Actor) .. Maid
Born: March 08, 1902
Died: October 26, 1962
Birthplace: Cincinnati, Ohio, United States
Trivia: African American actress Louise Beavers was born in Cincinnati and raised in California, where she attended Pasadena High School. Louise's entree into Hollywood was as maid to silent film star Leatrice Joy. With Ms. Joy's encouragement, Louise began accepting small film parts in 1923, and three years later became a full-time performer when she joined the Ladies Minstrel Troupe. After co-starring in the 1927 Universal remake of Uncle Tom's Cabin, Ms. Beavers worked steadily in films, usually playing maids, housekeepers and "mammies." Her most famous role was as troubled pancake entrepreneur Aunt Delilah in the 1934 filmization of Fannie Hurst's Imitation of Life. Another breakaway from stereotype was as the title character's strong-willed mother in The Jackie Robinson Story (1950), On television, Louise Beavers starred on the weekly sitcom Beulah from 1952 through 1953, and played Louise the maid on the 1953 pilot episode of Make Room for Daddy.
Elvira Snow (Actor) .. Pinhead
John Aasen (Actor) .. Giant
Born: January 01, 1886
Died: January 01, 1938
Demetrius Alexis (Actor) .. Mr. Rogers
Jerry Austin (Actor) .. Knife-Throwing Dwarf
Born: January 01, 1891
Died: January 01, 1976
Mathilde Comont (Actor) .. Madame Bartet
Born: January 01, 1887
Died: January 01, 1938
Burgess Meredith (Actor) .. Carny Caller
Born: November 16, 1907
Died: September 09, 1997
Birthplace: Cleveland, Ohio, United States
Trivia: Originally a newspaper reporter, Burgess Meredith came to the screen in 1936, repeating his stage role in Winterset, a part written for him by Maxwell Anderson. Meredith has had a long and varied film career, playing everything from George in Of Mice and Men (1939) to Sylvester Stallone's trainer in Rocky (1976). He received Oscar nominations for The Day of the Locust (1975) and Rocky. As comfortable with comedy as with drama, Meredith also appeared in Idiot's Delight (1939); Second Chorus (1940), with Fred Astaire; Diary of a Chambermaid (1942), which he also wrote and produced; The Story of G.I. Joe (1945); and Mine Own Executioner (1947). He also directed Man on the Eiffel Tower (1949). On television, he made countless guest appearances in dozens of dramatic and variety productions, including one of the first episodes of The Twilight Zone, the touching Time Enough at Last, and as host on the first episode of Your Show of Shows. He was a regular on Mr. Novak (1963-64) and Search (1972-73), hosted Those Amazing Animals (1981), co-starred with Sally Struthers in Gloria (1982-83), and made classic appearances as the Penguin on Batman (1966-68). He won an Emmy in 1977 for Tailgunner Joe and has done voiceover work for innumerable commercials, notably Volkswagen. Meredith made his final feature film appearance playing crusty Grandpa Gustafson in Grumpier Old Men (1995), the sequel to Grumpy Old Men (1993) in which he also appeared. In 1996, he played a role in the CD-rom video game Ripper. He was briefly married to Paulette Goddard in the 1940s. Meredith died in his Malibu home at the age of 88 on September 9, 1997.
Frank O'Connor (Actor) .. Herself
Born: April 11, 1888
Died: November 22, 1959
Trivia: A onetime stage actor, Frank O'Connor was a prolific writer/director in the silent era. During his busiest period as a director (1921-1929), he wrote and helmed such enjoyable time-fillers as Lawful Cheaters (1926). Returning to acting when sound came in, he played innumerable bit roles as cops, commissioners, clerks, and such until his retirement in 1953. This Frank O'Connor should not be confused with the thesp of the same name who was married to novelist Ayn Rand.
Edward S. Brophy (Actor) .. Rollo Brother
Born: March 27, 1895
Died: May 30, 1960
Trivia: Born in New York City and educated at the University of Virginia, comic actor Edward Brophy entered films as a small part player in 1919. After a few years, he opted for the more financially secure production end of the business, though he never abandoned acting altogether. While working as property master for the Buster Keaton unit at MGM, Brophy was lured before the cameras for a memorable sequence in The Cameraman (1928) in which he and Buster both try to undress in a tiny wardrobe closet. Keaton saw to it that Brophy was prominently cast in two of the famed comedian's talking pictures, and by 1934 Brophy was once again acting full-time. Using his popping eyes, high pitched voiced and balding head to his best advantage, Brophy scored in role after role as funny gangsters and dyspeptic fight managers (he was less effective in such serious parts as the crazed killer in the 1935 horror film Mad Love). In 1940, Brophy entered the realm of screen immortality as the voice of Timothy Mouse in Walt Disney's feature-length cartoon Dumbo (1940). Curtailing his activities in the 1950s, he did his last work for director John Ford. Brophy died during production of Ford's Two Rode Together (1961); according to some sources, the actor's few completed scenes remain in the final release version of that popular western.

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2023
11:30 pm