House of Dark Shadows


8:00 pm - 10:05 pm, Wednesday, October 29 on WNYW Movies! (5.2)

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About this Broadcast
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The vampire Barnabas Collins is accidentally freed from his coffin, and he wreaks havoc in the specter-filled Collinswood mansion in Maine as he searches relentlessly for a vampire bride.

1970 English
Drama Horror Mystery Comedy-drama Wedding Suspense/thriller

Cast & Crew
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Jonathan Frid (Actor) .. Barnabas Collins
Joan Bennett (Actor) .. Elizabeth Collins Stoddard
Roger Davis (Actor) .. Jeff Clark
Grayson Hall (Actor) .. Dr. Julia Hoffman
Kathryn Leigh Scott (Actor) .. Maggie Evans
Nancy Barrett (Actor) .. Carolyn Stoddard
John Karlen (Actor) .. Willie Loomis
Thayer David (Actor) .. Prof. T. Eliot Stokes
Louis Edmonds (Actor) .. Roger Collins
Donald Briscoe (Actor) .. Todd Jennings
David Henesy (Actor) .. David Collins
Dennis Patrick (Actor) .. Sheriff George Patterson
Lisa Blake Richards (Actor) .. Daphne Rudd
Jerry Lacy (Actor) .. Minister
Barbara Cason (Actor) .. Mrs. Johnson
Humbert Astredo (Actor) .. Dr. Forbes
Paul Michael (Actor) .. Old Man
Terry Crawford (Actor) .. Todd's Nurse
Michael Stroka (Actor) .. Pallbearer
Philip Larson (Actor) .. Deputy
David Patrick (Actor) .. Sheriff George Patterson

More Information
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Did You Know..
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Jonathan Frid (Actor) .. Barnabas Collins
Born: December 02, 1924
Died: April 14, 2012
Birthplace: Hamilton, Ontario, Canada
Trivia: Canadian actor Jonathan Frid received his master's degree in drama from Yale University. Frid spent the first 20 years of his professional life as a Shakespearean actor in both Ontario and the United States, and as a daytime-drama performer on such American series as Look Up and Live and As the World Turns. Work was seldom steady, and Frid was often as not in the unemployment line instead of the dressing room. Going the casting office rounds in 1966, Frid was hired by producer Dan Curtis to play a crucial role in a new ABC soap opera, Dark Shadows. At first glance, this was nothing out of the ordinary for a fortyish utility actor; but at second glance, there was nothing ordinary about Dark Shadows. The first Gothic daytime drama, Dark Shadows was chock full of ghosts, family curses, howls in the night-- and one 175-year-old vampire, Barnabas Collins. Frid's interpretation of Barnabas leaned more toward the erotic than the horrific, and before long the actor was receiving 1500 fan letters a week (mostly from young ladies who expressed a desire to have their necks bitten) and was the somewhat dazed object of numerous fan clubs. Striking while the iron was hot, Frid became a fixture of the talk-show circuit, reciting poetry and Shakespeare at the slightest provocation. The actor extended his Barnabas Collins characterization into a 1970 feature film, House of Dark Shadows. Frid was rather tired of the character before the daytime serial ended in 1971, but found that Barnabas had so effectively typed him that he was virtually unable to find any non-supernatural roles. Jonathan Frid hasn't been heard from much in recent years. (Ben Cross played Barnabas Collins in the short-lived 1991 primetime revival of Dark Shadows), but the faithful haven't forgotten him, as witness the many "official" Barnabas Collins Fan Clubs still dotting the landscape in the early '90s.
Joan Bennett (Actor) .. Elizabeth Collins Stoddard
Born: February 27, 1910
Died: December 07, 1990
Trivia: The title of actress Joan Bennett's 1970 autobiography is The Bennett Playbill, in reference to the fact that she came from an old and well-established theatrical family: her father was stage star Richard Bennett and her sisters were screen actresses Constance and Barbara Bennett. Though she made an appearance as a child in one of her father's films, Joan Bennett did not originally intend to pursue acting as a profession. Honoring her wishes, her father bundled her off to finishing school in Versailles. Alas, her impulsive first marriage at 16 ended in divorce, leaving her a single mother in dire need of an immediate source of income. Thus it was that she became a professional actress, making her first Broadway appearance in her father's vehicle, Jarnegan (1928). In 1929, she began her film career in the low-budget effort Power, then co-starred with Ronald Colman in Bulldog Drummond. She was inexperienced and awkward and she knew it, but Bennett applied herself to her craft and improved rapidly; by the early '30s she was a busy and popular ingénue, appearing in such enjoyable programmers as Me and My Gal (1932) and important A-pictures like Little Women (1933) (as Amy). During this period she briefly married again to writer/producer Gene Markey. It was her third husband, producer Walter Wanger, who made the decision that changed the direction of her career: in Wanger's Trade Winds (1938), Bennett was obliged to dye her blonde hair black for plot purposes. Audiences approved of this change, and Bennett thrived throughout the next decade in a wide variety of "dark" roles befitting her brunette status. She was especially effective in a series of melodramas directed by Fritz Lang: Man Hunt (1941), The Woman in the Window (1944), Scarlet Street (1945), and The Secret Beyond the Door (1948). In 1950, she switched professional gears again, abandoning femme-fatale roles for the part of Spencer Tracy's ever-patient spouse in Father of the Bride (1950). Though her personal life was turbulent in the early '50s -- her husband Walter Wanger allegedly shot and wounded agent Jennings Lang, claiming that Lang was trying to steal his wife -- Bennett's professional life continued unabated on both stage and screen. Her television work included the 1959 sitcom Too Young to Go Steady and the "gothic" soap opera Dark Shadows (1965-1971). In failing health, Joan Bennett spent her last years in retirement with her fourth husband, media critic David Wilde.
Roger Davis (Actor) .. Jeff Clark
Born: April 05, 1939
Grayson Hall (Actor) .. Dr. Julia Hoffman
Born: January 01, 1927
Died: August 27, 1985
Trivia: Educated at Cornell University, American actress Grayson Hall established her reputation on stage. Among her many theatrical achievements were Six Characters in Search of an Author, under the direction of Tyrone Guthrie, and The Balcony, supervised by Jose Quintero. Hall's first film was Night of the Iguana (1964), for which she received an Oscar nomination. The actress then played the kidnapped bank teller in Disney's That Darn Cat (1965), probably the biggest moneymaker with which she was associated. In 1966, Grayson signed on for ABC's supernatural soap opera Dark Shadows, playing a doctor who tried to cure Barnabas Collins of his vampirism but who wound up falling in love with him instead. Grayson Hall left Dark Shadows in 1971 for a long stint on another, more sedate daytime drama, One Life to Live.
Kathryn Leigh Scott (Actor) .. Maggie Evans
Born: January 26, 1943
Birthplace: Robbinsdale, Minnesota
Trivia: Lead actress, onscreen from the '70s.
Nancy Barrett (Actor) .. Carolyn Stoddard
Born: October 05, 1941
John Karlen (Actor) .. Willie Loomis
Born: May 28, 1933
Birthplace: New York City, New York
Trivia: Stocky, blondish character actor John Karlen gained a mid-1966s following as Willie Loomis (and several other roles) on the Gothic TV soap opera Dark Shadows. Thereafter, Karlen became a fixture in other Dan Curtis productions, appearing in such feature-length Curtis endeavors as House of Dark Shadows (1970) and Trilogy of Terror (1973). In 1987, Karlen won an Emmy for his portrayal of Harvey Lacey, the contractor husband of Mary Beth Lacey (Tyne Daly), on the TV series Cagney and Lacey (1982-88); two years later he co-starred on the less successful video weekly Snoops. John Karlen's TV movie credits include the role of Jerry Barr in the execrable Roseanne: An Unauthorized Biography (1994).
Thayer David (Actor) .. Prof. T. Eliot Stokes
Born: March 04, 1926
Died: July 17, 1978
Trivia: Actor Thayer David did quite well for himself on stage, screen and television. By virtue of his prominent eyebrows and chin and his brutish frame, David tended to be typecast as villains, notably as the odious Count Sacnusson in Journey to the Centre of the Earth (1959), the shadowy arsonist in Save the Tiger (1973) and the untrustworthy boxing promoter in Rocky (1976). But in 1977, David was on the verge of TV hero-dom, thanks to an excellent showing in the title role in the 90-minute pilot film Meet Nero Wolfe. Alas, he died of a heart attack before the pilot could be spun off into a series. Thayer David was at one time married to actress Valerie French.
Louis Edmonds (Actor) .. Roger Collins
Born: September 14, 1924
Died: March 03, 2001
Donald Briscoe (Actor) .. Todd Jennings
David Henesy (Actor) .. David Collins
Dennis Patrick (Actor) .. Sheriff George Patterson
Born: March 14, 1918
Died: October 13, 2002
Trivia: Best known for his roles on such television dramas as Dallas and the macabre Dark Shadows, actor Dennis Patrick also carried the distinction of being the small screen's first vampire. Born in Philadelphia, PA, in March 1918, Patrick began a prolific and enduring television career with roles in Star Tonight and Kraft Television Theater. Subsequently appearing in a handful of features and a slew of made-for-television movies, Patrick's roles in Dark Shadows and Dallas brought him the greatest success of his career. Married to actress Barbara Carson, Patrick was left a widower following his wife's death in 1990. On October 13, 2002, Dennis Patrick died in a home fire in the Hollywood Hills with his dog by his side. He was 84.
Lisa Blake Richards (Actor) .. Daphne Rudd
Born: May 05, 1941
Trivia: Supporting actress, onscreen from the '70s.
Jerry Lacy (Actor) .. Minister
Born: March 27, 1936
Trivia: Supporting actor, onscreen from the '70s.
Barbara Cason (Actor) .. Mrs. Johnson
Born: January 01, 1928
Died: January 01, 1990
Humbert Astredo (Actor) .. Dr. Forbes
Paul Michael (Actor) .. Old Man
Died: July 08, 2011
Terry Crawford (Actor) .. Todd's Nurse
Michael Stroka (Actor) .. Pallbearer
Died: April 14, 1997
Trivia: Character actor Michael Stroka spent most of his long career on-stage and in television, but he also occasionally appeared in feature films. Stroka launched his career after earning a B.F.A. in drama from Carnegie Tech in 1960. There he found work at Manhattan Theater Club and with the New York Shakespeare Festival. On television he is known for having frequently appeared on the Twilight Zone and Combat in the early '60s. He made his feature film debut in the war drama 36 Hours (1965). Stroka died after long struggle with cancer at age 58.
Philip Larson (Actor) .. Deputy
David Patrick (Actor) .. Sheriff George Patterson

Before / After
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