Interviews With Cast And Crew - Non-Bond Films
CoolHandBond
Mactan IslandPosts: 7,093MI6 Agent
Following on from the similar thread featuring interviews with cast and crew of Bond films, I have created this companion thread which will feature interviews with cast and crew of non-Bond films, but also interviews with Bond personnel who are not talking specifically about the Bond movies.
The first interview will be with Vladek Sheybal and will appear here soon…
Yeah, well, sometimes nothin' can be a real cool hand.
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Vladek Sheybal is interviewed by David Del Valle in Psychtronic #31
Vladek Sheybal was born in Poland in 1933. The history of Poland is long, complex and tragic. When the future actor (originally named Wladylaw) was around six years old, his country was invaded by the brief unholy alliance of Stalin's Soviet Union and Hitler's Germany.
The Nazis occupiers finally left in 45, followed by decades of Communist rule."l decided to be an actor when I was about four or five. My first part was as a mushroom in a school play, dancing and singing songs, it was very funny. I was nicknamed, at school, Aaor. My father was a professor at the Academy Of Fine Arts in Warsaw, and was a painter. He wanted me to become an architect. My Mother wanted me to become a doctor. And I was very much tempted to become a doctor because I'm born under the sign of a Pisces, to heal people and to be good to them. Suddenly, one day after the war, I walked into this drama school and I became an actor. The first jobs were theater, traveling in the south of Poland. Very old fashioned, very good theater. (One day) somebody twisted an ankle, so the director said, 'Vladek will play the part.' It was French comedy. I played the leading part, a young lover in a white powdered wig. A very good beginning. Then I was playing a considerable amount of big parts in the Warsaw theater. (Roman) Polanski was playing tiny parts. I remembered him because we were in the same dressing room for about one week. He was not talking about being a director. He wanted to be an actor then. He would look up to me then as a sort of already big star. He is now in Paris. I am still in touch with him (I shouldn't say that in this country!). I don't estimate him very highly as an actor. I saw him on the stage as Mozart in Amadeus, in French. He wasn't bad, but I couldn't believe in him as Mozart. He was technically very good. His main talent and genius is his fanatic ideas and observations of the lives of people, his scripts and as a director." Polanski, born the same year as Sheybal, acted in Polish fiims and directed his first shorts in 1959.
His first major England language feature was FROM RUSSIA WITH LOVE (63), the classic second James Bond film. His friend Sean Connery convinced him to accept the role. Terence Young directed in England and Istanbul. "It was my first international film. I was playing Kronsteen the chess player. I was an accomplice of Lotte Lenya, a fantastic lady that I adored." In 65 he had a similar role as the as manager of a chess club in RETURN FROM THE ASHES, a serious WWll drama starring Maxmillian Schell, Samantha Eggar.
British TV work included roles on series that were also broadcast in America: SECRET AGENT (starring Patrick McGoohan),THE SAINT (starring Roger Moore) and THE BARON (starring Steve Forrest).
Sheybal was in the all-star Bond spoof CASINO ROYALE as a representative of Le Chiffre (Orson Welles) in the casino scenes. He then played Dr. Eiwort in BILLION DOLLAR BRAIN (67), the third of the Harry Palmer spy movies starring Michael Caine. It was directed by Ken Russell (in Helsinki and in Latvia) and featured Francois Dorleac, Karl Malden, Ed Begley, and Oscar Homolka. In 68 he played Dr. Delgado in DEADFALL, directed by Bryan Forbes (partially in Madrid and Majora). Michael Caine stars as jewel thief "in love with a woman who is married to her homosexual father." He also appeared on the spy series THE CHAMPIONS that year. JOURNEY TO THE FAR SIDE OF THE SUN was a 69 sci fi feature starring Ian Hendry, Roy Thinnes, and Herbert Lorn. Producers Gerry and Silvia Anderson' were known for their "Supermarionation" TV shows (THUNDERBIRDS, SUPERCAR...).
PUPPET ON A CHAIN, based on the Alistair MacLean drug traffic novel, starred Sven-Bertil Taube and Barbara Parkins. The memorable speed boat chase sequence in Amsterdam was directed by Don Sharp. THE LAST VALLEY, directed by novelist )ames Clavell starred Michael Caine as a 17th century warrior, Omar Shariff, and Florinda Bolkan."! spent two days in the studio with Omar Shariff and Michael Caine." MOSQUITO SQADRON was a WWII drama starring David McCallum as a Canadian RAF piiot. Sheybal played Lt. Schack.
“I usually play in American films. The bulk of my films are cast from London. I'm always working for MGM, Warner Brothers, Paramount... I love it because I fly first class jumbo jet and I stay in the first class hotels."
During 70/71 he was a regular (Dr. Jackson) on Gerry and Silvia Anderson's UFO TV series which was syndicated in America. SCORPIO ( 73 ) was a spy movie directed by Michael Winner with Burt Lancaster and Alain Delon. "Alain Delon, I worked with him only one day, very professional very polite. I got to meet Burt Lancaster. We acted together for a split second. A charming man." The same year, THE KISS OF DEATH was an Italian feature with Martine Beswicke (also in FROM RUSSIA WITH LOVE) as a devil worshipping drug taking gypsy witch. Sheybal plays her reptilian assistant. S*P*Y'*S* (74) was an unpopular comedy with Elliot Gould and Donald Sutherland as CIA agents. THE WIND AND THE LION (75) was John Milius' romantic historical adventure starring Sean Connery. Sheybal piayed an Arab called The Bashaw, the brother of Connery's character. THE NIGHT OF THE MARIONETTES was a 1977 episode of the BBC show SUPERNATURAL"! was playing the proprietor of an Austrian inn in the mountains with Gordon Jackson.Very spooky, very strange things going on. There is a very snobbish Dracula Society, The Gothique, I received a letter saying I was being awarded for the best Gothique performance of the year. They invited me to a fantastic sumptuous dinner. They handed me a scroll which I have framed on my wall. One of the first awards was Christopher Lee. They are very rich people, country squires."
SMILEY'S PEOPLE (82) was a BBC mini series starring Alec Guinness as a spy in the 3rd of part of a John Le Carre trilogy. Sheybal was Otto Leipzig."! am very hard working for each part. I do my homework. I don't believe in talent or intuition. I believe in very hard work, then intuition takes over. When I'm in front of the camera I try to forget about my learned lines and start fresh. All this material that I worked on is already inside of me. I iiked very much, old fashioned theatrical actors like John Barrymore. I loved him. And nobody can equal Greta Garbo. She was very intelligent. She was working very hard. My very favorite actor on stage is Raiph Richardson. I didn't work with him but I worked with Sir Alec Guinness, on SMILEYS PEOPLE. I never understand these spy scripts. In Hamburg we were filming and I asked him 'What is our relationship?” he said 'I don't know. I only know that you are one of my men.'"
RED DAWN (84) was John Milius' American teens vs. invading Commies feature. "It's science fiction about America being invaded by the Cubans and the Russians. I play the Russian general. I play the part in Spanish and Russian. I portray these Russian generals in a way that the world should tremble. I'm giving a big warning by piaying this part!" In JIGSAW MAN (84), Michael Caine is a British spy who has plastic surgery and defects. Lawrence Olivier, Susan George and Robert Powell costarred and Bond veteran Terence Young directed.
Some of Sheybal's last roles were in features that few people saw.
"After so many big stars, I could become completely cynical. For instance, I happened to know Bette Davis very well, we were close friends. I'm not a cynical man though. After so many films I've done, technically, one is so prepared. I shut off the noise, people walking around, the camera. I've learned it iong time ago. I'm always getting in close with the cameraman. He's my friend. I know all angles of my face. I have to have technical knowledge. I know quite a lot. I would rather direct. I'd rather not to watch myself on the screen because I get angry and ask why did I do that?.”
END OF INTERVIEW
Interview with RICHARD KIEL in Starburst #12 - In conversation with Tony Crawley.
Richard Kiel is a pain in the neck. Looking up at him for an hour or so plays sheer havoc with the neck muscles. He’s rather tall, you see. Even when he’s sitting down, he’s tall. Ultra tall.
He’s seated now, finishing lunch in Kensington. The wine bottles are open. He doesn’t have to use his steel teeth. But seated, he’s the same height as the waiters buzzing by with open mouths. Like me, they’re trying not to stare. But he does take some getting used to. Richard Kiel is used to people trying to get used to Richard Kiel.
Richard Kiel weighs around 315 pounds. He wears size 17 shoes and a 19-inch collar. “It gives you a forced motivation,’’ he remarks about his enormous height. “I’m aiming for success in movies to support my life style.”
If acting falls through for Kiel he has a sideline career to fall back on. Real estate. He I daren’t risk becoming unemployed. His frame , couldn’t take it. “I tried it once,” he remarks.
Starburst: Having lately completed two sf movies — two-and-a-half, counting the high space quotient of Moonraker — I wonder what interest you might have in science fiction, per se.
Kiel: I love it. I have nothing against it. I’d like to do other things as well, though. Like Force Ten From Navarone, and more comedy. I did a family-type comedy in the States. But it’s true, I’ve done plenty of science fiction, right back to The Human Duplicators in 1964. And I’ve written science fiction, in fact.”
Such as .. .
“I write short sf stories. One was called Strange Worlds Within, about the potential infinity within the atom. It dealt with Einstein’s mathematical theories; the idea that if you go far enough in one direction, you’ll end up back where you started from. Plus the fact that when I went to school, the atom was composed of three particles of matter: the electron, the proton and the neutron. Now, there’s hundreds and hundreds and hundreds'. And they all have elipitical orbits of the North and South Poles, even though they travel at the speed of light. That’s not unlike the universe and the galaxies and our earth going 400,000,000 miles in a year. Einstein said that if you were going close to the speed of light you’d appear to someone not going that fast, to be infinitesimal in size; yet inside the space craft, of whatever, you’d appear normal size to the people with you. So who knows? And I just took it from there. . . .
I have a feeling you've turned down some sf or fantasy work, though. The Incredible Hulk, for example. Surely you were offered that series ?
Well, yes, I was under contract to do The Hulk But I had some other things I wanted to do. First of all, I’m a family man. Then, I’m an actor. And the movie business is a business. I’ve been an actor for almost 19 years. I think The Hulk is wonderful. My two kids love it. But it’s not my thing. American television is a grind! But I was going to do it, because of the money, you know. For the family. I left by mutual agreement. Marvel Comics wanted a guy with more muscles, and I think it worked out to everyone’s benefit.”
You mean you didn't want to turn green every week on tv, hmm ?
“I don’t have any interest in playing somebody behind a mask. I like to make people cry, make people laugh, make people afraid, make people sad. Every actor has a big ego, of course, and part of the enjoyment of acting is not being Jaws, but being Richard Kiel playing Jaws. When you get into a part where you lose your identity completely, that isn’t any fun. Not for me. For some people, it’s fine. For the guy doing The Hulk, Lou Ferrigno, it’s great. I’m sure. He’s new. So this can only be a very gratifying experience for him.”
But it's not your thing, as you say?
No, it’s not for me. I’ve worked on Rifleman, Gilligan 's Island, I Spy and Barbary Coast. “Having played giants, psychopathic killers, retarded customers many times, I’ve run into the situation where the directors think I’m really like that. And the general public, through miscasting or whatever, seems to think the big guy has got to be a dullard. A big dummy. Of course it upsets me. I’m blessed with a pretty good aptitude. I could read Readers Digest when I was five. So I used to react when directors said they wouldn’t ask me to do anything too difficult. Now I see the funny side of it. I tell them; Look, I can walk and talk. If you want me to do something, just ask . . . though I realise it’ll be a big surprise to you!”
Kiel prefers Intelligent directors. Top of his list — the current 007 boss, Lewis Gilbert. “He can see that I’m a human being.” It wasn’t always that way. His first film, Eegah!, in 1961, had Kiel playing ... a cave man. Since then he’s completed about twenty features including Otto Preminger’s Skiddoo, Robert Aldrich’s The Mean Machine (he was a fellow convict of Burt Reynolds), and he has just completed the thriller Silver Streak with Gene Wilder when he got the call to glory — the world’s favourite villain. Jaws.
Were you offered the films of Conan or Thongor ?
I have a very close rapport with my agent.He's been with me since the beginning. He knows what I want to do. He doesn't even tell me about any offers for things I wouldn’t want to do. He knows that, for me, the play's the thing. Naturally, if I wasn’t doing anything, he might start looking at such offers differently. As of now we're looking for more sensitive roles, with all the facets of the emotions. A Cuckoo’s Nest, say. We're in a great time for actors like me. You don't have to look like Robert Redford anymore, or Dustin Hoffman. Alan Arkin and the guy that did Taxi Driver. De Niro. Films now can have different types of people in them. Sometimes it makes them more interesting.”
Is that why you're in The Phoenix— made inTaiwan, of all places.
“I guess they wanted to capitalise on the Bond . . . They certainly wanted me to make it very, very badly.”
I can see the Bond connection: you play Steel Hands, right?
“But when I got down there they wanted me to wear steel teeth . . .! I just told them: "Wait a minute, guys, I can't do that, you know." We shot it in Taiwan. With wooden cameras. I'm not kidding . . . ! A big part and a lot of work. They got 14 months work out of me in two weeks. Really incredible. I had to work hardest on staying alive — stopping them doing all the stunts with real swords.”
What's the film about?
“Ah! I play the protagonist. Can you imagine a 7ft 2ins houseboy with a sword and a top-knot thing on my head? And I think he's taken over by women’s libbers ... or something. I really don’t know. They didn't have a script in English. All I can say is that it helped me buy my house.”
How do you cope without an English script? I managed. My feeling was that most Oriental films don't make the American market, unless they're quite good. My agent and I rationalised that if this turned out bad, well, it would never show up.”
It couldn't harm you. then?
“I'm not knocking it. I'm sure it will be a very interesting film. It's not that I'm not proud of it or anything. It was interesting to work on, and I feel it's a special Sinbad type film fantasyy for all the family. Probably it will run in the summertime in America as a children's programme — with a Disney or a Spiderman movie.”
Italy's The Humanoid, therefore, must rateas a much better production ?
“Oh yeah . . . ! The Humanoid is a $5-million film. It's very charming, a good story that nobody can mess up. It's such a strong story; a robodog and a little boy. . . . The Wizard of Oz in outer space. Kind of what Star Wars might have been.”
Might have been? i thought that was Oz, exactly.
“I'm not really comparing the two films. I'm Just saying The Humanoid has maybe a stronger storyline than Star Wars.”
Every new sf film claims that.
“The Humanoid's strength is not based on special effects alone. The effects are there.They're done by some of the people who did Superman and Star Wars. They spent a lot of money on them, but they're not relying on the effects. Here's where you have a good story, surrounded by special effects, rather than the effects being the entire film.”
Your title role of Golob. sounds at first, more deadly than Jaws. But you're not a robovillain, all steel from head to toe, I understand. You start off as a reasonably average chap and you're zapped into being this humanoid creature.
“Yeah, he's victimised. I'm a protagonistagain. . . .”
With your build, what else?
“Golob is a space sailor, just doing his job-up there in outer space, with a robodog to keep him company. He has this big brother image: not the 1984 image, more like any kid's big brother. When he’s changed, his world isn't totally taken from him. The leaders of his world remove the sensors implanted in his wrist by the villain— the control— and then Golob is on their side and ends up being a major factor in overthrowing the evil forces.”
He even sacrifices himself in the end, to save them, doesn't he?
“Not now. We changed that. It ends now with a full sunset shot, walking off to the sequel bit. It's another family film, really. It has fantasy and everything, and there’s a kind of subtle romance between Corinne Clery and myself. At the end, I think you’ll feel that maybe Golob isn’t going to be so much of a loner. He’s found friends. It's a very good part for me.”
And for another alumuniis from both The Spy Who Loved Me and Force Ten From Navarone. . . .
“Yeah. Barbara Bach plays the evil one. Lady Agatha. She chose the more dramatic of the two female roles. It required more acting than just being another beautiful heroine again.”
Who took over Donald Pleasance's role of the inevitable power-crazed villain ?
“Arthur Kennedy. He's very good.”
You sound high in the film. Yet Italian movies, and particularly those of an sf nature — Starcrash, jor instance — can he one hell of a mess during shooting.
“Absolutely! The big difference here was not my control, nor Arthur Kennedy's, nor anyone's in the cast. It was the Titanus company's interest in getting into the English-speaking market. It's difficult to make a film just for Italy these days and still make any return (or break even) on the original investment. So this film was pre-sold to a major television network in America, it was pre-sold to Columbia for European release and to American-International in the States. And that meant a lot of conditions. It was not to be a typically spaghetti Star Wars. It had to have a quality that the American and English audiences expect.”
And has it ?
“I've seen some of the film and, again, it's not an effects movie. The effects are just there. This is a story. It's about people. And it happens to take place in the future. So it needs special effects to achieve that look, and it looks pretty good. We had some difficulties. For instance, we tried to shoot it with direct sound, which is a departure for the Italians, who post-synch all the dialogue in their films, as you probably know. Very difficult to shoot direct sound. You tell an Italian that he can't make a noise on the set and he doesn't understand.”
You mention your control before . . . Can you ec-lain that ?
“My conditions were having total script approval. But I'm not an unreasonable person, so I didn't have any problems in that area. The director. George B. Lewis (his real name, by the way, is Aldo Lado) is keen on becoming a world-wide director, not just another Italian film-maker. When I gave him a four-page synopsis of my feelings towards my character of Golob, he jumped up and down with joy. There were a lot of ideas he hadn't considered, some of these sparked him off to other ideas— and they fitted in with what I had in mind. We got on fine. He was just delighted that, you know. I cared.”
Apart from the Bonds, do you have a particular favourite among your films?
“The Human Duplicators was a good role. It could — it should!— have been much a better movie. But I don't think the people set out to make a Day The Earth Stood Still. They set out to make money.”
Who are "they" ?
“The Woolner brothers, Murray and David Woolner. They didn't take the care it needed. There was a lot of miscasting and things like that.”
A British critic said it had all the panache of Roger Corman re-making Metropolis, minus cohesion and coherence. Your character, Kolos, dropping in from an alien galaxy, started cloning everyone in sight, I seem to remember: George Nader and company.
“Hmm. I preferred the other side of the visitor. That gave me an opportunity to be sensitive. I had a relationship with the blind girl in it. Dolores Faith, restoring her sight before departing, defeated and obviously returning home to destruction as a failure. I liked the role. But like I say, the film should have been better. It was good practise for me, put it that way.”
So was The Spy Who Loved Me, a full thirteen years later. All your new films are a direct result of your immense triumph as Jaws. How did you net that part ?
“Because of a television series in America, which came about because of a film I did with Burt Reynolds; The Mean Machine (US title: The Longest Yard). They were the small steps that led to Jaws. Barbary Coast was just another unsuccessful tv series sold to Britain . . .! We made only thirteen weeks of it. Westerns just weren't in and we had a lot of competition on the other networks. You know, over there you can have 11,000,000 people watching and it's not enough — 18,000.000 is the bottom line! It's all numbers. Even the actors have ratings.”
You're joking ?
“No. They're called TVQ— television quotients. Alan Alda, of MASH, has been leading the list of 365 names for years! They put your name into a computer to decide if they'll cast you. It's all based on your commercial appeal. And I couldn't even get an interview for Barbary Coast. Who knows why? Some political or financial thing with the casting people, or my TVQ didn't measure up, I don't know. I eventually sent a registered letter to the producer asking to be seen, feeling I was right for the show. His secretary had seen The Mean Machine and i think she persuaded him to see me. So I did the series, all thirteen weeks. BBC, I think, bought it here and Lewis Gilbert's continuity script supervisor saw it, mentioned me to him, suggesting that he and Cubby Broccoli should see me for Jaws. That's how I got it.”
Did you see right off what the role might do for you ?
“I was a little frightened of it to start with. It has all the ingredients for a cartoon character. It could have been just a little too much ... I met with Cubby, we had lunch, and I told him I'd like to bring more of Richard Kiel into the part. Rather than play a stone-faced killer, I wanted some humour, humanism, perseverance, to give Jaws a child-like quality, that made him forgiveable no matter what he did. The kind of things that Boris Karloff brought to the original Frankenstein monster.”
It sure worked. Though my little daughter will never forgive you for terrifying her.
” I've seen that Bond film in about thirty countries. I've yet to see the audience not applaud and cheer Jaws. They shot two endings, you know. They didn't know what to do with him. It was Lewis Gilbert who had his hand on it more than I did. I tried to do something different, but I never realised how important it was to do a Bond film.”
Well, until you came along it was more usually the girls who made good out of an 007 caper. Now you're back again in Moonraker — and on Bond's side this time?
“That's right. I have a girlfriend as well. But I'd rather not talk too much about Moonraker. There's too many surprises in it. Let's just say the implication is that next time we see Jaws, he'll be pushing a baby carriage.”
With his teeth, you mean !
END OF INTERVIEW
That was a very good read, thanks CHB.
This is the first of a whole bunch of Hammer interviews in the coming weeks. Francis Matthews in Hammer Horror #2 1995 Interviewed by Adam Jezard.
You never know who you’ll meet when interviewing Francis Matthews. One moment the actor, who starred in Hammer's The Revenge of Frankenstein (1958), Dracula Prince of Darkness and Rasputin the Mad Monk (both released 1966), is a charming, amusing man - the next, his eyes are bulging, his face is contorted into a strange expression and his voice is faultlessly mimicking a personality or two. It’s all part of the actor’s craft, but the scope of his imitations is so vast - one moment an American producer, the next Peter Cushing - that he might have been a successful impressionist.
Now in his mid-60s, Francis presents a dapper figure, even in jeans and T-shirt. He recently completed an episode of The Detective’s, with Jasper Carrott, Robert Powell and George Sewell. “I played the Earl of Connemara, and Idid it like Rex Harrison," he says, changing voices in mid-sentence to give his Impression of the My Fair Lady star.
Following an initial Hammer outing in 1958’s The Revenge of Frankenstein, Francis returned to the company in 1965 to co-star in Dracula Prince of Darkness and Rasputin the Mad Monk (directed by Terence Fisher and Don Sharp respectively). Hammer, in a bid to reduce costs, made the two films back-to-back on the same sets with the same stars. What did Francis remember most about the films? “Barbara Shelley was a wonderful lady. So was Suzan Farmer. We did our job, we had giggles at lunchtime, a drink after the day’s shooting and we were great pals, wonderful pals, on the shoot. Christopher Lee was fun - a bit stiff, but my goodness, he was good as Rasputin."
The filming of two movies back to back might seem a complicated business, but Francis says, for the actors at least, it all worked very simply. “Four of the cast of both films were the same; Christopher, Barbara, Suzan and myself.
"When we had finished the interiors, the cast went off to Black Park [near Slough, around 30 minutes away from Bray by car to film the scenes with the horses and in the woodman’s hut. While we were doing that, the crew at Bray had started to revamp all the castle sets [which occupied the whole of one sound stage], turning them into the interiors for Rasputin.
"They were the same sets. The crew probably just moved the staircase over a bit and then re-papered the walls and changed all the pictures. It was all very well organised. We filmed Dracula’s death scene [in the castle moat] last, then started shooting on Rasputin. We did it in ten weeks, five for each film. On Friday you finished shooting one and on Monday you came in and started filming the next, with a different director and different costumes. Then, while filming on the Rosputin interiors, the outside of Dracula's castle was transformed into the Winter Palace."
In addition to the sound stages, the house was still used for interior shots. The inn from the Dracula film, in reality a corridor in the house, is the same as the St Petersburg bar in Rasputin, but with different decorations and seating arrangements.
Francis has particularly fond memories of filming the end of the Dracula film, as his younger brother (actor Paul Shelley, currently starring in Granada's Revelations) came onto the back lot and shot an 8mm home movie for the family archives. Much of the footage was seen in the BBC’s Fleash and Blood documentary last year.
A day at Bray could last a long time. If you were on first call, you would be in make-up before 6.30am and on the set within an hour. In between scenes, actors played games, rehearsed and “had wonderful lunches."
“We had wonderful potato cakes and bacon butties made by a lovely lady who ran the . . . well, you couldn’t it the canteen, you couldn't even call it a restaurant. It was a room in the house. There was a kitchen and a little hatch to put food through. It was just like being at home, and the food was wonderful out of this world. The mashed potatoes left over from lunch she would make into fried potato cakes for breakfast. You ate all day long and got very fat. And you would sit together with the crew. There was none of that class thing that you got in the commissaries of the big studios, where the directors, the executives and the money men would sit in a separate area, the stars in another and the supporting players in another. The crew wouldn't even be able to afford to eat in the commissary, it was too expensive, so they’d go to the canteen. But at Bray, everybody ate and worked together. It was like a family - there were no temperaments, no hold-ups, no dramas, no disasters, no union problems. It was film-making at its best, even though you weren’t making Lawrence of Arabia, because the actors were all friends and the stars didn’t come the big ‘I am’. You knew everybody. 1 knew the technicians and even the man who designed the sets would come and chat to me. It was a lovely time.
Script revisions were apparently rare - “an occasional word or two" - and the filming schedule was planned down to the last detail, as you would expect from a studio renowned for turning out low-budget movies on time.
In the 1987 BBC documentary, The Studio that Dripped Blood, Tony Hinds said Hammer made the films back-to-back to keep the costs down at the request of the money men. This struck Francis as incredible. “They were terribly cheap already, God knows how much Columbia [the distributing and backing company] made out of them. I've got a picture hanging in the loo of when the money men came to visit. One of the men from ABC [Associated British Cinemas, part of the distribution chain] came to be photographed with Tony Hinds, Tony Nelson Keys and the cast.
“Tony Nelson Keys was the associate producer, which meant he was on set all the time. He was a gorgeous, funny little gingerhaired man. Tony Hinds was more distant, but he had more problems on his back. He was in association with Carreras, the studio head, he was very friendly but pre-occupied. A very nice man as far as actors were concerned - he’d give you the time of day and he'd have a chat and a coffee. Most of the time he had people talking to him about money, the next script or the next set. He was also writing the scripts (under the pen-name of John Elder] so he was involved in many other films. Tony Nelson Keys was usually keeping the actors happy, keeping everyone Jolly, and coming onto the set and saying;
‘Are we going to shoot now, Terry? We’ve got to turn the film out . . . ’ "
There were differences between the direction of Fisher and Sharp. "Don was a much more hands-on director, a real director - God forgive me, this is nothing against Terry. But Terry smoked his cheroots and drank his coffee and just said; 'It’s lovely, lovely. Are you ready Jack? Francis. Peter, come on let's have a look.' Then he’d say; 'Lovely, let’s shoot’.
“Some of my acting in that is quite awful. If you pick up the film from the scene when I find my brother with his throat ripped out, then I see my wife being attacked by a man with strange teeth and my sister-in-law tries to bite me, and something else dreadful happens . . . Then Andrew Keir takes me back to his monastery and I have this chat with him, and my performance in that is quite awful. A man in those circumstances would have either fainted or died of a heart attack.
He would say nothing. Instead, I’m doing all this tense acting; ‘What am 1 going to do? What are we going to do?' When I see it now. I keep thinking 'don't do this’.
"But why didn’t Terry say, 'Francis, just don’t do anything’? You know, get more out of doing less.
Like Hitchcock, Terry should have just put me in front of the camera and said ‘don’t do anything’.
“Now Don’s much better at that - a very lively, very interested director, very busy. He was a marvellous action and second unit director. My part in Rasputin was my smallest, but my favourite for Hammer because I made the role of Ivan into a character."
In the film, Ivan eventually agrees to help Rasputin’s enemies destroy him and, in a scene which gave Francis much enjoyment, he decoys the monk into an ambush. I made Ivan camp in that scene. I said to Don; 'Can I make him look a bit as though he fancies Rasputin?' and Don agreed.
“When we were running up to filming Rasputin, Chris wasn’t in Dracula so he kept popping into the studios, preparing for the role. He had all these books on the histories of the Tsars, so we spent a lot of time during breaks in filming reading the books. Chris would give me a book and say ‘you’d better read that if we’re going to do it properly', so I knew the whole history."
Francis says that, due to legal problems, Hammer couldn’t tell the real Rasputin story. In 1932, the man who killed Rasputin, Prince Yousoupoff, successfully took out a libel writ against MGM for their film, Rasputin and the Empress (ironically, this was released in Britain as Rasputin the Mad Monk).
Francis’s grievances regarding the film lie elsewhere. "The saddest part of that particular movie for me, my great regret, was that I spent three days doing a fight scene. It was wonderful, that final scene with Rasputin. He should have been poisoned with cake but for some daft reason we gave him chocolates. Anyway, we filmed it pretty much more or less as Yousoupoff describes. Of course, we changed the name to Kesnikov because of the legal situation, but then they left it all out. It’s a terrible cut. I come into the room beautifully dressed, all smart and neat, and see Rasputin, poisoned but not dying. Then Richard Pasco [as another would-be assassin. Dr Zargo] comes in. The next thing you see is us chucking him out of the window, and I’ve got cuts and bruises everywhere. I’m covered in muck and my hair is all over the place . . . and you think; ‘Oops, what happened?’
“It took us 3 days to film that fight. Not with Christopher, he wouldn’t do it. I did mine because that was what I enjoyed about movies - action scenes. So I did the fight with [Lee’s] double. I was slamming him and he was slamming me. It was wonderful. I’ll never know why they cut it. The end of the film now is so truncated and disappointing.
You’ve worked up to this moment of us poisoning him, but he doesn’t die, then I come in thinking we’ve got him, but he’s survived the poison and we go into the fight. The whole film’s built up to that moment, but they cut it."
Looking back on his work for Hammer, how does Francis view it now? “I have to be honest," he sighs, "none of us took those films seriously at all. I don’t understand the cult success of them. It’s like Captain Scarlet [Francis provided the voice for the indestructable hero] which I knocked off in a week 27 years ago, and all I get now is people requesting my autograph on a picture of the puppet! It's ridiculous. All my other work, my important work, which I care about and have respect for, is ignored.
'T’m not knocking these films, they're very good of their kind, and very successful. But there was a great snob thing about them then. You didn’t tell people you were doing them."
Francis also played in a number of cult television shows, including two episodes a-piece for The Avengers and The Saint. Of his Avengers work, he says: “In the first [The 13th Hole, broadcast in 1966] I played a golf professional. I had to learn to play the game, because I had never hit a golf ball in my life and I was supposed to be playing a club pro. The first ball I hit did a 180 yard drive. It was incredible, and the trainer we had thought I was a natural, but I’ve never hit a golf ball since.”
In his second episode (Mission . . . Highly Improbable. 1967), he is an enemy agent named Chivers who shrinks Emma Peel and John Steed down to size with a stolen weapon.
“I was miniaturised or something. I had to handle a big black frog in that one, and I hated it, and there was this frog chasing me. Urrgh!
“In one of the Saint episodes I played a Frenchman who got very angry and had a fight with Roger Moore [ 1967’s To Kill a Saint, directed by Robert Asher, brother of Jack, the director of photography on The Revenge of Frankenstein]."
Francis also appeared in a 1969 film Crossplot, produced by the same team which made The Saint television series and starring Roger Moore. He played a hired killer attempting to kill Moore, an innocent advertising man caught up in a Hitchcock-style plot. "Roger was, and is. the nicest man in our profession, a lovely man."
In 1969, Francis took the leading role in the BBC’s Paul Temple. Temple was the total opposite of girl-hunting characters such as the Saint and James Bond. To start with, he was married and wrote books on criminology. While Temple was sometimes called upon to engage in fisticuffs, he mostly solved his mysteries with his wits rather than with car chases and gun fights.
The series, currently being repeated on satellite staion UK Gold, was a huge hit and ran for 52 episodes. Despite this, Francis looks back on the show as a wasted opportunity. Although supposed to last 5 years, the BBC ended the show’s run early, much to Francis’s dismay.
“It’s the thing, more than the horror films, which made me well known. It’s also the worst thing I’ve done, except for some scenes in Dracula, but it was the most popular. It made me high-profile. I don’t know why the BBC dropped it. It was good for me in a way, it forced me not to get stuck in the character, but it was sad because it was so well-liked by people."
However, at the moment Francis is best remembered for providing the voice of Captain Scarlet, a fate in which, ironically, his one-time idol Cary Grant played a hand.
“Gerry Anderson heard me on some Interview doing an impression of Cary Grant and he rang me up and asked if 1 would do the voice for a new series, so I said yes.”
He and the other cast members (including Charles Tlngwell, who co-starred in Dracula Prince of Darkness) went into the studios at Denham in Buckinghamshire and recorded 4 or 5 episodes a day. “They just played your voice through the electronic voice activator, which moved the puppet’s mouth. We'd spend 5 or 6 hours in the studio and did them just like radio plays." Only on the last week of shooting did Francis go to Anderson’s Slough-based studio to see the puppets in action. But he did take his two eldest sons to see a preview of the series which gave him an early sign of the success it was to have with children everywhere.
“The thing came on with the two eyes and you heard; ‘This is the voice of the Mysterons’, and my first son, Paul, went ‘aargh' and ran out of the previewing room and started crying, The producer said; ’Oh my God, we’ll be sued!’ But Dominic, the pop star, a much more sanguine boy, loved it. I said: 'For every child who runs out, you'll have one who'll adore it.’ "
END OF INTERVIEW
Francis Matthews! Fantastic! But he doesn't mention what was surely the highlight of his career ....
And coming up soon…
I wonder if he was ever paid in the end?…
This is a transcript of an interview with Peter Cushing broadcast on BBC1’s PEBBLE MILL.
Date: 31st October, 1991.
Interviewer: Alan Titchmarsh.
A.T: You did a lot of work with Vincent Price and Christopher Lee. Do you have a lot in common as a trio?
P.C: Oh no! I mean we don't see each other for years but when we meet it's like yesterday. Dear Vincent lives in America, dear old Christopher lives in London and is all over the world doing things. But we keep in contact and we ring and, strangely enough, Vincent's the eldest, I'm the middle and dear old Christopher's the baby. Our birthdays fall... mine falls on the 26th May, please make a note of that, the other two on the 27th. So it's extraordinary. . .Gemini isn't it? Not that I know much about these things.
A.T: You did some work quite early on in Hollywood. Who did you work with?
P.C: I had been in repertory since 1936 and after about four years I realised my great ambition to go out and work in Hollywood and see where Tom Mix lived. Tom Mix, in my day, was a sort of John Wayne. So, having saved up a tiny bit of money, I asked my dear dad if he would help me to get across the pond. He said yes and gave me a one-way ticket, which worried me a bit. But upon enquiry he said "If you don't succeed you will have to swim home, so that should give you some sort of inspiration, my boy."
A.T: Now I've heard you actually worked with Laurel and Hardy.
P.C: Yes! Yes, well I was only a glorified extra. But it was wonderful; to think I've worked with the two greatest American comics, although Laurel's English, and the two greatest English ones, Morecambe and Wise. That was one of the jobs I got, the one with Laurel and Hardy, during the period of my deciding to try and get home before I succeeded. But I made quite a number of very small pictures in Hollywood during my first time.
A.T: Were you a great fan of Eric and Ernie, in spite the fact they never paid you?
P.C:- Oh, I adored them, I think they were so clever, absolutely wonderful. I don't know if you saw any of them, but there was a most wonderful running gag. I appeared with them seven or eight times, and each time I was demanding to be paid for my first one, and they kept getting away with it. And right at the very last one I did with them, I succeeded, I got my money. Then dear Morecambe had his first heart attack and was asked by the press, after he'd got better, if he'd ever paid me. He said "Yes, and look what happened to me!
(There now followed a clip of Peter on The Morecambe and Wise Show) .
A.T: Having played a lot of goodies in bad situations, you did get to play a real baddie in STAR WARS. But I heard a little rumour that you actually played him in a pair of carpet slippers. Now, is this true?
P.C: Where do you get all this information from, my dear boy? Yes, true. Usually, Bermans do my clothes. I've got enormous feet, size 12, and they make my boots for me. But this time they had to give me a pair from stock and they were agony, they really were. I was staggering around, and I said "Look, George, dear boy, I'm not asking for close-ups, but do you think from now on you could shoot me from the waist up. I cannot bear these, I'm not giving the performance I should." So he agreed and there I was stomping around in a pair of carpet slippers!
A.T: I hear you've now gone into the pop world?
P.C: Well yes, it's a lovely antiwar poem. We will turn it into a rap record. I said, in all my innocence, "Is that what you do for Christmas, wrap it up?" And they said "No, No!" So I said well I'm fasinated who likes this sort of thing and they said watch Top Of The Pops. This I did, and I'm still deaf! But I think, as I said earlier, it is an anxious mission to entertain. If I can entertain today's children, kids, with that sort of thing I am absolutely delighted
(The interview concluded with a clip from the video of the single. Peter appears in the video, complete with baseball cap and an American college jacket!)
END OF INTERVIEW
I’ve never seen that - would love to see it 😁
There will be another, more detailed interview with Peter Cushing at a later date where he talks extensively about Hammer Films and in particular the latest one he did at that time…Dracula A.D. 1972.
I'd love to read that. Thanks for this, CHB.
Director Val Guest talks Quatermass, dinosaurs and more with Adam Jezard from Hammer Horror #7 1995.
How was Val chosen to direct the studio's first horror, The Quatermass Xperiment?
“Tony Hinds gave me a stack of scripts to read while I was on holiday in Tangier. These were beside my bed for a good week or so before my wife, Yo [actress Yolande Donlan| asked me what one of them was. I said, 'Oh, its some sci-fi, horror thing Tony wants me to read, but it really isn't my scene.' And Yo said, 'Have you read it?' I said 'No,' and she said, 'Why not? Since when have you been ethereal?' So 1 read it, and I was immediately hooked, and that’s how I came to do Quatermass . . .
"What I did say to Tony Hinds was that, if I was going to do it, I was going to do it almost factually, as a newsreel or reportage. No science-fiction film had been done like that before." Hinds agreed, and Val duly set about rewriting Richard Landau's draft screenplay, itself taken from Nigel Kneale's television scripts. “The problem of condensing the serial can be best described as picking out the best bits and leaving the second best bits," says Val
"It was nothing less than a miracle really," he says. “I wasn't into horror and I was probably one of the few people who hadn't watched the television serial that was gripping the nation. Now, in doing this, you make an enemy of the writer, in this case Tom |Nigel Kneaie|, but that’s life in this picture business. The writer always feels you've taken out the best parts and the film-maker has to say, 'This is what I think people will sit through without shuffling their feet,' and has to take the decision of what to cut.”
"In all my years in this film industry 1 cannot remember anybody who had more upsets, worries and grumbles I have heard - from other people - that Nigel Kneale has. He seems to go through life grumbling about everything. He didn’t like the casting of Donlevy. he didn't like the way the script was written, he was upset about the first Quatermass film because he thought we'd ruined the whole thing. I quite honestly think he should shut up and thank his lucky stars that Hammer took a television writer, of immense talent and brilliance, and turned him into a world-wide name in his genre. Even the most brilliant writer needs an editor, someone to sub his stuff down and peddle it to the public so they won't go away yawning. I have great respect and admiration for him. but I cannot stand hearing about all these things he's supposed to have complained about over the years."
And Val is full of praise for the star of his Quatermass films, Brian Donlevy.
"Donlevy was a very good actor," he says, “and for my money it was far better to play someone as down-to-earth and factual, as he was, than it was to play him as an ethereal professor. He fitted in beautifully with my method of trying to film it as a newsreel and make it more believable. The whole thing with all these pictures was to never do a scene that you didn't honestly believe couldn't happen. For me. Donlevy gave a down-to-earth feel to a very off-the-Earth subject.
The casts of the first two Quatermass films were full of household names - Sid James, Thora Hird, and lack Warner among them. "I used to have a sort of film rep company," says Val, “and a lot of these people, like Sid lames. I used to write in. I hadn't worked with Jack Warner before, but I knew him. Thora Hird I'd used before. They were all part of our family. We had fun and everybody knew their business. If they weren’t pros, we wouldn't use them again."
Val also gave new talent a try and, in The Quatermass Xperimenl. featured a relative newcomer to film, Lionel Jeffries. as Blake, the man from the Ministry.
"Thereafter, I wrote Lionel into every other film I did,” says Val.
Even in its early days. Hammer was mostly concerned with bringing the production in on budget and on schedule. "I can't remember how much money we had," says Val, "it was normal sort of budget, it was very small. Schedule? I don’t know, I think had about six weeks. Eight weeks was tops." As was so often the case. Hammer made use of the resources on its doorstep: in early scene, a police car cruises past crowds of people while Bray Garage can be seen clearly in the background. Hammer also persuaded local fire and ambulance crews to take part. "The crews were very helpful," remembers Val. "We had no problems, we Just asked for their co-operation and we got it." While the occasional villager may have been seen in the background, most of the extras were jobbing actors. "There was a crowd artistes' union associated with Equity |the actors' union) and you had to use a certain amount of them unless you were more than 52 miles away from London. However, the odd local did turn up and make the place look a little bigger.”
Given the film's urban setting, Val and his crew didn’t have to go very far to find the locations they needed. “We used a lot of the cobbled ways of old Windsor, the little streets below the castle. That’s where we shot the break-in at the chemist s shop ... We shot the finale using the outside of Westminster Abbey, but we never shot inside. The interiors were shot at Bray."
Special effects were still fairly primitive in the 1950s. Val had the difficult task of realising the crash-landing of the spaceship, Richard Wordsworth's transformation from man into mess, and the scenes of the giant creature in Westminster Abbey, without the aid of computer enhancement, trick photography or expensive special effects teams.
"You may have thought you saw the crash-landing, but you never did. The only thing we shot was the spaceship, embedded in the ground resting against a tree on the backlot. It was built there, and our art director (Elder Wills) did a great job. But that huge spaceship was there on the backlot for quite a long time.
“Wordsworth's transformation was the brilliant work of Hammer's make-up man, Phil Leakey. He was with them for years and did some wonderful jobs. That, again, was done without trick photography or stop-motion, but painstakingly, from shot to shot. I suppose many times it did look like you were seeing him change. The creature in the zoo you never saw either. You may have thought you saw it, but you never did. I shot it so that you saw a shadow, you heard it moving, you saw the slime trail that it left, but you never, ever, saw the creature.
"Now, in Westminster Abbey, you did. You got a glimpse of it up in the rafters. That was down to Les Bowie, our special effects man, who was a great guy. The thing up in the rafters was a piece of tripe which he had manipulated into some form of life. Such is the wizardry of special effects, but that's all you saw."
The BBC had shot the original television serial (broadcast in 1955) at the huge Shellhaven oil refinery on the Essex coast, and at the nearby Mucking Marshes, which had stood in for Winnerden Flats, the village which had mysteriously 'disappeared'. Shellhaven proved so effective in the television version that Val also shot his Quatermass sequel there.
"Shell were very good," he recalls. “A production manager went down and saw them and made a deal. I don't remember seeing very many people down at the Shellhaven refinery. I think most of the operational tasks were done from inside the control house, so it was a very eerie place because of that."
Val's documentary-style method put Quatermass 2 ahead of its time. Despite these forewarnings of the terrors of mysterious 'new towns' and strange scientific processes, Val doesn't believe the films were Intended to reflect contemporary fears. "I think saying that is reading something Into it that wasn’t really there, unless Nigel Kneale says it was. You'll have to take that up with the author."
While the film is a stark and grim entertainment, there were laughs to be had on location. One of these involved Brian Donlevy's toupee, which unfortunately developed a life of its own while on location on the South Downs near Brighton. "We’d gone to the Downs because they were supposed to be windswept," says Val, "and they weren't." Consequently, the studio had to hire in aeroplane engines to create the hurricane sequence at the end of the Film. "As Brian wore a toupee, we knew we had to be careful filming the hurricane. We had God knows how many engines lined up to blow this gale because there was no wind at all, and those engines were turned on and had to blow at the actors - that was our hurricane. But to do that I had to arrange it so that in all the scenes, Donlevy faced the wind machines, or his toupee would have blown off. We did it all very successfully until one take, a very difficult shot, which we had tried a couple of times. Finally I said. ‘That's a beauty, cut.' Donlevy said, ‘Oh, great, now I can have a coffee.' but he turned around and his toupee took off and floated around like a bat. even after we’d turned the wind machines off. The props were throwing rakes at it trying to get it down and save it. They eventually did bring it down and it had to be resurrected by the hairdressing department."
Given the small budgets and the technical limitations on the Quatermass films, did the stories rely more on the characters to tell the plot than a modern film would?
“I don’t really think so." says Val. "All you had to do was make a very good story. To tell a good story, you need good characters. I don’t think we had to do that more than modern films do. If you’re saying that, you're implying modem films are bloody awful because they don’t rely on characterisation - and you may have a point, I don’t know."
Immediately after Quatermass 2. Hammer turned to Kneale's 1955 BBC television play The Creature, changing the title to The Abominable Snowman. Once again. Guest and Kneale were retained as director and writer respectively. Although Kneale was the only writer credited on the project and the film retained a principal star from the television version, the team still experienced familiar difficulties. "We had to cut the script to make it more cinematic," Val recalls. "It had sounded a bit like standing on a soapbox and pronouncing theories - all very well, but only to a certain extent.”
The script dealt with the potential extermination of an entire species.
"It was a good message then and it's a good message now," says Val. "That was all down to Nigel Kneale, it was his story and his script. All I had to do was edit it again and bring it a little down-to-earth and down to size, which again I believe poor Tom was very upset about. Poor Tom. He's wasted an awful lot of his life being upset. It's a shame he can’t enjoy the success that he's had."
According to the director, The Abominable Snowman wasn't rushed into production in a bid to capitalise on the success of the Quatermass team's previous efforts. "I made it because I was interested in the subject. It was nothing to do with Quatermass at all. It was a very good story and the Snowmen had been in the news. Some very well-known and respected people had found a footprint and it had been very well covered by the press. It was a very up-to-date subject to tackle, way away from Quatermass. You see, I happen to believe there is something in the mountains, an animal or a man-animal, that we haven’t really seen. People say they have had glimpses - I'm quite prepared to believe that."
Val continued to work for Hammer on and off, making films which were equally hard-hitting but based more in reality, including war movies The Camp on Blood Island (1958) and Yesterday's Enemy (1959), and crime thrillers Hell is a City ( 1960) and The Full Treatment (1961). These films were at the forefront of what became known as the wave' of realistic, gritty films, and were soon overtaken in terms of screen sex and violence. But why did Val choose to introduce such realistic elements into his films? "I always felt that if you were taking a new look at a familiar subject you should present it in a new fashion." he says. "You can’t do this with all subjects, but (those] seemed to lend themselves to my cinema verili style of film-making. It was a style I liked when approaching that sort of a subject, which I think gave it a little more impact."
After The Full Treatment, Val was not to work for Hammer for another nine years, but during that time he re-entered the fantasy field with another British documentary-style science-fiction thriller, 1961’s The Day the Earth Caught Fire. The movie, which deals with the end of the world after the planet is forced off its axis by repeated nuclear tests and into the gravitational pull of the sun. is Val's pet film. "I got the idea eight years before I made it. It wasn't that I didn't want to do it, but in every one of those years I made a film that was successful and someone would say to me, 'What do you want to do next?' When I told them about The Day The Earth Caught Fire, they'd say, 'You must be mad. who wants to know about bombs and things? No, no, get on with the things you know how to do.' And I did that for eight years!
But in the eighth year. I thought, 'I'm going to make this, sink or swim.'"
He was forced to partly finance it himself, putting up his profits from a successful Cliff Richard drama, 1959's Expresso Bongo, and then persuaded Michael Balcon and British Lion to give him the rest of the money. "It was my baby from the year dot," he said. "Of course, it is my favourite film and it won a British Academy award and it was very pleasing to me, having battled so long, that it was a great success." Val admits that The Day the Earth Caught Fire was one of a number of films where nudity could be added. In countries where the censor objected to such material, a sanitised 'cover shot' would be inserted. Such a scene was in The Day The Earth Caught Fire, wherein Janet Munro is seen washing her hair, once topless, once covered. Other films on which Val used 'cover shots' were 1963's 80,000 Suspects (with classical actress Claire Bloom), and The Full Treatment (with Diane Cilento).
He was finally called back to Hammer to direct their 1970 prehistoric adventure, When Dinosaurs Ruled the Earth. "I was on holiday in Malta with Yo, and Aida Young, the producer, flew out to see me and asked if I'd be interested in doing a film about dinosaurs. The whole thing was going to be shot in the Canary Islands. Now, I’d never been to the Canaries, and I thought it was a fabulous idea, and I did it because I thought it would be a fun thing to do. In fact, it's one of the few films I didn’t enjoy making. Hard work can be fun, but this was hard work that wasn’t. The set up was not all that good, the story wasn't good either, but at least I got six weeks in the Canary Islands. But the moment I left the picture with my editor [Peter Curran] in the state that was, for me, correct, the producer got into the cutring-room and re-edited the whole film. What went out on screen had nothing to do with the film I had made and left behind."
The script, written by Val from a treatment by author J G Ballard, featured no real words, but a phoney language which had been given predetermined meanings by the cast. The real stars of the film, however, were the Oscar-nominated special effects. “It was not difficult to mix the actors and animations," says Val. “We had Jim Danforth, a brilliant animations man. and everything we filmed we shot with a storyboard. Anything that had dinosaurs in it had been drawn out and you knew exactly what was happening with each movement. Jim animated the dinosaurs in after we'd shot the live-action sequences. Somebody would stand up on the mountain with a 14 foot pole, and you'd tell the actors, ‘The top of that pole is the dinosaurs eyes, that’s where you look'. It wasn't tough for me. it may have been tough for the actors, but they always had the storyboard to see where they were.'
Although that was the last feature film Val directed for Hammer, his connection with the studio did not end there. He returned to direct three episodes of the 1980s television series. Hammer House of Mystery and Suspense: Mark of the Devil, In Possession, and Child's Play. Of the series. Val says, "Roy Skeggs [the Hammer producer) called me and asked if I'd like to do some for old time’s sake. We had fun making them but they were tough going. We were given a tiny schedule [10-13 days per 73-minute episode), but 1 thoroughly enjoyed it and I probably would have stayed on and done more if I hadn’t had other commitments."
Now in his eighties, Val lives in America’s Palm Springs with Yo, and the couple celebrated their 40th wedding anniversary there last September. (They have a son and three granddaughters.) However, Val's version of retirement seems like more work. He teaches screenwriting at the nearby College of the Desert and has been working on the screenplay for a new version of The Day the Earth Caught Fire. “It's all about global warming," he says. "Nothing could be more topical than that.” And although he has nothing to do with the mooted remake of The Quatermass Xperiment, a new version of his Expresso Bongo was in pre-production in London when he spoke to Hammer Horror. "I'm tickled they're all being redone," he says. “It's great when you get to my time of life and three of your films are being remade in the same year. Life's pretty good."
END OF INTERVIEW
Interview with Peter Cushing from Cinefantastique Summer 1972 by Chris Knight and Peter Nicholson.
(DRACULA TODAY was released as DRACULA A.D. 1972)
Peter Cushing Is always the perfect gentlemen, and one of the few actors today who, to my way of thinking, can inject an aura of gentleness and kindness Into every role he plays, even in the macabre thrillers he has found lasting fame in. Peter spoke to me in his dressingroom during the shooting of DRACULA TODAY at Hammer Films about the film and film-making in general.
In DRACULA TODAY, Christopher Lee as Dracula is revived and brought to life in modern day England. I asked Peter how he felt people would react to bringing, what is basically a period character into the present?
"Well, I can’t answer how people will take it.” he replied, "but I think as it starts a hundred years ago. in 1872, and Dracula is really alive somewhere all the time, he is still a period character, so to speak, but he’s dateless. He's timeless, and no matter what happens to him, he is always revived. I think, having made so many (I haven't made all that number, but there have been so many Dracula films) that basically, to use the word you used --and once you’ve made the first Dracula picture or the first Frankenstein picture you are stuck with, a) a vampire who lives on blood, and b) a man who creates a human being who turns into a monster--so you can only write stories vyying that theme and I think It’s nothing short of genius to present Dracula In such a new way. I should think people will love it, because, don’t forget, when we made the first Frankenstein in 1957 the people who came to see those films (and don't forget, they were very strict as to who should go to the cinema, you had to be over a certain age), well, the young people who were allowed to see those pictures, the original ones that Chris and I made, their children are now seeing what we're making today. and as those old ones are still played all the time. I think that if they like this kind of picture I don’t think it will make one iota of difference. When I was originally told it was a modern one. I thought it’s a pity because I always feel that a period in which there are no such things as telephones. and you’ve only got horses and gigs to travel around in, makes everything more difficult to get at. whereas today, say Dracula is in Transylvania, you just get a Jet from London Airport and then you can be in Transylvania say in half an hour. The Gothic feeling of the period always seems to be more atmospheric. With this particular script I think the art director and the director have done a wonderful job in combining the aspects of the modern and the period.”
What was it like being teamed with Christopher Lee again?
“ It’s extraordinary when you think Chris and I have done a number together which stretch over, since 1956, but because nearly every one we've made has had such a tremendous impact as films--I don't mean just because Chris and I were in them—but as films, a) they’ve made a tremendous impact, and b) they've made such a lot of money. These two things are very important in the film business, and if you are connected with those two elements, you yourselves are promoted in that you become public Images. You see, I have letters saying 'Please will you send me a photograph of yourself with Christopher Lee.' They think he and I live together in a cave down at Whitstable, which is sweet. So you have to write back and say. I’ll send you mine, but you have to write to his agent for his. So you do get that connection, and also the very fact that I have been awfully lucky in the amount of work I have done. There have been long periods when I haven't worked, which is called resting, because it’s so unkind to say I'm out of work, or any actor for that matter. Every week something I’ve been in seems to be on television, on one channel or another. There has l»een CASH ON DEMAND, THE SKULL, CONE OF SILENCE, SHE and CAPTAIN CLEGG. That was a good picture and a good story. You see, that’s where everyone from the topmost to the bottommost dog in the film business relies. You all rely upon the script, and you can possibly make a bad script just a little bit better, but you all rely on the script. That is why this script for DRACULA TODAY is particularly good."
I asked if in this picture there was any humor, and whether it was a necessity in a picture such as this?
"No, not a great deal," was the reply. "This is the only thing that does lack in them. You are always going to get some people who are going to laugh anyway, in the wrong places. I think if you can bring in legitimate humor like that one famous line in CURSE OF FRANKENSTEIN 'pass the marmalade please,' which is a legitimate line, then it will help. Basically, these stories are good after the bad. You want an exciting story leading up to the chase and Dracula in some way defeated. Unless you've got some moment where maybe one legitimate line, where you want them to laugh, is a good thing. I think there is a certain amount of rye humor in this, from the point of view of the young people not really understanding the part I play of my generation. There's no conflict, there’s great affection. but it's just what I think they call today the generation gap, which I think comes off extremely well in this picture, and there might be just a few smiles about that, no bellylaughs."
Could Peter forsee a sequel to DRACULA TODAY?
"This I mean quite sincerely," he told me. "So long as these pictures — and I’m afraid it comes down to this — but so long as these pictures make money, they will always make them, whether they're with Chris and I, I don’t know. I will always do them if I’m asked, even if I have to do them from a bath-chair."
Could Peter forsee any of his films becoming regarded as classics?
"That’s, again, very difficult to tell," was the cautious reply. "How was poor Van Gogh to know that his paintings were going to fetch thousands when he didn't sell one in his lifetime? Anything like that is unpredictable, anymore than when they first printed the Black Mauritius stamp, who would think that in the years to come it would be literally worth a fortune? People say that they are already treating the first colored Dracula as a sort of minor classic in a way. but anything that goes into archives becomes perhaps a little bit of a classic in a way, even because of its archaical quality. You see an old film now and you’ll enjoy it, but you’ll laugh at it and in say fifty years time they may be laughing at the way this picture is made because things change so quickly."
Since Peter made a reference to some of his films. I asked if he had a favorite?
"No. Personally, I always love working in pictures and have great affection for that. What pleases me most of course is the people we do them for, the audience. Without an audience, none of us would be working, and they’re the people who matter and strangely they don’t seem to have any favorites, they just like each and every one of them according to the letters I get.”
One film of Peter’s that is unlikely to be seen for some considerable time is THE BLOODSUCKERS (originally titled DOCTORS WEAR SCARLET). Peter went on to explain some of the background to the troubles.
"I’ve-no idea when it will be released, but I have a feeling it’s been shelved purely for political reasons. The company who made it split up arguing who owns the picture. It was filmed partly in Cyprus. I didn’t go there, but I should say it's only loosely based on the book."
Knowing that Peter is a great nature lover, I asked if he had been on location with the picture DRACULA TODAY, and if he enjoyed location work?
"Location has been just up the road and in Chelsea of course," he told me. "I like locations on the screen. I adore westerns, and practically all westerns are done on location. As an actor, I don’t care for location work because it is such a make believe medium that put me up a set where I know behind it is all plaster, packs of sandwiches, and where the 'Daily Mirror’ is tucked in and people are having cigarettes behind there, then I know it’s all make believe, put me up against a real, lovely wood, a real church or along a real road, I find it much more difficult to pretend because that's what acting Is¬ let's pretend — against the real thing I’m not so happy. I love the real thing. I love the countryside and adore nature but I’m never quite so happy working against the real thing because I think that the country is so much bigger than mere mortal man, especially mere mortal actors, that it is far too impressive to try and combat. Plus the fact, the only part of filming I don’t care for is post-synching, because anything you do outside you nearly always have to post-synch because you’ve got jets going over and motors going by and maybe several weeks or months can go by and you come back, and you may have done something else in between. and you come back and you are dressed in your ordinary clothes and you've got to redo it. When you are actually doing it with an instinct the way you say things must come out in the way you want or as near as possible to what you hope to obtain and I always feel you must lose something in postsynching. Of course. I do it, and I do it as best I can. but I always feel you lose something.”
As Peter has appeared in so many films, would he ever like to go "behind the camera" as a director?
"No. I don’t think I know enough about the technical side of it." he told me. "I might be able to help a few actors through what I’ve learnt and been taught. Beside that, the pressure on the director is enormous. It isn’t just directing a scene. You’ve got to think about tomorrow’s work, tomorrow’s call sheet, you may be thinking about another scene. There are so many things away from your work as an artist. As a director, you’ve got to think about the budget, and have people buzzing 'round and breathing down your neck."
Hoping that Peter would not take the question the wrong way, I asked if he could ever forsee himself retiring from films?
"No. I don't think actors ever retire," he said smilingly. "I don't think any of them could afford to. I don't think they want to. To me, most actors I saw when I was younger, say like Jimmy Stewart, John Wayne. Robert Mitchum and Kirk Douglas, now they’ve got marvellously grizzled. They’re so much more interesting as people and far better actors. I know they can't play young men anymore. I enjoy them after watching them all these years. Gary Cooper. I think, when he got ever more grizzled and aged he became a much more interesting person to see. They became actors because they learnt about the business. They didn’t go into the business as actors like most English actors, and bless his heart, whatever Gary Cooper played, he was still Gary Cooper, and that goes with most of them. English actors do tend to be able to play more of a variety of parts because they’re allowed to, Peter Sellars and Alec Guinness for instance, whereas Kirk Douglas, who’s a marvellous actor, if he played Henry VIII or a cowboy he would still be Kirk Douglas. That is what is sold. You sell Kirk Douglas to the people who want to go and see."
Most of Peter's films have been made in England. Was this because he hadn't received many film offers from abroad. I asked?
"I have turned down films abroad. I’ve never liked going abroad. I don't mind so much now, but I still don't relish it. My dear wife always said when you cut me I bleed woad. I’m so British. but I've always loved England so much and I feel very wretched when I've been away from it. I have not done films abroad only because I haven't liked the scripts, but if the scripts had been good I would naturally have done them. I think SHE was well worth going abroad for, although I was only away ten days."
Over the last couple of years. Hammer has branched out slightly into other fields of film making. How did Peter react to this?
"You can’t flood the market with this kind of picture, say with me in it, unless it is something pretty good, because if people see two or three bad ones with you in it. they’ll stop going to see them. Hammer has been clever in as much as the next one I’ll be doing for them, FEAR IN THE NIGHT, is not by any means a horror film. It's a mystery thriller. They’re not getting away from the image, but they don't want to flood the market. They are now trying to start another kind of picture, the comedy ON THE BUSES."
It was at this point that our talk had to be concluded, seemingly with a myriad questions still to be asked. As Peter walked with me to the door of his dressingroom, he told me that the more he did as an actor the less he seemed to know and the more he wanted to perfect. That, he assured me, was meant quite sincerely.
DRACULA TODAY is now in release in the United States through Warner Brothers. Peter also appears with Christopher Lee in THE CREEPING FLESH, a forthcoming film from World Films-Tigon directed by veteran Freddie Francis, and also in HORROR EXPRESS. a Scotia International release which also features Telly Savalas. Peter also recently did a brief walk-on bit as a sea captain in AIP’s DR. PHIBES RISES AGAIN. He’s as far from retirement as he can get.
END OF INTERVIEW
Thanks, CHB, a pleasure to read that.
I’m a Universal Monsters fan so no apologies for posting this interview from Cult Movies #12 (1994)
Boris Karloff's only daughter, Sara, is joined by Cynthia Lindsay (author of the biography Dear Boris ) in this exclusive Cult Movies interview. Writer and film collector Ken Schacter conducted the interview in June 1994.
Cult Movies: Could you tell us about your childhood and your relationship to both your mother and your father while growing up?
Sara Karloff: I was born in Hollywood and we lived in Beverly Hills, up in Coldwater Canyon, until I was about 7 years old. We lived in a wonderful old Spanish house in which my father ruined his back laying the flagstones for the patio, himself. When I was a child, it looked like an enormous place, with enormous grounds, just an unending expanse. I made the mistake of going back in my adult life and it wasn't any bigger than anybody else’s lawn (laughs). That house also had a secret room. I know very little about it, except that there was a door that was always kept closed and behind it was a secret room. From what part of history it was I don't know, but there was a secret room and nobody ever went in it.
CM: What did you study in school, and did you find that being the daughter of a celebrity had an effect on the way people treated you?
SK: You bet! (laughs) ln school I studied political science, which is almost as practical as acting. And growing up, absolutely, people took note of the name Karloff, and I was the recipient of a lot of practical jokes because of it. And so I developed use of some one liners in response.
CM: You spent more time with your mother, Dorothy, after your parents divorced?
SK: We moved to San Fransisco when I was 7 years old and my mother remarried and my father remarried, and it was probably the best thing that either one of them ever did. They each had long happy remarriages and I benefitted from it because I had my father and I had my stepfather, who was a wonderful man. I had a great relationship with both.
CM: Did you ever ask your mother or father about why they split up?
SK: I think that's pretty inappropriate for a 7 year old to ask, if you think my father was formidable in makeup, you should have seen my mother out of makeup (laughs). I would never have asked her about that.
CM: Your father was grateful for the part of Frankenstein's Monster, which Bela Lugosi turned down, and Lugosi was somewhat resentful toward your father for his success resulting from the role.
SK: That makes good print, I don't know if that is true or not.
CL: I don't believe that's true. Actually, believe it or not, I was riding on the Santa Claus sleigh, with my in-laws, during the Christmas parade on Hollywood Blvd. Boris and Dorothy were there and as we went down Hollywood Blvd, some one was yelling "Boris! Boris!" and it was Lugosi and Boris said "Hey Bela, come on and get up on the sleigh with us." And Bela said, "There's no room. I'll see you later." So I think they were perfectly good friends.
SK: In private they didn't socialize, but my father didn't socialize primarily with actors anyway.
CM: So your father never thought badly of Lugosi?
SK: Oh, heavens no! And I don't think Lugosi resented my father either. I mean, I can't really speak to that point, but I know Bela Jr.and I think both he and I agree that it makes good copy, but I don't think that it's necessarily true.
CL: You know the thing you were asking about the Monster, people would say to Boris, who was a superb actor, I saw him in New York in The Lark with Julie Harris, and people would say "My God, you're finally over that thing, isn't that wonderful?" and Boris would say, "Don't say a word against the Monster, I'd be a totally out of work actor without the old boy so don't knock it." He was very defensive about the Monster.
CM: He knew what brought him his success.
CL: Absolutely. He used to go around cutting the roses in his front yard without taking his makeup off, because he was a big gardener. For the neighbors it was quite a scene.
CM: Lugosi was a very flamboyant, outgoing, partying type of individual, while your father seemed to be a more private, easygoing person. Was he like this in real life?
SK: He was a delighful human being. He was a typical English gentleman. He had a marvelous sense of humor, an innate gentleness, he was an avid reader, he was marvelous with children, and he could not be more different than the parts he portrayed.
CL: He was the kindest and dearest human being that I've ever met. That's why writing the biography ( Dear Boris) was difficult, because I went to everyone who had known him and everybody said, "What can you say about dear Boris? He was a saint" So it doesn't make much of a book There was never a bad word mentioned about him.
CM: Your father's family was based in England. Do you have any contact with that branch of the family?
SK: He was the youngest of nine, he left home against his family's wishes to become an actor. I think all of that is pretty well known. My husband and I were over in England for seven weeks this past year and we did as much research as we possibly could trying to trace any of the family. And we did trace his sister's family down to a girl bom in 1965, but we've not had any luck locating her. My father wasn't close to his family because he lived here most of the time. And we found a cousin, but we are not quite sure how he is related. Cynthia, on doing the book, did an awful lot of research in Canada, in England, and in India. We are finding it very difficult to locate any family members because England does not have the same sort of social security number or driver's license number checkpoints that you can follow through as you can in this country. We went through all the records at St. Catherine's House and we went back to the church where his sister had married the vicar; we did all of the things that we could possibly do, but we have had no luck locating the most recently bom relatives.
CM: And no one from that branch has ever contacted you?
SK: Never! Not ever! It's very strange.
CM: Your father was a big fan of Cricket.
SK: It was his passion. He was a member of the Hollywood Cricket team and played with C. Aubrey Smith. When we were over in England, we visited the Ken Barrington Center, which is a center for youth activities, and my father's wridow had dedicated a practice net there in my father’s name. We got to go to the Oval and met a lot of Cricketers and a lot of people involved in Cricket who had known my father. It was indeed a passion of his. We were told, when we were there, that one day he was out watching a Cricket match and he looked out over the green and he said, "Indeed, this is Heaven."
CM When Boris Karloff appeared on This Is Your Life , you could see the thrill in his eyes when that Cricket player came out on stage.
SK: Oh yes, it's just like any one of us meeting a big Baseball star.
CM: We've heard that Karloff had a lot of pets in his time. Do you have any good stories?
SK: Oh, plenty! I have some wonderful pictures. He and my mother brought the first male Bedlington terrier over from England to the West Coast in the 1930s. And if you don't know what a Bedlington terrier looks like, it looks like a lamb. And we now have a Bedlington terrier that runs our life and actually acted as bridesmaid at Cynthia's wedding. At one time, I think, my father and mother had 22 dogs. My father wanted to become a sort of the gentleman farmer/rancher and I have pictures of him with the turkeys and the ducks and they had a pig named Violet. There's a wonderful poem to Violet, that I have, that was written by a friend of theirs. He loved animals and indeed they did have a lot of them. They had Scotties and West Highland Temers, but primarily Bedlingtons.
CM: What was your favorite animal out of all of those?
SK: I really like Bedlingtons; they're nice pets.
CM: Have you seen many of your father's films? And of the ones that you have seen, which ones did you like best?
SK: Well, here comes one of my standard lines: I just don't like scary movies, I leave the room during Murder, She Wrote. So I haven't seen very many of his films; I've seen the original Frankenstein, I've seen The Old Dark House, and I've seen Targets, which is my favorite film. My father really enjoyed making that film and really admired Bogdanovich. I want to see The Body Snatcher. Everybody says it's one of his finest performances. But, I just don't like frightening films.
CM: Your father's acting roots originated on the stage in Canada, in the '40s he returned to the stage in Arsenic And Old Lace , and later had stage successes in Peter Pan and The Lark. Do you think your father had a greater love for acting on stage or in films or television?
SK: I think that it was just the profession itself he loved. He had a great regard for the profession, and he loved to work. And I think that there is a totally different chemistry that an actor experiences on stage than in films, and a lot of film actors took a long time to do television. They didn't like it, they didn't get the same chemical reaction. He loved the profession so much and he had a high regard for television as the coming thing and he did a lot of early television. He also did a lot of children's recordings; he loved anything to do with the industry and he had a great regard for the industry.
CM: Were you able to see any of his performances on stage?
SK: I saw the The Lark and I saw Peter Pan. I was supposed to see Peter Pan on Broadway in New York and I sprained my ankle chasing a boy across the street so my trip was cancelled. Subsequently, I went to Chicago to see it and he arranged for me to see it from the wings and he later said I paid more attention to Nana, the dog in the play than I did to him. And he said to Cynthia: "I'm afraid Sara Jane just doesn't have the fire in her belly for the theatre. She liked the dog better!".
CM: Now that your stepmother, Evelyn, has passed away we understand that you are taking a very active role in promoting your father's name through merchandising and other means.
SK: My stepmother died in England in June of 1993. There are some ongoing things in England in my father's memory, one being the Ken Barrington Center, there is a charitable trust in England established in my father's name, there are plaques in various places in England to his memory, and in this country I think there's a room in the Actor's Home in his memory. I'm the only child, so I've assumed the role of managing the commercial affairs of my father. Currently, Bela Lugosi Jr. and Ron Chaney, who is Lon Chaney Jr's grandson, and myself through our attorney have petitioned the US Postal Service for a commemorative stamp set series honoring the three of them. We understand it's being presented to the Postal committee, which meets in April of this year. Being presented doesn't mean much, but at least it made it past the initial round. We've had a lot of good public support and interest in it. We've had petitions circulating. We're told that it is a two to three year process. But, there is no real time frame on the signatures and there is no number of signatures required. It's simply a matter of our trying to show to the commitee, public interest in the project. And as I say, we've had nothing but positive response, but anybody who wants to write to the Postal Committee in Washington DC is free to do so. Or you can write to us at our Post Office Box (See the special petition section accompanying this article-Ed.)
CM: We also understand that a fantastic bronze bust of Boris Karloff is now available.
SK: The sculptor has done the most superb job, it's just an extraordinary bust and I'm doubly delighted with it because I can remember one that used to sit in our home when I was a child and nobody seems to know where it's gone. The new bust is slightly reminiscent of that same period, I just think it's a superb work and it is going to be done in a limited edition of 150.
END OF INTERVIEW
IIRC, they did get those stamps organised.
I had to look up the acronym 😂 I was hoping someone would know if it had happened.
And I’ve found this pic on the web - they look fantastic!
They certainly do! A lot of collectors would be very happy to have those.
Thanks for the above interview. There's always something more to learn about Boris & Bela, and Sara Karloff was there at the time. I like the story about the sleigh, I hadn't heard that one before.
Hammer film legend Hazel Court is interviewed by Joe Nazareth in Hammer Horror magazine #1 (1995)
Almost four decades before Robert De Niro shambled his way through Kenneth Branagh's much hyped, big-budget retelling of the Frankenstein legend, Hammer Films were preparing to revolutionise the period horror genre with The Curse of Frankenstein. Starring Peter Cushing as the titular doctor and Christopher Lee as his misshapen creation, the him became an enormous success, and marked a turning point in Hammer’s development.
For Hazel Court, who played Victor Frankenstein’s fiancee Elizabeth, the film’s success came as an unexpected, if pleasant, surprise. “Nobody ever expected it to be what it became,” she remembers. “We all went to the premier in Leicester Square, and it was a hit from the word go, but none of us expected it to be quite like that!”
The Curse of Frankenstein also proved to be a milestone in Hazel’s career, firmly establishing her as one of the genre's top ‘scream queens’.
From her appearances in several classic Hammer films to her later work in Roger Corman’s Edgar Allen Poe adaptations, the actress rarely found herself out of work. Now living in the United States, where she has become a sought-after painter and sculptress. Hazel was more than happy to discuss her former acting career. "My first film was Champagne Charlie, for Ealing Studios,” she recalls. "I was 17. I went for an interview with Anthony Asquith, who was a very famous director back then. He saw some photographs of me, thought I was very photogenic, and asked me to come to London. He sent me to Ealing Studios for an interview, and the next thing I knew I had a small part in Champagne Charlie, alongside Tommy Trinder and Betty Warren. The next one was Carnival, with Michael Wilding, Bernard Miles and Sally Gray."
At this point, doors began to open, “The Rank Organisation signed me up after I made a big hit in Carnival and won some award for Best Supporting Actress and Best Newcomer of the Year. I then got the lead role in Holiday Camp (1947), the Ken Annakin movie. He actually lives out here now and I’ve become very good friends with him again after all these years. He's 80 years old now.”
For Hazel, landing the role of Elizabeth in I957’s The Curse of Frankenstein was pretty much a happy accident. “They just chose me!” she laughs. “I was under contract to Rank and I had made some other films , including Counterspy with Dermot Walsh and another called Ghost Ship. They were successful, so I think it was from that I got the film.”
Hazel has fond memories of both Cushing and Lee. “Peter was a charming man. Vincent Price was the same way, and Boris Karloff. You couldn't find anyone to say anything bad about Vincent or Boris. They were all wonderful human beings, and greatly loved, yet they all indulged in horror.
"Christopher Lee was always fun, with lots of stories to tell. We never had any problem - there was never any 'show time’ from those actors. It was a job and you came in, did It, and you went home. It's not like over here (in the States) where It’s almost as if histrionics are required.”
The film established Cushing as a horror film icon, a label he never lost throughout his career. “It's true," Hazel agrees, “and Peter was never going to get out of it. He was a classical actor - in fact, the first time I ever saw Peter Cushing was in Shakespeare at the Old Vic. He was a classical actor and it's strange that his career took that turn. It’s like Vincent, and even myself to some extent. Once you're in it, you’re in it. There were other things I would have liked to do, and I did some things for television, but nothing big in the film world. You do get pigeonholed."
Hazel has vivid memories of The Curse of Frankenstein's director, Terence Fisher. “He was very easy, and he always had a formula,” she explains.
“He had to do those films in a matter of weeks, which is laughable now when you think about how long the Kenneth Branagh film took. We rehearsed before, and you never got more than two takes. You worked together as a family, and there was no nonsense.”
Hazel has no desire to see Branagh's Frankenstein. “I hear that it’s a bore, and also it’s all gone down the drain hasn’t it?”
Two years after The Curse of Frankenstein, Hazel was reunited with Christopher Lee and Terence Fisher on Hammer’s The Man Who Could Cheat Death. Anton Diffring starred as a 104-year old man who keeps himself looking young by undergoing a mysterious gland operation every ten years. Christopher Lee played the surgeon blackmailed into operating on him and Hazel Court played Lee’s kidnapped lover. “We used to work from eight in the morning until eight at night,” she recalls, “but nevertheless it was very well organised, right up to the last shot. Terry Fisher worked from a storyboard and it was all very relaxed and easy. I only remember fun and laughter.”
"Anton Diffring was easy to work with. He was from the German theatre and always seemed distant; there was always a wall between you and he. He wasn’t difficult, just distant."
Hazel had a starring role in 1960's Dr. Blood's Coffin, in which the misguided physician tries to achieve immortality by using freshly transplanted hearts. The result is a rotting, undead, corpse, played by Paul Stockman.
"That was shot down the old mines in Cornwall,” Hazel remembers. “Sidney Furie (The Ipcress File) was the director; I think it was his first film. I fell in love with Cornwall. I'd love to live there; it’s my favourite spot in the world. I have friends who own a wonderful small hotel, and I go back there every year.”
Now established in the UK, Hazel decided to test the waters in the US. 'I went to Hollywood and made four episodes of Alfred Hitchcock’s series (Alfred Hilchcock Presents) including one with Denholm Elliot, one with Jack Cassidy and one with Laurence Harvey which Hitch himself directed.
"It was a golden time, and also when I did the horror films with Vincent Price. I was the Queen of the Horrors then!"
Directing Hazel in her trio of Poe-related outings was legendary low-budget film-maker Roger Corman. “He improvised quite a bit!" she cheerfully recalls.
"It’s funny, I think it was while we were working on The Masque of the Red Death that he said 'I’m going to take a class at UCLA on the psychology of handling actors.’ He would say ‘I’m learning!' They were all early films for him but we had a great relationship."
In 1963, a year after doing The Premature Burial, Hazel appeared with Boris Karloff. Vincent Price and Peter Lorre in the light-hearted fantasy The Raven. "That was the most fun of all my films because every day the three of them would try and top each other. They would tell stories - Vincent would tell one, then Peter, then Boris would tell one and so it went on. I think that really comes through in the film, with the three of them trying to top each other with their tricks. We had a ball, and it never let up. If you look at The Raven now, it's even better than it was then. It’s still very funny.”
"Boris Karloff was charming, as was Peter Lorre. Peter talked to you as if you were the only person in the world, and I’m told that other women have said he actually had great sex appeal. He really did. He was very funny and had a marvellous mind. He wasn’t well on that film but he still made us laugh with his stories.”
“Of course, Vincent became my life-long friend. He was really responsible for my going into the world of art. That was his great love. He bought a lot of my work and encouraged me to study. Then the painting led into my sculpting, and he really helped me tremendously, Vincent was my mentor.” In addition to Hazel and the triumvirate of venerable genre stars, the film also featured a young, confused-looking actor named Jack Nicholson.
“Oh my God, in those pantaloons!" Hazel laughs. “Whenever I look at him now, I still see him in those green pantaloons. He didn’t exactly wear them well. He was so funny. When he left the set at night he used to say I think I’ll go back and write. I’ve got something in my head; I think I’ll go do some writing tonight.’ He was always saying that."
Hazel again worked with Vincent Price in 1964's Roger Corman film The Masque of the Red Death, shot in the UK. The film featured some stunning camera-work by future director Nicholas Roeg, as well as some controversial devil-worshipping sequences which promptly ran foul of the conservative British censors. While Hazel enjoyed being back in her native England again, it was nonetheless a strange experience. “I was ‘half and half at that point - six months in one place and six in another. I don’t do that anymore. What actually happens is that you live your life in limbo because you're neither one nor the other, and although I’ve lived here all these years, my heart is still in England and always will be. I won't become an American citizen.”
In the mid-sixties Hazel's acting career started to take a back seat to her new family. She still worked in television regularly but, for the most part, her film work ended. "I did some specials, and I remember doing an episode of Mission Impossible. Right around that time I had a baby and I didn’t work much after that. I devoted my time to my son."
Having made a conscious decision to leave the world of acting. Hazel eventually found a new outlet for her creative energies thanks to her talent as an artist. “I’ve always painted, but not sculpted. If you told me when I was back in England that someday I’d be sculpting six-foot marble I would have said you were crazy. The painting led into sculpting and that became my career. "Being married to Don Taylor (the director of The Savage Guns, Escape From the Planet of the Apes and Omen II amongst others)and having a son meant there was no time for acting. It’s not the easiest thing, because it’s very difficult to make money in the art world. It’s tough, but I’ve had commissions and I’ve been very well received. I’m now doing a piece for the new $12 million library that’s being built at Penn State University, so that should be a nice commission.”
The former actress concedes that a successful artist can easily be in favour one month and the next - “You’re gone. That’s when you paint or sculpt and your work has a gimmick to it, which is the way to success but it doesn’t always hold. I do abstract work, but not so abstract that you don’t know what I'm trying to say. You could look at it and say 'Oh yes, I know what you’re trying to say.' I’m leaning a little towards realism now, but I think the word ‘abstract’ Is so misused in the art world."
Pressed for any artistic influences, one name immediately came to mind. “I think Barbara Hepworth, the English sculptress, influenced me a lot. Oddly enough, I met her when I was making Carnival; I must have been 17 or 18 then. I was in Cornwall and they said ‘Oh, you must meet Barbara Hepworth, the sculptor,’ and it didn’t mean anything to me then, not quite like it does now. I would give anything to roll back the years and have that interview with her again. That has always stayed with me, and the fact that she brought up a family - if you read her biography you'll see that she’d be changing diapers and sculpting at the same time. I kind of admired that."
Does Hazel ever have the urge to step in front of the camera again? “I must say I get a hankering every once in a while. I have a very good friend named Judy Parfitt, and when she comes over and she's doing a part it’s very exciting. I think ‘Oh, I wish I was acting again!' On the other hand. I love being master of my own craft.”
For an actress who’s so well known for her work in the Cinefantastlque, Hazel is surprisingly harsh in her criticism of the genre’s current state.
“I’m very angry about a lot of it,” she says of today’s horror films. “Some of them are so horrible, I turned purple when I saw The Silence of the Lambs. I thought it was one of the most horrible films - it didn’t need to be made. I’m surprised that Anthony Hopkins and Jodie Foster would even have agreed to be in it. You couldn’t give me enough money to be in that film. I think they were very wrong. I'm also very anti-Pulp Fiction, which is going to be on everyone’s list of their ten best films. I was totally revolted by it, and I left the theatre. I went to have an ice cream in the middle of it, and when I came back there was a group of kids about 10 or 11 years old sitting at the back of the cinema getting all excited about the blood and violence. It's no good saying ‘We’ve got to wipe out violence", and then you see something like this, and you really get angry. It's totally revolting. I don’t see the point of going to the cinema, paying good money and having to have your hand over your eyes for a good third of the film. It makes no sense."
And what of Hollywood’s current interest in producing new versions of classic horror films? "They keep coming," she says. “It's like Hamlet - people keep doing Hamlet and they always will. There will always be a new Hamlet and there will always be a new Frankenstein."
As for her own reputation as 'Queen of the Horrors’ Hazel is pleased that movie-goers still remember her work, and that new fans discover her classic films all the time. “I still get a lot of fan mail, which is extraordinary I think some of them still believe I'm 22 years old when they ask about my next film. I think it’s wonderful though, and I reply to those letters because they say some beautiful things. They tell me how their children have been brought up to see the horror films and will keep going on. That’s very rewarding, and I feel It makes it all worthwhile."
END OF INTERVIEW
They don’t make them like Hazel Court any more - sheer class.
Interview with Ewan Hooper in Hammer Horror #6 magazine, who starred in Dracula Has Risen From The Grave…
Already an established theatre and television performer, Ewan believes he was asked to join the cast of Dracula Has Risen From the Grave as he had already worked with director Freddie Francis in television. "Freddie was a splendid director," Ewan recalls.
"He was sympathetic and creative as far as the actors were concerned and, of course, he brought all that experience as a cameraman and a film-maker to it."
Ewan's role called upon him to discover the body of a young girl drained of blood, needless to say - stuffed inside the bell of his church tower and to trail the Monsignor, played by Rupert Davies, through the mountains to nail a cross to the door of Castle Dracula. It is on this journey that the priest trips, cutting open his head, and it is this blood which revives the vampire Count, who sets out to avenge himself on the Monsignor and makes the priest an unwilling instrument of his revenge.
“People still remember me in it, especially after it's just been on television and it's fresh in their memory," says Ewan. "What I remember most is having a good time, There were some really talented people making it, and I remember we just enjoyed it very much. Probably the reason why it was successful, and the others too, was that people enjoyed working on them."
Ewan has fond memories of his co-stars. "Rupert Davies had, I think, been playing Maigret just prior to the making of the film," Ewan says. "All I can remember was that he was very nice. The thing I remember most, however, was having lunches with Christopher Lee. He was fascinating, and although lots of people have talked about it since, we were amazed to find out he had been an intelligence officer and had interviewed the leading Nazis at the end of the war.“
The actor was also impressed by the facilities at Pinewood Studios, where the indoor sequences were filmed. "It was quite a big studio," he says. “It was where they made the Bond movies and filmed Chitty Chitty Bang Bang. I had mostly worked in television, and it was pretty Impressive stuff I thought. The kind of detail that went into the work on the big sound stages was quite incredible."
For the scenes in which Ewan is seen driving Dracula's hearse and for some of the climbing sequences with Rupert Davies and Barry Andrews, as the film’s hero, Ewan remembers being taken on location to Surrey.
“I remember Box Hill, because both Barry and I were crazy about rugby and we used to kick a ball about up there."
During Dracula’s death scene, Ewan had to recite a prayer in Latin - it being an added script device that the king vampire wouldn’t die unless scripture was read over him by a true believer after the monster was staked - but learning the ancient text proved no problem for the actor.
"1 learned the prayer in sections," Ewan recalls. "That made it easier!"
Despite some happy memories, one unfortunate post-production incident served to mar the experience for Ewan. 'I got a phone call one day asking me to go along for some dubbing sessions, but I was so busy I didn’t have time," he remembers. “Freddie Francis was out of the country, but he called me when he got back, very upset my part had been totally redubbed. The producer had done it while he was away. Freddie told me to get my agent on to it, but unfortunately it was in the contract and there was nothing we could do. I was very angry about it and it’s probably one of the reasons why I have never seen the film.”
Ewan confesses not to be surprised that people still remember Dracula Has Risen from the Grave, but he is amazed at the amount of times it is shown on television. "It seems to crop up fairly regularly," he says. “You think, ‘if only I were getting royalties.' but that’s all our fault. We were offered extra money to buy our exploitation rights, and thought, 'that's great, we're getting extra money up front,’ without realising it would have been a great deal more sensible to take the royalties.”
After the film's release in 1968, Ewan opened the Greenwich Theatre, which he had been raising money for and building in the seven years prior to its launch in 1969, and which he ran until 1978. He also had a leading role as Detective Smith in the successful 1960s series Hunter’s Wolk,. which ran for 39 episodes. Although his main love is theatre,
Ewan also gave a memorable and moving performance as Julie Walters’ father in the 1987 film Personal Services. “I was one of the few characters who didn’t take my clothes off or put women’s clothes on in that film," he laughs. Now a member of the Royal Shakespeare Company, Ewan is acting in three plays. The Broken Heart, Henry V and Coriolanus, all of which will be transferring to the Barbican in London by September for a repertory season.
END OF INTERVIEW
Thanks for those, CHB, esp the Hazel Court interview.
INTERVIEW WITH MELVYN HAYES from Hammer Horror magazine #1 (1995)
It was a lifetime ago," remembers Melvyn Hayes of his role as the young Victor in Hammer's The Curse of Frankenstein. Born on the 11th January 1935, he left his grammar school at the age of 15 and first tried his hand at being a jockey.
He was working as a Fleet Street messenger-boy on two pounds and five shillings a week when he spotted a cryptically worded advertisement in The Daily Mirror - "'Boy wanted to disappear twice daily’, or something” - and come Christmas 1951 found himself performing the Indian Rope Trick in Eric Mason's Master of the Mysteries show at the Comedy Theatre, London. "I had this thing about being on the stage," he says now. "It didn’t occur to me that you could ... I thought you had to have special training and all that sort of thing, so this was a way in.”
He joined the famous troupe, Terry’s juveniles, played in a musical, Dear Miss Phoebe, and took the part of a dog in their pantomime before moving on into rep, earning £10 a week alongside later luminaries such as Edward Woodward. Frank Finlay and Margaret Tyzack: “They were fun days. You didn’t stop working."
Later, he moved into television, was acclaimed for his performance in the drama-documentary The Unloved, played Skinner the sneak in Billy Bunter, and the Artful Dodger in Oliver Twist: Then came the break into film with a tiny part - two lines in I954’s The Blue Peter. "There’s a part called Ginger, a Scot, so I dyed my hair red. Tony Newley came out with the script in his hand and said ‘I had got the part!'
Considerably larger was his role as Young Victor in Frankenstein. Melvyn believes he got the part as like Peter Cushing, they had same colour eyes. I got the script first of all, and there’s a scene in it which was cut out, but if you actually listen to the commentary at the beginning of the film he [Victor] talks about his headmaster ... the scene was never shot, they did it as a voice-over, because the time they got to me they were running out of money or something. They were cutting back because of overshooting. My part lasted about four days, and they cut that scene out where, basically, I stood up and had a thing with the headmaster, sort of discussing things way beyond what he would have been able to talk about as a child to a teacher ... in the film, they sort of flowed over this bit. Although they never shot it, the man still had a credit. I believe."
Melvyn enjoyed i working with his tutor Robert Urquhart - "A nice man. When I came to do the scenes with him, I’d worked on the lines backwards. I was very yourtg, and he was very experienced. He just opened the script and said, 'Shall we have a look at the scenes, then?' I thought,.! know them backwards. For me, that was the most important but for him, it was just the next day's shooting ..." Hayes relished the chance to act with Peter Cushing, then one of the few big television stars: "I walked onto the set. and the first thing I saw was Peter holding up this eye. It was a big shot, through a magnifying glass, and he was looking at this eye. I thought, ‘My God!’ It was a sheep’s eye , . . He was a wonderful man. The first thing he said to me when I came on the film was, ‘I wear a ring in the picture, and I think it would be wonderful if you wore it in your scenes.' And that’s how it went. I looked and watched him ... he did that sort of Prince Charles hand behind the back thing, which I tried to adopt in the film. I went on to do about five pictures with Peter over the years.’
Now you see everything. Now you’ve got to see the heads cut off, you’ve got to see knives going in, and people being sick . . . it’s a whole different thing these days, isn’t it? There was an innocence about The Curse of Frankenstein when it opened in America - people who dressed as Frankenstein got in for nothing. They did a fantastic publicity thing. As a kid, we used to go and see the ‘H’ films, the Boris Karloffs and Bela Lugosis, and we thought they were really frightening.
“The only other horror film I did was The Flesh and the Fiends [the 1959 Burke and Hare picture, with Donald Pleasance and George Rose as the bodysnatchers. John Gilling directed]. I played Daft Jake, the Scots idiot. They got caught for murdering this Daft Jake character. Also, funnily enough, Peter [Cushing] was in that, playing Doctor Knox. I did some crazy ones with Peter, I remember my agent phoned me up once and said, ‘Would you like to do a film in Lusaka, Zambia? Don’t ask, don't read the script or you won’t do it. But the money’s good, and there’s a safari thrown in.' I said, ‘Who's in it?’, and he said, ‘Oliver Reed, Peter Cushing.’ So I go out there on the aeroplane and on the way out some kid comes up to me and says, ‘Hello. I play opposite you. My father’s the producer’ I said, 'Who are you playing?' and he said ‘Jan.’ So I got my briefcase out from above me, flicked the script open, and my first line was [adopts camp Kenneth Williams inflection] ‘Hello, I'm Eddie Tarzan, This is my friend, Jan.’ I realised I was going to play the only effeminate Tarzan! The film never came out. It was unbelievable. I don’t know what Peter was doing there."
Melvyn suffered a similarly cheek-reddening experience as a result of a chance encounter with one of his Hammer co-stars:
“Years later, I went up to the bar in Pinewood, and there was Christopher Lee standing there with all his cronies, doing the big star bit, and I went up to him and said, 'Hello. I made you.’ He said, ‘I beg your pardon?’ I said. ‘I made you,’ now very embarrassed, with people looking at me. He said, ‘What are you talking about?’ I said, 'Well, you were my monster. I made you. Frankenstein.’ And I died. It was very embarrassing ...”
Of course, Melvyn’s been best known since for his comedy roles from the early sixties Cliff Richard films through to Carry On England and became a household name as Private Gloria in the wartime sitcom It Ain't Half Hot Mum. Still working regularly, his Hammer legacy came back to haunt him after the recent BBCl screening of The Curse of Frankenstein. “I had a 'phone call from a company saying, ‘We want to do a cartoon film with animated models, like those Creature Comfort films. It’s just a two-handed piece between an old man and a baby,’ and I said, ‘Oh yes?' And they said, 'We want you to play the old man,' and I said, 'What’s the character?’, and they said, ‘It’s Frankenstein,' I just made it a few weeks ago. I’ve come full circle. I've played the youngest Frankenstein in the world, and now the oldest!"
END OF INTERVIEW
Thanks, CHB, nice to hear from the guy who was young Frankenstein before Gene Wilder was Young Frankenstein.
The Cushing with magnifying glass scene he refers to
became something of a trademark
culminating with a splendid joke in the 1984 film "Top Secret" which I won't spoil.
And thank you, Barbel, for the extra information - I remember that Top Secret scene, it’s hilarious 😂
Interview with Michael Reed from Hammer Horror #2 (1995)
One of the key figures behind the making of Dracula Prince of Darkness and Rasputin the Mad Monk was director of photography Michael Reed. It was Michael’s job to capture the Gothic mood being created by the cast and crew on celluloid.
Bom in Wandsworth in the late 1920s, Michael was a keen amateur photographer with ambitions to work in the film industry. However, the closed-shop trade union rules provided the budding film-maker with a difficult hurdle to jump. "1 left school early, at 15 and-a-half. I saw a job advertised in the paper for an assistant at the Studio Film Laboratories in Wardour Street and, because I wanted to get into films but couldn’t unless I had a union ticket, and I couldn’t get a union ticket unless I had a job in films, I thought this would be a way around it,"
The laboratories provided him with a good opportunity to learn about the technical aspects of film production. "I worked with very good technicians there and managed to get around the different departments, which gave me a good background.”
After securing union membership (then it was the union ACIT, now called BECTU), he found work at the Alliance Film Studio where his first film was 1946’s Dancing With Crime. Michael had the much sought-after job of clapperboy. The director of this film was John Paddy Carstairs, now best-known for films such as The Saint in London and Trouble in Store.
Carstairs's real name was John Keys, and also working on Dancing With Crime were his brothers: Rod Keys (as assistant producer), Basil Keys (first assistant) and Anthony Nelson Keys (production manager). Anthony was later to play a big part in the Hammer story. "It was the whole family,” Michael recalled. "I think it was the only time they all worked together,”
The only way to get on in the film industry was to work your way up, and Michael found that being a clapperboy was just the first step on the ladder. "From clapperboy you went to being a focus assistant [also known as a focus puller], where you’re involved in lacing up the camera with film and sorting out the lenses for the operator and the director. They gave you the lens and you put it in for the section they wanted to shoot. Nowadays you've got zoom lenses and you basically use the zoom lens unless you want an extremely wide angle. In the old days you had a turret on the front of the camera and the lenses were interchangeable.”
The next step was to become a camera operator. "The operator works alongside the director, and is the main instigator of the shots and the set-ups the director needs.”
The final step is to become a director of photography. "The director wants moods on a picture and the director of photography has to translate that mood to the screen and takes overall charge of photography.” To do this, the director of photography works closely with other technical crew members to capture the image in the director’s mind.
Michael first became involved in the Hammer story while he was still working as a clapperboy. "I worked with Hammer way, way back, when they were Exclusive, They were doing quickies - basically taking radio plays and putting the scripts on film."
Long before The Quatermass Xperiment in 1955. Hammer had leapt on the idea of taking popular dramas from other successful media and putting them on the big screen to keep people coming back to the cinema. During Michael’s first stint at Hammer films such as Dick Barton: Special Agent (1948), The Adventures of PC 49 (1950) and The Man in Black (1950) were in production. Exclusive also made an early stab at a horror-style subject, adapting a play by Margery Allingham (who wrote the Campion books). Room to let (1950), about Jack the Ripper and starring Valentine Dyall and Jimmy Hanley (father of Magpie presenter Jenny and current Tory chairman Jeremy).
During his time with Exclusive, Michael also got a glimpse of how Hammer was to develop at Bray in future years. “As Exclusive, they had a house at Cookham (a village which is less than a 20-minute drive from Bray) which they used as a studio. Cedric Williams was the director of photography and he set the whole thing in motion - you know, putting light fittings in the ceilings and so on. He turned the house into a working studio. The sets were already there, and that saved money. Exclusive were the first to go into this. "From Cookham, they moved to a house in Bray, which I believe is now a hotel, and from there they built the small sound stages.”
The 1950s were a busy time for the British film industry as well as working in television and films, Michael found himself making a War Office documentary in Singapore, Keeping the Peace. This film, a flag-waver about British soldiers abroad, was directed by an ex-actor named Don Sharp. Reed went on to shoot several films for Sharp at the Beaconsfield Studios, including a contemporary Romeo and Juliet story, Linda, in1959. Michael, now a fully-fledged director of photography, returned to the Hammer fold to film The Ugly Duckling. It was the first time he worked as director of photography at the studio. Directed somewhat heavyhandedly by Lance Comfort (who later handled 1964’s Devils of Darkness for Planet Films) this was the studio’s first attempt at the Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde story. Despite the director’s treatment, the film is a lively comedy in which Henry (an idiot relation of Dr Jekyll played by Cany On star Bernard Bresslaw) rediscovers the magic potion which turns him to the hip and trendy 'Teddy Hyde’.
In 1964, Michael was given the chance to make a full-colour Hammer venture, Eton Sharp’s family film The Devil-Ship Pirates. The backlot at Bray was turned into a peaceful village which marauding Spanish pirates, led by Christopher Lee, take hostage while their damaged ship, part of the Armada invasion fleet, is repaired. Studio regulars Andrew Keir and Suzan Farmer also starred. The studio pulled out the stops for Jimmy Sangster's script, even commissioning a full-scale galleon to be built, although as Michael recalls, this caused the cast and crew a few problems. "For some reason, the galleon they built had the ballast tanks above the buoyancy tanks. Whether the art department was given the wrong instructions or what, I don’t know. The galleon was built on the side of the sandpits down at Bray and was lifted into the water by crane. Of course, because of the weight problem, she wouldn’t stay upright. They had to put a pontoon either side of her to keep her afloat."
One day, while filming at the ship, one of the pontoons sprung a leak. Despite bailing it out all day, water kept coming in, and it was decided to stagger meal breaks between the seafaring cast so the ship wouldn’t be unbalanced by too much movement. Unfortunately, a group of stunt men decided to ignore the safety advice and the ship capsized, ‘‘It went right over.” Michael remembers. “It was lucky we didn’t have a serious accident.”
Next on the Hammer production schedule was The Gorgon, and Michael was offered the chance to be director of photography on a horror film. While several directors of photography had worked on Hammer’s horrors, it is Jack Asher who is most closely associated with the creation of the style of photography associated with the studio.
“Jack did the Sherlock Holmes piece (1959’s The Hound of the Baskervilles) and I thought he did a fabulous job. Maybe they decided to try some fresh blood, I don't know. Jack’s a dear friend of mine, and I thought he did a marvellous job on those pictures.”
Much of the success of Hammer’s early films has been laid at the door of the directors of photography, but Michael is quick to point out that the whole effect was due to the team effort and family atmosphere at Bray, "If Terry Fisher knew you had the mood he wanted for the picture, he’d let you get on with it. He wasn’t like some directors, who kept saying, 'well, I wanted . . . ’
“You see, if they’ve got confidence in you, and they’ve seen what’s coming up the following day at the rushes and they know that’s what they want, they’ll leave it to you. That’s fine. Basically, you are the eyes of the director, and you’re putting on screen the image that he wants.”
Hammer devoted little time to such things as storyboarding, though they would hold a general meeting to discuss the approach to the film before shooting commenced. "The one good thing at Hammer was these meetings. They were to lay out the way it was going to be shot and how quickly we had to shoot - they had a budget and a schedule. What always came up was whether you could release a certain amount of your budget to help somebody - wardrobe or special effects or someone like that.
“It was a marvellous outfit. It was like working in a family. The whole thing was orientated in this way, even down to the restaurant - they had their own lady who came in and did her home cooking. It was absolutely marvellous. The whole thing was done on that ’family’ basis. We did normal hours on the schedule - not the ridiculous hours they work now - and we turned out good-quality material."
The Gorgon is now considered to be one of Hammer’s best films, featuring a Gothic script by John Gilling and one of composer James Bernard’s most eerie musical scores. Much of the film, including the garden sequence in which Richard Pasco (as Paul Heitz) sees the creature’s reflection in a pool, was made on the sound stages, but several scenes, such as the opening (in which a girl chases her lover through the woods) were shot at Black Park, near Slough, Although many of the outdoor scenes were set during the night, they were all filmed during the day.
“A lot of it was day-for-night shooting. Basically, if everything is right and you , can get the direct backlight with sunlight, you can get a good-quality day-for-night shot out of it by underexposing the film by about two stops and by using a special filter on the front. It worked out quite well on that.”
In some films, night sequences are obviously filmed during daylight, but The Gorgon offers the viewer the chance to see the technique at its best. The crew also manage to turn the very English-looking Black Park into a mid-European setting by placing a Continental-style shrine among the trees and by cutting away from the running girl to a model of Castle Borski and to a scene of the moon riding high above fast-moving clouds.
One of the film’s most effective scenes is the final duel between Paul Heitz and Dr Namaroff (Peter Cushing). The cobweb covered set is barely lit and full of shadows which could conceal the Gorgon. This becomes the backdrop to the death of the two protagonists and of the Gorgon herself. It is a beautifully-shot sequence and one of the best fight scenes in Hammer’s canon.
While it is true that the Gorgon wouldn’t petrify anyone but a cast member, her appearance is suitably nightmarish. One particularly effective shot was that of the transformation of the Gorgon back into a beautiful woman. After Meinster (Christopher Lee) has cut off the creature’s head, it falls to the floor and, in front of Paul Heitz's eyes, transforms into the face of the girl he loves, Carla (Barbara Shelley).
“From what I remember,” says Reed, “it was done in a series of shots, Barbara Shelley’s face was locked off [held in position!. The make-up people changed the face after each shot and it was filmed frame-by-frame, ending each shot in a soft cut or dissolve. As long as you have the head locked into one position you can change the make-up between shots. Providing you don’t see the head move in the frame, you can get away with it.” The final sequence, together with added optical effects, was pieced together in the editing room.
Of Cushing and Lee, Reed says; "They were a wonderful combination. They knew exactly what was needed, they had worked together on so many pictures.”
There was little room for rehearsal. “It was a normal line-up [practising the camera moves) we did to start with, then they came on to do the rehearsal and we’d shoot. They were so professional, and word perfect.
“One thing that Hammer seemed to do was get artists, not just Cushing and Lee, but the actors around them, like Barbara Shelley and Francis Matthews who were professional people and could be relied upon. In the old days you could always go on the studio floor and meet somebody that you’d known in the past, whether they were an actor or technician. Nowadays it’s all change, and there are so many changing faces that you don't get that now.”
What were Don Sharp and Terence Fisher like for a director of photography to work with? “They were both very professional. It’s far easier to find out from an actor rather than a technician what the difference between directors is. As long as you are turning in the material they want, there is no problem, but with actors directors want certain things in terms of performance. Don and Terry were both very professional technicians,"
Shortly after the back-to-back films. Hammer left Bray and relocated to Elstree. Michael paid his last visit to Hammer in its new home to shoot Michael Carreras’s Slave Girls. Made in 1966 on sets from One Million Years BC, Slave Girls wasn’t generally released until 1968.
“Slave Girls was a bit of a tongue-in-cheek script,” Michael remembers. “I think it was a spoof on the Rider Haggard She films. It was all filmed in the studio. The only problem this caused was to our health more than anything, because we were working in dust all the time. The earth and stuff they used to dress the set dried out after so many weeks, and both Michael and I got a bronchial problem.”
Michael came back to Hammer for Dracula Prince of Darkness and Rospuf/n the Mad Monk. "Shooting those films back-to-back didn’t pose any particular problems. It was left to the art department to revamp things. We shot the first film from beginning to end and then, for the second, we went onto the revamped sets. But everyone was in tune to a working system and it cut costs down. They didn’t have to start rebuilding sets after filming, they just had to move things around. They knew exactly what was going on.
"The schedule for each film was for four or five weeks, Michael Carreras and Tony Hinds had it well oiganised. They had a formula for it and, of course, Tony Keys was the great associate producer and kept everything moving along.
“They were very good, Carreras in particular. He’d come in and worked from . the bottom up. He was the son of James Carreras but he didn’t come in at the top and operate. He started at the bottom because he wanted to learn the business and know all about it. Tony Hinds was a very quiet man. He wrote them [as John Elder] and we had the script, and that was it. He’d come down if certain things weren’t going according to plan, but he was very much on the sidelines. He didn’t bother people. I never had anything to do with Sir James, We very seldom saw him - he was the head of Hammer,"
Despite the finely-tuned schedule for Dracula Prince of Darkness. Michael was given room to be creative. “I was encouraged by Tony Keys to use my imagination and go for something, even if it was going to take just that bit longer. For instance, prior to Dracula appearing (in the drawing room set] we started to add red into the scene, and that worked. We pinpointed lots of little red lights onto pictures and things like that, which just changed the mood of it slightly and gave it a much more mysterious look.”
This lighting has an almost subliminal effect on the viewer, hinting that something is about to happen and helping to build the tension. In the scene, Diana (Suzan Farmer) is locked in the drawing room and confronted by a transformed Helen (Barbara Shelley again), who tries to bite her.
But Helen is interrupted by the arrival of Dracula, who has plans for Diana himself. The subtlety of the lighting unobtrusively acts on the viewers’ subconscious, making the shock of Dracula’s sudden appearance more dramatic.
Dracula Prince of Darkness was shot using a widescreen format, TechniScope. The end result fills the whole cinema screen with the picture, but on television much of this is lost (hence the development of letter-box shaped format videos and special widescreen screenings of prints).
“I think, from what I recall, the film stock was down to two or three sprockets [wide] instead of being four per frame. 1 think it was down to two. This increased your film stock - your 1 ,000ft of film became 2.000ft - so you gained in that way. But I don’t really think it worked because you lost resolution on it and you got a certain amount of grain coming up. But they felt it was a good thing to do.”
Leslie Halliwell noted the widescreen effect, saying somewhat harshly; "Dracula Prince of Darkness was also shot in Cinemascope, totally robbing it of any suspense."
Michael followed his work for Hammer with several big-budget blockbusters. He was part of a second-unit team on 1968’s Chitty Chitty Bang Bang directed by former James Bond film editor Peter Hunt. When Hunt was offered his first chance to direct a whole movie. On Her Majesty’s Secret Service in 1969, he asked Michael to shoot it for him. They have since worked on other films together, including Shout at the Devil in 1976 and Wild Geese 2 in 1985.
Michael looks back on his time at Hammer as “A great educational experience. You learnt a lot there, and you were allowed to do things. There was a wonderful family feel about the whole thing. It wasn’t easy going, you had your ups and downs because schedules were tight, but in spite of that they were very nice to work with."
END OF INTERVIEW
Michael Reed’s photography on OHMSS was the best ever in a Bond movie. Such a pity that he couldn’t have teamed up again with Peter Hunt and George Lazenby in DAF for a proper revenge story.
Thanks, CHB, very interesting.
The Avengers - Bond & more - an inyerview with Patrick Macnee in TV Zone #16 (1991)
Mrs Gale -
A New Zealand actress, one of the best comedy actresses, named Nyree Dawn Porter was the first choice,” Macnee states. “In fact, she won an OBE for playing Irene in The Forsyte Saga. She was a great actress, but flatly turned us down."
Once Blackman was cast, the problem of finding the correct persona for Cathy Gale remained. At first, the producers even gave her scripts with dialogue meant for Ian Hendry. Instead of confusing matters, it actually gave her a sudden inspiration for the character.
“That’s right. That’s what gave her the idea,’’ Macnee recalls. “She was a very sharp woman. She had always played the little English rose in many films of Robert Taylor and all those sort of people. And suddenly she thought, ‘Hey here I am, a rising middle aged woman. I’ll take my opportunity and I’ll play it as a man.’ Well, looking the way she did, it wouldn’t have made any difference even if she played it like ‘The Incredible Hulk,’ because she still would have looked like Honor Blackman. But the combination was irresistible.’’
Her look included an array of trend setting black leather outfits, which Macnee takes credit for designing. “I’m kinky as hell and always have been, and I presumably knew, through one reason or another, that black leather has a very strong erotic content. Any form of second skin does, particularly when it’s lit. So, yes I did design them.
“It didn’t turn out to be a fad,’’ he explains, “it turned out to reflect the tastes of a great many people in the country for a particular form of perverse sexuality. It wasn’t thrown at people. I mean, you could have had rubber or any other Imaterial. You could have had bondage... Well, we did have bondage. You could have had anything as long as you touched upon it lightly. It’s in the English character with sex, you cannot take it seriously, and we did that with sex. That was the other reason that it worked so well.”
Macnee admits that once Honor Blackman decided to leave the series, and become Pussy Galore in Goldfinger, it took a long time to find the right actress to replace her.
On to Mrs Peel -
“Indeed, but [at first] they found the wrong actress, whose name is Beth Shepherd, a beautiful woman and a fine actress - completely wrong for the part.”
After many fruitless auditions, the producers tried out an actress who appeared in an Armchair Theatre production of The Hothouse. Her name was Diana Rigg. And after a successful screen test, she was hired. The Avengers then took off to greater heights.
Macnee has said that working with Rigg made him an even better actor. “Well. I didn’t consider myself an actor at all, you know,” he clarifies. “If you have to (stop acting and) become a producer... I really sort of coasted along. My range is very narrow, and her range is gargantuan. She had already played Cordelia with Paul Scofield in King Lear, and she was a woman of extraordinary distinction.
“She said, looking straight at me, ‘I can only go with men of high intellect, Patrick.’ Being masochistic. 1 immediately thought, well 1 have a low intellect so we won’t get anywhere,” he chuckles. “But we had a wonderful and strange and peculiar, technical... We never talked about anything technical at all. We rewrote all the scenes together. We played them with some sort of innate thing. But I can’t claim to have been clever, it just happened.”
Tara Turning-Point -
After two successful seasons as Emma Peel, Rigg became bored with The Avengers and left the programme. In Macnee’s opinion, the series then took a turn for the worse. Her replacement was Canadian actress Linda Thorson, whose character, Tara King, was designed to be an amateur secret agent who Steed would take under his wing.
“Well, if that had been developed it would have been fine, but it never worked,” he confesses. “If she had that in her mind, she was quite right, but we brought in ridiculous people like ‘Mother’ (played by the late Patrick Newell), because the producers assumed that she couldn’t act, which is bad. Hugh Cruttwell, who is the great supporter of Kenneth Branagh, also nurtured Linda Thorson. And when she came into the show he said, ‘You are getting one of the best actresses ever.’ She came in at 20, the producers terrified her, they said she was overweight and put her on amphetamines, and she had a bloody awful time. And I was awful to her. It really just didn’t work, and she succeeded in spite of it, yes. But I can’t claim that I had anything to do with it at all.
“I had total communion with Diana Rigg,” he notes, “and enormous communion with Honor Blackman; most of all with Honor, but with Linda I had absolutely none. I wanted to get rid of her. I just didn’t like the whole set up, and I even wished I wasn’t doing the show. I hated it.”
The New Avengers -
Unfortunately, Macnee feels that the 1976 Avengers sequel didn’t fare any better. “Finally, in The New Avengers they tried to tell me that I was getting it all wrong, and I said, ‘Of course I’m getting it all wrong, because the whole show’s all wrong. I shouldn’t even be doing it.’ They should have done it with the two younger people: Joanna Lumley, who’s a wonderful character, and Gareth Hunt. The whole thing was bad.”
Macnee has since put away Steed’s trademark bowler and brolly, and has traded them in for a steady stream of television work which has included episodes of Murder She Wrote, Magnum P.I. and Battlestar Galactica, as well as roles in films ranging from The Howling, to This is Spinal Tap. He sums up his current situation by describing himself as “a rather old but reasonably successful character actor. And I promote a lot of things.”
Bond -
One of the products he has recently publicised took on an ironic twist for Macnee, who for years has been identified with spies and secret agents. Sterling Automobiles hired him to be their answer to James Bond.
“That was fun, but it wasn’t me [which made it a good commercial]. It was the brilliance of them striking a deal with the Bond people, who have never used the Bond music outside of their films before, and this wonderful man coming up with this one line, ‘I suppose you were expecting someone else.’ I mean, the thing itself is a little gem,” he asserts. “The fact that it didn’t sell any Sterlings and that it didn’t do much good... It was a one-off, but I was very grateful for it, because that, the Bond film (A View To A Kill), and the book tour have what you might call revivified my geriatric career.”
Macnee’s role as Tibbett, an agent disguised as Bond’s chauffeur, was suggested by the film’s associate producer Barbara Broccoli. But he wasn’t opposed to calling Mr Bond for a little help.
“When I heard that I was being suggested for the role,” he remembers, “I rang Roger (Moore), who’s an old friend, I would like to say. I’ve known him for many years, and said that if it gets to push and shove, would he think that I would be good in it? And as I played Doctor Watson to his Sherlock Holmes a couple of years earlier, he very much went to bat for me, and I think we did a good job in the film.”
More -
Two of Macnee’s recent credits are based on stories by Edgar Allen Poe. He plays Machiavel in Masque of The Red Death, and stars in an episode of Ray Bradbury Theater called Usher II, a follow-up to the original House of Usher, taking place in the year 2125.
He’s also been featured with Loni Anderson in Sorry, Wrong Number, and with Christopher Lee in the TV remake of Around The World In 80 Days. In fact, Lee is going to portray the great detective to Macnee’s Watson in a new weekly Sherlock Holmes series filmed in Zimbabwe.
In spite of many years of international recognition and acclaim, one wonders if Patrick Macnee has ever regretted his decision to become an actor.
“Oh, I think so. I would have liked to have been an ambassador, or an archbishop, or somebody,” he reveals. “Being an actor to me is something that I don’t do quite well enough. I’ve never really been somebody that people come to see, but I’m somebody who seems to be employed all the time. I can’t say I have any bitterness, and I don’t have any regret exactly; I just wish I’d been a bit better.”
END OF INTERVIEW
This is a very candid interview, it’s nice to see someone who actually speaks their mind instead of toting out niceties they don’t mean.
That WAS an insightful interview, lots I hadn’t heard before…thanks 🍸
Interview with Sylvia Anderson in TV ZONE #20 (1991)
One of the undying images of 1960s pop culture must be the marvellous pink Rolls Royce, FAB 1, and its owner, Lady Penelope Creighton-Ward from Thunderbirds. Created and voiced by Sylvia Anderson, ex-wife of producer Gerry. Lady Penelope was just one of the many characters Sylvia had sole responsibility for dreaming up. But Thunderbirds was not the start of the story...
“I saw an advert to be a Girl Friday for a small film company and Jumped at the opportunity. I joined them, but after a while there was a breakaway group from that, consisting of Gerry, myself, Reg Hill, John Read and Arthur Provis. This covered cameras, art direction, direction and scripting. We formed AP Films and waited for work. I have to say that we didn't get any and all our dreams of making big productions seemed to be fading away. One day we had a visit from a lady who had written some children’s books and was hawking them around to see who could give her a decent, in other words cheap, quote to do them as a puppet show. We gave the cheapest quote, because we were probably the hungriest. We were working out of a sort of country house and we turned a ballroom into a small studio and made this lady’s series, called Twizzle.”
“After that we made Torchy for the same lady, we began to think we could do these puppet things in a more sophisticated way and do our own ideas and stories. So we did Four Feather Falls for Granada, which was a Western. Westerns were popular then and we had to do it with puppets because obviously we couldn’t afford to go on location. We created lots of great characters, Tex the Sheriff, the Mexican baddies, Dan Morse the Telegraphist and on the strength of that we moved into a warehouse on the Slough Trading Estate. We converted it into a studio for our own needs, rather naively thinking that having done Four Feather Falls we would go on to do more things for Granada. But the ’phone didn’t ring — Four Feather Falls, being a kids’ series, could be repeated again and again so they didn’t need anything else from us.
“I started ringing around friends in the industry for work. One friend said he couldn’t give us any work directly but that he would introduce us the Lew Grade. The rest is history. We went on for the next fifteen or so years making series from Supercar, Fireball XL5 etc through to Space: 1999.”
So why was it that Sylvia voiced so many characters, as well as being heavily involved on the production side?
“I really think we all just took on the jobs we were best at. Reg did Art, John did cameras and Gerry did direction and editing. I did scripts and voice casting. I created all the characters, so I had everything to do with them, the look, the voices and so on. I had done stuff like that when we made commercials, it was my side of the business. I did lots of weird voices and accents for the shows, although I wrote myself out of a part in Stingray, but I directed the dialogue so it was quite easy to add odd voices when necessary.”
Nearly every Anderson series has an organisation in which the lead characters work. Was it difficult thinking up all those different teams and characters?
“It really wasn’t as difficult as one might imagine because you’re in the rhythm and atmosphere of creativity and therefore you really just extended the characters on. So you had the hero, the brilliant one, the boss, the woman. What I did find difficult at times was making the women’s roles more interesting. At that time a heroine still had to walk a few paces behind the men — still does really — but Lady Penelope, I think, broke all that. She became a character in her own right.
“In the beginning I was working in a male-dominated team, so there was resistance against her. The men concentrated on the sets, Derek Meddings’s wonderful explosions and the aircraft, but I proved you couldn't have just that, you needed the characters to care about. So really Lady Penelope was very neglected in the first few episodes and I fought hard to get her involved more, and by the time we did the films she was a ‘star’. There was even a comic devoted to her called Lady Penelope in which I did a column called ‘Lady Penelope Investigates...’ which gave me a chance to get out of the studio and meet all the famous people I ever wanted to meet, like Roger Moore!
"Thunderbirds was an hour, not twenty five minutes, like the other programmes had been, so you could develop the story and characters more, you could give more humour. I was inspired really by Bonanza, the big Western series with Ben Cartwright [Lorne Greene] and all his sons. It occurred to me that you could have more than one hero, so that if viewers didn’t like one, well, next week, their favourite might star. That worked well and so Scott and Alan became the most popular. But that realisation only came with time, once we’d seen the first few we could see which way things were going. Once the characters were created, given a look, you could see how they were going to go and quite soon I could say to the rest of the team ‘Look, Scott’s got to do this and ‘Hey, Scott really ought to do that!’. Again, The Hood goes back to our past, to all the villains we’d had before, like Masterspy from Supercar. We didn’t want to make him Russian, though, so I decided he was Oriental and made him the half-brother to Kyrano, who worked for Jeff Tracy and was under The Hood’s spel
After that was the first fully live action series, UFO, sadly destined to run for just one series, but was it a good experiment?
“Yes, and because it was live action, and made by us, all the critics immediately said the cast looked like puppets! But I’m enormously proud of UFO and I think it’ll have a comeback in popularity. I think everything worked on that show and it was the most popular, next to Thunderbirds. Although the cast was large, they weren’t all in it at the same time, only a few episodes each, bar the main three or four. Everything worked on that and I even made a brief appearance dancing at a party or something!
“ I liked those costumes. We didn’t have too much money and so at one point I hit on the idea of getting a load of Army surplus string vests which were discreetly lined for the ladies and padded for the men. The purple wigs for Moonbase came about simply because I liked them and I was the designer! I thought they were fun. I sat one day in my office with one on, people coming in and out all the time, and no one said a thing! I thought they were something different and everyone remembers them!”
The Protectors saw a different direction for Gerry and Sylvia Anderson. How involved was Sylvia in it?
“1 wrote the first episode, but really that was Lew Grade’s show with Gerry. It wasn’t really my sort of thing at all.”
Sylvia’s final foray into the worlds of Fantasy was Space: 1999, starring the ex-husband and wife team of Martin Landau and Barbara Bain.
“It was an extension of the ideas from UFO, but was by no means a revamp or replacement of UFO’s second season. Space: 1999 simply didn’t have the charm or appeal of UFO — mainly because we didn’t have the right cast. They were wooden and certainly weren’t my choice at all. They had been very popular in Mission: Impossible, but were totally wrong for Space:1999. I wrote the opening episode of that and then put together a strong writing team to carry the show, but I left before the second series went into production.”
Does it surprise Sylvia Anderson that Stingray and all its successors are still being enjoyed on video or on tv reruns?
“Yes and no. The stuff dredged up today is so awful that I’m not surprised all our older stuff is popular again. It is very gratifying that all that hard work is still watched and enjoyed. I think, bearing in mind the technology we were dealing with back then, we all did some very good work.”
Finally, is there any special series and/or character Sylvia is particularly fond of?
“Well, I don’t think that’s too difficult to guess — Thunderbirds of course, and therefore Lady Penelope!“
END OF INTERVIEW
Well, those purple wigs certainly did something for me as an adolescent schoolboy 😁
Great find 🍸
I loved UFO 😁