"The Day the Earth Stood Still"
January 1, 2007
November 23, 2006
Pass the gizzards, please
November 21, 2006
Your Past Life
Learn right here and right now... and ask yourself "do I believe that it can be possible?" Kinna spooky, ain't it?
SPOOK-A-RAMA wants you to know...
No mummies, juvenile delinquints, or flying wombats were harmed in the making of this production. Neither were any emus or llamas of any sort mistreated. Nor was abuse of ferrits (pink or otherwise) of any kind whatsoever tolerated.
Any relationship of the spooks represented in our show to actual spooks -- whether they be living or the living-dead -- is strictly coincidental.
November 16, 2006
Now Showing at Théâtre De Spectre-a-Rama
Mark of the Vampire 1935
Stars: Lionel Barrymore, Bela Lugosi and Carroll Borland as the she-vampire Luna Mora.
Director: Tod Browning
Plot Synopsis: Sir Karell Borotyn appears to have been killed by Count Mora, a vampire believed to haunt the local village. Now his daughter Irena is the count's next target. Enter Professor Zelen, an expert on vampires who's sent in to prevent her death. At the same time, secrets are revealed surrounding the circumstances of Sir Karell's death.
Trivia: Miss Borland was fascinated by Lugosi when she saw him as Dracula at the Fulton Theater in Oakland, she wrote a novel called "Countess Dracula" and sent it to Lugosi. He called her to play Lucy, Dracula's favorite victim, on stage. Later he gave her the role of Luna Mora in the film Mark of the Vampire (1935).
Stars: Lionel Barrymore, Bela Lugosi and Carroll Borland as the she-vampire Luna Mora.
Director: Tod Browning
Plot Synopsis: Sir Karell Borotyn appears to have been killed by Count Mora, a vampire believed to haunt the local village. Now his daughter Irena is the count's next target. Enter Professor Zelen, an expert on vampires who's sent in to prevent her death. At the same time, secrets are revealed surrounding the circumstances of Sir Karell's death.
Trivia: Miss Borland was fascinated by Lugosi when she saw him as Dracula at the Fulton Theater in Oakland, she wrote a novel called "Countess Dracula" and sent it to Lugosi. He called her to play Lucy, Dracula's favorite victim, on stage. Later he gave her the role of Luna Mora in the film Mark of the Vampire (1935).
November 15, 2006
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