September 23, 2014
The Art of Frankenstein : Paco Giménez
Here’s an adaptation of Frankenstein for Young Adult readers published in 2008 by Bromera
in Spanish and Algar in Catalan. The two covers by Paco Giménez capture tragic
moments: The Monster saves a little girl from drowning, only to be attacked and shot for his well-intentioned efforts, and the sudden, violent revenge killing of Elizabeth, a
wedding bouquet falling from her hands.
Writer Jesús Cortés (Jesús Cortés Zarzoso) has adapted a
number of classic works including Homer’s Odyssey, Melville’s Moby Dick and
Stoker’s Dracula. Paco Giménez
(Francisco Giménez Ortega) is an award-winning artist who has illustrated a
number of children’s books and comics. His Frankenstein illustrations are done in stark, geometric strokes
that are at once economical and lyrical.
Labels: Art and Illustration
September 17, 2014
Subway Frankenstein
If you are a book reader, you never travel alone. That’s the
message from Bookish, a promotional
website launched in February 2013. Here, a reader shares a subway ride with
Scarlett O’Hara, Sherlock Holmes and Frankenstein’s Monster. The art — artist
unfortunately unidentified — was featured last year in one of a series of
subway ads in New York. Tag line read, “Give your ride more character”.
Memorable Characters page on Bookish.com
With thanks to Joseph Grego.
Related:
Labels: Advertising, Art and Illustration, Books
September 12, 2014
Richard Kiel (1939-2014)
Actor Richard Kiel passed away on September 10, just a few
days short of his 75th birthday. Kiel parlayed his towering size — due to a
hormonal condition known as acromegaly — into a film and television career
playing gigantic strongmen, mountainous henchmen, colossal aliens and mammoth
monsters. When given a chance, he showed he could also act really well, too.
Kiel’s credits include many memorable parts. Early on, in
1962, he was the giant caveman, EEGAH, and the unforgettable alien in the
classic TWILIGHT ZONE episode, TO SERVE MAN. His TV work included appearances
on THE MAN FROM U.N.C.L.E., THE WILD WILD WEST and KOLCHAK: THE NIGHT STALKER.
Kiel was the original actor chosen to play Bill Bixby’s
green alter-ego in THE INCREDIBLE HULK (1978), but he was replaced a couple of
days into the pilot shoot in favor of the more muscular Lou Ferrigno. Kiel was
happy to bail, having found the full-body makeup and the thick contact lenses
most uncomfortable. He was also offered the part of Darth Vader, but the role
went to David Prowse after Kiel chose, instead, to play the steel-toothed
“Jaws” opposite Roger Moore’s James Bond in THE SPY WHO LOVED ME (1977) and
MOONRAKER (1979). It would be the character he’d be most remembered for, though
he earned himself a whole new generation of fans with a celebrated turn in
HAPPY GILMORE (1996).
Kiel is one of a handful of actors to play two different
iterations of the Frankenstein Monster. In 1967, billed as Dick Kiel, he had bolts sticking out of his ears in I WAS A TEENAGE MONSTER, an episode of THE MONKEES in which the boys try to turn The Monster into a
pop star. With a bit more to do than just look big and menacing, Kiel
demonstrated a fine flair for comedy.
Kiel’s second pass at The Monster had him in full, classic
makeup with blue face, flattop — and a bow tie — as a Haunted House club
manager in the first season, first episode of THE HARDY BOYS/NANCY DREW
MYSTERIES (1977).
In recent years, soldiering on despite a serious car
accident in 1992 that left him with reduced mobility, Kiel enjoyed appearing on
the convention circuit, happy to meet fans and generous with his time. Richard Kiel was a giant man who, by all accounts, had a heart to match.
Both of Richard Kiel’s Frankenstein appearances are on
YouTube. Here are the full episodes of THE MONKEES: I WAS A TEENAGE MONSTER, and THE HARDY BOYS/NANCY DREW MYSTERIES: THE MYSTERY OF THE HAUNTED HOUSE.
September 10, 2014
Meet Senator Frankenstein Fishface
The gentleman with the exploding mustache is Senator
Frankenstein Fishface, a radio personality of the early Forties. A
self-professed “foolosopher”, The Senator ran for President on the
Pussyfooter’s Party ticket and promoted nudism under the auspices of the Open
Pore Nudist Cult of Bareback Gulch, Pa. He also ran for Mayor of New York,
promising “to put a radio, overstuffed furniture and a featherbed in every
jail cell in our city. That's so our jails will attract a better class of
people!"
The Senator was Elmore Vincent (1908-2000), a Texas-born
entertainer who first broke into show business as “The Texas Troubadour”.
Relocating to Seattle, Vincent got into radio in 1929 on KJR’s Mardi Gras, a daily, 90-minute variety program, appearing as
“The Northwest Shanty Boy”, singing lumberjack songs with yodel accompaniment.
Having to support his family through the dark days of the Great Depression,
Vincent expanded his repertoire, performing comic sketches as a blowhard, word-mangling
politician. The show’s director, Ivan Ditmars came up with the name “Senator
Fishface” and it is assumed that it was Vincent who added the Frankenstein
surname.
In 1934, NBC came calling and persuaded Vincent to bring his
act to their San Francisco station. Going out over the Blue Network on the
daily Carefree Carnival show, Senator
Frankenstein Fishface was a nationwide hit. When the show was cancelled in
1936, Vincent took Frankenstein Fishface on tour, performing live in trademark
mustache, a baggy suit and a crumpled high hat. Along the way, he voiced “Pa
Scarecrow” for Tex Avery in a Warner’s Merrie Melodies cartoon, I’D LOVE TO
TAKE ORDERS FROM YOU (1936).
In New York, Vincent hooked up with NBC again for another
2-year stint, now in his own series co-starring writer-comic Don Johnson as
“Professor Willbert G. Figgsbottle”. As a measure of the Frankenstein Fishface
character’s enduring popularity, Vincent was recruited to appear in a
pioneering test program of RCA’s television system in 1937, beaming out to all of 60 TV
sets in New York, live from Radio City. It was Senator Frankenstein Fishface
last hurrah. In years to come, Vincent occasionally revisited the character
under new names. He was called “Durwood Zinkafoose” in 1949, and “Senator
Bolivar Gassaway” in 1961, otherwise Vincent developed a new specialty playing
crusty old men. In ’44-45, he played Phineas Peabody on radio’s Lum and
Abner, and soon transitioned to television,
where he played grandpappys, old janitors and farmer types on classic TV series
like DRAGNET, SKY KING, TALES OF WELLS FARGO and THE REAL McCOYS. He played
Santa Claus in a 1955 episode of HIGHWAY PATROL and Doc Appleby on THE DUKES
OF HAZZARD in 1982. His last TV work saw him play old-timers, including the
recurring character “Floyd” on LITTLE HOUSE ON THE PRAIRIE, 1980 to ’82.
Elmore Vincent never quite retired, reprising his old man
character — in actual old age — for Dinner Theater plays and speaking
engagements. He passed away in 2000 at 91.
Senator Frankenstein Fishface was a precursor of the
double-talking, comically illogical experts and phony politicians such as
Red Skelton’s San Fernando Red, and satirists the likes of Pat Paulsen, Prof.
Irwin Corey and even Brother Theodore. Plugging “Frankenstein” into the
character’s name was good fun and symbolic of the name's ubiquitousness.
Labels: Pop Culture
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