The Mystery of the Haunted Vampire

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Friday, September 30, 2005

Supernatural tales and music in Montana

From the Helena (Montana) Independent Record:

Internationally known composer and keyboardist Philip Aaberg and Montana Historical Society historian Ellen Baumler will premier their collaboration based on Montana supernatural stories Saturday, Oct. 1, at 11 a.m. at the Myrna Loy Center. Baumler recently spent three days at Aaberg's studio in Chester working with him on an audio book based on her popular "Beyond Spirit Tailings" to be released at the event by the Montana Historical Society Press and Sweetgrass Music. Aaberg created an original score to accompany Baumler's readings from the book. snip Baumler's "Spirit Tailings," and "Beyond Spirit Tailings," were based on her research into supernatural stories and ghostly legends across Montana. The books already are among the Society Press' all-time best sellers.


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Vampire cats and spiders and others

Scary and not-so scary.


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Dancing Dracula

From the West Chester (Pa.) Daily Local:

Halloween haunting season has arrived, and that means it’s time for the Brandywine Ballet Theatre’s annual production of the ballet "Dracula."
Other Halloween activities listed for you Pennsylvanians.


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'I wanted to run away with Dracula'

From the Oakland Tribune:

EDNA O'BRIEN is a superstitious Irishwoman. During a recent conversation she "touches wood" multiple times, usually when she's talking about the opening of her play "Family Butchers" at San Francisco's Magic Theatre. She also touches wood to avoid cursing her new novel, "Twilight," when she happens to mention it in passing. If superstition has helped O'Brien in her 45-year literary career, perhaps we should all be knocking wood. Since her earliest splash, when her "Country Girls Trilogy" was banned in Ireland in the early'60s, O'Brien has become a book world celebrity almost as famous for her auburn hair and striking beauty as for her books that deal primarily with women, family turmoil and Ireland. snip "There weren't many books and not much of what we'd call 'culture' in the town," she recalls. "So when these players would come with their melodramas, I can't tell you how exciting it was just to see one of their fliers stuck to a stone fence. Then to watch those actors. Oh! It seemed they led such charmed lives, which I'm sure now they didn't." A production that remains vivid in O'Brien's memory is "Dracula." "I wanted to run away with Dracula," she says. "I was so daft."
So for all you amateur actors performing Dracula this October - and from my searches through the Internet I know there's a lot of you out there - don't think your production is unimportant just because you're in a small-town. You might be inspiring audience members in incredible ways.


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Electronic ghost detector

I need to get one of these. From Gadgetry Blog:

The Grand Daddy of Ghost meters, the TriField Natural EM Meter ($179) ignores power sources and appliances and has a built-in tone to alert you of spooky activity. It also comes with instructions on how to stay alive (sorry, I added this bit for effect!). The gizmo has a radio frequency range from 100KHz all the way up to 2.5GHz - if that means anything to you - so you can also check for leaky microwave ovens, monitor cellular phone radiation, and look for RF-based surveillance 'bugs'.
See, it's multifunctional.


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Friday vampire cat blogging

Hat tip to Philly Gal.


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Cuddly toys from hell

CavBlog, bounced back bravely from the sad loss of his one-eyed, grumpy hamster Frank, posts about cuddly toys from hell. Cavan's a real trouper.


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Only bayou remains

From The Washington Post:

[Hurricane] Rita abused Cameron's dead as much as its living. The town cemetery is macabre. Coffins float in fetid water, mausoleums are in shards, and human bones lie blanching in the sunlight next to disintegrating burial vestments. Not far away, a church sags beneath a steeple that once pointed to the skies. It points west now, almost accusatorily, to the place where Rita came ashore.


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Spooked: the Haunting of a Kentucky Sanatorium

Via an email, Spooked. Creepy site for a movie on a haunted sanatorium.


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Thursday, September 29, 2005

After Life

Via the soon-(fingerscrossed)-to-return Howard Peirce, comes After Life, a series of photographs of Streatham Cemetery through the four seasons.


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It sure beats Calculus

Purdue University in Indiana has added "The Vampire in Folklore, Fiction and Film" to it's Honors program. The class will study all aspects of vampire history, mythos and culture, and even includes a field trip to Castle Dracula in Transylvania! From the University's online journal, The Exponent


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Werewolves

Curt at The Groovy Age of Horror has a terrific post on depictions of werewolves throughout history. There's several images from the historical to movies presenting the different variations of the metamorphosis -- the two-legged wolf man as depicted by Lon Chaney Jr. and Werewolf By Night (left), the four-legged, more beast like version and the beast-like version that walks on hind legs. My own favorite, if you will, is the two-legged wolf man. My introduction to werewolves came through the Werewolf By Night comic. However, in my novel, The Mystery of the Haunted Vampire, the werewolves are the traditional four-legged variety. Go figure. It is Curt's best post yet for Werewolf Month. He also reveals a bit from his own novel in progress that I find intriguing and hopefully will get the chance to read when he completes it. Not only does Curt know his werewolf and wolf man legends well, he knows how to build on them to present something we can readily recognize at an instant yet make it his own.

What dreams and animation have in common is precisely this: imagery unconstrained by physicality. There is a certain logic, then, in emphasizing the rough, jerky physicality of transformation--but I think it runs in entirely the wrong direction. I conceptualize the werewolf in my own novel as transforming in a much more fantastic, fluid manner... snip Besides tapping more closely into the original experience that gave birth to folk-beliefs about metamorphosis, another advantage of this conception is flexibility in the forms available to the werewolf. Rather than changing into one form or another and being stuck there, my werewolf will be much more protean and physically unstable when he shifts out of human form. In a series of comic book panels, for example, he would look a bit different every time. When he needs to run, he "melts" down to all fours, and when he wants to stand upright (to fight with his claws), he simply does so and his body morphs to accomodate his wishes. In moments of extreme intensity, he even radiates metamorphic power. Thus, in one scene, he charges through a graveyard, and his passage is marked by a subtle pattern of warping and distortion in the inscriptions on the headstones and other monuments.
So I look forward to the metamorphosis of Curt from blogger to novelist and back again.


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Night Stalker

I watched the Night Stalker premiere tonight. While it's not nearly as good as the original Kolchak series, it's not as bad as the critics described, particularly the Washington Post's second string reviewer, Chip Crews (whose no chip off the old Tom Shales). There were aspects of the show I really liked (Gabrielle Union, decent directing). It doesn't capture the gritty realism of the original series which helped accentuate the horrific elements by grounding it in realism. Comic Book Wife links to several pro and con reviews. A review which better captures the series than The Post's is the Hollywood Reporter's.

It has been 30 years since "Kolchak: The Night Stalker" prowled at ABC, enough time to challenge anyone's memory. That's probably for the best because in some ways "Night Stalker," as newly envisioned by Frank Spotnitz of "The X-Files" fame, differs markedly from the original. If, however, the new series is judged on how well it scares and entertains and not on how carefully it is cloned, it is both a success and unique among the shows on the fall menu. In the original, which lasted only one season, Darren McGavin played Carl Kolchak, a Chicago reporter who, week after week, ran into stories filled with horrible surprises and elements of the supernatural. His editor, Tony Vincenzo, was skeptical but Kolchak knew there was a lot going on in this world that defied simple and logical explanations. In the new version, Kolchak still knows the world can be a weird and dangerous place, but he's a young man (Stuart Townsend), brash and fearless, unlike the original Kolchak, a wisecracker at the tail end of his career who had seen it all. The new Kolchak migrated west, where he is employed by the fictional Los Angeles Beacon. Vincenzo (Cotter Smith), Kolchak's editor, has faith in his young employee. However, Perri Reed (Gabrielle Union), the paper's crime reporter and reluctant partner with Kolchak, assumes the role of series skeptic.
Don't, however, think that Reed is simply the series version of Scully. Reed is much quicker to believe than Scully in the first few years of the X-Files. What I didn't like is how the series glamorizes the reporters, from their newsroom to the car Kolchak drives to the way they dress to their attractiveness. In the original, Carl Kolchak looked and dressed and acted every bit the part of a dogged, world-weary crime reporter who had seen and lived it all, leaving him as rumpled as his suit and battered as his straw hat. Hopefully, and from some of the reviews it appears to be true, the series improves from this not-bad beginning. UPDATED: From my Night Stalker email group, came this New York Times review:
The series is driven by two urbane reporters at an imaginary Los Angeles newspaper, The Beacon. Stuart Townsend refreshes the crusty Carl Kolchak role that Darren McGavin inhabited in the original 1972 made-for-television movie and in the 1974-75 series. Those who loved the old vampire hunter may pine for Mr. McGavin's creased face and straw hat. The rest of us can admire Mr. Townsend's update of a smoldering loner who is still aching after the loss of his wife. The premiere presents Kolchak's vision of that violent death, but he still has trouble making everyone believe what he saw.
Hey the Times got something correct and on the same day Judith Miller agreed to testify - the stars are aligned right. Overall The Times gives it a good review and that makes me hopeful that Ned Martel saw something in the second episode to create such positive spin.


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The Encyclopedia of Haunted Places

Subtitled "Ghostly Locales From Around The World", it is, as they say, available in bookstores everywhere:

"To truly understand a haunted location, you need to get local," said Jeff Belanger, editor and compiler for the Encyclopedia of Haunted Places. "What makes this book unique is that the entries are written by people who have done the haunted field work to back up each ghostly claim – hearsay and urban legends weren’t enough. Each entry combines the history, the tragedies, and the eyewitness accounts of each haunted locale."
The homepage of the author/editor Jeff Belanger is Ghostvillage.com, a site already in our sidebar.


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Pasadena has more than just the Rose Parade

it's got some spooky history, too. Forget Disney's Haunted House....this tour is a real E-Ticket!

Old Town Haunt Story has it, in 1901, 3 bank robbers successfully entered the bank, blew open 2 of the bank’s basement vault safes, but failed to get away. The building was surrounded by local sheriffs, and then ... they just disappeared. Legend has it that their dynamite explosions, not only open the vaults, but they opened the sealed off catacombs, which apparently, they tried to flee thru ... never to be heard of again ... even though every gold piece stolen was recovered! Soon after, the bank experienced strange things. Strange sounds, empty screams, and finally the disappearance of 2 bank employees and a bank customer that started rumors flying about the “Ghosts of the Bank Robbers” getting revenge on the living. This of course was later dismissed as a local myth. ...Descend into the basement of the historical Union Savings Bank Building where mysterious occurences have taken place in the buildings' deadly 107 year history. In fact, something lives down there in the dark....not some one, but some thing. The basement that was sealed shut for decades is being reopened for your investigation into the unknown.The History of the building is enough to scare most, what will you do when the catacombs and darkness surround you!


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"The Perfect Medium"

The day before yesterday, the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City opened a new temporary exhibit - The Perfect Medium: Photography and the Occult:

The exhibition features about 120 photographs from collections all over the world and arrives in New York after a showing in Paris. Most of the images date from about the 1860s until World War II, a period when people were greatly interested in spiritualism and the paranormal. Using photography to document any images or incidents became a popular way of trying to get proof. [...] The show is divided into three sections. The first features images of "ghosts" or "spirits," while the second section has photographs about mediums and their seances. The third section looks at pictures of what people thought were the vital life forces emanating from human beings.
Eugène Thiébault: Henri Robin and a Specter, 1863 I must have that poster... The Met's page for The Perfect Medium can be found here.


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Wednesday, September 28, 2005

Halloween Short Film Festival

Saw this on Fortean Times. The Halloween Short Film Festival. Jane Porter, pictured on left, won the Lux award for best experimental film for Stolen Sorrow. Too bad the films aren't posted online. They're taking entries for 2006. I don't know if any of the horror bloggers/filmmakers work in short films, but this could at least lead to a chance to visit Britain.


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Want to read something really scary?

The American Library Association is marking this as Banned Books Week until Oct. 2nd to highlight the challenges to intellectual freedom in this country. Here's the horror and (sort of) horror-related books challenged most frequently from 1990 to 2000 in an effort by extremists to get them banned from libraries to keep people from reading them. 1. Scary Stories (Series) by Alvin Schwartz 7. Harry Potter (Series) by J.K. Rowling 16. Goosebumps (Series) by R.L. Stine 27. The Witches by Roald Dahl 34. Halloween ABC by Eve Merriam 45. Bumps in the Night by Harry Allard 73. Curses, Hexes and Spells by Daniel Cohen 77. Carrie by Stephen King 83. The Dead Zone by Stephen King So it's not just that the extremists - and we know who they are, they're the American Taliban - don't want to read the books and don't want their children to read them. They don't want the rest of us to read them either. Go look at the list. Many of the titles will surprise you and if you love liberty and freedom (and good books) it'll scare you.


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Medieval bridge emerges

Spain's severe drought revealed a previously submerged medieval bridge outside of Madrid. Photo here.


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Casket stuck in a tree

From drought we go to flooding. (We bring it all to you here at The Mystery of the Haunted Vampire.) Casket stuck in a tree.


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Ice Age twins found buried

From New Scientist:

The babes were placed side by side in their grave and protected beneath a woolly mammoth's shoulder blade, which was propped up by pieces of mammoth tusk. The bodies were wrapped in a material such as animal hide that has since deteriorated and were covered with ochre. Neugebauer-Maresch told New Scientist that more than 31 ivory beads were also found at the burial site. "They had been buried with much ritual - it is really very interesting," she says.


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Boo at the Zoo

The National Zoo in Washington, D.C., is celebrating Halloween, too.

Boo at the Zoo is the wildest trick-or-treat in town! Disney princesses, Spidermans, Harry Potters, and other costumed guests are invited to join us at the seventh annual Boo at the Zoo, a safe and fun way for families with children ages 2 to 12 to enjoy the fall holiday. We'll have the traditional spiders, owls, and other animals on hand every day. Plus the Zoo's traffic-free walkways and many animal houses will make trick-or-treating a kid-friendly activity. Costumed volunteers will hand out candy, snack foods, and other special treats at more than 40 treat stations. Animal encounters, keeper talks, festive decorations, and haunted trails round out this exciting extravaganza.
Ticket prices are a bit scary: $13 for FONZ members and $23 for nonmembers ($3 off coupons available at Whole Food). Boo at the Zoo is from October 28-30 between 5:30-8:30 p.m.


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TIME interview with Neil Gaiman and Joss Whedon

Geek heaven:

TIME: I think there's actually a law that you guys can't be in the same room at the same time. It's like the President and the Vice President, or something. JW: Like the two Ron Silvers in Timecop. TIME: That's exactly the simile I was looking for. So you guys both have movies coming out on September 30th. NG: It will be National Geek Day.
'National Geek Day' indeed... (via /., of course...)


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Halloween "Haunted House"... on a haunted ship?!?

For all of our readers who'll be in Long Beach, CA this October, this press release announces the opening of the 11th annual "Haunted Shipwreck" haunted house attraction aboard the Queen Mary:

The Queen Mary is known around the world for her reported hauntings. For years, guests, employees and paranormal researchers have witnessed unexplained sounds, voices, apparitions and other phenomena. Shipwreck visitors have the chance to explore the areas where these sightings have occurred, many not open to the public. Mazes are situated deep into the bowels of the ship and Shipwreck guests can navigate the creepy corridors and hallowed hallways of this massive haunted vessel -- if they dare.


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Sea monster captured on film

Calling Cthulhu. Calling Cthulhu. Cthulhu to the white courtesy phone, please. From The New York Times:

For decades, scientists and sea explorers have mounted costly expeditions to hunt down and photograph the giant squid, a legendary monster with eyes the size of dinner plates and a nightmarish tangle of tentacles lined with long rows of sucker pads. The goal has been to learn more about a bizarre creature of no little fame - Jules Verne's attacked a submarine and Peter Benchley's ate children - that in real life has stubbornly refused to give up its secrets.


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Tuesday, September 27, 2005

Sherlock Holmes and the Athanaeum Ghoul

From the Manchester (U.K.) Evening News:

In this latest manifestation, a tortuous tale by writer Carl Miller, we find Holmes the worse for wear, overtaken by the boredom of retirement – and cocaine, administered by his caring boy housekeeper. Does Holmes have hidden depths after all? Dr Watson has moved on – and written a play about the old sleuth. As we watch his creaky production on the stage of the Athenaeum Theatre, it is interrupted by a horrible murder. The ghoul has struck. Watson calls Holmes into action. Miller has created a play true to the tradition, a sort of end-of-the-pier whodunnit (you’ll never guess). It involves Victorian underlife, where young girls get sold for toffs’ pleasure, an actor of the old school bent on getting a knighthood, a steam-filled Turkish bath in Covent Garden, a fearsomely howling fiend, like one of the hounds of the Baskervilles, and a coup de theatre which failed to work. Guns go off, things explode, people scream.
The newspaper's theater critic Philip Radcliffe gave the play 4 stars (out of 5). How I wish I could see it performed! I crossposted this from the new blog I created tonight, 221B Baker Street. I often posted items of a Holmesian nature on this blog out of personal interest even though they seldom fit under the category of "Tales of the supernatural." In fairness to the other Haunted Vampires, I need to be more careful in what I post so that I do not unnecessarily push their excellent posts down the thread too fast. With that in mind, I'll still post news of Sherlock Holmes here when it is related enough to horror and the supernatural. Otherwise, you may find them here.


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Tuesday Night (never to be repeated) Vampire... Frog Blogging?

Thanks to Jane @ firedoglake - it was a great likeness, Jane!


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Goodbye Yellow Brick Road

and hello blood soaked streets....

Sir Elton John's latest musical Lestat, based on the bloodsucking hero of Anne Rice's book Interview with the Vampire, is to open on Broadway next year. The show, co-written by Bernie Taupin, is scheduled to open at New York's Palace Theatre on 13 April, with previews beginning on 11 March. Actor Hugh Panero will play the role made famous by Tom Cruise in the 1994 film version, directed by Neil Jordan. The musical will premiere December 17 at San Francisco's Curran Theater, where it will run through January 29. ..Speaking in 2003, John said he and his songwriting partner had been "huge fans of Anne Rice's books for a long, long time". "When I read Interview with the Vampire for the first time, I wanted to become a vampire," the singer added. - BBC and Reuters


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The 'sexiest vampire slayer'

USA Weekend features the 'Sexiest Vampire Slayer Alive' in a nice feature on Sarah Michelle Gellar and her thoughts on being Buffy, feminism and being named to People's Top 50 Beautiful list. Oh, and David Boreanaz - Buffy's love interest Angel - undergoes a Q&A.

Do you believe vampires exist? I think they do. They're probably living in New York City, not Los Angeles.


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Ghost walk in New York

From the Tonawanda (N.Y.) News:

When you sense something special about an old building, pay attention. That structure could be talking — literally — to you. So says John Koerner, an American history teacher at Niagara County Community College, who, with his wife Tammy, conducts Haunted History Ghost Walks throughout Western New York. We joined 23 other spirit seekers on the Lewiston phantasm path this past Saturday night, learning that structures, like animals and humans, might embody invisible dimensions communicating unto infinity. Most phantom-prone people believe the Hollywood version of ghosts, those disembodied remnants of someone who died, Koerner instructed his group gathered on Center Street in the heart of the heritage district. “But, parapsychologists think of other possibilities,” he continued to an audience rapt by his introduction.
My house speaks to me too: "Install a new roof. Finish the basement. Clean the attic." Spooky stuff.


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Jesus the werewolf

Not that Jesus. Another one. From The Hindustan Times:

The word werewolf conjures up in the mind an image of a beast set against a medieval Gothic or Anglo township in the serene background of a full moon night with the firs and cedars casting an eerie glow over terra firma. Well, if the existence of a werewolf in 21st century seems strange enough, then brace up, for the werewolf we are talking about is named Jesus. Jesus Aceves, is however not amused at being a werewolf and says that everywhere he goes, people jeer and stare at him. Some, he says, even mock him as he looks exactly like a werewolf straight from a horror movie. "When I was a child people laughed at me. Some even thought I was cursed. Now they stare and scream, 'Werewolf!' At night people react badly because the hair looks darker then. But these people are ignorant. As a child I'd just cry. Now I might end up drinking or smoking drugs to handle the rejection and humiliation," News of the World quoted Jesus as saying.
At least he's not been beaten with a silver-handled cane.


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Dutch witch gets tax breaks

From News 24:

The Hague - Dutch tax authorities have ruled that a Dutch actress training as a witch is eligible for tax deductions for the course, the Dutch tax court said on Tuesday. During the training, which lasts one year and one day, students are instructed in casting spells, magic, preparing potions, working with herbs, prophesying and divining, said the tax authorities.
I'm going to try to write off blogging on my