RCCC 2019 Interviews - David Dastmalchian and Roberta Solomon
seen from South Korea
seen from United States
seen from Iraq
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Brazil
seen from South Korea

seen from United States
seen from Brazil

seen from Germany
seen from Singapore
seen from Algeria
seen from United Kingdom
seen from United States
seen from France
seen from United States

seen from Malaysia
seen from Russia
seen from United States
seen from South Africa
RCCC 2019 Interviews - David Dastmalchian and Roberta Solomon
The Ferrymen (and Women) of Fright piece (2021)
[Count Crowley's artist Lukas Ketner created this artwork piece for an article by Count Crowley's writer David Dastmalchian on the loving on the TV horror hosts since he was a child inside of the horror monthly magazine Fangoria Vol. 2 #11.]
Art by: Lukas Ketner
"Loving on the Horror Hosts", illustration by Lukas Ketner for an article by David Dastmalchian in Fangoria V2 #11, 2021
Dastmalchian and Ketner are the authors of the very enjoyable Count Crowley Reluctant Midnight Monster Hunter and the upcoming Count Crowley Amateur Midnight Monster Hunter, both published by Dark Horse.
Crematia Mortem was the horror host of KSHB 41’s late night weekend television show Creature Features in Kansas City, Missouri from 1981 to 1988. Nicknamed The Ghostess with the Mostess, she was the creation of Roberta Solomon (a local television and radio talent).
Every week, late at night on Saturday (or Friday, for a while), Crematia and her cohorts would welcome viewers into her spooky mansion’s living room, decorated with spiderwebs, skulls, and half-spent candelabras. She would emerge from her coffin in classic vampy makeup and attire, and take a seat in her massive wicker throne while cracking jokes and setting up the night’s film selection. A classic horror or science-fiction film would play, and Crematia would pop back in around the commercial breaks with a little film commentary or other antics.
Crematia’s look was mostly up to Roberta. “I wanted her to look like she had stepped out of an Edward Gorey drawing,” she says. She bought a long black wig at Wild Woody’s in Independence, a negligee at Macy’s or Kmart, a corset from Frederick’s of Hollywood, and she was set.
Mortem gained cult status and, in 2012, was inducted into Horrorhound Magazine’s TV Horror Host Hall of Fame (along with Elvira, Joe Bob Briggs and Universal’s “Shock” Movie Package).