Lust for a Vampire | 1971 | dir. Jimmy Sangster

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Lust for a Vampire | 1971 | dir. Jimmy Sangster
... just found this gem on tenor.com ✨️
KENNETH WILLIAMS deals with ladies' underwear 🤭 ... this definitely made my day! 😂😂
This cutout is obviously from Ken's appearance on Thames TV show 'Looks Familiar', recorded 03/06/1984. Unfortunately, there's only a short excerpt of the show available on YouTube.
Is there anybody out there who can provide the entire broadcast ?!?!? Anyway, whoever made this gif ... thanks a million! 🙏🏼💋😅
Denholm Elliott played a suave Count Dracula in an episode “Mystery & Imagination”. It aired in the UK (on Thames Television) in 1968. Elliot is quite good as the Count, wearing groovy pair of sunglasses indoors. In a twist, Jonathan Harker replaced Renfield in the insane asylum where Mina is horrified to discover him.
There are two other actors worth mentioning… Susan George plays a very sexually aroused Lucy. Joan Hickson, long before she became synonymous with Miss Marple, played Lucy’s mother.
On the whole, the production is pretty good. You can see it at this link. Just ignore the silly TV host that introduces it. This was added much later.
https://youtu.be/GhqKw_YjilE
A little over 40 years after the Abdication Crisis that had peaked in December of 1936, Thames Television, holder of the weekday independent TV franchise for London and the Home Counties, commissioned a dramatisation based on the exhaustive, Wolfson History Prize winning biography of Edward VIII by Frances Donaldson.
Read a little bit more about the real abdication here;
https://georgefairbrother.tumblr.com/post/669685662223613952/the-abdication-crisis-december-1936
In terms of casting, production design, location filming that included Fort Belvedere where many of the real events unfolded, soundtrack, costume and performance, Edward and Mrs Simpson seemed to be as close as you could possibly get to 1930s culture, fashion and upper-class society without a time machine. Written for television by Simon Raven and directed by pioneering British-Asian director Waris Hussein, the series was justly rewarded with an Emmy and multiple BAFTAs.
In retrospect, it appears to be as historically accurate as a drama can be, including verbatim conversations. Edward VIII, formerly the Prince of Wales known as David, then finally the Duke of Windsor, was played about perfectly by Edward Fox, and Wallis Simpson by Cynthia Harris. Other key castings included Nigel Hawthorne, yet to find stardom as Sir Humphrey Appleby in Yes Minister / Prime Minister, as the King's friend and advisor Walter Monckton, David Waller as a totally convincing Prime Minister Stanley Baldwin (He reprised this role in 1988 for another adaptation, The Woman He Loved, starring Anthony Andrews, Jane Seymour and Olivia de Havilland), Peggy Ashcroft as Queen Mary, Marius Goring as King George V, and Wensley Pithey as Winston Churchill.
Other notable parts, amongst many, were Jessie Matthews (Aunt Bessie), former silent film star Bessie Love (Lady Cunard), Patricia Hodge as Lady Diana Cooper, and British-Australian actor Ed Deveraux as Lord Beaverbrook.
The Duke of Windsor died in 1972, but the Duchess of Windsor, formerly Mrs Simpson, was still alive when the programme was conceived and broadcast. (She died in 1986). She was not best pleased, citing invasion of privacy, and lobbied to have the production stopped. Her opposition was reported in The Sun, and perhaps might have been more newsworthy if not for another significant event in August 1977.
The series ended with the marriage of the Duke and now Duchess of Windsor, some months after the Abdication.
The BFI Screen-Online review stated;
"...The series also carefully juxtaposes Edward's frequent, and popular, visits to depressed areas with his opulent and carefree private life, and doesn't shy from showing his admiration for Mussolini in a pair of brief but pointed exchanges with Anthony Eden...Edward Fox gives a fine and charismatic performance as the King, ably suggesting the contradictory impulses that ruled the man. Wallis Simpson, however, is presented rather less sympathetically. In an occasionally heavy-handed performance, Cynthia Harris plays her as a cool and conniving gold-digger, albeit a sometimes naïve and even disarmingly foolish one..."
The portrayal of Edward VIII was a little more sympathetic than in some later productions, including Bertie and Elizabeth (2002). Edward and Mrs Simpson did tend to gloss over the King's fascist sympathies, although it was at least alluded to as mentioned in the BFI review. Perhaps, in fairness, these along with some alleged international shady financial dealings, meddling in Britain's foreign policy and the cosy relationship with Hitler didn't really become apparent until the period after the series ended. Wensley Pithey's Winston Churchill was accurately shown as a strong and sincere personal friend and advocate for the King and Wallis Simpson, in public and private, to the annoyance of the Baldwin government, but this relationship later soured when Churchill was wartime Prime Minister, over the Duke of Windsor's behaviour.
The Duke and Duchess of Windsor (top) - Edward Fox and Cynthia Harris (bottom)
Updated Thames TV ident.
👨🍳 W A T C H I N G 🍽
I bought the Bluray about year ago, and finally got my region free Bluray Player out to finally watch it with my mom.
We like Vincent Price, and my mom is a 125% Food Network addict.
A little retro horror icon mixed with food. It's going to be a fun family Bluray night.
Is it a bird?
Thames TV’s Drive In discusses ‘the rise of foreign cars’ at Silverstone Car Test Day in 1974.
But what’s thát (near 6:10) in the background behind Frank Page ?
The rise of foreign cars | Common Market | Vintage cars | Drive In | 1974
All I ever hear is Goku Vs The Hulk, Goku Vs Superman. It's never Goku Vs Marmalade Atkins...