Showing posts with label valerie gaunt. Show all posts
Showing posts with label valerie gaunt. Show all posts

Wednesday 30 November 2016

ACTRESS VALERIE GAUNT DIES AGED 84


VALERIE GAUNT: Terribly sad to hear that actress VALERIE GAUNT (Reddington Valerie) has passed away, aged 84 after a short illness.


VALERIE'S short career on the big screen featured only in two films, and they were along side Peter Cushing. Just two roles, but they left a lasting impact, that would outlast many longer career! Her playing of Justine in 'The Curse of Frankenstein' (1957) and her performance in Hammer films,1958 'Dracula' hold a special place for lovers of fantasy cinema. Born Valerie Shelia Gaunt, on the 9th July 1932 in Stratford-on-Avon, Warwickshire, England, following an interest in amateur theater, after leaving school embarked on a career as a model, before auditioning for Hammer and landing her first professional role in 1957. Gaunt married her husband Gerald Alfred Reddington on May 17th,1958.


Valerie will be buried today (November 30th ) following a service at St Helen's, Seaview, Isle of Wight, She is survived by her husband, Gerald and their four children.



Tuesday 23 August 2016

#TOOCOOLTUESDAY: TIME WARP VAMPIRE SHOES : AND TWO DRACULA ACTRESSES THAT ARE NOT LINDA HAYDEN


#TOOCOOLTUESDAY: ANSWER? Very cool and a bit of a trend setter too... Note her PALE BLUE STILETTO HEEL SHOES... they were not invented until the early 1940's.... This scene in Hammer films Dracula starring Peter Cushing and Christopher Lee, took place in 1885, putting her at least 55 years ahead of popular fashion, un-dead she maybe, dumb she isn't !!



#‎toocooltuesday‬ : PETER CUSHING, an actor who for the latter third of his career did get trapped in a kind of type-casting, of horror fantasy roles, and even though he didn't watch horror films, had a good sense of humour about it all... that's too-cool!



#‎TOOCOOLTUESDAY‬ : HERE'S A VERY COOL REPOST, that also turned out to be one of our most popular series of posts on our website. It it tells the tale of Christopher Lee having a right ol bat flap in a series of contact sheet photographs from a photo session with a Daily Mirror newspaper photographer in 1972...This feature you can find at the website HERE!


NOT ALONG AFTER we posted the Dracula Daily Mirror Pictures . . . We started getting enquiries about a colour photograph we posted in the feature. A mysterious photograph that was also turning up at signing sessions, and being signed by LINDA HAYDEN. The problem was..it WASN'T Linda Hayden in the photograph with Christopher Lee.. but someone with a Space 1999 / glamour model connection . . the mystery was solved! You can read all about it with full gallery HERE 


AS THE PUZZLE OF THE ' NOT LINDA HAYDEN' photograph was solved, we decided to get to the bottom of another mysterious face in Dracula AD 1972, the DANCER ON THE PIANO.. who again, some were saying...also could be the girl in the pic with Lee! This one, wasn't going away.. but after MORE digging and a telephone chat with the lady in question.. we managed to solve this one too! Find out just who THAT girl is RIGHT HERE



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Saturday 19 March 2016

REMEMBERING JOHN VAN EYSSEN BORN THIS DAY


Today we remember Hammer's first vampire hunter John Van Eyssen.Best known for starring in Hammer's DRACULA /Horror Of Dracula as Jonathan Harker. Eyssen also starred in Hammer's QUATERMASS 2 and a early Terrence Fisher Hammer film called The Four Sided Triangle in 1953.



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Monday 3 August 2015

THAT FEMININE TOUCH : WOMEN IN GOTHIC : HAZEL COURT AND VALERIE GAUNT BY BRUCE G HALLENBECK


Make no mistake: Peter Cushing's Baron Frankenstein was one of the world's worst misogynists. He had his Creature murder his maid, whom he, the Baron, had impregnated; he had little time for his fiancee, Elizabeth; he railed against 'interfering women;' he 'created' a woman with the soul of a man, with no thought for the consequences; he raped his assistant Anna, whom he later said he wanted to keep around so she could 'make coffee;' and he had a mad plan to mate the beautiful asylum inmate Angel with his latest monstrous creation.


Baron Frankenstein was, in short, the kind of man who would make feminists' blood boil. Yet, during the making of The Evil of Frankenstein - surely a misnomer, for the Baron was in a very mellow mood in that episode - Cushing noted, 'I don't think Frankie's a villain, really.' Perhaps he was merely misunderstood? His long-suffering 'mistresses' may have disagreed. Unlike the Universal series, Frankenstein himself is the Monster in Hammer's world and it is he who returns in every film, not his creation, the first one played, of course, by Christopher Lee in a star-making performance.


Interestingly enough, Frankenstein's first onscreen 'mistress' was played by the same actress who later portrayed Christopher Lee's first vampire bride: Twenty-three-year old Valerie Gaunt was cast in The Curse of Frankenstein (1957) as Justine, the maid with whom Frankenstein has his amorous fling. Born in Birmingham, Gaunt had appeared in several British television episodes in 1956, including an episode of Dixon of Dock Green and Television Playhouse.


As the ill-fated Justine, Valerie Gaunt became the first of Hammer's sacrificial lambs. Justine was a voluptuous, dark-haired, dark-eyed and inquisitive woman who made the mistake of seducing the Baron (or did he seduce her?) and then attempted to blackmail him. Their sexual relationship is implicit in the film, but it was still rather daring for that time, as the cinema in the late fifties was just beginning to explore more frankness in depicting sex on the screen.

Justine Blackmails The Baron


'Why choose me as the father?' Frankenstein taunts Justin when she tells him she is pregnant. 'Why not choose any man from the village? The chances are, it'd be the right one.' This scene was a shocking - for the time - example of the sexual undercurrents of  Gothic horror that Hammer would bring more and more to the forefront as screen censorship became more liberal.


Gaunt's death scene, in which Frankenstein locks her into his laboratory and lets his Creature have his way with her, highlights the Baron's sociopathic personality. If anyone wants to find out more about his experiments, they end up getting closer to them than they ever intended. Poor Justine; we never know exactly what the Christopher Lee's Creature does to her, but our imaginations fill in the blanks.

Justine Goes Snooping!



Red-haired Hazel Court was cast as Elizabeth, Frankenstein's fiancee. Thirty years old at the time, Court had made her screen debut at the age of eighteen in the 1944 film Champagne Charlie, directed by Alberto Cavalcanti. Court's lookalike daughter Sally also appears in Curse as Elizabeth's younger self, in an early scene that features Melvyn Hayes as the young Frankenstein.


As Elizabeth, Court is radiant in a role that began her long association with Gothic horror. Stunningly beautiful, she also possesses a kind of regal bearing which is entirely appropriate for the part of a well-bred Victorian lady. She does not have a great deal to do in the film besides look lovely - which she accomplishes without even trying - but she leaves the audience with an impression of a somewhat repressed and genteel woman of leisure who seems to have inner passions that simmer just beneath the surface, something along the lines of Alfred Hitchock's 'cool blondes.'



Court was no blonde, though; she was a fiery redhead whose hair was made for Technicolor - or Eastman Colour - with all the eroticism which that - and her copious cleavage - conveyed. At the film's climax, when Frankenstein attempts to shoot the Creature but hits Elizabeth instead, it comes as a shock because it's completely unexpected. Audiences expecting the old Universal Frankenstein movie cliches were in for a surprise with many of the elements, both sexual and violent, in The Curse of Frankenstein.

The Climax Of The Curse of Frankenstein


Composer James Bernard's life partner, critic Paul Dehn, was one of the few in the British press to give Curse a favourable review. In a piece entitled 'I Like it Grisly!,' Dehn noted the presence of what would later be called 'Hammer Glamour' in the film. He wrote: 'Hazel Court as the Baron's wife and Valerie Gaunt as his servant pant their way prettily through a series of nasty fixes.'


Many years later, Court recalled the film's Leicester Square premiere: 'We never believed The Curse of Frankenstein would be what it is. Peter Cushing, Robert Urquhart and I went to the premiere in Leicester Square. We had our dark glasses on and coat collars sticking up and we all sat in the back row. Then we suddenly realised something was happening - that maybe we had a success - so the glasses came off and the collars came down.'




THE FEMININE TOUCH: WOMEN IN GOTHIC : PART TWO : THE REVENGE OF FRANKENSTEIN BY BRUCE G HALLENBECK : HERE

IMAGES AND ARTWORK: JAMIE SUMERVILLE AND MARCUS BROOKS



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