Monday, 6 May 2013
INGRID PITT AND PETER CUSHING: CONVENTION CANDID SNAPS
Sunday, 5 May 2013
A VERY NASTY BUSINESS : PETER CUSHING SUE LLOYD KATE OMARA 'CORRUPTION' AKA 'CARNAGE' TROY HOWARTH REVIEW AND GALLERY
In 1959, Georges Franju’s Eyes Without a Face made a tremendous impact on audiences. The film offered an odd mixture of the up market and the down market, with a poetic sensibility mixed with instances of graphic gore. Indeed, the film pushed the envelope further than anything Hammer Films had done at that time, yet Franju’s credentials with the art house crowd ensured that it was taken in a more serious manner. It also set the template for a series of “surgical” horror films, many of which borrowed the basic concept of a surgeon driven to madness by love. Spanish filmmaker hit pay dirt with his own variation on the formula, The Awful Dr. Orlof (1961), establishing himself – and Swiss-American character actor Howard Vernon – as a fixture in the horror genre. The British came to the party a bit late, but when they did so, via Corruption (1967), they managed to outdo the competition in terms of sheer sleaze and gratuitous violence.
The film came at an awkward period in Peter
Cushing’s career. Cushing had established himself as a household name in
the UK due to top lining a number of celebrated live TV productions,
and he parlayed this into big screen infamy by aligning himself with
Hammer Film Productions. The double-punch of The Curse of Frankenstein
(1957) and Dracula (1958) showed him to be an actor of tremendous
versatility, equally at home in roles that were villainous and heroic,
and he was soon inextricably linked with the horror genre. It was a role
Cushing accepted with some reluctance, knowing full well that it would
deprive him of more mainstream recognition – but it provided a steady
income, and this was something that he and his beloved wife Helen were
desperately in need of. Helen’s health had always been problematic, and
by the time the mid-60s rolled around, her emphysema had deteriorated to
a noticeable degree. Cushing was panic-stricken by the
notion of possibly losing her, and the costly treatments she required
insured that he was able to bank very little of the money he was making
in his film work. Thus, he accepted virtually every role he could cram
into his schedule – and though he took the work very seriously, he was
only too aware that he was sometimes accepting projects with a
less-than-distinguished pedigree. The actor had appeared in quite a few
indifferent pictures through the years, but never in his career would he
be faced with a project quite so sleazy and down market at Corruption.
The story deals with a distinguished surgeon, Sir
John Rowan (Cushing), who succumbs to madness when he accidentally
causes his lover, Lynn (Sue Lloyd), to become hideously disfigured in a
freak accident. In an effort to restore her lost beauty, via a series of
unsuccessful skin grafting operations, he turns to murder…
Say what you will about the film itself, it still
offers one of Cushing’s most intense and deeply felt performances. The
actor was deeply uncomfortable appearing in some of the scenes that were
required of him, but this does not manifest itself in a negative manner
on screen. True, the scene of Cushing lost amid a sea of hippies at a
very 60s “flower power” party is jarring – but it is sensibly played for
laughs, with Cushing conveying a sense of being a fish out of water,
desperately trying to appease his younger love interest. After the
accident which destroys Lynn ’s face, Cushing becomes determined to
correct his inadvertent actions, and in the process he loses control and
succumbs to his worst impulses. There’s a particularly strong scene
wherein Rowan, trying to keep his mounting frustration and rage under
control, finally snaps at his young assistant (Kate O’Mara). Cushing
plays the sequence for all the punch and pathos it
is worth – it doesn’t even feel so much like acting as a moment of
cathartic release, as if his own personal demons and anxieties were
spilling over into the character.
Cushing would later decry the film for its excesses, but he recognized that it had the germ of a worthy dramatic concept. It’s possible that he entered into the film hoping that it would explore the dynamics of the relationship between Rowan and Lyn, but any such idealism surely faded soon into the production. When the time came to film a sequence wherein Rowan murders a prostitute, it surely must have felt like a very bleak day. The scene was filmed twice, once in a more conventional manner befitting the censorship mores of the UK and the US marketplace, and then in a more risqué manner, which depicts the “gentleman of horror” forcing a topless actress (played by Marianne Morris; she is substituted by a clothed Jan Waters in the more commonly available edit of the film) to the ground, slashing her with a knife, smearing blood over her naked breasts, and then beheading her. It’s a very intense set piece, though director Robert Hartford-Davis’ concept of how to best capture the insanity of the moment was to go wild with the fish-eye lens effects. Clubfooted direction to one side, it’s Cushing who gives the scene its impact - partially because it seems so very out of character, and partially because he conveys a sense of going over the edge that is almost unique in his body of work.
Cushing would later decry the film for its excesses, but he recognized that it had the germ of a worthy dramatic concept. It’s possible that he entered into the film hoping that it would explore the dynamics of the relationship between Rowan and Lyn, but any such idealism surely faded soon into the production. When the time came to film a sequence wherein Rowan murders a prostitute, it surely must have felt like a very bleak day. The scene was filmed twice, once in a more conventional manner befitting the censorship mores of the UK and the US marketplace, and then in a more risqué manner, which depicts the “gentleman of horror” forcing a topless actress (played by Marianne Morris; she is substituted by a clothed Jan Waters in the more commonly available edit of the film) to the ground, slashing her with a knife, smearing blood over her naked breasts, and then beheading her. It’s a very intense set piece, though director Robert Hartford-Davis’ concept of how to best capture the insanity of the moment was to go wild with the fish-eye lens effects. Clubfooted direction to one side, it’s Cushing who gives the scene its impact - partially because it seems so very out of character, and partially because he conveys a sense of going over the edge that is almost unique in his body of work.
Sadly, the film isn’t worthy of Cushing’s efforts.
As noted above, Hartford-Davis’ direction is flat and functional at
best. He would go on to direct Cushing in an even more unfortunate
project - Incense for the Damned, aka Bloodsuckers (1970), an incomplete
hodgepodge of vampirism and flower power mysticism that was largely
filmed on location in Greece - but his most interesting and accomplished
picture remains The Fiend (1971), a demented slice of religious mania
featuring typically intense performances from Tony Beckley (When a
Stranger Calls) and Patrick Magee (A Clockwork Orange). His emphasis is
squarely on the sensational in this context, however, which creates a
dramatic vacuum where a far greater sense of emotional investment would
have been appreciated. Nowhere is this more evident than in the
depiction of the character of Lynn, played by Sue Lloyd. Lloyd is a
capable and photogenic actress, but her portrayal is
unsympathetic - and this is very much as she appears to have been
written. Lloyd doesn’t manage to invest any real pathos into the
character, regardless, thus making Cushing’s obsession with her seem
bizarre and misplaced. It’s truly as if the two actors were making two
different films - Lloyd picking up a paycheck for playing a bitchy femme
fatale, and Cushing trying to capture a far greater sense of heartfelt
sorrow and heartache. The remainder of the cast is similarly
uninspired, with even the normally reliable character actor David Lodge
(something of an unofficial member of the Peter Sellers “rep company,”
having appeared in many of the great comic’s films, including A Shot in
the Dark and I’m All Right Jack) coming off quite poorly as a goon who
roughs up Cushing’s character at one point; the actor was miscast and
likely knew it, and he resorts to broad overacting to compensate. Add
in one of the most truly horrific music
scores to be found in British horror (“courtesy” of Bill McGuffie, who
really oughtn’t have bothered) and the end result is as offputting as it
is poorly made.
Even so, Cushing fans are still encouraged to give
it a try - the “full strength” edition isn’t so easy to find, but
certainly the tamer US/UK edit is easy enough to come by. If ever there
was proof of Cushing’s utter commitment and professionalism in even the
most unsavory of projects, Corruption most certainly fulfills that
function.
Labels:
carnage,
corruption,
exploitation,
kate omara,
laser ray,
peter cushing,
robert hartford davis,
sue lloyd
Saturday, 27 April 2013
GRAND MOFF TARKIN : DESTROYING PLANETS IN COMFORT : PETER CUSHING CARPET SLIPPERS
Another shot of those famous carpet slippers that Peter wore in STAR WARS as Grand Moff Tarkin. 'Moff Tarkin destroying planets in comfort'
These slippers and many other items from Peter Cushing's life and career can be seen at the 'Peter Cushing At 100' exhibition at Whitstabe Museum and Gallery.
Labels:
carpet slippers,
gran moff tarkin,
peter cushing at 100,
star wars,
whitstable museum exhibition.
AS DAPPER AS EVER: PETER CUSHING TAKES A STROLL ON THE SEA FRONT AT HIS HOME IN WHITSTABLE
Labels:
candid.,
dr who,
peter cushing,
seasalter,
star wars,
tarkin,
tudor tea rooms,
whitstable
A QUIET MOMENT ON THE BEACH: PETER AND HELEN CUSHING CANDID PHOTOGRAPH
A rare candid photograph of Peter and his wife
Helen. This photograph was taken just outside Peter and Helen's front
garden gate...the shingle beach, starts just a few feet away.
Labels:
centenary,
dr who,
frankenstein,
hammer films,
helen cushing,
peter cushing 100,
sesalter,
van helsing,
whitstable
Wednesday, 24 April 2013
CHRISTOPHER LEE 'THIS IS YOUR LIFE' APRIL 1974: PETER CUSHING PHOTO
Peter appears on UK 'THIS IS YOUR LIFE:
Christopher Lee' transmitted on 3rd April 1974. Guests also included
Vincent Price, Oliver Reed, Veronica Carlson and Trevor Howard.
Labels:
christopher lee,
oliver reed,
peter cushing,
thames television,
this is your life,
veronica carlson,
vincent price.
HAMMER FILMS: THE MUMMY : TROY HOWARTH FEATURE AND STILLS GALLERY HERE THIS WEEK
'The Mummy is a 1959 British horror film, directed by Terence Fisher and starring Christopher Lee and Peter Cushing. It was released on 25 September 1959. It was written by Jimmy Sangster and produced by Michael Carreras and Anthony Nelson Keys for Hammer Film Productions.
Though the title suggests Universal Pictures' 1932 film of the same name, the film actually derives its plot and characters entirely from two later Universal films, The Mummy's Hand and The Mummy's Tomb, with the climax borrowed directly from The Mummy's Ghost. The character name "Joseph Whemple" is the only connection with the 1932 version.'
From Wikipedia,
Labels:
christopher lee,
hammer films,
jimmy sangster,
lobby gallery,
peter cushing,
peter cushing appreciation society.,
terence fisher
Tuesday, 23 April 2013
PETER CUSHING FACEBOOK FAN PAGE HITS MAGIC TEN THOUSAND IN LEAD UP TO CENTENARY CELEBRATION
Labels:
basil gogos,
centenary,
dr who,
facebook fan page,
hammer films,
pcasuk,
peter cushing at 100,
peter cushing facebook fan page,
star wars
MOVIE TIE IN PAPERBACKS: HAMMER FILMS : DRACULA AND THE HOUND OF THE BASKERVILLES
Rare Dell (New York) "The Hound of the Baskervilles" by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle movie tie-in paperback; August, 1959.
Vintage: The Perma Book (New York) "Dracula" by Bram Stoker movie tie-in paperback; May, 1958.
Labels:
christopher lee.,
dell publishers,
dracula,
film tie in,
hammer films,
hound of the baskervilles,
memorabilia,
paper back,
peter cushing,
sherlock holmes
Monday, 22 April 2013
NOSHER POWELL : 1928 - 2013
Sad news to hear of the passing of veteran
stuntman Fred 'Nosher' Powell. Nosher had a very full life and a quite
an amazing list of movie credits.Take a look at his IMDB page and
website. Some of his his Peter Cushing connections are stuntwork on
'Star Wars' (1977) Hammer films 58' Dracula, Sword of Sherwood Forest
(1960) and was Peter's stuntman on 'Violent Playground '(1958) Nosher's website
Labels:
hammer films,
nosher powell,
star wars,
stunt man,
sword of sherwood forest.,
violent playground
Saturday, 20 April 2013
PETER CUSHING AT 100: THE GENTLEMAN OF HORROR MAKES FORTEAN TIMES COVER
Sneak preview: The May issue of Fortean Times magazine will be celebrating 100 years of Peter Cushing!
Labels:
dr who,
fortean times,
frankenstein,
hammer films.,
peter cushing cover,
sherlock holmes,
weird whitstable,
whitstable
HOW SHERLOCK GOT THE BURNS IN HIS DRESSSING GOWN: THE HOUND OF THE BASKERVILLES
Peter Cushing on his methodical preparation in
playing Sherlock Holmes. With the majority of roles that Peter played
throughout his long career, this attention to detail, was not
unusual....
Labels:
actors prep,
dartmoor,
hammer films,
hell hound,
peter cushing,
sidney padgett.,
sir arthur conan doyle,
the strand
BIG BROTHER IS WATCHING YOU : NOW YOU CAN WATCH BIG BROTHER : PETER CUSHING IN BBC GEORGE ORWELL'S 1984
WATCH PETER CUSHING AS WINSTON SMITH IN '1984'
BBC Sunday-Night Theatre: Season 5, Episode 50
Vintage Television Drama with André Morell, Yvonne Mitchell and Donald Pleasence.
BBC Sunday-Night Theatre: Season 5, Episode 50
Vintage Television Drama with André Morell, Yvonne Mitchell and Donald Pleasence.
CLICK HERE:WATCH 1984
Labels:
1984,
andre morell,
bbc,
big brother,
classic television.,
donald pleasence,
george orwell,
peter cushing,
yvonne mitchell
Friday, 19 April 2013
DRACULA IS DEAD, BUT HIS DISCIPLES LIVE ON: REVIEW AND GALLERY 'THE BRIDES OF DRACULA' (1960)
If Curse of Frankenstein was the film that put
Hammer Films on the map, then Dracula (US title: Horror of Dracula) was
the film that made them a sensation - it confirmed that Curse was no
fluke, and it helped to make Peter Cushing and Christopher Lee into the
British film industry’s first full fledged horror stars since the
barnstorming days of Tod Slaughter. It was a new found reputation both
men accepted with mixed blessings; for Cushing, the sudden financial
prosperity at least enabled him to properly look after his ailing wife,
while for Lee he hoped to use it as a stepping stone to bigger and
better things. Hammer had wasted no time in rushing a sequel to Curse
into production, but when it came to their biggest cash cow, the
transition wasn’t so smooth. The end result would prove to have been
worth the wait, however.
The Brides of Dracula remains one of Hammer’s most
celebrated yet oft debated titles. There’s no denying that the
screenplay is a problematic patchwork of ideas, and this can be
explained quite logically by the fact that it underwent so many rewrites
and reincarnations before going before the cameras. One of the big
points of contention is its status as a proper Dracula film, given that
neither the count nor Christopher Lee are anywhere to be glimpsed.
Quite why this is, nobody can say for sure. Christopher Lee has
insisted that he was never asked to appear. Others, including the
film’s first screenwriter, Jimmy Sangster, maintain that he was never
intended to be a part of the picture. Afterall, at that time, Peter
Cushing was the company’s established star property - he had come to
Hammer after years of distinguished work on stage, screen and TV, and in
the UK at least, he was a household name. Dracula had helped to make
Lee
visible, but he was still a little ways from becoming a true box office
commodity. It is also no secret that relations between Hammer and Lee
were a bit frayed at times, and if he had allowed the success of Dracula
to go to his head, it’s conceivable that he was making demands that
were simply unrealistic at that stage in the game. On the other hand,
the actor did continue to appear in numerous films for them - invariably
in a supporting capacity, excepting his turn as The Mummy (1959) - so
the issue remains a little muddy at best. Speculation to one side, The
Brides of Dracula was marketed as a Dracula film - but in fact, it
focuses on the exploits of one of his disciples, Baron Meinster (David
Peel).
A recap for those who haven’t seen it yet (and if
not, what’s your excuse?): a young school teacher, Marianne (Yvonne
Monlaur) is summoned to teach French at a girl’s school in Transylvania.
Near the end of her journey, she is abandoned at a local inn by her
frightened coach driver (the marvelous Michael Ripper). The mysterious
Baroness Meinster (Martita Hunt) happens upon the scene and offers to
put the young girl up for the night at her ancestral castle. While
there, Marianna makes the acquaintance of the dashing and seemingly
victimized Baron Meinster, who talks the naïve young woman into setting
him free from the chains which bind him to his room. Once freed, the
Baron shows his true colors as a vampire, and he sets his sights - and
fangs - upon his mother. Marianne flees in horror, only to be rescued
by Dr. Van Helsing (Peter Cushing), who has come to the area to
investigate the Baron and his nefarious activities. The
intrepid vampire hunter then sets out to destroy the vampire, though
inevitably more victims are claimed before he is able to do so…
So much has been written for and against this film, and much of it comes down to how forgiving one is of its many faults. As noted above, Sangster’s original script was heavily reworked, first by Peter Bryan and then by play write Edward Percy, who was apparently engaged at Cushing’s behest to do a final polish. There are elements of the story that simply don’t make any sense: the mysterious man in black (played by the cadaverous Michael Mulcaster, who previously appeared with Cushing in both Curse and Revenge of Frankenstein, 1958) who is glimpsed at the beginning, for example, simply disappears early on without any clarification; Marianne is stranded at the inn without her luggage, yet the luggage is waiting for her at Castle Meinster - it’s no a great stretch to imagine that the mysterious man in black bribed to coachman to deliver her possessions to the castle, but why is it that Marianne doesn’t even bat an eye at this?; the Baron is able to transform into a bat, yet he is kept prisoner by a chain - why not simply change form and escape?; and so forth. Impassioned fans have argued in favor of a dreamlike tone where logic plays no significant function, but this never really was the way of Hammer horror. Compared to the Italian horror films of the same period, many of which truly did eschew logic in favor of a kind of fever dream state, Hammer’s writers and directors were more concerned with keeping their fantasy rooted in as much logic and realism as possible.
It could be that some of these deficits were originally explained, but in the film as it stands, they seem vague and sloppy. Even if one can accept that the chain possesses some magical property, for example, it’s not consistent with Hammer’s M.O. to simply leave such a crucial plot point unexplained. What’s most likely is that, in the rush to get the script finished and filmed, some connecting pieces of material were pushed aside - and then forgotten. For some viewers, these inconsistencies prove ruinous; I would say that allowing these gaffes to ruin the film is a bit much, however.
Another, more damaging issue comes out of the
script’s decision to reinstate a piece of vampire folklore which
Sangster had wisely removed from the script of Dracula. Whereas Van
Helsing stressed in the first film that the notion that Dracula can
shape shift is a “common fallacy,” here Meinster is able to turn into a
bad - and a particularly sad looking bat it is, too. Special effects of
this variety were never really in the Hammer budget, and this is
precisely why Sangster had removed it from the first film; in allowing
it to be present in this film, however, he allows for some very
laughable moments, indeed. Another rather irksome deficit is to be
found in the makeup for the vampire brides played by Andree Meeley and
the truly spectacular Marie Devereux. Quite apart from Fisher’s
decision to have them constantly baring their fangs, they are rendered
even more ludicrous by pasty pancake makeup which is confined solely to
their
faces - it stops at the face, and their necks, emphasized by a plunging
neckline in the costume (which was surely there more for Devereux’s
benefit), carry on in a perfectly normal skin tone. One could argue
that this is a bit of nitpicking, and perhaps it is, but it does serve
to draw attention to itself and undercuts some of the menace in their
appearance.
Having spent so long talking about what’s wrong
with it, let’s turn our attention to what’s good about it - and believe
me, there’s plenty of it. For one thing, the film joins The Mummy as
the best looking film Hammer ever produced. Jack Asher’s lighting is
simply superb, topping his already lustrous work on Dracula. The use of
exaggerated color gels gives the film an appropriately unearthly feel.
Bernard Robinson’s sets are truly impressive, offering further evidence
of his ability to create a “big” feel with very little money. Malcolm
Williamson’s organ-drenched score may be a little more old fashioned
than James Bernard’s thumping, percussive music, but it suit’s the tone
and texture to a proverbial T. Terence Fisher, too, is at the top of
his game. While the script sometimes gets away from him, he does a
tremendous job building mood, atmosphere and suspense. There are some
wonderfully effective compositions
throughout, and if he fails to top the impact of the finale of his
first Dracula film (which frankly seems impossible), he still delivers a
rousing end for Baron Meinster.
As to the cast, it, too, is one of the strongest
Hammer ever assembled. While Yvonne Furneaux is rather wooden as
Marianne - a factor not much helped by her uncertainty in English;
Hammer would really let her down in casting her as a Chinese in The
Terror of the Tongs later that same year! - she is supported by a
tremendous gallery of character actors. Peter Cushing is every bit as
effective here as he was in Dracula. He dominates the proceedings with
quiet grace and authority. He and Fisher viewed Van Helsing as
something of a fanatic, but they were careful not to take this concept
to extremes, as Francis Ford Coppola and Anthony Hopkins would later do
in the uneven Bram Stoker’s Dracula (1992). Van Helsing remains a
steely force for good, and his ability to rise to the challenge is most
vividly evident in the scene where he, having been overpowered and
bitten by Meinster, uses a red hot poker to cauterize the wound.
Cushing plays such physical scenes absolutely brilliantly, helping to sell the effect in a powerful manner. Cushing also displays some sly humor in his scenes with the doddering village doctor played by the wonderful Miles Malleson (who previously played a blackly funny morgue attendant in Dracula). Superb as he is, Cushing is nearly outdone by the double act of Martita Hunt, as Baroness Meinster, and Freda Jackson, as the Baroness’ cackling housekeeper. Both actresses bring a positively Shakespearian dimension to their scenes, and if they had the slightest contempt for appearing in a “Hammer horror” after having done so many distinguished projects on stage and screen (Hunt, for example, is immortalized as Miss Havisham in David Lean’s definitive version of Great Expectations), it certainly doesn’t show.
Cushing plays such physical scenes absolutely brilliantly, helping to sell the effect in a powerful manner. Cushing also displays some sly humor in his scenes with the doddering village doctor played by the wonderful Miles Malleson (who previously played a blackly funny morgue attendant in Dracula). Superb as he is, Cushing is nearly outdone by the double act of Martita Hunt, as Baroness Meinster, and Freda Jackson, as the Baroness’ cackling housekeeper. Both actresses bring a positively Shakespearian dimension to their scenes, and if they had the slightest contempt for appearing in a “Hammer horror” after having done so many distinguished projects on stage and screen (Hunt, for example, is immortalized as Miss Havisham in David Lean’s definitive version of Great Expectations), it certainly doesn’t show.
David Peel was a
surprising choice to sub for Christopher Lee, as it were. Though he was
40 at the time of filming, he had a youthful visage, and
Hammer’s makeup ace, Roy Ashton, elected to emphasize this with a
swishy blonde wig. Peel comes off as a rather pretty and fey vampire,
and this adds some interesting subtext to the film. His appearance to
one side, Peel is forceful and commanding, whether it be verbally
belittling Marianne’s pompous employer (Henry Oscar) or engaging in hand
to hand combat with Van Helsing. Peel’s film career never caught fire,
however, and after making a “blink and you’ll miss it” appearance as an
airline pilot in the Franco-British horror item The Hands of Orlac
(1960 - which featured Christopher Lee in one of his most striking
villainous turns), he basically retired from the screen to pursue a
career in the antiques trade. Even if he had never made another film,
Brides would be sufficient to immortalize Peel among the Hammer fan base
- he may lack the sheer force and charisma of Lee, but bear in mind
that was a tough act to follow… and his sexually
ambiguous presence surely informed Roman Polanski’s creation of the
character of Herbert (played by the equally “pretty” Iain Quarrier) in
his loving lampoon of/tribute to Hammer horror, The Fearless Vampire
Killers (1967). The supporting cast includes some nice roles for the
aforementioned Ripper, Malleson and Oscar, as well.
Ultimately, Brides of Dracula manages to overcome
its imperfections and is one of the rare sequels - if one chooses to
view it as such - that manages to equal, and possibly even surpass, its
original. Hammer would continue to mine the vampire myth, creating some
wonderful - and not so wonderful - variations on the theme, but Brides
of Dracula is arguably their most successful “stab” at the subgenre; as
an exercise in pure cinematic style, it’s hard to beat.
Labels:
baron meinster,
brides,
dracula hammer films,
female vampires,
hammer films blu ray.,
peter cushing,
troy howarth,
yvonne monlaur
Thursday, 18 April 2013
PETER CUSHING AND HIS LOVE OF LADY TOBACCO.
PETER CUSHING AND HIS LOVE FOR LADY TOBACCO:
It's no secret that Peter Cushing was quite a smoker. Both on and off
screen, he could give those 'coffin nails' quite a hammering! Of course,
Peter came from a time when the awareness of smoking and health related illnesses was not what it is today.
Along with
bits and bobs, props and business, he managed to work puffing into an
art form. He played a whole string of characters, who too, were no
strangers to a pack of twenty unfiltered tipped. Though pipe smoking was
never his thing, as Sherlock Holmes on both film and television,
Cushing gagged with the strength of the tobacco, always keeping a glass
of milk just out of shot to keep the wrenching at bay. In some ways this
is strange because Peter's personal preference for many years was John
Player unfiltered cigarettes, in packs of twenty. Real blow your socks
off puffers!
Nicolas Gadd,
in his book, 'Spending Time With Frankenstein', tells of various visits
to Peter's home in Whitstable, where after many months of having given
up smoking, there were still tens of unopened cartons of twenty packets
in drawers and cupboards.
Smoking was
something that Peter enjoyed. During interviews, many journalistswould
comment on the use of his 'trademark' white glove... Peter would tell
them, 'I use these gloves, so that I do not stain my fingers. You can't
play period roles with stained fingers!' From 'End of the Affair', Night
of the Big Heat, Nothing But The Night', 'Dracula AD 1972' right up to
'The Silent Scream in 1980, Peter and his unfiltered friends often
shared the screen...
Labels:
christopher lee,
cigarettes,
nicotine,
oliver tobias,
peter cushing,
pipe smoking,
puffers,
white cotton glove.
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