March 26, 2006

Drac Facts

Dracula (1931), Universal Studios.


  • Bela Lugosi only appeared in one other film as Dracula, in 1948's Abbot and Costello Meet Frankenstein.

  • Although Lugosi played Dracula during a successful Broadway run and subsequent tours, he wasn't the first choice for the film role. He wasn't the second, third or fourth choice either.

  • There were three versions of Dracula made at the same time. During the day the English version was filmed. At night a Spanish language version was filmed on the same sets with an entirely different cast and crew. And lastly, because at the time many theaters weren't wired for sound, a silent version of the film was simultaneously edited with dialogue boards.

  • Not once during the film does Dracula display fangs.

  • The word Nosferatu is widely considered to be Hungarian for "vampire" because Bram Stoker used the word after reading about it in a book on folklore and the occult. Problem is, no such word exists.

  • The studio insisted that Dracula only attack women in the movie because they were worried about homoerotic overtones. Dracula's first movie victim is male, but you don't see it.

  • The actor who plays Dr. Seward (Herbert Bunston), had met Bram Stoker earlier in his career when he appeared in a stage production at the theater that Stoker managed.

  • Actor Dwight Frye (Renfield) and Bela Lugosi had worked together before, on Broadway in a comedy production.

Posted by: Ted at 07:22 PM | category: Cult Flicks
Comments (1) | Add Comment
Post contains 236 words, total size 2 kb.

1 Yes we have Nosferatu, we have Nosferatu today!

Posted by: triticale at April 02, 2006 09:59 PM (R/vw+)

Hide Comments | Add Comment

Comments are disabled. Post is locked.
23kb generated in CPU 0.0155, elapsed 0.1175 seconds.
70 queries taking 0.1077 seconds, 188 records returned.
Powered by Minx 1.1.6c-pink.