Ghosts

All posts in the Ghosts category

Rhonda in the Beyond

Published July 22, 2024 by biggayhorrorfan

My boyfriend in Chicago in the early ’90s was best friends & occasional roommates with a talented actress named Rhonda Reynolds. Rhonda and I weren’t incredibly close…horror films made her physically squirm in discomfort…but she once acted in a short play that I wrote, and we had many of the same musical likes. In fact, I still have the L7 shirt that she got for me when she saw them open for The Beastie Boys in Chicago. Her future husband Robb was also a talented bassist. Robb and I spent one Saturday evening, in the Wicker Park apartment that I shared with Kelly – the afore mentioned boyfriend, pouring through my CDs and cassette tapes, listening to the latest Fugazi and other alt-rock/punk gems.

In 1994, Wreck, Robb’s band, released an LP on C/Z Records and they went on tour. I went to the kick off show with Kelly and Rhonda – procuring another band shirt that I had for decades. Rhonda, herself, soon took off for Los Angeles, landing a prominent gig opposite Lloyd Bridges in a sexy TV film about a small-town scandal called Secret Sins of the Father.

Going the way of many first relationships, Kelly and I broke up that fall. We did keep in touch for a handful of years after that, though, and I learned through him that Rhonda was landing other nighttime gigs, here and there. But my ears really perked up when I found out that she secured a job playing a ghost on an episode of Beyond Belief: Fact or Fiction, a syndicated anthology series that was many a young genre fan’s entree into the macabre. I never could figure out when her episode was airing, though, and as the years passed, it became just one of the many interesting factoids that decorated the background of my existence.

Of course, as I age, nostalgia is ever nipping at my heels and, in a flush of newfound determination, I recently found her segment online. As you can see from the photos alone, she played her character, an apparition warning a family against impending dangers, with an ethereal potence. Of course, my viewing was amplified by my experience with her in my theater salad days and my sincere gratitude for having lived a life surrounded by so many uniquely creative individuals. But you can judge for yourself at….


A Spirited Update:

All these years later, Robb and Rhonda are still continuing their artistic journeys  — this time through the culinary arts. Their restaurant Masa, a celebration of Chicago style Deep Dish pizza, in East-Central Los Angeles is a smashing success with both locals and the city’s many visitors. 

https://www.masaofechopark.com/


Who Ya Gonna Call – 2

Published November 10, 2023 by biggayhorrorfan

Days later, after I stop by Lou’s to chug a root beer & grab some licorice at the mid-point of a Saturday afternoon jog, he tells me that he told off his sister Luann earlier in the week. Both Lou’s sisters are nuns and the three of them seemingly share some weird sort of ecumenical magic. “I don’t think I told you she was here last Friday.”

“No.”

“Well, I don’t know what the hell she left behind, but I finally had to call her on Sunday and tell her to cut it out! I mean, my phone’s whizzed and popped for awhile after one of her visits. But that? The bumping and scratching & weirdness?”

“I know.”

” Especially after that disappointing Eastwood flick!! Not a bare chest in sight! So, I couldn’t take it! I called her and screamed BITCH! She just laughed and hung up and… minutes later, it finally stopped.”

Catching his breath, the switch, as it so often does, clicks in him and he now eyes me, flirtatiously. “& to think, I thought you were making things up,” he fake-pouts, his voice oozing with Baby Jane cuteness, “just to get a little comfort from me!” He reaches out his arms, like a clumsy Toys R Us baby doll in need of perpetual attention, and I, reluctantly, let him hug me, damply, for a bit and then, after faking a coughing fit, I move to the kitchen table and sit.

Indeed, when Lou and Sherry had first returned that evening they had, dubiously, listened to my ghostly tale. The boys, who I had (somewhat) properly sent to bed, began calling for her, almost immediately. 

“They were really scared” She grunts, noncommittedly. “They might try to come down if you don’t go up!” 

Indeed, their whimpers of “Mom, mom,” sonically, seem to move ever closer as speak. “You stay right there! & In that bedroom – not the hallway!” she commandingly screams up to them as she shakes her head at me and, disapproving, climbs the stairs to the guest room where they are nervously pacing.    

Earlier, we three, unsurprisingly, had found nothing upon exploring. Post incident, both Lou’s bedroom and the room that the boys were set up in were minus any deities – menacingly corporal or otherwise. Despite that seemingly calming discovery, their nervous energy squiggled about in uncontrollable bursts throughout the rest of the evening. I had hoped the continued lack of spiritual congress would eventually put them at ease. But as their prescribed bedtime rolled ever nearer, they grew increasingly nervous, begging to stay downstairs with me. 

Naturally, I was desperate to avoid any kind of maternal disapproval. Sherry did not strike me as someone to mess with. So, I ordered them back up the stairs when their bedtime arrived. My caveat being that I would go with them as a form of mild, foolhardy protection. So, I sat by them for an hour, chatting as the lay, still too mortified to sleep. At the sound of shooting gravel in the rectory parking lot, they shot up, immediately, whipping off lightly draped blankets. But before their feet could hit the ground, I corralled them into remaining still for the moment. “Do you want to be the one who explains to your mom why you’re not in bed at 11 pm?” They both shake their heads. “Smart. Stay & I’ll send her up right away.” 

Now Sherry emerges from the upper level, not a child peeping behind her, just as my parents, merrily, arrive. The five of them settle in the kitchen while I take coverage in the living room. My mom and dad seem less than convinced of our paranormal adventure, as well, and I sink into the recliner in the furthest corner, wanting to be at a far remove from the disbelieving adults. Time passes and I am just beginning to contemplate dozing off. My mom and dad tend to settle in for these gatherings and hours will pass by before the thought of leaving begins to even tickle at their consciousnesses. Keeping with the established flow of the evening, though, there have been consistent whispers on the floorboards and minor moans of wind against the windowpanes since this particular stop-by has begun. But the mature element has written them off as mere weather induced tragedies. Thus, I have not uttered a peep of awareness. But suddenly it seems as if these minor aural presences amplify – the creaks feel deeper, as if they are rocking the heart of this doggedly noble structure from within it’s oaky marrow. The conversation in the other room stops for a moment. I rouse from my slumber-aimed stupor…and listen to them listen. The chatter eventually begins again…but throughout the rest of this prolonged encounter, there are significant pauses in the flow of their words. The noises eventually, as if mocking them, begin to take on the shape of speech. They have the feeling of mini-monologues about them, as if some former inhabitants and their long ago guests, are trying to communicate their past stories through the shifting bumps and bark-stained titters. What secrets are they sharing? Lou’s voice rises even higher now, a quivering tone of strained combativeness entering his exchanges. He is trying to outgun the unknown’s invisible, sensory alarm. 

Finally, Sherry rises, mentioning a need for sleep if she wants to be at early mass in the morning. The group ascends into the room, drawing nearer, almost as one, embarrassed smiles creasing their features. They believe us now, I can tell. And I, who will spend decades doubting myself even in the most affirmative circumstances, am strangely confident here. I never second guessed for a moment what we’d seen. It felt as real, as part of this atmosphere as all the unwanted gestures, the lingering caresses of a man possessed by some other affliction than charitable duty and public service. 


Note: (My first horror movie buddy was a priest named Lou Hendricks. Several years ago, Hendricks was named by the Western New York Catholic diocese as one of their most unrepentant predators in the ’70s and ’80s. Thus, I grew up watching monster movies with a monster – a man who was like an uncle to our family. Over the next few months, I will be sharing some of my stories from that period of time.)


Part One of this Remembrance is located at:

Thanks for reading &…Until the next time, SWEET love and pink GRUE, Big Gay Horror Fan!

http://www.facebook.com/biggayhorrorfan

Who Ya’ Gonna Call?

Published September 6, 2023 by biggayhorrorfan

Sherry is coming back for a visit. There is another Clint Eastwood in the movie theaters and, as is their ritual, she and Lou have planned a weekend around attending it. I do suspect, though, that they are both upset that this is a western – Pale Rider – and not another sleazy Dirty Harry shoot ‘em up adventure. Lou’s enthusiasm for the visit is definitely not a potent as it has been for previous cinematic outings. He sighs a bit when he reminds me of the fact that, as usual, I will be required that Saturday. Still, despite any disappointment, like clockwork, she is here before I know it, with Stevie and Sammy, properly, in tow. These boys, her sons, have been my charges on nights like these for a few years now, and my best way to describe their behavior, over my past few babysitting stints, is a rambunctious if timid obsessiveness.

Two years apart, age wise, they clung to each other, steadfastly, as they learned a series of ghost stories at Camp Turner, the Catholic boys summer program, last July. These tales have seemingly filled their minds every waking moment since then. Their tandem brown heads skittle back and forth, bursting with the gory details of campfires past, all ripe for re-expression. But, as eager as they have been to share these learned audible horrors, each previous visit has brought a compulsive reason not to indulge in a ghastly re-telling – a good movie on TV, tiredness…even, on occasion, admitted fear. Indeed, they’ve definitely been much too frightened the last few times I have sat with them to get more than a couple sentences out. But, as it is June now…the beckoning summer temperatures seem to calm their fears.

Though, in some cruel, cosmic twist of fate, the weather contrarily belies such expected, warm forecasts. This whole weekend has had the air of chill about it. Wind whips through the dried husks of neighboring corn fields. The tarred roads shine from the intermittent rains and lonely branches skitter against the windows of all this lonely lane’s houses. It’s like Halloween has arrived six months ahead of time and I have to laugh that my already nervous puppies, through some weird emotional miscalculation. have decided they are finally ready to share their long-held grotesqueries, picking the perfect night for the macabre.

The house itself seems to swirl with squiggly energy as we go from room to room, leaving most of the lights we find there on. At each outlet, they debate for long moments about whether to turn all illumination off or if it is better, rather, to leave things slightly dimmed. Often, the switches remain untouched. We leave the dazzling orbs as we find them, at the full height of their dazzling luminescence. We finally settle into chairs in the living room, still ablaze with artificial sunshine. They are so jittery that they will not let me adjust the mood one bit more. Born into drama, I suggest turning off a lamp or two. I’d love to create a theatrical shadow for our creative outpourings. Their nerves, already shot, will not even allow me that simple cinematic virtue. I give up, deciding that the damp and dark evening, visible, if barely, through the windows in the kitchen, far off to the left, will have to do. Even before we begin, though, they are stalling, asking me about my school friend, Mary Ellen. They are consumed with gathering details about her as she is the girl that I took to the Homecoming dance. Somehow, in their minds, this has become a grand romance. In reality, Mary Ellen and I are probably much more like chums, sharing an easy relatability – a true joy in each other’s presence. I find this another one of their amusing quirks. The thought of having a girlfriend makes their faces scrunch in a sour squint pucker, but they are endlessly curious about relationships with the opposite sex and are always full of questions about the girls I claim, with a touch of elaborate fiction, to like. Finally, they allow me to begin a story – my earlier suggestion that they begin with one of the favorites having been shrugged aside with quick and firm protestations.

I start my take on The Furry Collar, the much-told urban legend about an escaped maniac & the resourceful roommate-narrator who goes to check on a late-night noise and who, ultimately, discovers that her housemate is missing her head after touching the ruff of her housecoat. I choose this one because its content is the closest to the slasher movies that I love and I can almost imagine myself in the place of the surprised friend, my final girl fantasies brought to some sort of verbally literary life. Unfortunately for all, such imaginings are quickly interrupted.

In the living room of the rectory, there is a pair of mini doors. They are firmly shut, closing off the way to the second floor where the bedrooms are located. Their tiny knobs are secured, tightly, with a shiny latch. When I am barely a minute or two into my story, a chill wind somehow gusts around our feet and the lights in the room suddenly let out a quick spasm. As if in response to these cosmic intrusions, the latch holding the two doors tautly, moves slowly, from its resting place. It dangles upwards, almost whimsically, in the air and then falls to the side. The doors then open at a deliberate pace, all by themselves, pausing to give us a good look at the stairwell contained beyond them. They then, determinedly, slam close once again. The boys have become one with the scratchy fabric of the couch that they are occupying. They chortle out gasps as the latch lifts itself, precisely and determinedly, into the air again and then re-attaches itself over the knobs. As if purposely building suspense, it waits a beat…then, once more, releases itself up into the atmosphere, eventually falling, limp, to the side of the door. The doors swing forth once more, again giving us another look at the flight of steps beckoning upwards. They then close once again. Almost immediately, the latch, as if held by ghostly hands, soars back into the air, hovers a predetermined second and then refastens itself one last time. The lights give off a hearty burp and then all is deafeningly still.

Moments, thick with wavy strands of shock, pass us by. My charges are pure white, their chins jut downward, swinging parallel to their tiny chests. I hop up, shouting loudly, “Who’s there?!?” – knowing, immediately, how nonsensical that question really was. No one is there. At least not physically. Still, I feel like I should check the upper level. If an intruder was really there…if anything was done to hurt these boys, I knew my guilty conscience would never let me sleep again. “Stay here,” I command them, as I jump up and head towards the doors, still vibrating with some sort of ghostly presence. “No!” they wail, clutching for my arms as I make my way forward. “Fine, fine,” I mutter, fright and curiosity mingling equally, “we’ll go up together.”

to be continued

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Note: (My first horror movie buddy was a priest named Lou Hendricks. Several years ago, Hendricks was named by the Western New York Catholic diocese as one of their most unrepentant predators in the ’70s and ’80s. Thus, I grew up watching monster movies with a monster – a man who was like an uncle to our family. Over the next few months, I will be sharing some of my stories from that period of time.)


Ghosts: Watching Over

Published October 17, 2021 by biggayhorrorfan

My dad would have been 75 last week. In some sort of coincidental converging of significant dates, we are also inching towards the 20th anniversary of his passing. His death in 2002 was totally unexpected….there was no early term cancer or other major health issues – just one final popping of his heart, one warm, late summer afternoon . That endlessly surprising week, my sister and brother & I camped out in the living room of his house in the far stretches of Western New York, pouring through boxes of photos & family mementos, writing his obituary. I would wake in the morning on the floor of that well worn area, my body curved towards my sister’s on the couch, almost like a human cocoon. It was like I was trying to protect her, unconsciously in the night – to cradle her from any further, completely unexpected blows. My niece Gabby arrived later in the week, descending breathlessly upon the funeral home with her father & younger brother. There was no one my father and I adored more in the world…each of us fighting to spend as much time with her as possible on those all too rare get togethers between our far flung family members. That evening, I walked with her into the waiting area where we, quietly, looked at all the memorabilia pertaining to my dad’s life – his existence laid out on cork boards and carefully scattered photo albums. There, upon seeing a photo of herself and my father, my dear, dear niece’s chin began to quietly tremble. As her adorably plump cheeks quivered, one single, fat, perfectly formed tear eventually leaked from her left eye. “Grandpa is dead,” she gasped, “and – I – will – never – ever – see – him – again!”

And I, being the kind of uncle who sang her Husker Du songs as lullabies when she was a toddler and tried to engage her in feminist chants during my infrequent stints as a babysitter , said, “Oh no, you’ll see him again, honey! He’ll appear to you when you need him the most. Your great grandmother, dad’s mom, has shown up to talk to me…even on the day of her funeral. So, maybe you’ll even see grandpa this week. But even if you don’t, he’ll be watching over you, always.” Perhaps, thankfully, it didn’t register in her 5 year old mind that her agnostic, punk rock loving uncle was talking to her about ghosts as the dawn leaked away from the sky that twilight gloaming – but I was….& perhaps rightfully so. My niece has grown up to be strong and sure and independent- the product not only of her own fierce will & a strong familial hand… but perhaps also due to the presence of a man who loved her very much and who has been watching over her from some misty, far off plane.

Until the next time, SWEET love and pink GRUE, Big Gay Horror Fan!

http://www.facebook.com/biggayhorrorfan