David Lynch

All posts tagged David Lynch

Va-Va-Villainess: Ann Miller

Published April 25, 2026 by biggayhorrorfan

Always outshining her contemporaries, Ann Miller’s latter day gothic film career entry was not a slasher or a horror comedy. She actually played two characters, both named Coco, in David Lynch’s much lauded, eternally creepy Hollywood tale Mulholland Drive. This dual take allowed Miller to play with both sassy kindness and a more cryptic coolness, especially in her final scenes.

That perfected chill often played well during her major player days at MGM. Often cast as the other woman, Miller frequently tried to make life rough for her female co-stars. Whether it was Judy Garland, Jane Powell or Anne Francis, Ann continually used her feminine wiles to try to steal their men.

Of course, while all the roles were definitely of a certain type, Nadine Hall in Easter Parade was probably her penultimate creation. After dumping Fred Astaire’s smitten Don Hewes to achieve greener career pastures on her own, Hall about faces, mischievously trying to win him back after he finds success (and potential love) with Garland’s sweet Hannah.

Always playing this underhandedness with a bright smile, Miller also performs her iconic Shaking the Blues Away number here.

Impressively, she nailed this arduous routine while still recovering from a broken back, her physical agony making the victory of her performance here all the more significant. Importantly, this feat still echoes today, proving that, with grit and determination, absolutely anything can be obtained. 

Book Review: Sharon Farrell, Siân Phillips

Published December 4, 2016 by biggayhorrorfan

sharon-book

Written in completely different styles and featuring authors who arrive at their writing points from much different backgrounds, the memoirs of Siân Phillips (The Doctor and the Devils, Hammer House of Horror) and Sharon Farrell (It’s Alive, Night of the Comet) still manage to broker in the much of the same emotional currency and definitely illustrate how it is still the men in society who continue to steadily manipulate the fates of those around them.

sian-public-placesA prodigiously talented theater actress, Wales bred Phillips details her courtship and years of marriage to Peter O’Toole in Public Places, which was first published in the United States in 2003. While Phillips engaged, successfully, in a performing arts career, O’Toole, obviously, was the more famous of the two, reaching a worldwide platform with Lawrence of Arabia. He also definitely, as evenly and poetically described by Phillips, controlled the many specifics of their lives together. Fairly, Phillips often revels in the adventures she experienced while visiting O’Toole on his various film sets and, lovingly, describes a remote home on a mountain that she, painstakingly, created for him and their two daughters.

Phillips also shares stories of such legends as Katharine Hepburn, who frightened her children by vehemently suggesting that they should become something useful like plumbers, and My Fair Lady’s pompous Rex Harrison. Harrison, known for his misogynistic temper, is painted truthfully here and Phillips shows grace and courage when explaining how she mastered his moods while performing on stage with him. sian-hammer

In deep contrast to Phillips’ artfully measured tones, Farrell’s “Hollywood Princess” From Sioux City, Iowa is a messy and rambunctious offering, often filled with grammatical errors and with the names of famous participants misspelled. Yet, with pluck and little sense of bitterness, the actress traces her career which was often sidetracked by affairs, a miscarriage, rape, medical issues and mismanagement.

As with Phillips’ offering, Farrell’s honestly reveals how the males in power, here in LA (and beyond), frequently, shaped her destiny – from the unstableness of Hawaii Five-O’s Jack Lord to the peculiarities of Bill Bell, the creator of the popular soap The Young and the Restless. Farrell frequently found herself jobless due to their whims and when, onset, was subjected to unprofessionally bizarre behavior – prime examples being Dennis Hooper peeing on her while filming Out of Blue and a physical attack from a fellow performer on the location of The Reivers.

Still, Farrell, who suffers from bi-polar disorder, is often hardest on herself here and she acknowledges her own responsibility in many of the choices that she made. She is full of passion and heart and, despite the lack of editing, often sets up a nice sense of atmosphere and sense of time and place even when her viewpoint rambles some.

its-alive-sharon-farrellUnfortunately, neither actress concentrates much on their genre offerings here. Phillips does, happily, describe her interesting audition for David Lynch’s Dune and Farrell gives passing mention to such projects as The Premonition and The Fifth Floor. But, what is most poignant and interesting about each book, is the conclusion that readers can draw about society, itself. It is still a straight man’s world, as plainly evidenced in both writers’ circumstances. Here, they show how they overcame and thrived despite that sometimes overpowering obstacle.

Public Places is available, on sale, from various dealers on Amazon. Farrell’s tome, meanwhile, can be purchased from her at www.sharonfarrell.com.

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

www.facebook.com/biggayhorrorfan

 (Images of are Phillips in Hammer House of Horror and Farrell in It’s Alive.)

 

Music to Make Horror Movies By: Ketty Lester

Published November 29, 2015 by biggayhorrorfan

Ketty 3Even though William Marshall put the bite on her tough talking cab driver Juanita Jones in Blacula, the exquisite Ketty Lester always knew how to put her mark on a song.

 

Best known for her golden hit Love Letters, used to macabre effect in David Lynch’s Blue Velvet, Lester  puts a smoky, subtle emphasize on the more sinister aspects of romance with her rocking take on Sweet Torture.

 

Slink into this blissful agony now!

Ketty 2

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

http://www.facebook.com/biggayhorrorfan