January
21, 1991
Vol. 35
No. 2
As Dark Shadows Creeps Back to TV, the Old Show
Still Haunts Its Cast
By Alan Carter, Craig Tomashoff, John Griffiths
Vampires you kill with a stake through the heart.
Werewolves, with silver bullets. Ah, but canceled TV series, they don't. They
just retire to the fog-shrouded land of the un-dead, waiting to be summoned
someday by network executives who would practice any black art to have a hit.
And so, 20 years after sinking into the grave, Dark Shadows—ABC's cobwebby soap
opera about the lives and loves of spirits and ghouls, which spawned a huge
occult cult from 1966 to 1971 and which still sets the standard for the most
radical departure from the formulas of daytime drama—materializes on NBC this
week. Starring Ben ("Chariots of Fire) Cross, 43, as Barnabas Collins, the
vampire with the Byronic soul and the interesting hair, the newly risen show
airs Jan. 13 and 14 as a miniseries, then starts its prime-time series run Jan.
18. If the resuscitated Shadows can match the popularity of the original—which
spawned two feature films, three dozen paperback novels and, more recently, a
series of video releases—it could be a supernatural pop phenomenon on the order
of, say...Barnabas Simpson. Correspondents Alan Carter, Craig Tomashoff and
John Griffiths talked to the original Not Ready for Daylight Players.
Dan Curtis, 62, the Dr. Frankenstein of Dark
Shadows, created the original and is producer of the new series. He directed
the Winds of War and War and Remembrance miniseries: This wasn't supposed to be
a supernatural show. It was supposed to be a gothic mystery. We had a six-month
deal on ABC, and the show was going nowhere. It was boring. The characters
talked about things happening in closed-off rooms, but you never saw what they
were talking about. So...a ghost appeared. The ratings started to go up. Then
we had a weird story about little David Collins's mother, who was a phoenix and
came back for him. The ratings went higher. I said. "I'm going to see how
far I can go with this thing. I'll do a vampire."
It was a Shakespearean-trained actor, Jonathan
Frid, now 65, who did the vampire—Barnabas Collins, an 18th-century bloodsucker
locked away in 1795 and liberated from his crypt two centuries later. Frid now
tours with a series of solo shows, including one devoted to his beloved bard: I
only did the part for some pocket money to go teach on the West Coast. And, of
course, because I didn't particularly want the job, I got it. An audition room
full of cadaverous-looking creeps, and I must have really looked the part....
Curtis: We had the classic tragic figure—a
romantic, a vampire who hates himself.
Frid: Barnabas was supposed to be this nervous
wreck. I mean, if you came out of your coffin after hundreds of years, how
would you talk? Where would you go? So he was very vulnerable.
Curtis: I was just going to bring him in as a
straight-out killer. All of a sudden, he turned into a giant hit. I wondered
how the hell I could perpetuate a vampire. But I did it. I ripped off all the
horror classics, all the old horror movies. The one thing I wouldn't do was a
mummy. I mean, the guy"s always dragging his leg. How could he catch
anybody?
Mummies, no, but the show had just about
everything else except the possessed kitchen sink: witches, warlocks,
Frankensteins, ghosts, Jekylls and Hydes—played mostly by a cast of young
unknowns, including Kate Jackson, now 41, as a ghost, David (Falcon Crest)
Selby, 49, as Quentin the werewolf, and John (Cagney & Lacey) Karlen, 56,
as Barnabas's henchman and valet, Willie.
Jackson: I didn't speak for three months. Ghosts
tilt their heads down and tilt their eyes up and gently beckon and never blink.
That's what I did.
Lara Parker, 48, was the spellbindingly sexy
witch, Angelique, eternally pursuing Barnabas. Since Shadows, she has done a
number of small TV roles: I was just a young, naive actress who wanted to play
the lead. I had to be the princess. I wanted to cry when things went wrong.
They kept pulling me aside and saying, "Honey, you're the heavy. Don't
cry. Think vicious."
Barnabas, on the other hand, was willing to spend
eternity pursuing his true love, Josette, played—in a number of incarnations—by
Kathryn Leigh Scott, 44. Scott recently wrote The Dark Shadows Companion and
has guest-starred on Star Trek: The Next Generation and other series: I spent
four years wandering through corridors of dry ice, saying, "Barnabas,
where are you?" I was 19, and I learned to act in front of a million
people. Show me somebody who would like to have their first job in summer stock
taped and sold in video stores.
Actually, the show was more like Transylvanian
summer stock: haunted rooms with ghost-thin walls, cues whispered off-camera
and a boom mike so conspicuous that critics referred to the show as Mike
Shadows.
Curtis: It was like we had a budget of $2.12 to
work with. It was a joke.
Parker: We would tape from 3:30 to 4 P.M. The show
went on the air at 4. so as soon as we finished, we'd go upstairs and get in a
tiny room to watch and laugh at ourselves. We used to be horrified. The show was
done as a live taping, so all the mistakes we made went on the air.
Selby: Jonathan Frid was caught carrying his
shoes!
Jackson: I had to say this long speech explaining
why I was back from the dead. I was standing in an 1800s dress, with candles
all around, and the back of the dress caught fire. I was already messing up the
lines, and all I could think was, "Why is David Henesy [who played the
littlest Collins, David] dancing around back there?" He kept me from
having to scream. "Aaaaaaaah! My dress is on fire!"
Frid: I always thought I looked like this damn
silly ass. I couldn't believe people were ever really scared.
If not scared, maybe seduced. If not seduced,
maybe amused. Or...well, it's hard to say, exactly....
Selby: The show was intriguingly gothic to some,
campy to others.
Scott: It was a bad time when we were on the air.
Vietnam, the Democratic Convention. We were a breath of fresh air.
Frid: Occasionally it would coalesce into
something lovely: at its best, a Dark Brigadoon. A never-never land.
For the original cast, though, celebrity from the
show has been ever-ever.
Karlen: Once a blind lady at the race track
recognized my voice. "That's Willie!" she said. I found that bizarre.
I still get more recognition from fans of Dark Shadows than from Cagney &
Lacey.
Frid: This morning I was walking home from getting
groceries. I missed the light because the traffic was heavy. This truck wasn't
moving. I thought the driver may have had a stroke. All these people are
honking. And I caught the side of his face, this truck driver, and I'm
screaming, "Can I cross? Are you going?" He was dumbstruck. He had
recognized me! I want to be the Johnny Weissmuller of Dark Shadows. He's the
Tarzan everyone knows. He wasn't the original, but he's the one people
remember.
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