Showing posts with label CHARLES BEAUMONT. Show all posts
Showing posts with label CHARLES BEAUMONT. Show all posts

Friday, January 24, 2025

THE BLOODY PULPS


On occasion I enjoy browsing through Hef's old PLAYBOY magazines, particularly from the 1950's and 1960's. And yes, I admit, I don't just read them for the articles! In my opinion, pinup and glamour photography during this period captured the unclothed female form in the most artful and alluring ways. Although considered extremely bold and controversial at the time, PLAYBOY just brought these images out from under the metaphorical drug store counter. Indeed, there were a multitude of other "photography" magazines available at the time and many I consider quite tasteful relative to the show-all 'zines of today that literally leave nothing to the imagination. Many of these women have careers in porn films, as well, but the ladies of yesteryear were considerably more discriminating even if some of them ended up in B-horror movies like Jeanne Carmen in THE MONSTER OF PIEDRAS BLANCAS!

Moreover, pictorials, especially in PLAYBOY'S earlier years occupied only a very small part of the magazine. The meat -- as it were -- came from non-fiction articles and fiction, especially when Ray Russell was the editor. Russell had a discerning eye for the grotesque, the oddball and the unusual tales as well as razor-sharp mainstream fiction. An author himself, Russell wrote several gothic and horror novels and short story collections, as well as screenplays for MR. SARDONICUS (1961), THE PREMATURE BURIAL (1962), X: THE MAN WITH THE X-RAY EYES (1963) and others. Along with the articles on men's fashion, sports, music (especially jazz), fiction included work by James Jones, Arthur Porges, Arthur C. Clarke, Ken Purdy, Ray Bradbury ("Fahrenheit 451" and others), Jack Finney, J.P. Donleavy, P.G. Wodehouse, Gerald Kersh, Ben Hecht, John Collier, Erskine Caldwell, even reprints of Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's Sherlock Holmes ("A Study in Scarlet", "A Scandal in Bohemia", etc.)!

Another author who appeared frequently was Charles Beaumont. An insanely talented writer, Beaumont's imagination seemed boundless until his health began to fail rapidly and he died at the age of 38. He sold his first story to AMAZING STORIES in 1950. He wrote teleplays for THE TWILIGHT ZONE and screenplays for QUEEN OF OUTER SPACE (1958), BURN, WITCH, BURN! (1962), PREMATURE BURIAL (1962), THE HAUNTED PALACE (1963), 7 FACES OF DR. LAO (1964) and THE MASQUE OF THE RED DEATH (1964), among others.

Beaumont's first fiction for PLAYBOY was "Black Country" a superlative jazz story, published in 1955. He also wrote a non-fiction nostalgia piece about his love for pulp magazines that went back to his childhood. It is shown here today, in situ, from PLAYBOY (September 1962).

Further reading:
  • Read Charles Beaumont's "Perchance to Dream" HERE.
  • Read Ray Russell's "Sardonicus" HERE.
  • Read Arthur Porges' "The Mirror" HERE.
  • Visit the "It Came From the Men's Mag" archive: HERE.












And, just in case you're wondering who the Playmate of the Month was for September 1962, it was the lovely Mickey Winters.





Tuesday, November 15, 2022

CHARLES BEAUMONT: 'PERCHANCE TO DREAM'



Under the guiding light of Executive Editor, Ray Russell, PLAYBOY magazine in the 1950's and 1960's published some of the finest fiction of any periodical during this period. Each issue was comprised of several short stories or even once in a while, a full-length novel. What made things extra special is that Russell was sympathetic to the work coming out of Southern California from a group of genre writers that included Richard Matheson, William F. Nolan and perhaps the most talented of them all, Charles Beaumont. This story is from the October, 1958 issue.

Note the cartoon on the second page -- it's drawn by Jack "Plastic Man" Cole, who was not only well-known as a comic book illustrator, but a "good girl" artist, as well.






Saturday, June 22, 2019

THE STATE OF THE HORROR FILM, 1959


"Horror is now one of the basic American commodities, like breakfast cereal and soap." 
- Charles Beaumont and Hollis Alpert

Buried away in the March, 1959 issue of PLAYBOY, is this hidden gem of an article co-authored by then Contributing Editor (and TWILIGHT ZONE scripter) Charles Beaumont and famous film critic, Hollis Alpert (later to co-write the PLAYBOY SEX IN CINEMA series with Arthur Knight). The piece analyses the current state of the horror film and its influence on the movie-going public. The authors convincingly discuss the similarities between the successful formulas used in both Western and horror films and conclude that these are the reason for their popularity.

In 1959, however, it was the science-fiction and horror film that reigned at the box-office, especially at the drive-in, where the nation's youth could go and spend their money on "cheap thrills" as well as other "recreational activities". . . sex and horror -- the perfect match.

Producer Robert Newman stated that "Horror movies are sexually stimulating to people, whether they know it or not. The monster itself is usually a symbol of sexual power unleashed." The authors confirm this by adding that King Kong, Frankenstein, Dracula, the Creature From the Black Lagoon and Caligari's Cesare were all "skirt chasers". Considering the publication that the article appeared in, this angle is covered in depth.

The piece goes on to delve into the machinations of Hollywood and provides several anecdotes regarding the love/hate relationship between Tinsletown producers and their biggest meal ticket, horror films, proving its hard not to look a gift monster in the mouth.







Oh, and if you're wondering who the Playmate of the Month was for the issue, it was the tastefully posed "girl next door", Audrey Daston.


Sunday, September 24, 2017

DEADTIME STORIES NO. 38


Tonight from the dim and dusty vaults of the Mysterious Mansion comes a tale by one of the 20th Century's most masterful short story writers of the weird, Charles Beaumont. It is a modern telling of the arcane art of magic from the July 1959 issue of PLAYBOY.






Sunday, February 17, 2013

CHARLES BEAUMONT ON DVD


Now available from Oldies.com is a full-length feature on DVD about one of the most versatile and imaginative writers from the classic TWILIGHT ZONE period. They also offer a few of the movies that he wrote screenplays for.

As I have mentioned OLDIES.COM is an excellent source for finding all sorts of monster movies, books, and periodicals -- all in one place. They also send out HUGE catalogs. Oldies is Monster Friendly -- give 'em a try!
 
CHARLES BEAUMONT: THE SHORT LIFE OF THE TWILIGHT ZONE'S MAGIC MAN
DVD Details

  • Run Time: 2 hours, 13 minutes
  • Encoding: Region 1 (USA & Canada)
  • Originally Released: 2010
  • Label: JaSunni Productions LLC

Performers, Cast and Crew:
Directed by Jason V. Brock
Subject: Charles Beaumont
Description:

Writer. Adventurer. Provocateur. All of these words apply to one man: Charles Beaumont. 

As one of the principal writers for the original Twilight Zone series, Beaumont became a mainstay of 1960s television. Later, working with filmmaker Roger Corman, he embarked on a promising career in movies (7 Faces of Dr. Lao, The Intruder). By this time, Beaumont was also a primary contributor to Playboy, Esquire, and several other major magazines of the day.

Beaumont overcame humble roots, bouncing between Chicago and Washington state. As the only child of an obsessed mother with an explosive temper, he endured many hardships, such as seeing his pets tortured and being dressed as a girl. Plagued with health problems and very fragile, Beaumont was a prodigious young talent whose artistic and writing abilities surpassed his peers. 

Following his dreams to Los Angeles, the driven, intellectual Beaumont became the charismatic nucleus of a group of Southern California writers, whose ranks include Richard Matheson, William F. Nolan, George Clayton Johnson, Harlan Ellison, and Ray Bradbury among others. Charles Beaumont's intensity and unabashed heed to confront controversy influenced early television and science fiction; he understood the human condition, and lived at the edge in everything he did and created.

At the height of his career, Beaumont began exhibiting strange and frightening symptoms: slurring words, balance problems, memory lapses. Was it alcohol abuse? Was it leftover from his childhood bout of meningitis? Perhaps it was stress...
He began to age - looking more like a man of 70 than a young man in his thirties. Charles Beaumont seemed to be trapped in one of his own Twilight Zone stories. Whatever the cause, he would not live to see his 39th birthday.

Documentary includes interviews with Ray Bradbury, William Shatner, William F. Nolan, Richard Matheson, George Clayton Johnson, John & Wilma Tomerlin and others.

7 FACES OF DR. LAO
DVD Features:
  • Rated: Not Rated
  • Run Time: 1 hours, 40 minutes
  • Video: Color
  • Released: September 27, 2011
  • Originally Released: 1963
  • Label: Warner Archives Collection
  • Encoding: Region 0 (Worldwide)
Performers, Cast and Crew:
Starring
Tony Randall & Barbara Eden
Performer:
John Ericson, Arthur O'Connell, Royal Dano, Lee Patrick, Noah Beery Jr., Minerva Urecal & Frank Kreig
Directed by
George Pal
Edited by
George Tomasini & George Tomasini
Screenwriting by
Charles Beaumont & Ben Hecht
Screenplay by
Charles Beaumont
Composition by
Leigh Harline
Art Direction by
George W. Davis
Produced by
George Pal
Director of Photography:
Robert Bronner
Major Awards:
Academy Awards 1963 - Honorary Awards
Description:
An elderly Chinese man routs evil in a Western frontier town by setting up his circus for the townspeople. The various performers affect each of the circus' visitors in a different way, and in the end the unscrupulous citizen who dominates the town repents.

Tony Randall plays eight different characters in the movie, with the help of Academy Award-winning special visual effects and make-up that earned make-up artist William Tuttle a special Honorary Academy Award for his outstanding achievement.


In one of the finest performances of his career, Tony Randall plays the part of a mysterious Chinese doctor named Lao who rides into a small western town with his circus and changes the lives of all who come to see it. Lao assumes many disguises, some so extraordinary that Mr. Randall is completely unrecognizable.
Plot Synopsis:
A mysterious traveling circus, led by the odd Dr. Lao, arrives in a small dusty town. Dr. Lao is endowed with magical powers, and his troupe is populated with such mythical characters as Merlin, Pan, Medusa and even the Abominable Snowman. Together, Lao and his performers use their unique abilities to help the townspeople gain clearer outlooks on who they are -- and in the process change their lives forever.
Production Notes:
  • Color by Metrocolor.
  • Additional cast: Kevin Tate (Mike Benedict); Eddie Little Sky (George E. George); Frank Kreig (Mr. Peter Ramsey); Dale McKennon (Lean Cowboy).
  • Additional credits: Al Shenberg (assistant director).

QUEEN OF OUTER SPACE
DVD Features:
  • Run Time: 1 hours, 20 minutes
  • Video: Color
  • Released: September 20, 2011
  • Originally Released: 1958
  • Label: Warner Archives Collection
  • Encoding: Region 0 (Worldwide)
  • Aspect Ratio: Widescreen
  • Audio:
    • PCM Mono - English
Performers, Cast and Crew:
Starring
Zsa Zsa Gabor, Laurie Mitchell & Eric Fleming
Performer:
Mary Ford, Lisa Davis, Paul Birch, Dave Willock & Barbara Darrow
Directed by
Edward Bernds
Edited by
William Austin
Screenwriting by
Charles Beaumont
Screenplay by
Charles Beaumont
Composition by
Marlin Skiles
Cinematography by
William Whitley
Story by
Ben Hecht
Produced by
Ben Schwalb
Description:
Breaking news from space! The bad: an intrepid captain and his men have landed on a planet where males are outlawed. The good: some women there are eager to break the law! 

Queen of Outer Space is a milestone of movie camp. Eric Fleming plays the granite-jawed leader who shares with his crew the crime of maleness. That?s just the start of their troubles. The man-hating Venusian Queen (Laurie Mitchell) aims to destroy Earth once a Beta Disintegrator is operational. But a gossamer-gowned scientist (Zsa Zsa Gabor) and her curvy cohorts eye the men, and they like what they see. This Bijou bauble has sets, costumes and effects from Flight to Mars, Forbidden Planet and World Without End. Have fun spotting them! Botchino!