Of course, Bela Lugosi ... Bud Abbott and Lou Costello, as well as Glenn Strange as Frankenstein’s Monster. Uncharitable billing aside, Abbott and Costello Meet Frankenstein does Dracula right ...
particularly their Abbott and Costello Meet Frankenstein episode featuring actor Bela Lugosi. “My brother was three or four at the time and he started dressing up like Dracula and doing these ...
Rather than make the movie feel redundant, the familiar plot gives Lee plenty of room to stake (pun intended) his claim, establishing himself as a different type of beast than those played by Bela ...
There’s plenty of hilarious monster mayhem afoot when Abbott and Costello are forced to retrieve Dracula (Bela Lugosi) and the Monster (Glenn Strange) from... a secret hideaway island.
Despite what the film’s title implies, this horror-comedy classic from Abbott and Costello shows the titular duo encountering Bela Lugosi’s Dracula and many other iconic movie monsters in addition to ...
Bela Lugosi’s Dracula is the ultimate. It’s ironic, considering Universal was extremely hesitant to cast him. Lugosi had already been receiving positive marks for his portrayal as the title ...
including “Abbott and Costello Meet Frankenstein,” which was released in 1948. At least one astute reader had spotted the mistake and sent a letter to The Times. The photograph was seemingly ...
As played by the German actor Max Schreck, the original Count Orlock — a character so indebted to Bram Stroker’s Count Dracula that ... you know, Bela Lugosi. So the first question when ...
A rousing good time for Abbott and Costello fans is contained in this spoof on fiction's classic bogeyman [from stories by Sidney Fields and Grant Garrett]. The fat & thin comics combat Boris ...