The problem with being a disorganized collector is that you tend toward acquiring things and promptly forget about them. I had made photgraphs of this convention program back in 2016, but, well, here you go. Memory Lane Alert! When I went to conventions, back in the day, they weren't the slick-slacks affairs they are today; where your wallet goes bust and your body is crushed trying to fit into spaces not even Einstein had thought about. And you got a REAL convention program. I mean a honkin tome you could actually read and enjoy, along with the cool bag-o-stuff it was tossed in. Highlights in this Comics Buyer's Guide Fantacon 90 Convention Program include I Was a Zombie in Night of the Living Dead by Dennis Daniel and Editing The Famous Monsters Chronicles by, oh yeah, Dennis Daniel again (man, he got around). The other highlights are the cool advertisements and the tids and bits regarding the con itself.
See more convention programs from Zombos' Closet.
ComicRack reader version: Download Fantacon 90 Convention Program
Here's an interesting play bill for Arsenic and Old Lace, from the Marquee Theater, starring Jonathan Frid and Larry Storch (with an impressive cast). Very interesting is the typo on page 13. My gut is telling me that Larry Storch had a hand in it. I kept in the adverts to keep this a complete historical item for your edification pleasure.
I wonder if anyone had recorded this? See the not so positive review from the Chicago Tribune toward the end of the post.
Review from the Chicago Tribune, October 3, 1990, by Sid Smith:
Frid's Approach to Spooky Readings is Not So Chilling
Jonathan Frid, who gave vampiricism a better name with his long-running portrayal of Barnabas on the old ``Dark Shadows`` daytime serial, is in Chicago with a pair of one-man shows wherein he dramatically interprets short stories, poems and a few other bits of brief writings.
Standing on a stage in the smaller space at the Halsted Theatre Center, Frid provides what's sometimes called oral interpretation, reading the selections with expressive force and characterization but minimal gestures and staging. In keeping with the persona that made Frid famous, the works in
``Fools and Fiends,`` one of the two programs now in repertory, are spooky or slightly horrific.
Ghosts and supernatural skullduggery play at least a hovering role in the pieces. Edgar Allan Poe's classic ``The Cask of Amontillado,`` in which a fiendish murderer provides a step-by-step account of how he buried an enemy alive, rests alongside more-modern fare by the likes of Stephen King and Irwin Shaw, tales of murder, mayhem and misanthropy. ``The Ghost`` by Richard Hughes is the opening selection, and even ``The Open Window,`` by Saki (the pen name of short-story maestro H.H. Munro) has for its twist a seeming return from the grave.
Frid is a graceful, enthusiastic reader, but the program suffers from conception and content. This old-fashioned, librarian approach to entertainment is mildly pleasant but a little outmoded, ours an era of the videocassette and complete works of literature read aloud in audio. Frid`s presence adds little-as a dramatic offering, ``Fools and Fiends`` comes off as hopelessly behind the times.
Moreover, the selections don't give much of a boost.
The famous ones, notably ``Cask`` and choice verses by Ogden Nash, are overly familiar.
The more contemporary stuff, the pieces by King and Shaw and others, are humdrum and so-so, mildly engaging and quickly forgettable.
Even their little plot twists seem tame and unsurprising.
In ``The Ghost,`` Hughes relates of a dead man`s efforts to haunt the woman who murdered him, while ``Dead Call`` is William F. Nolan`s creepy narrative of a supernatural phone caller urging his living friend to suicide. Saki`s ``Window`` amounts to a sick trick played on a visitor by a nasty young adolescent teller of tall tales, while Shaw's ``The Girls in Their Summer Dresses`` reports of a long-married couple`s confrontation over the husband's ceaseless skirt-watching.
King`s story, ``The Man Who Loved Flowers,`` is a quick, disappointingly straightforward account of a lover turned homicidal maniac.
The most unusual and worthwhile material comes in the form of Eve Merriam`s ``Inner City Mother Goose`` selections, which turn the ills of modern big-city ghetto life into mock nursery rhymes.
Strangely, and all too briefly, Frid scores best with material drawn not from the mists of the Gothic imagination but from the very real horrors glimpsed nightly just outside the contemporary urban front door.
The Famous Monsters 1975 Convention is the one monster convention I'll never forget. Seeing Peter Cushing in person was a blast. It was and still is the highlight of my monsterkid adventure. (See the Famous Monsters 1974 Convention Guide)
I think I like the 1970s the best for comic collecting. That's when comics became sought after collectibles for real, fans became more earnest and knowledgeable, and conventions were more fun to attend because they didn't have moviemercials and had a more intimate atmosphere. Now its all glitz and blitz. And I had around 10,000 comic books in the 1970s. Up to that point I had complete runs of every Marvel title. I also loved DC's Superman's Pal Jimmy Olsen, but lost those issues when my basement flooded. I eventually sold my comics and retired. From collecting, that is.
There's nothing like mixing comedy and horror, but plain old comedy comes close.
I was very young when I watched Ghost Catchers with Ole Olsen and Chic Johnson, on television, and not old enough to have caught their zany Broadway show called Hellzapoppin'. I'm a pushover for sight-gags, witty and cheeky repartee, and downright insouciance. Olsen and Johnson scored big on all three. Here's the show's program, courtesy of Professor Kinema's archives. It's a good reminder that, aside from Ole and Chic, there were other acts that kept the show moving.
Broadway critic Brooks Atkinson wrote: "Folks, it’s going to be a little difficult to describe this one. Anything goes in Hellzapoppin -- noise, vulgarity, and practical joking. Olsen and Johnson make their entrance in a clownish automobile, and the uproar begins. There is no relief, even during the intermission, when a clown roams the aisles. You can hear some lymphatic fiddling by rotund Shirley Wayne who looks as though she has just finished frying a mess of doughnuts. It is mainly a helter-skelter assembly of low comedy gags to an ear-splitting sound accompaniment. If you can imagine a demented vaudeville brawl without the Marx brothers, Hellzapoppin is it ... and a good part of it is loud, low, and funny!"
The show consisted of two acts with 25 scenes, during which the audience was bombarded with eggs and bananas. Then when the lights went out, the audience was besieged with rubber snakes and spiders. A woman ran up and down the aisles shouting out in a loud tenement voice for "Oscar! Oscar!" Meanwhile, a ticket salesman began to hawk tickets for a rival show (I Married an Angel). The Broadway madness ran for a record breaking 1,404 performances. (Charles Stumpf in Classic Images)