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Archive for the 'Horror Movie TV Hosts' Category

Mar 31 2009

The passing of Dick Golembiewski

The expert on Milwaukee’s TV history, Dick Golembiewski, died Sunday after suffering an apparent heart attack while shoveling snow.

Dick’s detailed “Milwaukee Television History: The Analog Years,” the product of more than a decade of research, came out late last year.

He also created a Web site, that chronicled the old hosts of Milwaukee’ horror movie programs.

The 51-year-old Golembiewski worked the microphone at WMSE-FM (91.7) under the name Dick Nitelinger, a persona he kept alive at his Horror Hosts site.

I didn’t know Dick that well, But we spoke from time to time on the phone. He was an enthusiastic student of the media and of Milwaukee history.

Dick’s book was a labor of love, and I’m happy that he at least got to see it in print before his untimely passing.

Source - http://www.jsonline.com

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Dec 09 2008

Forrest J. Ackerman creator Famous Monsters of Filmland Passed Away

A Sad day for all monster movie fans…

LOS ANGELES – Forrest J Ackerman, the sometime actor, literary agent, magazine editor and full-time bon vivant who discovered author Ray Bradbury and was widely credited with coining the term “sci-fi,” has died. He was 92.

Ackerman died Thursday [Dec. 4, 2008] of heart failure at his Los Angeles home, said Kevin Burns, head of Prometheus Entertainment and a trustee of Ackerman’s estate.

Although only marginally known to readers of mainstream literature, Ackerman was legendary in science-fiction circles as the founding editor of the pulp magazine Famous Monsters of Filmland. He was also the owner of a huge private collection of science-fiction movie and literary memorabilia that for years filled every nook and cranny of a hillside mansion overlooking Los Angeles.

“He became the Pied Piper, the spiritual leader, of everything science fiction, fantasy and horror,” Burns said Friday.

Every Saturday morning that he was home, Ackerman would open up the house to anyone who wanted to view his treasures. He sold some pieces and gave others away when he moved to a smaller house in 2002, but he continued to let people visit him every Saturday for as long as his health permitted.

“My wife used to say, ‘How can you let strangers into our home?’ But what’s the point of having a collection like this if you can’t let people enjoy it?” an exuberant Ackerman told The Associated Press as he conducted a spirited tour of the mansion on his 85th birthday.

His collection once included more than 50,000 books, thousands of science-fiction magazines and such items as Bela Lugosi’s cape from the 1931 film “Dracula.”

His greatest achievement, however, was likely discovering Bradbury, author of the literary classics “Fahrenheit 451″ and “The Martian Chronicles.” Ackerman had placed a flyer in a Los Angeles bookstore for a science-fiction club he was founding and a teenage Bradbury showed up.

Later, Ackerman gave Bradbury the money to start his own science-fiction magazine, Futuria Fantasia, and paid the author’s way to New York for an authors meeting that Bradbury said helped launch his career.

“I hadn’t published yet, and I met a lot of these people who encouraged me and helped me get my career started, and that was all because of Forry Ackerman,” the author told the AP in 2005.

Later, as a literary agent, Ackerman represented Bradbury, Isaac Asimov and numerous other science-fiction writers.

He said the term “sci-fi” came to him in 1954 when he was listening to a car radio and heard an announcer mention the word “hi-fi.”

“My dear wife said, ‘Forget it, Forry, it will never catch on,’” he recalled.

Soon he was using it in Famous Monsters of Filmland, the magazine he helped found in 1958 and edited for 25 years.

Ackerman himself appeared in numerous films over the years, usually in bit parts. His credits include “Queen of Blood,” “Dracula vs. Frankenstein,” “Amazon Women on the Moon,” “Vampirella,” “Transylvania Twist,” “The Howling” and the Michael Jackson “Thriller” video. More recently, he appeared in 2007’s “The Dead Undead” and 2006’s “The Boneyard Collection.”

Ackerman returned briefly to Famous Monsters of Filmland in the 1990s, but he quickly fell out with the publisher over creative differences. He sued and was awarded a judgment of more than $375,000.

Forrest James Ackerman was born in Los Angeles on Nov. 24, 1916. He fell in love with science-fiction, he once said, when he was 9 years old and saw a magazine called Amazing Stories. He would hold onto that publication for the rest of his life.

Ackerman, who had no children, was preceded in death by his wife, Wendayne.

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Nov 24 2008

Bill Cardille and Channel 11’s Chiller Theater Saturday Late Show

For many years, Chiller Theater was Pittsburgh’s favorite place to see Science Fiction and Horror and  movies on television.

The first episode of Chiller Theatre premiered on WIIC, Channel 11 in Pittsburgh On September 14th, 1963. Bill Cardille (the eventual long-term Chiller Theatre host) was the off-screen booth announcer for the show. The first movie shown was The Brain From Planet Arous. The first show had a Saturday afternoon start time of 3:00 p.m.

Bill Cardille became the on-screen host of Chiller Theatre On September 19th 1964 and the show moved to Saturday night after the 11:00 p.m. news cast. Cardille’s first show as on-screen host  featured It! The Terror From Beyond Space and The Screaming Skull.

Unlike most TV Horror Movie Hosts of the time, Cardille did not wear any “scary” make-up, he appeared as himself, and would eventually come to be known as “Chilly Billy”. During the show, Cardille portrayed a variety of characters such as “Maurice The Matchmaker” and “Captain Bad.” “Chilly Billy” would be back the end of the show with his signature signoff, “Good Night and Sleep Warm”.

Chiller Theater was so popular in Pittsburgh and the Tri-state area that it kept Saturday Night Live from airing on Channel 11 (NBC’s Pittsburgh affiliate) for 4 years. Even though Chiller Theater eventually lost it’s time slot and was forced to air after  Saturday Night Live with a 1:00 a.m. start time it remained a popular show.

After more than twenty years, Chiller Theater aired it’s last episode on New Years Eve 1983. The final two movies shown were The Wolf Man and It Came From Outer Space.

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