LOVELY LYNLEY

What better way to return to Blogging then with a Carol Lynley post. Hell, you weren’t expecting a Diane Baker tribute, were you? Blech!

Click here to see this wonderful fan page on MySpace. Carol may not have been the most talented actress in Sixties/Seventies Hollywood but she sure was one of the most beautiful.

CHECK THESE OUT

Click here to see fellow Carol Lynley fan Jeremy Lichey’s great new Elvis Presley Blog.

Fans of that swinging ’60s chick Joanna Pettet our favorite spy girl from the original Casino Royale (1967) should click here to see a trailer of her hard-to-find heist drama Robbery (1967).

And finally click here to see Hey, It’s That ’60s Chick. It’s a Blog after my own heart about those wonderful starlets from that time. You can never ever get enough starlets!!!


GO APE!

One of New York City’s largest theatres, the Ziegfeld, is showing the original Planet of the Apes (1968) beginning this Friday March 28 for 5 straight days. Click here for more info.

As everybody must now know it is the story about four astronauts, after hurdling through space for over 2,000 years, who land on a planet where humans are mute and unintelligent and apes are their masters. Of the space travelers, only Charlton Heston as Taylor survives but he is shot in the throat by a band of gorillas who are the hunting humans. Taylor is taken to Ape City along with a woman he dubs Nova (Linda Harrison) where he tries to convince a sympathetic psychologist Dr. Zira (Kim Hunter) and her archeologist financee Cornelius (Roddy McDowall) of his intelligence. When he regains his speech he proves his superiority but is thwarted by Dr. Zaius (Maurice Evans) who has always been aware of man’s reputation as “the harbinger of death.” The film climaxes in the Forbidden Zone with Taylor proving that the apes evolved from humans. He goes off with Nova only to discover the horrible truth—the planet of the apes is actually Earth whose civilization was destroyed by man.

I interviewed the lovely Linda Harrison for my first book Fantasy Femmes of Sixties Cinema and below are some of her memories about working on the movie:

Roddy McDowall, Kim Hunter, and Maurice Evans were great people and fabulous troupers. I’m not just saying that but they were pros. They had a difficult time with all that make-up. And they had to report to the set at 3:00AM! As for Charlton Heston, he was an idol of mine since I was a teenager and saw him in Ben-Hur. I thought, ‘My God, he is the most wonderful man in the world!’ And then a few years later to be co-starring with him was delightful, to say the least. It wasn’t in my nature to fawn over celebrities but I told Charlton that he was my idol. He was so nice and responded, ‘Thank you very much.’ He had a quiet quality about him and was very courteous with me. He encouraged me to favor the camera. I was a newcomer in many ways—which may have helped my character. I’m sure Heston had his doubts about me, however, he never showed them. He treated me more like a child than an adult and not much was discussed between us, in character or off. When you idolize someone like I did, you tend to submit rather than assert yourself. Again this worked in our roles and the relationship between us, as Taylor and Nova.”


I’M SEEING A BEAUTIFUL BLONDE BEING TERRORIZED BY THE SUPERNATURAL

Click here to see Carol Lynley as a fashion designer newly settled into a mansion being haunted by visions of a drowned corpse in the creepy 1972 episode “The House That Cried Murder” on The Sixth Sense starring Gary Collins as an investigator who has “the gift of ESP.” Carol once again excels as the perplexed damsel in distress but this time shows some courage and decides to face her fears head on.

During the early Seventies, Carol made a string of appearances in horror films (Beware! The Blob; The Night Stalker; If It’s a Man, Hang Up!) and TV shows (Night Gallery; Orson Welles’ Great Mysteries; The Evil Touch).