Boris Karloff filmography
This is the filmography of Boris Karloff. Born as William Henry Pratt, he joined a touring company and adopted the stage name Boris Karloff. During these early stages of his career he was mostly left in obscurity. By 1919, Karloff found regular work as an extra at Universal Studios. Karloff's first significant hit film was in Howard Hawks's The Criminal Code (1931). While shooting Graft, director James Whale convinced Karloff to star as a character in one of his most popular roles as Frankenstein's monster in Frankenstein which led to him becoming an overnight superstar. After Frankenstein and starring in several high-profile films such as Bride of Frankenstein and The Mummy (1932 film), Karloff spent the remainder of the 1930s continuing to work at an incredible pace, but progressively more into less financially successful films. In the 1940s, he began to get stereotyped into playing "mad scientist" roles.
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Karloff starred in a few acclaimed Val Lewton produced horror films of the 1940s and by the mid-1950s, he was a familiar presence on television and radio, hosting his own series including Starring Boris Karloff, Colonel March of Scotland Yard, Thriller, Out of This World and The Veil, and guest starring on such programs as Suspense, The Donald O'Connor Show, I Spy and Route 66. He also played Detective Wong (five times) in the 1930's Mister Wong film series. In the 1960s, Karloff worked at Roger Corman's American International Pictures. He also made films in England, Italy and Spain. His final American film was Peter Bogdanovich's Targets, in which he portrayed an aging horror film star.
Filmography
Year | Film | Role | Director | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
1919 | The Lightning Raider | extra | George B. Seitz | 15-chapter film serial starring Pearl White; an incomplete print exists |
The Masked Rider | Mexican roughneck in saloon (appears in Episode 2 only) | Aubrey M. Kennedy | 15-chapter film serial; an incomplete print exists | |
His Majesty, the American | extra | Joseph Henabery | starring Douglas Fairbanks; a complete print exists | |
The Prince and Betty (film) | extra (bit part) | Robert Thornby | considered a lost film | |
1920 | The Deadlier Sex | Jules Borney, fur trader | Robert Thornby | This film was restored in 2014 and stil exists |
The Courage of Marge O'Doone | Buck Tavish, a mountain man | David Smith | considered a lost film | |
The Last of the Mohicans | a Huron Indian brave (extra) | Maurice Tourneur, Clarence Brown | a complete print exists | |
1921 | The Hope Diamond Mystery | dual role as Dakar and the High Priest of Kama-Sita | Stuart Paton | 15-chapter Film serial; Karloff's first major screen credit; a complete print exists |
Without Benefit of Clergy | Ahmed Khan | James Young | Based on a short story by Rudyard Kipling; a complete print exists | |
Cheated Hearts | Nei Hamid | Hobart Henley | considered a lost film | |
The Cave Girl | Baptiste, the half-breed | Joseph Franz | considered a lost film | |
1922 | The Man from Downing Street | dual role as Dell Monckton and Maharajah Jehan Dharwar | Edward José | considered a lost film |
Nan of the North | uncredited extra | Duke Worne | considered a lost film[1] | |
The Infidel | The Nabob of Menang | James Young | considered a lost film | |
The Altar Stairs | Hugo | Lambert Hillyer | considered a lost film | |
The Woman Conquers | Raoul Maris | Tom Forman | considered a lost film | |
Omar the Tentmaker | Holy Imam Mowaffak | James Young | Based on the play Omar Khayyam; considered a lost film | |
1923 | The Gentleman from America | uncredited bit part | Edward Sedgwick | starring Hoot Gibson; considered a lost film |
The Prisoner | Prince Kapolski | Jack Conway | considered a lost film | |
1924 | The White Panther | a Native | Alan James | |
The Hellion | an Outlaw | Bruce Mitchell | ||
Riders of the Plains | uncredited bit part | Jacques Jaccard | 15-chapter Film serial; considered a lost film | |
Dynamite Dan | Tony Garcia | Bruce Mitchell | available on DVD | |
1925 | Forbidden Cargo | Pietro Castellano | Tom Buckingham | |
Parisian Nights | Pierre, a French Apache | Alfred Santell | ||
The Prairie Wife | Diego | Hugo Ballin | considered a lost film | |
Lady Robinhood | Cabraza, a Spaniard | Ralph Ince | ||
Perils of the Wild | uncredited bit part | Francis Ford | 15-chapter Film serial based on the novel Swiss Family Robinson; considered a lost film | |
Without Mercy | a Henchman | George Melford | ||
Never the Twain Shall Meet | a Villain | Maurice Tourneur | Uncredited bit part | |
1926 | The Greater Glory | Scissors grinder | Curt Rehfeld | |
The Man in the Saddle | Bit part as a robber | Clifford S. Smith | starring Hoot Gibson and Fay Wray | |
Her Honor, the Governor | Snipe Collins, drug addict | Chet Withey | a.k.a. The Second Mrs. Fenway | |
The Bells | The Mesmerist | James Young | co-starring Lionel Barrymore | |
The Golden Web | Dave Sinclair, a blackmailer | Walter Lang | ||
Flames | Blackie Blanchett, a bandit | Lewis H. Moomaw | ||
The Eagle of the Sea | a Pirate | Frank Lloyd | Based on a novel Captain Sazarac | |
The Nickel-Hopper | Big Bohunk, a masher | Hal Yates | co-starring Oliver Hardy | |
Flaming Fury | Gaspard, the half-breed | James Hogan | co-starring Ranger, the Wonder Dog | |
Old Ironsides | Saracen guard | James Cruze | a.k.a. Sons of the Sea; starring Wallace Beery | |
Valencia | uncredited bit part | Dimitri Buchowetzki | a.k.a. The Love Song | |
1927 | Let It Rain | a Crook | Edward Francis Cline | |
The Princess from Hoboken | Pavel, a Frenchman | Allan Dale | ||
Tarzan and the Golden Lion | Ozawa, the Waziri native chieftain | J. P. McGowan | starring James Pierce as "Tarzan" | |
The Meddlin' Stranger | Al Meggs | Richard Thorpe | ||
The Phantom Buster | Ramón, a smuggler | William Bertram | ||
Soft Cushions | Chief conspirator | Edward Francis Cline | ||
Two Arabian Knights | Ship's purser | Lewis Milestone | produced by Howard Hughes | |
The Love Mart | Fleming | George Fitzmaurice | ||
1928 | Sharp Shooters | Cafe owner | John G. Blystone | |
The Vanishing Rider | a Villain | Ray Taylor | 10-chapter Film serial | |
Vultures of the Sea | Grouchy, a pirate | Richard Thorpe | 10-chapter Film serial | |
The Little Wild Girl | Maurice Kent | Frank Mattison | ||
Burning the Wind | Pug Doran | Henry MacRae, Herbert Blaché | starring Hoot Gibson | |
1929 | The Fatal Warning | Mullins | Richard Thorpe | 10-chapter Film serial |
The Devil's Chaplain | Boris | Duke Worne | ||
Two Sisters | Cecil | Scott Pembroke | ||
Anne Against the World | uncredited bit part | Duke Worne | ||
The Phantom of the North | Jules Gregg, fur thief | Harry S. Webb | Karloff's last silent film | |
Behind That Curtain | a Sudanese servant | Irving Cummings | Karloff's first sound film; features a cameo by Charlie Chan | |
The King of the Kongo | dual role as Scarface Macklin and Martin | Richard Thorpe | 10-chapter Film serial | |
The Unholy Night | Abdoul | Lionel Barrymore | based on a story called The Doomed Regiment | |
1930 | The Bad One | a guard | George Fitzmaurice | |
The Sea Bat | a Corsican | Wesley Ruggles | ||
The Utah Kid | Baxter | Richard Thorpe | Western starring Rex Lease | |
Mothers Cry | a murder victim | Hobart Henley | co-starring Helen Chandler and David Manners | |
1931 | Sous les verrous (Pardon Us - French version) | The Tiger, a menacing jailhouse prisoner | James Parrott | Karloff appears only in the French language version of this Laurel and Hardy film |
The Criminal Code | Ned Galloway | Howard Hawks | The film that brought Karloff to James Whale's attention | |
King of the Wild | Mustapha | B. Reeves Eason, Richard Thorpe | 12-chapter Film serial. | |
The Last Parade | Prison warden | Erle C. Kenton | starring Jack Holt | |
Cracked Nuts | a Revolutionary | Edward F. Cline | ||
The Vanishing Legion | voice of "The Voice", the serial's mystery villain | Ford Beebe and B. Reeves Eason | 12-chapter Film serial | |
Young Donovan's Kid | Cokey Joe, a drug dealer | Fred Niblo | starring Jackie Cooper | |
Smart Money | Sport Williams, a gambler | Alfred E. Green | starring James Cagney and Edward G. Robinson | |
The Public Defender | the Professor | J. Walter Ruben | based on the novel The Splendid Crime | |
I Like Your Nerve | Luigi | William McGann | starring Douglas Fairbanks Jr. and Loretta Young | |
Graft | Joe Terry, a gangster | William Christy Cabanne | ||
Five Star Final | "Reverend" T. Vernon Isopod | Mervyn LeRoy | starring Edward G. Robinson | |
The Yellow Ticket | a Lecherous orderly | Raoul Walsh | starring Lionel Barrymore and Laurence Olivier | |
The Mad Genius | Fedor's abusive father | Michael Curtiz | starring John Barrymore | |
The Guilty Generation | Tony Ricca, a gangster | Rowland V. Lee | starring Leo Carrillo and Robert Young | |
Frankenstein | the Frankenstein Monster | James Whale | starring Colin Clive, Edward Van Sloan, Dwight Frye and Mae Clarke | |
Tonight or Never | a Waiter | Mervyn LeRoy | starring Gloria Swanson and Melvyn Douglas | |
1932 | The Cohens and Kellys in Hollywood | Karloff guest-stars as himself | Mervyn LeRoy | |
Behind the Mask | Jim Henderson, a hoodlum | John Francis Dillon | co-starring Jack Holt and Edward Van Sloan | |
Business and Pleasure | a Sheikh | David Butler | starring Will Rogers and Joel McCrea | |
Scarface | Tom Gaffney, a gangster | Howard Hawks | produced by Howard Hughes | |
The Miracle Man | Nikko, a crooked restaurant owner | Norman Z. McLeod | Remake of a Lon Chaney silent film | |
Night World | "Happy" MacDonald, nightclub owner | Hobart Henley | starring Lew Ayres and Mae Clarke | |
The Old Dark House | Morgan, the butler | James Whale | Billed for the first time as KARLOFF; co-starred Charles Laughton and Ernest Thesiger | |
Alias the Doctor | Autopsy surgeon | Lloyd Bacon, Michael Curtiz | Karloff's scenes were edited out of the film by the censors due to violence and no longer exist | |
The Mask of Fu Manchu | Dr. Fu Manchu | Charles J. Brabin, Charles Vidor, King Vidor | Based on the Fu Manchu novels by Sax Rohmer | |
The Mummy | dual role as Imhotep and Ardath Bey | Karl Freund | Billed as KARLOFF; co-starring Edward Van Sloan and Zita Johann | |
1933 | The Ghoul | Professor Morlant | T. Hayes Hunter | This film was shot in England, co-starring Cedrick Hardwicke and Ernest Thesiger |
1934 | The Lost Patrol | Sanders, a religious fanatic | John Ford | co-starring Victor McLaglen |
The House of Rothschild | The antisemetic Count Ledrantz | Alfred L. Werker | filmed partially in Technicolor | |
The Black Cat | Hjalmar Poelzig | Edgar G. Ulmer | Billed as KARLOFF; co-starring Bela Lugosi. | |
Gift of Gab | Cameo appearance as himself | Karl W. Freund | Billed as KARLOFF; co-starred Bela Lugosi | |
1935 | Bride of Frankenstein | the Frankenstein Monster | James Whale | Billed as KARLOFF, co-starring Colin Clive, Dwight Frye and Ernest Thesiger |
The Raven | Edmond Bateman | Lew Landers | Billed as KARLOFF; co-starring Bela Lugosi | |
The Black Room | dual role as Baron Gregor de Berghmann and Anton de Berghmann | Roy William Neill | ||
1936 | The Invisible Ray | Dr. Janos Rukh | Lambert Hillyer | Billed as KARLOFF; co-starring Bela Lugosi |
The Walking Dead | John Ellman | Michael Curtiz | ||
Juggernaut | Dr. Victor Sartorius | Henry Edwards | filmed in England | |
The Man Who Changed His Mind | Dr. Laurience | Robert Stevenson | a.k.a. The Man Who Lived Again; filmed in England[2] | |
Charlie Chan at the Opera | Gravelle, the Opera star | H. Bruce Humberstone | starring Warner Oland as Charlie Chan | |
1937 | Night Key | Inventor Dave Mallory | Lloyd Corrigan | Billed as KARLOFF |
West of Shanghai | General Wu Yen Fang, Chinese warlord | John Farrow | ||
1938 | The Invisible Menace | Jevries | Lloyd Corrigan | |
Mr. Wong, Detective | James Lee Wong | William Nigh | First of five "Mr. Wong" films Karloff starred in | |
1939 | Devil's Island | Dr. Charles Gaudet | William Nigh | |
Son of Frankenstein | the Frankenstein Monster | Rowland V. Lee | Co-starring Bela Lugosi, Basil Rathbone and Lionel Atwill | |
The Mystery of Mr. Wong | James Lee Wong | William Nigh | ||
Mr. Wong in Chinatown | James Lee Wong | William Nigh | ||
The Man They Could Not Hang | Dr. Henryk Savaard | Nick Grinde | ||
Tower of London | Mord, the Executioner | Rowland V. Lee | co-starring Basil Rathbone and Vincent Price | |
1940 | The Fatal Hour | James Lee Wong | William Nigh | |
British Intelligence | Valdar/ Franz Strendler, Nazi spy | Terrell O. Morse | a.k.a. Enemy Agent | |
Black Friday | Dr. Ernest Sovac | Arthur Lubin | co-starring Bela Lugosi and written by Curt Siodmak | |
The Man with Nine Lives | Dr. Leon Kravaal | Nick Grinde | ||
Doomed to Die | James Lee Wong | William Nigh | Fifth and final "Mr. Wong" film to star Karloff | |
Before I Hang | Dr. John Garth | Nick Grinde | co-starring Edward Van Sloan | |
The Ape | Dr. Bernard Adrian | William Nigh | co-written by Curt Siodmak | |
You'll Find Out | Judge Spencer Mainwaring | David Butler | co-starring Bela Lugosi and Peter Lorre | |
1941 | The Devil Commands | Dr. Julian Blair | Edward Dmytryk | |
1942 | The Boogie Man Will Get You | Professor Nathaniel Billings | Lew Landers | co-starring Peter Lorre |
1944 | The Climax | Dr. Friedrich Hohner | George Waggner | Karloff's first Technicolor film |
The House of Frankenstein | Dr. Gustav Niemann | Erle C. Kenton | co-starring Lon Chaney Jr. and John Carradine | |
1945 | The Body Snatcher | John Gray, a body snatcher | Robert Wise | co-starring Bela Lugosi; produced by Val Lewton |
Isle of the Dead | General Nikolas Pherides | Mark Robson | produced by Val Lewton | |
1946 | Bedlam | Master George Sims | Mark Robson | produced by Val Lewton |
1947 | The Secret Life of Walter Mitty | Dr. Hugo Hollingshead | Norman Z. McLeod | starring Danny Kaye |
Lured | Charles Van Druten, an artist | Douglas Sirk | co-starring George Zucco and Lucille Ball | |
Unconquered | Indian chief Guyasuta | Cecil B. DeMille | directed by Cecil B. DeMille; starring Gary Cooper | |
Dick Tracy Meets Gruesome | Gruesome | John Rawlins | starring Ralph Byrd as Dick Tracy | |
1948 | Tap Roots | Tishomingo, an Indian brave | George Marshall | Filmed in Technicolor; starring Van Heflin |
1949 | Abbott and Costello Meet the Killer, Boris Karloff | Swami Talpur | Charles Barton | co-starring Lenore Aubert |
Starring Boris Karloff | Host | Charles Warburton | 13-episode Radio and TV anthology series | |
1951 | The Emperor's Nightingale, aka Cisaruv Slavik (Czech animated film) | Narrator | Jiří Trnka | Karloff narrated English-language version only; filmed in 1949 but released in U.S. in 1951[3] |
The Strange Door | Voltan, the servant | Joseph Pevney | starring Charles Laughton; based on a story by Robert Louis Stevenson | |
1952 | The Black Castle | Dr. Meissen | Nathan Juran | co-starring Richard Greene and Lon Chaney Jr. |
1953 | Abbott and Costello Meet Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde | Dr. Henry Jekyll / Mr. Edward Hyde | Charles Lamont | |
Sabaka (aka The Hindu) | General Pollegar | Frank Ferrin | Filmed partially in India, but Karloff's scenes were filmed in Hollywood; film was previewed in 1953 as The Hindu, and later went into general release in 1955 retitled Sabaka[4][5][6] | |
1954 | The Monster of the Island (Il mostro dell'isola) | Don Gaetano | Roberto Bianchi Montero | Filmed in Italy; aka The Island Monster |
Colonel March Investigates - Feature film version | Colonel Perceval March | Cyril Endfield | Feature film comprised of three "Colonel March" British TV episodes | |
Colonel March of Scotland Yard TV series | Colonel Perceval March | Cyril Endfield | 26-episode British TV series (first broadcast in the U.S weekly from Dec. 1954 - Spring, 1955); later broadcast in U.K. weekly from Sept. 24, 1955 - March 17, 1956 | |
1957 | Voodoo Island | Dr. Phillip Knight | Reginald Le Borg | |
1958 | The Juggler of Our Lady | Narrator | Al Kouzel | Terrytoons cartoon nominated for a BAFTA award[7] |
The Creation of the World (aka La creation du monde) | Narrator (English language version only) | Eduard Hofman | An 83-minute Czechoslovakian/French cartoon; Karloff narrated the English language dubbed version only; film was condemned by the Vatican | |
The Haunted Strangler (a.k.a. Grip of the Strangler) | James Rankin | Robert Day | filmed in England; produced by Richard Gordon | |
Frankenstein 1970 | Baron Victor von Frankenstein | Howard W. Koch | ||
Corridors of Blood (a.k.a. The Doctor From Seven Dials) | Dr. Thomas Bolton | Robert Day | filmed in England in 1958, co-starring Christopher Lee; released in U.S. in May 1963[8][9] | |
Heart of Darkness | Capt. Kurtz | Playhouse 90 (CBS-TV) | 90-minute made-for-TV adaptation of the Joseph Conrad novel | |
The Veil | Host and various roles within the episodes as well | Herbert L. Strock, George Waggner, Paul Landres and others | 12-episode TV anthology series hosted by and co-starring Karloff; the series was never broadcast nor syndicated anywhere, but is available today on DVD | |
1960 | Who Killed Chung Ling Soo? | Narrator | Al Kouzel | Five-minute short subject[10] |
The Secret World of Eddie Hodges | Captain Hook | Norman Jewison | 60-minute made-for-TV musical produced by Jackie Gleason[11] | |
1960-1962 | Thriller (aka Boris Karloff's Thriller) | Host and Various roles | Various directors | Anthology TV series of 67 one-hour episodes hosted by Karloff; Karloff also acted in five of the episodes. |
1962 | Arsenic & Old Lace | Jonathan Brewster | George Schaefer | Hallmark Hall of Fame Made-for-TV film |
Out of This World | Host | Various directors | 13-episode British TV anthology series (only one episode exists today) | |
1963 | The Raven | The sorcerer Dr. Scarabus | Roger Corman | co-starring Vincent Price and Peter Lorre; written by Richard Matheson |
The Terror | Baron Victor von Leppe | Roger Corman | starring Jack Nicholson and Sandra Knight | |
Black Sabbath (aka I tre volti della paura) | Narrator, and Gorca the vampire (in one story) | Mario Bava | Filmed in Italy in 1963; released in U.S. in May 1964 | |
The Comedy of Terrors | Amos Hinchley | Jacques Tourneur | co-starring Vincent Price, Basil Rathbone and Peter Lorre; released in U.S. Christmas Day, 1963[12] | |
1964 | Bikini Beach | an Art dealer (cameo) | William Asher | starring Frankie Avalon, Annette Funicello |
1965 | Die, Monster, Die! (U.K. title: Monster of Terror) |
Nahum Whitley | Daniel Haller | filmed in England; based on a story by H. P. Lovecraft |
1966 | The Ghost in the Invisible Bikini | Hiram Stokely | Don Weis | co-starring Tommy Kirk and Basil Rathbone |
The Daydreamer (animated film) | the Rat (voice only) | Jules Bass | Rankin-Bass animated film inspired by the stories of Hans Christian Andersen | |
How the Grinch Stole Christmas! | Narrator and Voice of The Grinch | Chuck Jones | This animated TV special won Grammy Award for Best Album for Children | |
Mondo Balordo (Foolish World) | Narrator (of the English language version only) | Roberto Bianchi Montero | documentary filmed in Italy; dubbed and released in U.S. in 1966 | |
1967 | The Venetian Affair | Dr. Pierre Vaugiroud | Jerry Thorpe | co-starring Robert Vaughn, Roger C. Carmel and Elke Sommer |
Mad Monster Party (Rankin-Bass Puppet Animation film) | Baron Boris von Frankenstein (voice only) | Jules Bass | co-starring Phyllis Diller as The Bride of the Monster | |
The Sorcerers | Professor Marcus Montserrat | Michael Reeves | filmed in England; directed by Michael Reeves | |
Cauldron of Blood (El Coleccionista de cadáveres) a.k.a. Blindman's Bluff | Charles Franz Badulescu, a blind sculptor | Santos Alcocer (credited as Edward Mann) | Filmed in Spain in Spring 1967; released theatrically in Spain in 1970 posthumously | |
1968 | Targets | Byron Orlok, aged horror film star | Peter Bogdanovich | released in August, 1968 |
Curse of the Crimson Altar (U.S. title: The Crimson Cult) | Professor Marsh | Vernon Sewell | Filmed in England; released in U.K. Nov. 24, 1968 (the final film released during Karloff's lifetime); released in U.S. in May, 1970 posthumously | |
Isle of the Snake People (a.k.a. La muerte viviente, Snake People and Cult of the Dead) | dual role as Karl van Molder / Damballah | Juan Ibañez, Jack Hill | Filmed in May 1968; released in March 1971 posthumously[13] | |
The Incredible Invasion (a.k.a. Alien Terror, Invasion siniestra and The Sinister Invasion) | Professor John Mayer | Luis Enrique Vergara, Jack Hill | Filmed in May 1968; released in April 1971 posthumously[14] | |
Fear Chamber (a.k.a.La camara del terror and The Torture Zone) | Dr. Carl Mandel | Juan Ibañez, Jack Hill | Filmed in May 1968; released in 1971 posthumously[15] | |
House of Evil (a.k.a. Serenata macabra and Dance of Death) | Mathias Morteval | Luis Enrique Vergara, Jack Hill | Filmed in May 1968; released in 1972 posthumously[16][17][18] | |
Television appearances
(Note = Major appearances highlighted in boldface)
- Screen Snapshots #11 (1934) Karloff and Bela Lugosi appeared in this 10-minute newsreel feature, along with James Cagney and Maureen O'Sullivan (interviews)
- Hollywood Hobbies (1935) Karloff was interviewed briefly on this 10-minute newsreel feature which also featured Clark Gable and Buster Crabbe
- The Chevrolet Tele-Theatre NBC-TV Show (Feb. 7, 1949) - appeared in a 30-minute drama entitled "Expert Opinion"
- The Ford Theatre Hour CBS-TV Anthology show (April 11, 1949) acted in radio play of Arsenic and Old Lace
- Star Theatre (April 12, 1949)
- Suspense CBS-TV Anthology show (April 26, 1949) Karloff acted in a radio play entitled "A Night at an Inn"
- The Chevrolet Tele-Theatre NBC-TV Show (May 9, 1949) Karloff acted in a radio play entitled "Passenger to Bali"
- Suspense CBS-TV Anthology show (May 17, 1949) Karloff acted in a radio play entitled "The Monkey's Paw"
- Suspense CBS-TV Anthology show (June 7, 1949) Karloff acted in an episode entitled "The Yellow Scarf"
- Celebrity Time ABC-TV Quiz Show (Sept. 4, 1949) - with host Conrad Nagel
- Starring Boris Karloff Weekly ABC-TV Anthology Series (Sept. 22, 1949 - Dec. 15, 1949) - Karloff acted in 13 weekly 30-minute episodes; this show was broadcast as both a TV show and a radio show simultaneously; episodes were "Five Golden Guineas", "The Mask", "Mungahara", "The Mad Illusion", "Perchance to Dream", "The Devil Takes a Bride", "The Moving Finger", "The Twisted Path", "False Face", "Cranky Bill", "Three O'Clock", "The Shop at Sly Corner" and "Night Reveals".[19]
- Inside U.S.A. with Chevrolet CBS-TV Variety Show (1949)
- Supper Club (Feb. 19, 1950) Guest
- Masterpiece Playhouse NBC-TV Anthology Series (Sept. 3, 1950) - co-starred with Eva Gabor in "Uncle Vanya", written by Anton Chekov
- Lights Out NBC-TV Anthology show (Sept. 18, 1950) - appeared in 30-minute episode entitled "The Leopard Lady"
- Paul Whiteman's Goodyear Revue ABC-TV variety show (Oct. 29, 1950) Guest
- The Texaco Star Theatre (aka The Milton Berle Show) NBC-TV comedy show (Dec. 12, 1950) Guest
- The Don McNeil TV Club ABC-TV variety show (April 11, 1951) Guest
- The Texaco Star Theatre (aka The Milton Berle Show) NBC-TV comedy show (Oct. 9, 1951) Guest
- The Fred Waring Show CBS-TV musical variety show (Oct. 21, 1951) Guest
- Robert Montgomery Presents NBC-TV dramatic anthology show (Nov. 19, 1951) Karloff acted in a radio play entitled "The Kimballs"
- Celebrity Time CBS-TV quiz show (Nov. 25, 1951) Karloff appeared with Kitty Carlisle and host Conrad Nagel
- Studio One CBS-TV Anthology show (Dec. 3, 1951) Karloff acted in a radio play entitled "Mutiny on the Nicolette"
- Suspense CBS-TV Anthology show (Christmas Day, 1951) Karloff co-starred with Judith Evelyn in a radio play entitled "The Lonely Place"
- Lux Video Theatre CBS-TV Anthology Show (Dec. 31, 1951) Karloff played Arthur Strangways in a radio play entitled "The Jest of Hahalaba" (written by Lord Dunsany)
- Columbia Workshop (aka CBS Television Workshop) - CBS-TV Anthology Show (Jan. 13, 1952) Karloff played the title role in a radio play entitled "Don Quixote"
- The Stork Club CBS-TV Talk show (Jan. 30, 1952) interviewed by host Sherman Billingsley
- Tales of Tomorrow ABC-TV Sci-Fi Anthology Show (Feb. 22, 1952) Karloff acted in an episode entitled "Memento"
- The Texaco Star Theatre (aka The Milton Berle Show) NBC-TV comedy/variety show (Apr. 29, 1952) Guest
- Studio One CBS-TV Anthology show (May 19, 1952) Karloff played King Arthur in a radio play entitled A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court by Mark Twain; co-starred Thomas Mitchell
- Celebrity Time CBS-TV Quiz show (May 25, 1952) with Orson Bean and host Conrad Nagel
- Philip Morris Playhouse on Broadway (June 1, 1952) Karloff acted in a radio play called "Outward Bound"
- I've Got a Secret CBS-TV Quiz show (June 19, 1952)
- Curtain Call NBC-TV Anthology show (June 27, 1952) Karloff acted in an episode entitled "Soul of the Great Bell"
- Schlitz Playhouse of Stars NBC-TV Anthology show (July 4, 1952) with Host Irene Dunne; Karloff acted in a radio play entitled "House of Death"
- Lux Video Theatre NBC-TV Anthology show (Dec. 8, 1952) Karloff and Bramwell Fletcher acted in a radio play entitled "Fear"
- The Texaco Star Theatre (aka The Milton Berle Show) NBC-TV Comedy Variety show (Dec. 16, 1952) appeared with Don Ameche and others
- Who's There?" CBS-TV Quiz show (1952) with host Arlene Francis
- All Star Revue Musical-Comedy show (Jan. 17, 1953) co-featuring Peter Lorre and Martha Raye
- Hollywood Opening Night NBC-TV Anthology show (March 2, 1953) Karloff starred in a radio play entitled "The Invited Seven"
- Suspense CBS-TV Anthology show (Mar. 17, 1953) Karloff played Rasputin in an episode entitled "The Black Prophet"
- Robert Montgomery Presents NBC-TV Anthology show (Mar. 30, 1953) Karloff starred in an episode entitled "Burden of Proof"
- Tales of Tomorrow Sci-fi Anthology show (Apr. 3, 1953) Karloff starred in an episode entitled "Past Tense"
- Quick as a Flash (May 7, 1953) Quiz Show
- Plymouth Playhouse (aka "ABC Album") ABC-TV Anthology show (May 25, 1953) with Host Cedric Hardwicke; Karloff starred in 2 episodes entitled "The Chaser" and "The Reticence of Lady Anne"
- Suspense CBS-TV Anthology show (June 23, 1953) Karloff acted in an episode entitled "The Signal Man" (written by Charles Dickens)
- Rheingold Theatre NBC-TV Anthology show (1953) Karloff acted in an episode entitled "House of Death"
- Colonel March of Scotland Yard - 26-episode British TV series starring Karloff as a detective (played in U.S. from Dec. 1954 - Spring 1955) - The series was later broadcast in England from 1955-1956
- I've Got a Secret CBS-TV Quiz show (Oct. 13, 1954) appeared with Host Garry Moore, Bill Cullen and Kitty Carlisle
- The George Gobel Show (Nov. 6, 1954) Guest
- Truth or Consequences (Nov. 9, 1954) Guest
- Climax! CBS-TV Anthology show (Dec. 16, 1954) Karloff acted in a radio play entitled "The White Carnation", with Host William Lundigan
- Down You Go TV Quiz Show on the Dumont Network (Dec. 17, 1954) appeared with Phil Rizzuto and others
- The Best of Broadway CBS-TV Anthology show (Jan. 5, 1955) Karloff acted in a TV version of "Arsenic and Old Lace", co-starring Peter Lorre, Helen Hayes, Orson Bean and Edward Everett Horton
- The Donald O'Connor Texaco Star Theatre NBC-TV Sitcom (Feb. 19, 1955) Karloff sang two songs on this TV show
- The Elgin TV Hour ABC-TV Anthology show (Feb. 22, 1952) Karloff acted in a radio play entitled "The Sting of Death"
- Max Liebman Presents NBC-TV Musical Variety show (Mar. 12, 1955) Karloff sang two songs on this show, co-featuring Eddie Albert; a musical version of "A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court" by Mark Twain
- Who Said That? TV Quiz Show on the Dumont Network (April 30, 1955) with Host John K. M. McCaffrey
- General Electric Theatre CBS-TV Anthology show (May 1, 1955) with Host Ronald Reagan; Karloff acted in an episode entitled "Mr. Blue Ocean", co-starring Bramwell Fletcher, Eli Wallach, Susan Strasberg and Anthony Perkins
- Boris Karloff (July 15, 1955) British TV about Karloff's life
- I've Got a Secret CBS-TV Quiz show (Aug. 24, 1955) with host Garry Moore, Bill Cullen and Kitty Carlisle
- The U.S. Steel Hour (aka Alcoa Hour) CBS-TV Anthology show (Aug. 31, 1955) Karloff acted in an episode entitled "Counterfeit"
- The Alcoa Hour NBC-TV Anthology show (April 15, 1956) Karloff acted in an episode entitled "Even the Weariest River", co-starring Christopher Plummer and Franchot Tone
- The Amazing Dunninger ABC-TV Mind-reading show (July 18, 1956) Guest
- Frankie Laine Time CBS-TV Musical Variety show (Aug. 1 and Aug. 8, 1956) Karloff performed on this variety show two weeks in a row
- The Ernie Kovacs Show NBC-TV Comedy show (Aug. 13, 1956) Guest
- Climax! CBS-TV Anthology show (Sept. 6, 1956) Karloff acted in an episode entitled "Bury Me Later", with Torin Thatcher and Angela Lansbury
- Playhouse 90 CBS-TV Anthology show (Oct. 25, 1956) Karloff acted in an episode entitled "Rendezvous in Black", by Cornell Woolrich.
- The Red Skelton Show CBS-TV Comedy show (Nov. 27, 1956) Guest
- The $64,000 Question CBS-TV Quiz show (December 11, 18 and 25, 1956) Karloff appeared three times and won $32,000 in the "Children's Fairy Tales" category
- The Rosemary Clooney Show NBC-TV Variety show (Jan. 9, 1957) Karloff sang a song called "You'd Be Surprised"
- Hallmark Hall of Fame NBC-TV Anthology show (Feb. 10, 1957) Karloff played Bishop Cauchon in a 90-minute TV version of "The Lark", co-starring Basil Rathbone, Julie Harris (as Joan of Arc), Denholm Elliott, Jack Warden and Eli Wallach
- Lux Video Theatre NBC-TV Anthology show (Apr. 25, 1957) Karloff acted in an episode entitled "The Man Who Played God"
- The Kate Smith Special ABC-TV Variety show (Apr. 28, 1957) Karloff sang a song called "September Song" on this program
- The Dinah Shore Chevy Show NBC-TV Variety show (May 17, 1957) Karloff sang a song called "Mama Look a' Boo Boo" on this program
- A to Z (British TV show) (Aug. 30, 1957) Guest
- The Dinah Shore Chevy Show NBC-TV Variety show (Oct. 27, 1957) Karloff appeared with the Skylarks and the Steiner Brothers
- The Rosemary Clooney Show NBC-TV Variety show (Halloween, 1957) Karloff did a musical number
- The Gisele MacKenzie Show (Nov. 16, 1957) Guest
- This Is Your Life (Nov. 20, 1957) Karloff was feted on this show, which guest-starred Evelyn Karloff and makeup artist Jack Pierce among other people from Karloff's past; hosted by Ralph Edwards
- Suspicion NBC-TV Anthology show (Dec. 9, 1957) Karloff acted in an episode entitled "The Deadly Game", co-starring Gary Merrill and Joseph Wiseman, hosted by Dennis O'Keefe; Karloff played a judge
- The Betty White Show ABC-TV Variety show (Feb. 12, 1958) guest-starred Karloff and Buster Keaton among others
- Telephone Time ABC-TV Anthology show (Feb. 25, 1958) Karloff acted in an episode entitled "The Vestris"; this episode was made as a pilot for Karloff's 1958 12-episode anthology series The Veil, but was shown separately from the other episodes on Telephone Time
- Shirley Temple's Storybook NBC-TV Anthology show for children (Mar. 5, 1958) Shirley Temple and John Ericson costarred in this one-hour TV version of "The Legend of Sleepy Hollow", narrated by Boris Karloff
- Studio One CBS-TV Anthology show (March 31, 1958) Karloff acted as Professor Koenig in an episode entitled "The Shadow of Genius"
- The Jack Paar Show NBC-TV Talk Show (aka The Tonight Show)(April 22, 1958) Jack Paar interviewed Karloff
- The Veil (1958) 12-episode Anthology show (similar to The Twilight Zone) produced by Hal Roach Jr; Karloff hosted each episode and starred in all but one of them (Jack the Ripper); the series was never broadcast nor syndicated, but is available today on DVD (several episodes were later re-edited into 3 different feature-length films to be shown on late night TV)
- Playhouse 90 CBS-TV Anthology show (Nov. 6, 1958) Karloff played Captain Kurtz in this 90-minute TV version of "Heart of Darkness" by Joseph Conrad; co-starring Eartha Kitt, Oscar Homolka and Roddy McDowall
- The Gale Storm Show CBS-TV sitcom (Jan. 31, 1959) co-starring Zasu Pitts in an episode entitled "It's Murder, My Dear"
- General Electric Theatre CBS-TV Anthology show (May 17, 1959) hosted by Ronald Reagan; Karloff acted in an episode entitled "Indian Giver", co-starring Edgar Buchanan and Jackie Coogan
- Playhouse 90 CBS-TV Anthology show (Feb. 9, 1960) Karloff acted in an episode entitled "To the Sound of Trumpets", costarring Judith Anderson, Stephen Boyd and Sam Jaffe
- The Du Pont Show of the Month CBS-TV Anthology show (Mar. 5, 1960) produced by David Susskind; Karloff played "Billy Bones" in this 90-minute TV adaptation of Robert Louis Stevenson's "Treasure Island", co-starring Michael Gough and Barry Morse, among others.
- Hollywood Sings NBC-TV Variety show (April 3, 1960) Karloff sang a song on this program, co-featured Eddie Albert and Tammy Grimes
- Upgreen and at' em: or, A Maiden Nearly Over (British TV show) (June 6, 1960) Guest
- The Secret World of Eddie Hodges CBS-TV Musical Special (June 23, 1960) - A one-hour Musical Special directed in N.Y. City by Norman Jewison, featuring Boris Karloff (as Capt. Hook), Margaret Hamilton, Bert Lahr, Hugh O'Brien and others, narrated by Jackie Gleason.
- Thriller NBC-TV Anthology show (Sept. 13, 1960 - April 30, 1962) Sixty-six hour-long episode B&W series hosted by Karloff, who also acted in five of the episodes themselves: "The Premature Burial" (10/2/60), "The Prediction" (11/22/60), "Last of the Sommervilles" (11/6/61), "Dialogues with Death" which consisted of two 30-minute stories (12/4/61), and "The Incredible Dr. Markesan" (2/26/62); the other episodes were only hosted by Karloff
- The Hallmark Hall of Fame NBC-TV Anthology show (Feb. 5, 1962) Karloff acted in this 90-minute TV adaptation of "Arsenic and Old Lace", co-starring Tony Randall, Tom Bosley, Mildred Natwick and others; Karloff played Jonathan Brewster
- PM syndicated Talk Show (Feb. 12, 1962) Mike Wallace interviewed Karloff, Tony Randall, Kim Hunter, Ed Wynn and Julie Harris.
- Theatre '62 NBC-TV Anthology show (Mar. 11, 1962) Karloff acted in this episode entitled "The Paradine Case", co-starring Richard Basehart, Robert Webber and Viveca Lindfors
- The Dickie Henderson Show a British Variety show (June 1962) Karloff appeared on this show while he was filming Out of this World in England
- Out of This World (British TV series) - ABC-TV British Sci-Fi Anthology show produced in England by BBC-TV (broadcast June 30 - Sept. 22, 1962) Thirteen one-hour episodes hosted by Karloff; stories adapted from works of John Wyndham, Terry Nation, Isaac Asimov, Philip K. Dick and others (Karloff shot these immediately after the Thriller TV series ended production.)
- Route 66 CBS-TV Drama show (Oct. 26, 1962) Karloff appeared as the Frankenstein Monster in this episode entitled "Lizard's Leg and Owlet's Wing", co-starring Lon Chaney Jr. (as The Wolf Man/ Mummy), Peter Lorre, Martin Milner and George Maharis.
- I've Got a Secret Game Show (Jan. 28, 1963) Guest
- The Hy Gardner Show WOR-TV Talk Show (March 3, 1963) Karloff and Peter Lorre were both interviewed in this episode
- Chronicle CBS-TV Documentary show (Christmas Day, 1963) Karloff narrated "A Danish Fairy Tale" (a biography of Hans Christian Andersen)
- Today's Teens (Jan., 1964) 11-minute newsreel feature narrated by Karloff
- The Garry Moore Show CBS-TV Variety show (Apr. 21, 1964) also featuring Alan King and Dorothy Loudon
- The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson (NBC-TV talk show) (June, 1964) Guest
- The Entertainers CBS-TV Variety show (Jan. 16, 1965) also featuring Carol Burnett and Art Buchwald
- Shindig ABC-TV Musical show (Oct. 30, 1965) also featuring Ted Cassidy and Jimmy O'Neill
- The Wild Wild West CBS-TV Western program (Sept. 23, 1966) Karloff played a villain named Singh on an episode entitled "Night of the Golden Cobra", co-starred Robert Conrad and Ross Martin
- The Girl from U.N.C.L.E. NBC-TV Adventure series (Sept. 27, 1966) Karloff played a transvestite character named Mother Muffin in an episode entitled "The Mother Muffin Affair", co-starring Stefanie Powers, Leo G. Carroll, Robert Vaughn and Noel Harrison
- Dr. Seuss' How the Grinch Stole Christmas CBS-TV Animated Cartoon (Dec. 18, 1966) narrated by Karloff who also does the voice of the Grinch (30 minutes)
- I Spy NBC-TV Adventure series (Sept. 24, 1968) Karloff travelled to Spain to star in this episode entitled "Mainly on the Plains", co-starring Robert Culp, Bill Cosby and (future Spanish horror film star) Paul Naschy in an uncredited bit role
- The Red Skelton Show CBS-TV Variety show (Sept. 24, 1968) Karloff and Vincent Price sung a duet called "The Two of Us" on this show, and acted together in a skit called "He Who Steals My Robot Steals Trash"
- The Jonathan Winters Show CBS-TV Variety show (Oct. 30, 1968) Karloff sang "It Was a Very Good Year" on this program, which also featured Agnes Moorehead, Abby Dalton, Alice Ghostly, Paul Lynde and others
- The Name of the Game NBC-TV Adventure series (Nov. 29, 1968) Karloff played a character called Mikhail Orlov in this 90-minute episode entitled "The White Birch", co-starring Susan Saint James, Roddy McDowall, Gene Barry, Peter Deuel, Ben Gazzara, Richard Jaeckel and Susan Oliver; this was Karloff's final dramatic performance, broadcast just weeks before his death
Stage performances
- Kongo (1929) Karloff played "Kregg" at the Capitol Theatre in San Francisco
- The Criminal Code (Opened May 12, 1930) Karloff played "Galloway" in this stage play in San Francisco and Los Angeles in 1930 (he reprised the role in the 1931 film version the following year).
- Mud, Blood and Kisses (Nov. 17, 1934) Karloff appeared in this one-night skit in Padua, California
- The Drunkard (Oct. 19, 1936) Karloff appeared for one night in this play at the Theatre Mart in Hollywood, on the night of the 1200th performance
- The Tell-Tale Heart (1938) Karloff toured with this play in April 1938, which he only narrated
- Arsenic and Old Lace (beginning Dec. 26, 1940) Karloff starred for 2 weeks in Baltimore, Md.
- Arsenic and Old Lace (Jan. 10, 1941 - June, 1942) Fulton Theatre in N.Y.; co-starred with Josephine Hull and Wyrley Birch
- Night of the Stars (Nov. 26, 1941) appeared for one night at Madison Square Garden, NY
- The Navy Relief Show (Mar. 10, 1942) played at Madison Square Garden, NY for one night, with Eddie Cantor, Danny Kaye, Ed Wynn and Vincent Price
- Arsenic and old Lace (Aug. 17, 1942 - Jan. 23, 1944) on tour (Los Angeles, San Francisco, Chicago, Milwaukee, Boston, Washington DC, Seattle, Kansas City, and back to Washington DC again)
- Arsenic and Old Lace (Feb. to June, 1945) Pacific tour
- On Borrowed Time (Nov. 5 - Nov. 24, 1946) Karloff played "Gramps" in this stage play in San Francisco and Los Angeles; (March, 1947) played a week in Mexico City
- The Linden Tree (Feb 4 - Mar. 6, 1948) toured Connecticut, Pennsylvania, Washington DC, and at The Music Box Theatre in N.Y.; co-starred Una O'Connor and Noel Leslie
- The Shop at Sly Corner (December 1948 - Jan. 22, 1949) played Atlanta, Georgia and The Booth Theater in N.Y.; co-starred Una O'Connor, Jay Robinson
- On Borrowed Time (Jan. 16, 1950 - Feb. 4, 1950) at the Penthouse Theater in Atlanta, Georgia
- Peter Pan (April 24, 1950 - January 27, 1951) ran 321 performances at the Imperial and St. James Theatres in N.Y., co-starred Jean Arthur as Peter Pan, Karloff as Captain Hook, Marcia Henderson as Wendy, and Nehemiah Persoff as Cecco [23]
- Peter Pan (Jan. 27, 1951 - Apr. 29, 1951) toured Boston, Cincinnati, Cleveland, Detroit and Minneapolis
- Night of 100 Stars (June 25, 1955) Karloff appeared at a one-night fundraiser for the Actors' Orphanage at the London Palladium in England
- The Lark (Oct. 28, 1955 - Nov. 12, 1955) Plymouth Theatre in Boston
- The Lark (Nov. 17, 1955 - June 1956) ran 229 performances at the Longacre Theater in N.Y., featuring Julie Harris as Joan of Arc, Karloff as Bishop Cauchon, Christopher Plummer as Warwick, and Joseph Wiseman as the Inquisitor
- The Lark (Sept. 1956) played in San Francisco
- Arsenic and Old Lace (March 21–23, 1957) played 3 days at a high school in Anchorage, Alaska
- Arsenic and Old Lace (Jan. 12 - Jan. 17, 1960) Tapia Theatre in San Juan, Puerto Rico
- On Borrowed Time (Jan. 17, 1961) Tapia Theatre in San Juan, Puerto Rico
- On Borrowed Time (March 17–25, 1961) at the Wharf Theatre in Monterey, Cal.
References
Sources
- Nollen, Scott Allen (1991). Boris Karloff: A Critical Account of His Screen, Stage, Radio, Television and Recording Work. McFarland. ISBN 0-89950-580-5.
- Buehrer, Beverley Bare (1993). Boris Karloff: A Bio-bibliography. Greenwood Publishing Group. ISBN 0-313-27715-X.
- Bojarski, Richard; Beals, Kenneth (1974). The Films of Boris Karloff. Citadel Press. ISBN 0-8065-0396-3.
Citations
- Jacobs, Stephen (2011). Boris Karloff: More Than A Monster. Tomahawk Press. p. 415. ISBN 978-0-9557670-4-3.
- Mank, Gregory William (2009). Bela Lugosi and Boris Karloff : the expanded story of a haunting collaboration, with a complete filmography of their films together. Jefferson, N.C.: McFarland & Co., Publishers. ISBN 978-0786434800.
- Mank, Gregory William (2009). Bela Lugosi and Boris Karloff : the expanded story of a haunting collaboration, with a complete filmography of their films together. Jefferson, N.C.: McFarland & Co., Publishers. ISBN 978-0786434800.
- Nollen, Scott Allen. Boris Karloff: A Gentleman's Life. Pg. 307. Midnight Marquee & BearManor Media.
- Jacobs, Stephen (2011). Boris Karloff: More Than A Monster. Tomahawk Press. p. 368. ISBN 978-0-9557670-4-3.
- Mank, Gregory William (2009). Bela Lugosi and Boris Karloff : the expanded story of a haunting collaboration, with a complete filmography of their films together. Jefferson, N.C.: McFarland & Co., Publishers. ISBN 978-0786434800.
- Mank, Gregory William (2009). Bela Lugosi and Boris Karloff : the expanded story of a haunting collaboration, with a complete filmography of their films together. Jefferson, N.C.: McFarland & Co., Publishers. ISBN 978-0786434800.
- Stephen Jacobs, Boris Karloff: More Than a Monster, Tomahawk Press 2011 p 422
- "Werewolf In A Girl's Dormitory". www.dvddrive-in.com.
- Mank, Gregory William (2009). Bela Lugosi and Boris Karloff : the expanded story of a haunting collaboration, with a complete filmography of their films together. Jefferson, N.C.: McFarland & Co., Publishers. ISBN 978-0786434800.
- Mank, Gregory William (2009). Bela Lugosi and Boris Karloff : the expanded story of a haunting collaboration, with a complete filmography of their films together. Jefferson, N.C.: McFarland & Co., Publishers. ISBN 978-0786434800.
- Jacobs, Stephen (2011). Boris Karloff: More Than A Monster. Tomahawk Press. ISBN 978-0-9557670-4-3.
- Nollen, Scott Allen. Boris Karloff: A Gentleman's Life. Pg. 307. Midnight Marquee & BearManor Media.
- Nollen, Scott Allen. Boris Karloff: A Gentleman's Life. Pg. 307. Midnight Marquee & BearManor Media.
- Nollen, Scott Allen. Boris Karloff: A Gentleman's Life. Pg. 307. Midnight Marquee & BearManor Media.
- Nollen, Scott Allen. Boris Karloff: A Gentleman's Life. Pg. 307. Midnight Marquee & BearManor Media.
- Mank, Gregory William (2009). Bela Lugosi and Boris Karloff : the expanded story of a haunting collaboration, with a complete filmography of their films together. Jefferson, N.C.: McFarland & Co., Publishers. ISBN 978-0786434800.
- Jacobs, Stephen (2011). Boris Karloff: More Than A Monster. Tomahawk Press. p. 415. ISBN 978-0-9557670-4-3.
- Jacobs, Stephen (2011). Boris Karloff: More Than A Monster. Tomahawk Press. p. 552. ISBN 978-0-9557670-4-3.
- Nollen, Scott Allen (1991). Boris Karloff: A Critical Account of His Screen, Stage, Radio, Television, and Recording Work. McFarland & Company. pp. 403–414. ISBN 9780899505800.
- Mank, Gregory William (2009). Bela Lugosi and Boris Karloff : the expanded story of a haunting collaboration. Jefferson, N.C.: McFarland & Co., Publishers. ISBN 978-0786434800.
- Jacobs, Stephen (2011). Boris Karloff: More Than A Monster. Tomahawk Press. p. 415. ISBN 978-0-9557670-4-3.
- Jacobs, Stephen (2011). Boris Karloff: More Than A Monster. Tomahawk Press. p. 545. ISBN 978-0-9557670-4-3.
- Mank, Gregory William (2009). Bela Lugosi and Boris Karloff : the expanded story of a haunting collaboration. Jefferson, N.C.: McFarland & Co., Publishers. ISBN 978-0786434800.
- Jacobs, Stephen (2011). Boris Karloff: More Than A Monster. Tomahawk Press. p. 545. ISBN 978-0-9557670-4-3.