The embers from the burning windmill were still glowing when Universal Pictures honchos began planning a sequel to the 1931 Frankenstein. Boris Karloff would return as the Monster, Clive Colin as the beleaguered Dr. Henry Frankenstein, and James Whale would once again direct. Joining the cast as the mate that fate had the Monster created for was British actress Elsa Lanchester — the titular Bride of Frankenstein. The film premiered on April 19, 1935.
The film also featured a despicable evil scientist, Frankenstein’s former mentor, Dr. Septimus Pretorius, played by Ernest Thesiger and an old blind hermit, Oliver Peter Heggie, who with Karloff perform one of the movie’s most enduring scenes.
A scene which was brilliantly parodied in Mel Brooks’ Young Frankenstein.
Where Are the Angry Villagers When You Need Them
The Vagabond King a 1925 operetta by Rudolf Frimi was already an American success when it opened in London on April 19, 1927. It’s success in England was probably assured given its theme of foibles of the French. Its hero is a braggart, thief and rabble-rouser who attempts
to steal an aristocratic lady from the king himself. Not only that, he openly mocks the king, boasting about what he would do if he were king. The angry king gives him royal powers for 24 hours — king for a day — during which he must solve all France’s problems or go to the gallows (the guillotine had not yet been invented). He succeeds, wins the lady’s hand and lives happily ever after in exile — probably in England. The operetta was the inspiration for a couple of movies and, of course, the popular radio and television program “Queen for a Day.”
