Top 10 Vincent Price Movies: Host Your Own Vincent Price Movie Marathon Tonight!
This lens is devoted to reviewing what I consider to be the ten best Vincent Price movies ever made. Ten movies; Twenty hours of great movie viewing. Why not gather together your friends and family and host your own Vincent Price Movie Marathon! A great activity for Halloween or any other day!
This lens was created August 22, 2007.
Vincent Price: The Art of Fear
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Vincent Price, whose name is virtually synonymous with the American horror film, was a major screen presence for more than four decades. Now, in this judicious, well-illustrated survey, Denis Meikle looks at both the highs and lows of an enduring film career.
Release Date: 12/31/1969






Why Vincent Price?

Well for starters, because he is my favorite actor. Can you think of a better reason?
Okay, other reasons. Let's see. He's gorgeous at every age. He's got a voice like velvet. He's spooky. He's creepy. He can scare the pants off you without a single drop of blood. Best of all, he's an actor; a real actor who can actually act like an actor, in other words he acts instead of relying on special effects, something very few actors do anymore. What this world needs is a come back of the classically trained actors, than maybe the movies being made today could be good movies based on good acting rather than good special effects.
Vincent Price didn't need special effects to fall back on. When you've got an actor who's that good, you've got a rare gem, a true treasure to cherish, for such an actor is rare and few.
None can outshine Vincent Price. All hail the crown prince of horror!

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Why Did You Choose the Ten You Chose?
And on what scale did you judge them?

When you have a man who has stared in more than 80 films and guest stared in countless other films, plus tv shows and commercials, it's hard to narrow the list down to just ten. Why did I choose these ten? Because they are the ten that I find myself going back to watch again and again. Actually, I find myself going back to watch a lot more than ten, but I narrowed it down to these being the ten I enjoy watching the most.
On what scale did I judge them? You mean, like how many awards did they win? How many of them were big selling smash hits? How many of them made movie history? That kind of scale? Is that what you mean? Hhhhmmmm. Me thinks, me hears the voice of someone who does not know Vincent Price. How can I tell? Easy. Vincent Price won no awards. Other than for his cameo appearance in The Ten Commandments, none of his movies were big hits or huge box office sellers. None were big productions. In fact, Vincent Price is celebrated for the fact that he stared in low budget films and relied on good acting over special effects to make his movies good. Most of his movies were filmed in 2 to 3 weeks time, with very little scenery, and costumes and sets that were used over and over again throughout most of his films. Indeed some of them very were little more than "backyard home movies" by today's standards.
So why than did I choose them? Because, without awards, without rave reviews, and without special effects, these films have stood the test of time to become cult classics, showcasing the talents of a man who knew how to take a good story and bring it to life with good acting.

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#1: House On Haunted Hill

Vincent Price at his spookiest best. Price stars as an eccentric millionaire, who rents a haunted house for his 5th wife's birthday party, telling the guests he will pay $10,000 to anyone who can survive the night. His last four wives died mysteriously, and wife number five suspects this party is a cover to end her life. But before the party can even begin, the guests are locked in a house with a history of violent murder. One by one the ghosts begin picking off the guests. Well there be anyone left alive to collect the reward money? With heads in the closet and a vat of acid in the basement, it's now a fight just to stay alive till morning.


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House on Haunted Hill
Vincent Price at his best.
Release Date: 09/06/2005
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#2: Theater of Blood

One of his later movies and also one of his very few bloody gore filled movies, made when the slasher films where just climbing from their cribs. Vincent Price was known for his ability to scare the pants of you without ever showing a drop of blood or a bit of gore. Theater of Blood is one of the rare exceptions. This is Vincent Price at his most gruesome. Vincent Price plays an aged actor rebuffed by critics in favor of a newer younger actor. To raise the new young star to fame the critics write cruel reviews thus destroying Price's career. Devastated Price commits suicide, but unknown to the world is rescued by a band of gypsies. Years later he comes back to seek revenge on the critics who destroyed his career, using a murder scene from each of the shows they criticized to kill them off one by one in on screen gruesome detail.
NOTE: Several scenes in this movie go into graphic detail and may be too disturbing for some viewers.
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Theater Of Blood/MadHouse (Midnite Movies Double Feature)
Release Date: 02/15/2005
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Vincent Price: MGM Scream Legends Collection (The Abominable Dr. Phibes / Tales of Terror / Theater of Blood / Madhouse / Witchfinder General / Dr. Phibes Rises Again / Twice Told Tales)
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#3: The Pit and The Pendulum
A double dose of horror's best: Vincent Price and Edgar Allan Poe together at last, a match made in... hell? This movie combines three Edgar Allan Poe stories: Annabelle Lee & The Premature Burial & The Pit and The Pendulum.
In this movie we are taken back through time to a castle by the sea in 1500's Spain, where Price plays a man who locks himself away in his castle by the sea to morn the death of his beloved wife. Friends and family come to his aid in attempt to end his suffering, but are horrified to learn that he fears he has buried his dearly beloved too soon. Distraught and nearing madness Price is driven to the dungeons to dig up his wife's grave, tormented by the thought that he has buried her alive. Upon finding his fears to be true, he is driven over the edge into the utter brink of madness. No longer in control of his sanity, Price descends into the castles deepest dungeons where lies a torture chamber with it's deep pit painted to resemble the fires of hell and it's giant pendulum swinging to slice his victims in two.
What starts out as a slow moving movie, ends with a climax that has gone down in movie history as one of the scariest scenes ever filmed. This is my favorite movie ending as well as my favorite Vincent Price movie. I can't watch it enough.

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#4: The Master of the World

I found this to be an interesting and quite unusual movie for Vincent Price to be in. Why? Well for starters this is a fantasy film which appears to have been made for a younger audience and can almost be called a children's or family film which runs no where's near his usual horror films. Based on the book by Jules Vern, in Master of The World Vincent plays a mad scientist during the Victorian era who has created a strange flying machine, which is capable of wiping out entire countries. Price takes his machine on a world tour, blowing up weapons factories and battle ships on his way. His mission: create world peace and put an end to war once and for all or destroy the world instead. The special effects don't meet up with today's standards, but were amazing for the time this film was made.

Buty The Master of the World
Master of the World [VHS]
Release Date: 06/06/2000
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The Master of the World
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#5: The Fall of the House of Usher
Vincent Price's first of many Edgar Allan Poe movies. The first of his low budget, fast filmed movies, House of Usher was created and filmed in a record breaking 16 days. The set and costumes from this film would go on to be reused over and over again in most of Price's films throughout the rest of the 1960's, allowing him to make 4 or 5 movies in each of the years to follow.
House of Usher became the standard from which Price would set the acting style he was most famous for: Gothic Aghast Horror. While Price had dabbled in horror in his early movies, his career had scattered about in other genres as well, leaving him billed by producers (and reviewed by critics) only as a character actor who played the side lines. House of Usher was the turning point of Price's career that would lay down the foundation of his horror career and set him out as one of horror's great icons.
Price plays Roderic Usher, the last in the line of the wealthy Usher family. A family cursed with ill health and short life. Generations of madness and murder have haunted the Usher family and all of it took place in the family castle: The House of Usher. Roderic believes the house to be alive; possessed. Believing himself possessed by his house, he lives alone, tormented by the doom that awaits him, waiting to be killed by his house.
But wait...did I say he was the last? No, there is one other, still alive. His sister was traveling abroad and has returned to say that she shall marry and never return to him, his house, or his madness. Roderic cannot allow this; he cannot allow the family curse to spread and so devises a plot to bury his sister alive. But on the eve of her funeral, her soon-to-be-husband arrives and discovers that all is not well in this house of insanity. He attempts to put an end to Roderic's madness, but can he do it before the house takes actions into its own hands and kills them all?

Quote From The House of Usher:
Roderick: This House, than it seems normal to you?
Philip: The House is neither normal nor abnormal. It is just a house.
Roderick: You are very wrong, Mr. Winthrop! This House is centuries old. It was brought here from England and with it every evil rooted in its stones...
Philip: You really believe this?
Roderick: Evil is not just a word! It is a reality. Like any living thing it can be created and was created by these people... The history of the Ushers is a savage history of degradation and always in this house! Always! in THIS HOUSE! The evil which fills it is no illusion. For hundreds of years foul thoughts and foul deeds have been committed in these walls. The House itself is evil now.
Philip: I do not believe it.
Roderick: Mr. Winthrop, do you think those coals jumping out of the fire at you was an accident? Do you think that chandelier falling was an accident? Do you think that falling casket was an accident?
Philip: Are you trying to tell me that the House made those things happen?
Roderick: Yes.
Philip: You are mad! I will not listen to you! ... Is there no end to your horrors?
Roderick: No.
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The Fall of the House of Usher /The Pit and the Pendulum
THE FALL OF THE HOUSE OF USHER: Audio Commentary by Director Roger Corman Original Theatrical Trailer THE PIT AND THE PENDULUM: Rare Prologue
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The Fall of the House of Usher [VHS]
Vincent Price brings a theatrical flourish to the role of Roderick Usher, a brooding nobleman haunted by the dry rot of madness in his family tree. This being Poe, there's a history of family madness and melancholia, a premature burial, and a sense of doom hanging over this gloomy, crumbling mansion. Roger Corman sold stingy AIP pictures on the concept by claiming "The house is the monster," or so goes the oft-told story. True or not, Corman (with the help of his brilliant art director Daniel Haller and legendary cinematographer Floyd Crosby) creates an exaggerated sense of isolation and claustrophobia with the sunless forest and funereal fog that holds the house and its inhabitants prisoner in a land of the dead. It doesn't quite look real (some of the effects are downright phony, notably the apocalyptic climax), and none of the costars can hold a candle to Price's elegant, haunted performance (often speaking in no more than a stage whisper), but it's a triumph of expressionism on a budget. Shot in rich, vivid color and CinemaScope, from a literate script by genre master Richard Matheson, this is stylish gothic horror in a melancholy key. It was such a success that Corman reunited his core group of collaborators for the follow-up The Pit and the Pendulum the very next year. Corman's "Poe Cycle" was born. MGM's widescreen disc also features commentary by director-producer Corman, his first-ever such contribution. --Sean Axmaker
Release Date: 05/15/2001
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The Fall of the House of Usher and Other Tales (Signet Classics)
The eerie tales of Edgar Allan Poe remain among the most brilliant and influential works in American literature. Some of the celebrated tales contained in this unique volume include: the world's finest two detective stories - "The Murders in the Rue Morgue" and "The Purloined Letter"; and three stories sure to make a reader's hair stand on end - "The Cask of Amontillado," "The Tell-Tlae Heart," and "The Masque of the Red Death."
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#6: The House of Long Shadows

Another of Price's later films. This is your classic haunted house story with a twist. A bestselling author takes on a bet with his publisher, who says he can not write another bestseller in the next 24 hours. On top of having to complete a book in 24 hours, he must do it in an abandoned haunted house to boot.
Upon arriving at the house, he quickly discovers that the house is not quite as abandoned as people believed. While trying to write his book he is disturbed by first one person and than another, until the house is bustling with people who claim to be celebrating a family reunion... a family reunion that involves releasing one member of the family who has been locked away in a room in the tower for the last 50 years. Fifty years of planning and plotting and waiting to seek revenge on those who locked him away. With dead bodies showing up around every corner, what's a poor writer to do, when he picked tonight of all nights to spend in The House of Long Shadows?
This all star horror cast includes Vincent Price in his usual sinister role of doomed man cursed by the family home and Christopher Lee as a man who is not quite what he seems to be.

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House of the Long Shadows (1983)
An American writer goes to a remote Welsh manor on a $20,000 bet: can he write a classic novel like "Wuthering Heights" in twenty-four hours? Upon his arrival, however, the writer discovers that the manor, thought empty, actually has several, rather odd, inhabitants.
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#7: The Raven

A strange little film, made for children, in which horror may very well be the funniest thing to happen to you. Vincent Price teams up with Peter Lorre and Boris Karloff in this horror spoof that makes light of every horror movie scare feature.
Price plays a wizard who is content to live a peaceful life, quoting doomed poetry over the body of his dead wife, whose coffin lies in the front hallway of his castle.
Meanwhile Boris Karloff is an evil wizard who seeks to learn the secrets of Price's great power.
One night while reading Edgar Allan Poe's The Raven, Price is visited by such a bird. The bird in question turns out to be a bumbling wizard (played by Peter Lorre) with an evil spell cast upon him, by Karloff. Once Price reverses the spell, he and Lorre take off to Karloff's castle to seek revenge and meet up with a silly battle of wits in a wizards duel against the evil Boris Karloff.
Filmed as a comedy, this family friendly G rated DVD is often sold as a children's Halloween movie, and is rarely billed as a horror.
If you can find them, there was once a very short run of 12" action figure/dolls of the three main characters for this movie.

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The Comedy of Terrors/The Raven
Release Date: 08/26/2003
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3 Classics from Vincent Price, The Merchant of Menace: The Raven, The Fall of the House of Usher & The Pit and the Pendulum (3 Video Boxed Set of Edgar Allen Poe Writings)
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Vincent Price 12 inch figure from The Raven [Toy]
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#8: The Fly
Two parts: The Fly & The Return of the Fly

One of his earlier films, this is your typical 1950's cult classic monster movie, complete with a fake-looking rubber monster and a screaming damsel in distress.
In The Fly, a mad scientist takes his experiments a little bit too far, and ends up becoming a half-man half-fly when an ordinary house fly lands on the machine he is testing.
In The Return of The Fly, the mad scientist's son takes up were his father left off in hopes of correcting the mistake of his father, but ultimately
falls victim of the same errors.
In both movies Vincent Price plays only a minor role as the brother of the mad scientist, but this is one of the early films that helped to set him on the path to becoming the reigning king of horror.
This film is marked by having one of the most disturbing images ever seen in 1950's monster/horror movies, which still turns people away from the screen even today. When this film was released on VHS for the first time in the early 1980's, it was sold with a warning label attached to it that said simply:
- Beware of the hand scene!

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The Fly Collection (The Fly [1958] / Return Of The Fly [1959] / The Curse Of The Fly [1965])
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The Fly (1958)/Return of the Fly (1959)
Release Date: 09/05/2000
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#9: Dr. Phibes
Two parts: The Abominable Dr. Phibes & Dr. Phibes Rises Again
The great Dr. Phibes and his beloved wife were killed in a car accident. While Phibes died instantly his wife lived long enough to die on the operating table. Ten years after their deaths, the doctors who had treated the wife begin to die from the Biblical 10 plagues of Egypt. Detectives are baffled as to how or why these murders are taking place.
One of Price's most famous, and most chilling, roles. Part murder mystery, part horror, this movie was originally filmed in two parts as two separate movies, which are best watched together as one film.
NOTE: Some scenes in this movie may be too disturbing for some viewers.
The costumes on this epic length film, based on the art of Erte`, are amazing.

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The Abominable Dr. Phibes/Dr. Phibes Rises Again!
THE ABOMINABLE DR. PHIBES: Original Theatrical Trailer DR. PHIBES RISES AGAIN!:
Release Date: 02/15/2005
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The Abominable Dr. Phibes
This unusually beautiful horror classic features Vincent Price in the title role of Dr. Anton Phibes, a genius who specializes in organ music, theology, and concocting bizarre deaths for anyone who wrongs him. Discovering why is half the fun, so for now let's just say that Phibes is a little mad and very, very angry. With his assistant, the lovely, silent Vulnavia, Phibes begins cutting a gory swath through London's medical community, with the dogged Inspector Trout hot on his tail. Phibes contains many pleasures--exquisite art direction and a dark sense of humor among them--but the real treat is in watching an old pro like Price at work. Whether he's playing his organ, staring down a victim, or drinking through his neck, Price is at the top of his game. He mixes dark menace with wry comic touches, revealing both Phibes's maniacal obsession and offhanded confidence in his own genius. Settle in for an evening of elegant gore and if an attractive, mute deliverywoman comes to the door, whatever you do--don't answer! --Ali Davis
Release Date: 02/20/2001
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Dr. Phibes Rises Again!
The title says it all--the abominable Dr. Phibes is back and as ruthless as ever. No longer content with merely avenging his wife's death, Phibes is now bent on her resurrection. Phibes and his mute assistant, Vulnavia, set off for Egypt, meting out bizarrely elaborate deaths--everything from clockwork snakes to a particularly severe exfoliation treatment--to all who stand in their way. This time Phibes has two competitors to race against, the trusty Inspector Trout and the renowned archaeologist Biederbeck, who has his own reasons for chasing Phibes. Like its predecessor, Dr. Phibes Rises Again adds dark wit and imaginative art direction to the mix. Vincent Price is once again in high form, playing his organ with swooping arms and adding dry comic touches with a delicately cocked eyebrow. A worthy successor to the classic original. --Ali Davis
Release Date: 02/20/2001
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#10: Tales of Terror
Tales of Terror
Tales of Terror/Twice Told Tales (Midnite Movies Double Feature)
Release Date: 09/20/2005
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Vincent Price: MGM Scream Legends Collection (The Abominable Dr. Phibes / Tales of Terror / Theater of Blood / Madhouse / Witchfinder General / Dr. Phibes Rises Again / Twice Told Tales)
Release Date: 09/11/2007
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Bonus Movie: Vincent by Tim Burton
Because 10 Vincent Price movies just aren't enough!

This is a cute animated/claymation movie created by Tim Burton (his first). In this one man show, Vincent Price plays a boy named Vincent who believes he is Vincent Price trapped in an Edgar Allan Poe book and suffers the dire consequences.
The video doesn't show up on Squidoo, but if you click the link it'll take you to MySpace where you can watch the entire 5 minute long mini-movie.
Vincent by Tim Burton
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What Wikipedia has to say about Vincent Price:
Price was born in St. Louis, Missouri, the son of Marguerite Cobb (née Willcox) and Vincent Leonard Price, Sr., who was the president of the National Candy Company.[1][2] His grandfather, Vincent Clarence Price, invented "Dr. Price's Baking Powder", the first cream of tartar baking powder, and secured the family's fortune.[3]
Price attended St. Louis Country Day School. He was further educated at Yale in art history and fine art. He was a member of Alpha Sigma Phi Fraternity and the Courtauld Institute, London. He became interested in theater in the 1930s, appearing professionally on stage from 1935.
He made his film debut in 1938 with Service de Luxe and established himself as a competent actor, notably in Laura (1944), opposite Gene Tierney, directed by Otto Preminger. He also played Joseph Smith, Jr. in the movie Brigham Young (1940), as well as a pretentious priest in The Keys of the Kingdom (1944).
Price's first venture into the horror genre was in the 1939 Boris Karloff film "Tower of London" in which his character was murdered by Karloff's. The following year he portrayed the title character in the film The Invisible Man Returns (a role he reprised in a vocal cameo at the end of 1948's horror-comedy spoof Abbott and Costello Meet Frankenstein).
In 1946 Price reunited with Gene Tierney in two notable films, Dragonwyck and Leave Her to Heaven. There were also many villainous roles in slick film noir thrillers like The Web (1947), The Long Night (1947), Rogues Regiment (1948) and The Bribe (1949) with Robert Taylor, Ava Gardner and Charles Laughton. He was also active in radio, portraying the Robin Hood-inspired crime-fighter Simon Templar, aka. The Saint, in a series that ran from 1943 to 1951.
In the 1950s, he moved into horror films, with a role in House of Wax (1953), the first 3-D film to land in the year's top ten at the North American box office, and then the monster movie The Fly (1958). Price also starred in the original House on Haunted Hill (1959) as the eccentric millionaire Fredrick Loren. (Geoffrey Rush, playing the same character in the 1999 remake, was not only made to resemble Price, but was also renamed Steven Price.)
In the 1960s, Price had a number of low-budget successes with Roger Corman and American International Pictures (AIP) including the Edgar Allan Poe adaptations House of Usher (1960), The Pit and the Pendulum (1961), Tales of Terror (1962), The Raven (1963), The Masque of the Red Death, The Last Man on Earth (1964) and The Tomb of Ligeia (1965). In 1968 Price gave an iconic, coldly menacing, performance as Matthew Hopkins the "Witchfinder General" in the film of the same name.[4]
He also starred in comedy films, notably the cult-classic Dr. Goldfoot and the Bikini Machine (1965). In 1968 he played the part of an eccentric artist in the musical Darling of the Day opposite Patricia Routledge, displaying an adequate if untrained singing voice.
He often spoke of his pleasure at playing "Egghead" on the Batman television series. Another of his co-stars, Yvonne Craig (Batgirl), often said Price was her favorite co-star. In an often-repeated anecdote from the set of Batman, Price, after a take was printed, started throwing eggs at series stars Adam West and Burt Ward, and when asked to stop replied, "With a full artillery? Not a chance!", causing an eggfight to erupt on the soundstage. This incident is reenacted in the behind-the-scenes telefilm Return to the Batcave: The Misadventures of Adam and Burt.
It was also in the 1960s that he began his role as a guest on the game show The Hollywood Squares, even becoming a semi-regular in the 1970s, including being one of the guest panelists on the finale in 1980.[5] He was known for usually making fun of Rose Marie's age, and using his famous voice to answer maliciously to questions.
During the early 1970s, Price hosted and starred in BBC Radio's horror and mystery series The Price of Fear. Price accepted a cameo part in the children's television program The Hilarious House of Frightenstein (1971) in Hamilton, Ontario Canada, on the local television station CHCH. In addition to the opening and closing monologues, his role in the show was to recite poems about the show's various characters, sometimes wearing a cloak or other costumes.[6] He has also appeared in The Abominable Dr. Phibes (1971) and Theatre of Blood (1973), in which he created a series of campy, tongue-in-cheek villains. Price also recorded dramatic readings of Poe's short stories and poems, which were collected together with readings by Basil Rathbone.
He greatly reduced his film work from around 1975, as horror itself suffered a slump, and increased his narrative and voice work, as well as advertising Milton Bradley's Shrunken Head Apple Sculpture. Price's voiceover is heard on Alice Cooper's first solo album, Welcome to My Nightmare from 1975, as well as the TV special entitled Alice Cooper-The Nightmare. He also starred for a year in the early 1970s in a syndicated daily radio program, Tales of the Unexplained. He also made guest appearances in a 1970 episode of Here's Lucy showcasing his art expertise and in a 1972 episode of The Brady Bunch, in which he played a deranged archaeologist.
In the summer of 1977, he began performing as Oscar Wilde, in the one man stage play Diversions and Delights. Written by John Gay and directed by Joe Hardy, the play is set in a Parisian theatre on a night about one year before Wilde's death. In an attempt to earn some much-needed money, he speaks to the audience about his life, his works and, in the second act, about his love for Bosie, Lord Alfred Douglas, which led to his downfall.
The original tour of the play was a success in every city that it played, except for New York City. In the summer of 1979, Price performed it at the Tabor Opera House in Leadville, Colorado on the same stage that Wilde had spoken to the miners about art some 96 years before. Price would eventually perform the play worldwide and to many, including his daughter Victoria, it was the best acting that he ever did.
n 1982, Price provided the narrator's voice in Vincent, Tim Burton's six-minute film about a young boy who flashes from reality into a fantasy where he is Vincent Price. That same year, he performed a sinister "rap" on the title track of Michael Jackson's Thriller album. A behind the scenes recording of the second verse of Vincent's rap can be heard on the Thriller 25 album. In 1983, Price played the Sinister Man in the British spoof horror film Bloodbath at the House of Death starring Kenny Everett. One of his last major roles, and one of his favorites, was as the voice of Professor Ratigan in Walt Disney Pictures' The Great Mouse Detective from 1986.
From 1981 to 1989, he hosted the PBS television series Mystery!. Also, in 1985, he was voice talent on the Hanna-Barbera series The 13 Ghosts of Scooby-Doo as the mysterious Vincent Van Ghoul who aided Scooby-Doo and the gang in capturing thirteen evil demons into an ancient chest. During this time (1985-1989), he appeared in horror-themed commercials for Tilex bathroom cleanser. In 1989, Price was inducted into the St. Louis Walk of Fame. His last significant film work was as the inventor in Tim Burton's Edward Scissorhands (1990).
A witty raconteur, Price was a frequent guest on Johnny Carson's Tonight Show, where he once demonstrated how to poach a fish in a dishwasher. He also was a frequent panelist on Hollywood Squares during its initial run. Price was also a noted gourmet cook and art collector. From 1962 to 1971, Sears, Roebuck offered the Vincent Price Collection of Fine Art, selling about 50,000 pieces of fine art to the general public. Price selected and commissioned works for the collection, including works by Rembrandt, Pablo Picasso, and Salvador Dalí.[7] He also authored several cookbooks and hosted a cookery TV show, Cooking Pricewise.
Price was a lifelong smoker. He had long suffered from emphysema and Parkinson's disease, which had forced his role in Edward Scissorhands to be much smaller than intended.
His illness also contributed to his retirement from Mystery, as his condition was becoming noticeable on-screen. He died of lung cancer on October 25, 1993. The Arts & Entertainment Network aired an episode of Biography highlighting Price's horror career the next night, but because of its failure to clear copyrights, the show was never aired again. Four years later, A&E produced its updated episode, a show titled Vincent Price: The Versatile Villain, which aired on October 12, 1997; it is often rebroadcast and is available on DVD. The script was by Lucy Chase Williams, author of The Complete Films of Vincent Price (Citadel Press, 1995). In early 1991, Tim Burton was developing a personal documentary with the working title Conversations With Vincent, in which interviews with Price were shot at the Vincent Price Gallery, but the project was never completed and was eventually shelved.
Vincent Leonard Price II (May 27, 1911 - October 25, 1993) was an American actor, well known for his distinctive voice and serio-comic attitude in a series of horror films made in the latter part of his career.
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I'm looking for some great on-topic lenses to add to my lensroll. I also feature and lensroll on-topic lenses by other lensmasters on this lens. Have you got a lens about favorite Vincent Price or other classic horror stars or their movies? If so, please feel free to leave a link to it in the comment box. Next time I log-in I'll stop by and check it out. I'll feature the ones that are on-topic for this lens, and lensroll most all lenses related to Vincent Price, and classic horror.










24websurf wrote...
When I was very young, I was in love with this man. At 16 my mother decided to let me know that I could not, in fact, marry him. This was in the days before I having information right at your fingertips. She told me he was not only too old for me - he was the same age as my grandmother actually-(sigh) but that he was her cousin. I never got to meet the man.
LCarney wrote...
Great list. Always up for debate and personal preference, but I think The Tingler deserves inclusion here, too.
tweety0126 wrote...
Great lens; my favorite was the House of Wax. Ever notice how many of his films had the word House in the title?
Cherkowsky wrote...
Cool lense! My girlfriend's mom is a huge Vincent Price fan. I'll have to pass this lens along to her.
Treasures-By-Brenda wrote...
Great lens; I like Vincent Price. Have you seen House of Seven Gables? It is a very rare Vincent Price movie that has not made it to DVD.
Brenda
StevenCousley wrote...
The Fly is one of my favourite classic movies. Even if Vincenr's roll was only a minor one, it still wouldn't have been the same without him, 5 Stars for great lens!
KimGiancaterino wrote...
I had the honor of working on a commercial with Vincent Price. He was such a gentleman. Nice Top 10. I also like "The Tingler." Entertaining lens... featured on my Squid Angel Diary this week!
TheWhistler wrote...
I love Vincent Price and I am honoured to have a framed autograph poster he signed for me after a performance of "Devices and Desires" in which he played Oscar Wilde.
cannedguds wrote...
I opened up my Social Media Inspector, type in the keywords "feng shui design " to find lenses regarding Feng Shui and guess what I found? THIS! This...this...very wonderful lens of one of my celluloid heroes, VINCENT PRICE! I really enjoyed reading this! Thanks for sharing! Vincent Price forevahhh!!!! Wooooo!!!!!No one can escape the evil of the Thriller (evil laugh)!!!!
MusicMadness wrote...
The rap he did on MJs thriller album showed how cool he was even for an actor beyond the age of cool. He's a classic for sure. 5*
Tiddledeewinks wrote...
I love Vincent Price. I've watched his movies since way back when...
Mortira wrote...
Who can forget the voice of Vincent Price? He's such an icon! Thanks for the fantastic lens! You've got a lot of great content and I loved the movie posters. *****
CleanerLife wrote...
He was great! The biggest surprise for me, is that he wasn't British -- I just always assumed...
rms wrote...
I miss Vincent Price's great voice! Thank you for adding this lens to the Gothic Temptaions group!
EelKat wrote...
I loved House of Wax, and also the Mad Magician, which was similar but scarier. He did more than 80 movies over the years, and I've and have most of them, so picking just 10 to feature here was VERY hard! I tried to pick the ones that were the best, and were important to his career.
poddys wrote...
Theatre Of Blood is my favourite. His voice alone is scary - such a dominating voice. The other great voices in my opinion are Richard Burton, and James Earl Jones.
Didn't Vincent Price also do The House Of Wax?
This is a very nice tribute lens.
About time some of the younger generation learned about some of the classic actors and movies.
(He did do House of Wax - 1953 - just looked it up)
amandaquerque wrote...
Who doesn't love Vincent Price? He is the master! What a wonderful addition to the BIG LENSES Group!
AdriennePetersen wrote...
I love Vincent Price! Great Lens, 5 Stars! Thanks for visiting my Lens,How To Make Chocolate Fudge That Will Have Your Friends & Family Begging For More!.
tplus wrote...
Congratulations! You are #10 at Who Has the Most Lenses?! I've picked this lens to be featured alongside your name. Come check out your competition!
EelKat wrote...
here's my group, for you to join all of your lenses too, that'll help more people to find it:CLiCK; also I'm making a lens to brainstorm ideas about building new lenses
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About Me
Lensmaster EelKat, aka Wendy C. Allen, has been a member since April 18 2007, has rated 6,062 lenses, favorited 3,137, and has created 403 lenses from scratch. This member's top-ranked page is "Publishing Methods". See all my lenses
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I am Wendy C Allen, Doll Maker and Independent Avon Sales Representative.
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