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  1. Theatre of Blood

    Theatre of Blood

    R1973 · Horror · 1h 44m

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  1. Sep 10, 2012 · Time Out says. Comedy horror that really does give Vincent Price a chance to do his stuff, with deliciously absurd results. He plays a vilified classical actor driven to mount a series of ...

    • Plot
    • Cast
    • Critical Reception
    • Filming Locations
    • Stage Adaptation
    • Price and Coral Browne
    • External Links

    After being humiliated (as he perceives it) by members of the Theatre Critics Guild at a coveted awards ceremony, Shakespearean actor Edward Kendal Sheridan Lionheart (Vincent Price) is seen committing suicide by diving into the Thames from a great height. Unbeknownst to the public, Lionheart survives and is rescued by a group of vagrants. Two year...

    Diana Rigg... Edwina Lionheart
    Ian Hendry... Peregrine Devlin
    Harry Andrews ... Trevor Dickman

    This film was reportedly a favorite of Price's, as he had always wanted the chance to act in Shakespeare, but found himself typecast because of his work in horror films.Diana Rigg regards this as her best film. Before or after each death in the film, Lionheart recites passages of Shakespeare, giving Price a chance to deliver choice speeches such as...

    Theatre of Blood was filmed entirely on location. Lionheart's fictional hideout, the "Burbage Theatre", was actually the Putney Hippodrome in London, built in 1906, which had been vacant and dilapidated for over a decade before being used in the film. It was later demolished in 1975 to make way for housing units. The Hippodrome was also used in dir...

    The film was adapted for the stage by the British company Improbable, with Jim Broadbent playing Edward Lionheart and Rachael Stirling, Diana Rigg's daughter, playing the role her mother essayed, Lionheart's daughter. The play differs from the film in that the critics are from British newspapers (examples including The Guardian and The Times) and i...

    Vincent Price was introduced to his future wife Coral Browne by Diana Rigg during the making of the film. Browne recalled in a television documentary Caviar To The Generalin 1990, that she had not wanted to make "one of those scary Vincent Price movies" but she was persuaded to take the part of Chloe Moon by her friends Robert Morley and Michael Ho...

  2. Sep 23, 2021 · Theater of Blood, released in 1973, tends to fall under the radar given Price’s huge body of work. However, it is a deliriously entertaining horror-comedy. Price portrays Edward Lionheart, a Shakespearean actor humiliated by a slew of critics at an awards ceremony. Lionheart is so distraught that he attempts to commit suicide by plunging into ...

    • Douglas Hickox
    • R
    • Diana Rigg, Vincent Price, Ian Hendry
  3. Theatre of Blood is a 1973 British Horror Comedy film directed by Douglas Hickox and starring Vincent Price, who regarded it as one of his personal favorites.Also in the cast are Diana Rigg and an impressive coterie of British character actors, including Ian Hendry, Michael Hordern, Coral Browne, Robert Coote, Jack Hawkins, Harry Andrews, Arthur Lowe, Robert Morley, Dennis Price, Eric Sykes ...

  4. Theatre of Blood (also known as Theater of Blood) is a 1973 horror film starring Vincent Price as vengeful actor Edward Lionheart and Diana Rigg as his daughter Edwina. The cast includes such distinguished actors as Harry Andrews, Coral Browne, Robert Coote, Jack Hawkins, Ian Hendry, Michael Hordern, Arthur Lowe, Joan Hickson, Robert Morley ...

  5. Two years later, the presumed-dead Lionheart resurfaces in the burnt-out husk of his old theatre. Wearing a variety of costumes and disguises and aided by his equally-deranged daughter Edwina (Diana Rigg) and a gang of homeless vagabonds, the former leading-man begins to slay the nine members of the Critics' Circle in a most gruesome fashion, the crimes based on murders found within the plays ...

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  7. May 18, 2022 · Nick Freeman cites Theatre of Blood, along with Dracula A.D. 1972 (Alan Gibson, 1972) and Death Line (Gary Sherman, 1973), as one of a group of British horror films that attempted to buck this trend, relocating horror within the metropolis. [3] In the 1960s, London had been depicted within British cinema as a space of social change and class ...

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