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In 1945 it was adapted into a British film of the same title produced by Gainsborough Pictures. [1] Directed by Bernard Knowles and starring James Mason and Margaret Lockwood, it was part of the group of Gainsborough Melodramas. Sitwell collaborated on the screenplay with Brock Williams.
Tom is a werewolf from infancy and cannot remember any life before having the condition. Nina Pickering: Being Human: Nina becomes a werewolf after her boyfriend, who is a werewolf, scratches her during a transformation. George Sands: Being Human: After being attacked by a werewolf in Scotland, George himself becomes a werewolf.
James Mason wrote in his memoirs that when he read the script "not only did I enthuse but I even asked that I might be permitted to play the role of the elderly retiree in the story." [ 2 ] This was the first time Margaret Lockwood used a beauty spot on her cheek in a film, something which became a trademark.
The werewolf trials. While most people know of the witch trials that took place in Europe and in the American colonies (including Salem, Massachusetts) during the 1500's and 1600's, few are aware ...
Lockwood House may refer to: Allen-Lockwood House, Bluffton, South Carolina; Henry Lockwood House, Harpers Ferry, West Virginia; Hoffecker-Lockwood House, Kenton, Delaware; Isaac Lockwood House, Marshall, Michigan, listed on the National Register of Historic Places (NRHP) J.C. Lockwood House, Milan, Ohio, listed on the NRHP; Lockwood-Boynton ...
Mason and Lockwood's involvement in the movie adaptation was announced in November of that year, together with that of director Leslie Arliss. [ 10 ] In a 1945 issue of Picturegoer , Arliss said that it was Eleanor Smith (author of the book which had inspired his 1943 hit The Man in Grey ) who gave him King-Hall's novel.
English: One of the last remaining traces of the former Josiah Mason College building in Edmund Street (1969). Baskerville House is visible through the archway, and the dome of the Hall of Memory rises above the ruins to the left.
At some point, John W. Hunter sold this house to his son-in-law, who by 1877 had sold it to Ira Toms. By 1893, Henry Randall was the owner, and he moved the house from its original location to Brown Street. The house passed through a series of owners who used it as a residence until 1970, when it was purchased by the city of Birmingham.