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Early 1990s horror series were based on classical horror figures such as a blond-haired Count in Dracula: The Series and She-Wolf of London. [5] Series in the 1990s were often either based on their locations such as Shades of LA , Eerie Indiana , and Twin Peaks or focused on vampires with Geraint Wyn Davies playing an undead cop in Forever ...
Pages in category "1960s horror television series" This category contains only the following page. ... Creature Features (1969 TV series) This page was last ...
Creature Features is a program of horror shows broadcast on local American television stations throughout the 1960s, 1970s, and 1980s. The movies broadcast on these shows were generally classic and cult horror movies of the 1930s to 1950s, the horror and science-fiction films of the 1950s, British horror films of the 1960s, and the Japanese kaiju "giant monster" movies of the 1950s to 1970s.
Pages in category "1960s American horror television series" The following 4 pages are in this category, out of 4 total. ... The Twilight Zone (1959 TV series)
You can’t talk about horror without talking about TV’s horror family, The Addams. Far more comedy than horror, of course, The Addams Family sitcom was adapted from a series of long-running New ...
Late night horror programs had become immensely popular during the 1960s, so KIRO-TV decided to tap into a market virtually untouched by the Pacific Northwest stations at the time. Nightmare Theatre was conceptualized by Joe Towey , who not only functioned as the director of The J.P. Patches Show for its entire twenty-three years, but who also ...
Chiller Theater began airing on WPIX in 1961. Beginning in 1963, its host was John Zacherle ("The Cool Ghoul"). Zacherle quit the show in 1965. [1] Each episode of the show began with the "Classic Montage Opening" that used a montage of brief segments of film from various 1950s fantasy and science fiction movies. [2]
Shock Theater continued the American tradition of horror film television shows that originated with Vampira (Maila Nurmi) at Los Angeles KABC-TV in 1954-55. Shock Theater programs in major cities were often introduced by local hosts in the style of Zacherley or Vampira such as Terry Bennett's Marvin on Chicago's WBKB-TV. [3]