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Bela Lugosi Filmography
Source:
Theiapolis - Amazon Women on the Moon
1987 - Actor (Pete Jones)
- Nightmare in Blood
1978 - Actor
- Head
1968 - Actor (Himself, Actor in clip from 'The Black Cat')
- Plan 9 from Outer Space
1959 - Actor (Ghoul Man)
- The Black Sleep
1956 - Actor (Casimir)
- Bride of the Monster
1955 - Actor (Dr. Eric Vornoff)
- Glen or Glenda
1953 - Actor (Scientist)
- Bela Lugosi Meets a Brooklyn Gorilla
1952 - Actor (Dr. Zabor)
- Mother Riley Meets the Vampire
1952 - Actor (Von Housen)
- Bud Abbott Lou Costello Meet Frankenstein
1948 - Actor (Count Dracula)
- Scared to Death
1947 - Actor (Prof. Leonide)
- Genius at Work
1946 - Actor (Stone)
- The Body Snatcher
1945 - Actor (Joseph)
- Zombies on Broadway
1945 - Actor (Dr. Paul Renault)
- One Body Too Many
1944 - Actor (Murkil)
- Return of the Ape Man
1944 - Actor (Prof. Dexter)
- Voodoo Man
1944 - Actor (Dr.Richard Marlowe)
- The Return of the Vampire
1944 - Actor (Armand Tesla/Dr. Hugo Bruckner)
- Ghosts on the Loose
1943 - Actor (Emil)
- Frankenstein Meets the Wolf Man
1943 - Actor (Monster)
- The Ape Man
1943 - Actor (Dr. James Brewster)
- Bowery at Midnight
1942 - Actor (Prof. Frederick Brenner, alias Karl Wagner)
- Night Monster
1942 - Actor (Rolf)
- The Corpse Vanishes
1942 - Actor (Dr. Lorenz)
- S.O.S. Coast Guard
1942 - Actor (Boroff)
- The Ghost of Frankenstein
1942 - Actor (Ygor)
- Black Dragons
1942 - Actor (Dr. Melcher/Monsieur Colomb)
- The Wolf Man
1941 - Actor (Bela)
- Spooks Run Wild
1941 - Actor (Nardo)
- The Black Cat
1941 - Actor (Eduardo)
- Invisible Ghost
1941 - Actor (Charles Kessler)
- You'll Find Out
1940 - Actor (Prince Saliano)
- The Devil Bat
1940 - Actor (Dr. Paul Carruthers)
- Black Friday
1940 - Actor (Eric Marnay)
- The Saint's Double Trouble
1940 - Actor (The Partner)
- The Dark Eyes of London
1940 - Actor (Dr. Feodor Orloff/Prof. John Dearborn)
- Ninotchka
1939 - Actor (Kommissar Razinin)
- The Gorilla
1939 - Actor (Peters - the Butler)
- Son of Frankenstein
1939 - Actor (Ygor)
- The Phantom Creeps
1939 - Actor (Dr. Alex Zorka)
- S.O.S. Coast Guard
1937 - Actor (Boroff, alias M.A. Anderson)
- Postal Inspector
1936 - Actor (Gregory Benez)
- Revolt of the Zombies
1936 - Actor (The Eyes)
- The Invisible Ray
1936 - Actor (Dr. Felix Benet)
- Murder by Television
1935 - Actor (Arthur Perry)
- The Raven
1935 - Actor (Dr. Richard Vollin)
- The Mystery of the Marie Celeste
1935 - Actor (Anton Lorenzen)
- Mark of the Vampire
1935 - Actor (Count Mora)
- The Best Man Wins
1935 - Actor (Doc Boehm)
- Chandu on the Magic Island
1935 - Actor (Frank Chandler (Chandu))
- The Mysterious Mr. Wong
1934 - Actor (Mr. Fu Wong, aka Lysee)
- The Return of Chandu
1934 - Actor (Frank Chandler, aka Chandu the Magician)
- Gift of Gab
1934 - Actor (Cameo Appearance)
- The Black Cat
1934 - Actor (Dr. Vitus Werdegast)
- The Devil's in Love
1933 - Actor (Military Prosecutor)
- International House
1933 - Actor (Gen. Nicholas Petronovich)
- Night of Terror
1933 - Actor (Degar)
- The Death Kiss
1932 - Actor (Joseph Steiner)
- Island of Lost Souls
1932 - Actor (Sayer of the Law)
- Chandu the Magician
1932 - Actor (Roxor)
- White Zombie
1932 - Actor ('Murder' Legendre)
- Murders in the Rue Morgue
1932 - Actor (Dr. Mirakle)
- Broadminded
1931 - Actor (Pancho)
- The Black Camel
1931 - Actor (Tarneverro)
- Women of All Nations
1931 - Actor (Prince Hassan)
- 50 Million Frenchmen
1931 - Actor (Orizon - Magician)
- Dracula
1931 - Actor (Count Dracula)
- Oh, for a Man
1930 - Actor (Frescatti)
- Viennese Nights
1930 - Actor (Count von Ratz, Hungarian Ambassador)
- Renegades
1930 - Actor (Marabout)
- Wild Company
1930 - Actor (Felix Brown)
- Such Men Are Dangerous
1930 - Actor (Dr. Erdmann)
- The Thirteenth Chair
1929 - Actor (Inspector Delzante)
- Prisoners
1929 - Actor (Brottos, Nightclub Owner)
- The Veiled Woman
1929 - Actor (Murdered suitor)
- How to Handle Women
1928 - Actor (Bit Part)
- The Midnight Girl
1925 - Actor (Nicholas Schuyler)
- He Who Gets Slapped
1924 - Actor (Clown Extra)
- The Rejected Woman
1924 - Actor (Jean Gagnon)
- The Silent Command
1923 - Actor (Hisston)
- The Last of the Mohicans
1920 - Actor (Indian)
- Lederstrumpf, 2. Teil: Der Letzte der Mohikaner
1920 - Actor (Chingachook)
- Lederstrumpf, 1. Teil: Der Wildtöter und Chingachgook
1920 - Actor (Chingachgook)
- Der Januskopf
1920 - Actor (Dr. Warren's Butler)
- 99
1918 - Actor
- Élet királya, Az
1918 - Actor (Lord Henry Wotton)
- Lili
1918 - Actor (Plinchard/General)
- Leoni Leo
1917 - Actor (Leoni Leo)
Bela Lugosi Resources
Béla Lugosi was the stage name of actor
Béla Ferenc Dezső Blaskó (October 20, 1882–August 16, 1956). He was born in Lugos, Transylvania, Austria-Hungary (now Lugoj, Romania), the youngest of four children of a banker.
Lugosi started his acting career on the stage in Europe in several Shakespearean plays. He however, became most notably known for his portrayal of Dracula in a stage production of Bram Stoker's classic vampire story.
During World War I he served as an infantry lieutenant for the Central Powers.
He left from his native Hungary for Germany in 1919 after persecution following his complicity in the forming of an actor's union, and emigrated to the United States in 1921.
He was most famous for his title role in Tod Browning's Dracula (1931) (building on the stage role). The film was a success, but Lugosi was typecast as a horror heavy with such movies as White Zombie
and Scared to Death
. He declined an offer to appear as The Monster in Frankenstein
but made an impression as the insane Ygor in two sequels, Son of Frankenstein
and Ghost of Frankenstein
before finally consenting to play the creature in Frankenstein Meets the Wolf Man
. He also had a small role in the comedy classic Ninotchka opposite
Greta Garbo.
Several films, such as The Black Cat
and the aforementioned Son of Frankenstein paired Lugosi with his chief rival in the realm of horror movies,
Boris Karloff. Lugosi's attitude towards Karloff is the subject of contradictory reports, some claiming he was openly resentful of Karloff's long-term success and ability to get good roles beyond the horror arena, while others suggested the two actors were - for a time at least - good friends.
Later on, the acting jobs dried up and he became addicted to morphine, though he did get to recreate the role of Dracula one last time for the film Bud Abbott and Lou Costello Meet Frankenstein in 1948.
Late in his life, he again got to star in movies, albeit lousy ones. Ed Wood, a long-time fan of Lugosi's, offered him numerous roles in his films, always playing some variant of a mad scientist/vampire type, even in movies — such as Glen or Glenda
— in which such a role made no sense. The biographical film Ed Wood, by
Tim Burton, portrayed Wood's relationship with Lugosi, who was played by Martin Landau. Because Lugosi appeared in B-Movies, he was featured in several episodes of the television series Mystery Science Theater 3000, most notably, Bride of the Monster.
He died of a heart attack, aged 73, in Los Angeles, California, while sitting in a chair. The script for
Final Curtain, written by Ed Wood, was in his lap. (The role was later given to Kenne Duncan, and the shots of that production made their way into Wood's
Night of the Ghouls, a sequel of sorts to Wood's previous Lugosi films.)
One of Lugosi's most infamous roles was in a movie that was released after he was dead. Ed Wood's Plan 9 from Outer Space featured footage of Lugosi interspersed with a double who looked nothing like him. Wood had had great difficulty in financing the project, and was only able to shoot short, silent scenes that he planned to incorporate into the whole of the film once he had found the remainder of his funding. However, Lugosi died three years before the funding came through (from the Baptist Church of Beverly Hills, no less). Wood hired his wife's chiropractor to double for Lugosi, who is easily spotted by the fact that# He looks nothing like Lugosi# He covers his face with his cape in every shot.Contrary to Burton's Ed Wood
, Lugosi did not receive top billing for Plan 9. Instead he was listed as a guest-star, below Tor Johnson,
Vampira and Kenne Duncan.
He was also the subject of a song by gothic rock band Bauhaus entitled "Bela Lugosi's Dead".
Truth being stranger than fiction sometimes, Bela Lugosi was buried in his full Dracula costume, as per the request in his will, in the Holy Cross Cemetery in Culver City, California.
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