Fright Night (TV series)

Fright Night was the name of at least two science fiction and horror film programs. One ran from 1970 to 1981, and the other ran from 1973 to 1987. Both programs were broadcast by KHJ-TV Los Angeles, and its sister-station WOR-TV New York City.

Los Angeles

Fright Night was a television horror show that presented low-budget horror and science fiction films on KHJ-TV in Los Angeles between 1970 and 1981. The host for the show was Larry Vincent (Sinister Seymour). He was noted for his style of criticizing the films he presented in an offbeat and funny manner, usually appearing in a small window which would pop up in the corner, tossing a quip, then vanishing again.

His show began with a voice-over introduction by a whiny-voiced, never seen assistant, who proclaimed him ". . .the Master of the Macabre, the Eppy-tome of Evil, the most sinister man to crawl across the face of the Earth, SEEEEEEEYmooooourrrr!" He would then come out from behind the "slimiest of walls," and often lambaste the viewing audience for wasting their time watching such "stinkers." His films generally were poorly written films which had been distributed for late-night filler programming, in the days before satellite distribution became cost-effective for non-network stations.

He would frequently try to get a free meal from Pizza Fella which was a take-off on a then-popular franchise known as Pizza Man. He would announce that a character was a "real four-flusher"—followed by the sound of a toilet, flushing four times.

Elvira and Moona Lisa

Vincent was briefly replaced by Elvira prototype Moona Lisa (Lisa Clark), "girl guide of the galaxy and heavenly hostess" during 1972-1973. When Vincent died in 1975 he was replaced by Grimsley which was played by Robert Foster. The show lasted until 1979. In 1981, the show was revived by Elvira ("Mistress of The Dark") and was renamed "Movie Macabre".

Fiction

In the American horror film Fright Night (1985), Roddy McDowall's character, Peter Vincent, is also a horror host for a TV horror show titled "Fright Night". Although the character's name is derived from veteran horror film actors Peter Cushing and Vincent Price, and the character an amalgam of Cushing, Price, and Christopher Lee, the Peter Vincent character is also an homage to Fright Night 's host Larry Vincent.

New York City

Fright Night was also a horror program that aired on New York's WOR-TV, Channel 9. Unlike some of the station's other horror showcases from the 1970s such as Thriller Theater and Chiller Thriller, Fright Night catered to an adult audience.

As the Championship Wrestling show was ending, a Channel 9 off-screen announcer (either Ray Marlin, Jesse Elin Browne, Barbara Daniels Korsen or Ted Mallie) would say "Now stay tuned for Fright Night, next on Channel 9."

The opening featured a series of classic monsters from the Universal Horror series. Bela Lugosi's Dracula, Elsa Lanchester as the Bride of Frankenstein, Lon Chaney, Jr.. as The Wolfman and then Boris Karloff as the Frankenstein Monster which dissolved into a skull from whose empty eye socket flowed wispy dry ice mist. Then two words appeared in the eye socket...FRIGHT NIGHT.

From there the screen would give way to an incredible array of weekly horror films unlike those offered on any other station of the time. The show ran at various times throughout its history, ranging from midnight to 1 and 1:30 am. Fright Night had its premiere on Saturday night, October 6, 1973 at midnight. The first film shown was one of Hemisphere Pictures' television films called Decoy For Terror.

From 1973 to 1979 Fright Night showed mainly the Universal Horror classics like Dracula and Frankenstein. In fact, The Invisible Man became a Christmas tradition, broadcast whenever the Saturday night program fell on a Christmas weekend. Fright Night also later made a tradition of showing the violent Christmas chiller Silent Night, Bloody Night instead. The movie Mad Max also debuted in the New York Television area for the first time on Fright Night in 1980.

In early 1979 the station showed more 1970s slasher films and B-movies such as:

From 1979 until its end in 1987, many famous horror and science-fiction films debuted on Fright Night, like Ben, Halloween, House of Dark Shadows, It's Alive, Night of Dark Shadows, The Amityville Horror, The Deep, The Hills Have Eyes, The Legend of Hell House, The Texas Chain Saw Massacre, and Willard.

Fright Night was discontinued in September, 1987. A book about the WOR-TV version of the series entitled Fright Night on Channel 9: Saturday Night Horror Films on New York's WOR-TV, 1973-1987 by James Arena was published by Mcfarland in 2011.

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