Haven Theatre
80-16 Jamaica Avenue,
Woodhaven,
NY
11421
80-16 Jamaica Avenue,
Woodhaven,
NY
11421
8 people favorited this theater
Showing 51 - 75 of 123 comments
Right on, George !
Is Zacherle still performing for the public ?
Indeed my good friend Peter.K. Zacherley did resemble Lon Chaney in Phantom Of The Opera with some schtick borrowed from Spike Jones. John Zacherley is now 90 years of age. Hopefully John Zacherley will be among us for many more years and continue to entertain us all.
George
Thanks, Lost Memory. No hurry. I already have one in my head.
Thanks, George Tobor, for all the Zacherle data. I will indulge you ANY time. I learned about ABC’s Shock Theater from “BrooklynJim”. It was a bit before my time. I first saw Zacherle hosting a Hercules cartoon (the one with the centaur named Newton) fall 1963. I’m not sure which TV station had it. I last saw Zacherle hosting “Chiller Theater” on WPIX 11 about January 1970, hosting “Killers From Space”, with Peter Graves, and those Marty Feldman-esque cumberbunded zombies in black, sealing Graves' chest with what looked like electric soldering irons. When the outer space zombies showed Graves their equations, there was a cut to Zacherle’s hand holding a slip of paper on which was written “2 + 2 = 5”. Sort of a MST 3000 predecessor.
I also remember Zacherle showing his bare feet on camera, introducing a commercial for the “Bop The Beetle” game, and using a head of cauliflower as a human brain in his lab. As I recall, his appearance was somewhat reminiscent of Lon Chaney in “Phantom Of The Opera”.
My friend Peter.K, indulge me for a moment. Chiller Theatre debuted in New York City in 1961 sans John Zacherle. The Cool Ghoul joined Chiller Theatre in 1963. Prior to joining Chiller Theatre John Zacherle hosted Shock Theatre in Philadelphia. WABC in New York City moved John Zacherle to New York City to host their version of Shock Theatre. It was at that time the spelling of his name was changed to Zacherley. The name of the show was briefly changed to Zacherley At Large just before it was cancelled. The following year John Zacherley signed a contract with WOR in New York City. The budget for the WOR show was paltry and his tenure at WOR was brief. In 1963 Zacherley signed with WPIX to host Chiller Theatre. Within two short years Zacherley would move on. 1965 found Zacherley hosting Zacherley’s Disco Teen show on channel 47 from Newark, New Jersey. In 1967 Zacherley moved to radio. Goodbye, whatever you are-ha! ha! ha!
George
Thanks, Lost Memory, but I would be more interested in a list of what was shown on Chiller Theatre from 1961 to 1970. I’m probably remembering most of them correctly, but I’d like to check.
The clips from “Plan 9” (Vampira and Ed Wood’s chiropractor with the cape up around his nose) were scarier in that “Chiller Theater” intro than they were in “Plan 9”, probably because the background music was scarier.
Will do Lost Memory, please forgive me for taking so long.
I think you would be welcome there, Panzer65 !
Warren masks for Halloween? That could be very interesting.
Seeing that I already roamed the elaborate aisles of the RKO Keith’s Richmond Hill (and took pictures) the prize that Peter mentioned is still up for grabs, and I do intend on getting those pics, but I hope I’m as lucky as Bway was to gain access (with no pics!)
The prize is upped to photos of the inside of what’s left of the RKO Madison Theatre !
You got it !
Can we wear Warren masks for Halloween ?
Sorry Peter,
Cant name any more.
Wonder what Warren is wearing for Halloween?
I would like a Wrigley’s spearmint before I go to the balcony.
That’s ONE of them, Panzer. Can you name the rest ?
And can you name them before Warren makes a comment on this thread about OT posting ?
“Attack of the 50 ft. Woman?
View link
Thanks so much, Mikey8052 ! One good Chiller Theatre intro deserves another !
Now, who can name all the movies, clips from which are included in the above linked older intro ?
Bonus question : a clip from what film was included in the ALTERNATE version of this older b & w intro ?
First prize : One stick of gum !
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=asO97gdn2oo
Thanks, Lost Memory !
Thanks for your consolation, Lost Memory. That means Chiller Theater ended on WPIX in 1983 or before.
I associate “Tarantula” more with The Big Show (I almost typed “Bug Show”, but that would have been ironically appropriate !) sci fi monster day, 4:30 PM weekdays, WABC Channel 7, fall 1963, than I do with WPIX Chiller Theater.
Viewers can decide what is more horrible, the giant tarantula crawling down Main Street, USA, or Leo G. Carroll’s acromegaly-distorted face.
This film may have been Clint Eastwood’s movie debut, as a jet fighter pilot, assigned to frying the giant bug, or did he debut in TV’s “Rawhide” before “Tarantula” was released ?
I missed it also.
No. What TV channel was it on, and at what time ?
I remember that six-fingered hand coming up out of the swamp next to that awful-looking dead tree, picking up the letters in “Chiller” one at a time. I also remember the previous, early 1960’s “Chiller Theatre” opening sequence with that god-awful scary music, and the montage of clips from about eight of the films they showed.
Speaking of roving hands, Peter, did you catch “Chiller Theater” last Saturday?
Indeed it was. The scene was reminiscent of the end of “Carrie”, when Carrie’s hand suddenly shot out of the ground to grab Sue Snell (Amy Irving).
Yes indeed, that lake was calm and serene.
That was a good scene, too, Panzer65. I think you meant “calm”, not “clam”, lake. I think that was Adrienne King, the heroine and one surviving teenager, in the rowboat, when Jason came up out of the water and tried to drag her down.
Yes, good thing no one near you had a jumbo tub of popcorn when Jason popped up.
Re:Friday the Thirteenth.
Peter, I did not see Friday the 13 th at the Ridgewood,but i do another scary scene, when the person is n the rowboat in a clam lake, and all of a sudden, Jason pops out of the water.
Glad no one near me had a jumbo tub, extra butter!
Thanks, Adrian. I’m no kid, so I know what those double-features were like. I saw “Friday The 13th” in the balcony of the Ridgewood on Tuesday June 17th 1980, four days after it opened on Friday June 13th 1980. Bucket of popcorn got tossed up in the air when Jason’s mother’s head went flying !