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The undisputed horror queen of the 60s was Barbara Steele, a British actress with eerie, mysterious good looks: large dark eyes, high cheekbones, jet black hair and full lips. Her journey into the shadowy world of witches and vampires occurred by accident. She’d been filming ‘Flaming Star’, the Elvis Presley western, for a few days, wearing a ridiculous blonde wig when she decided to walk out on the project. It put paid to her contract with 20th Century Fox. |
From
her base in Rome she appeared in a string of macabre movies, including
‘Dr Hitchcock’s Hidden Secret’; ‘The Spectre of Dr Hitchcock’; ‘Danse
Macabre’; ‘The Maniacs’; ‘The Long Hair of Death’; ‘Five Graves for
a Medium’; ‘Orgasmo’; ‘An Angel for Satan’ and ‘Return of the Blood
Beast’. In 1968 she returned to Britain to star with horror kings Boris
Karloff and Christopher Lee in ‘The Curse of the Crimson Altar’. This was the last real horror film she made as she decided not only to wind up her career in the horror genre but also to go into semi-retirement from screen appearances in general. In the succeeding years she has only appeared in a few films, including ‘Caged Heat’ in which she played a sadistic wheelchair-bound warden in a women’s prison; David Cronenberg’s ‘Shivers’ and ‘I Never Promised You A Rose Garden’ (1977); ‘Pretty Baby’ (1978); ‘Piranha’ (1978); ‘The Space Watch Murders’ (1978) and ‘The Silent Scream’ (1979). |
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