Featuring Over 700 Photos and Images of Artifacts From the Lugosi Family Archives, A Foreword by Bela Lugosi, Jr., and an Afterword by Noted Lugosi Historian Dr. Gary Rhodes
Béla Lugosi was more than just an actor; he was a cultural icon and a legend of the silver screen whose commanding presence, hypnotic voice, and mesmerizing gaze made him the embodiment of Count Dracula. Now acclaimed journalist and Lugosi expert Robert Cremer has written BÉLA LUGOSI: THE MAN BEHIND THE CAPE, a comprehensive and essential biography that features over 700 photographs, including many rare or never-before-seen family photos, letters, documents and historical artifacts curated by Lynne Lugosi Sparks of the Lugosi Family Archives, many of which have never before been published. The book, which is being crowdfunded on Kickstarter by Clover Press, also features an all-new foreword by Béla Lugosi, Jr. and an afterword by noted Lugosi historian Dr. Gary Rhodes.
BÉLA LUGOSI: THE MAN BEHIND THE CAPE includes exclusive interviews conducted with Lillian Lugosi Donlevy, Lugosi’s wife of 20 years, as well as his closest Hungarian relatives and friends. The biography explores the actor’s humble beginnings in Hungary; his political activism, which cost him his wife, family and almost his life; his harrowing transatlantic crossing to America; and his struggles to realize his dream of becoming a success on stage and on the silver screen. The book also provides compelling insight into the reasons for Béla’s decline into B-movie productions in Gower Gulch in the 1950s, with extensive interviews with Edward D. Wood, Jr. which unlock heretofore unknown background on Béla’s involvement in the filming of the cult classics Glen or Glenda, Bride of the Monster and Plan 9 from Outer Space.
BÉLA LUGOSI: THE MAN BEHIND THE CAPE providesunprecedented look into many aspects of Lugosi’s life, including:
- Why Béla enlisted in the army in 1914, when he could have been excused from military service.
- How Béla became a major union organizer in 1918 that catapulted him to fame and then to exile from his beloved Hungary.
- How a sailor and his cat saved Béla’s life during his transatlantic crossing to the U.S.
- Why Béla was not the first choice for the role of Count Dracula.
- Why Béla risked involvement in the founding of the Screen Actors Guild in Hollywood, given his near-fatal experience with union activism in Hungary.
- Who was really behind the ban on horror films in 1936.
- Why Béla’s film The Raven was a personal nightmare for the actor, despite being a box office hit.
- Why Béla risked his health repeatedly on cross-country barnstorming tours.
- What role fishhead stew played in Béla’s embarking on a second career with filmmaker Ed Wood.
- Why Béla asked his son not to drive him to his wedding ceremony with Hope Lininger.
Perfect for film buffs, horror aficionados and readers with a taste for the macabre, BÉLA LUGOSI: THE MAN BEHIND THE CAPE is now on Kickstarter. Visit the campaign here: https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/cloverpress/2045420609?ref=e7z592
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About Clover Press: Headed by IDW co-founders Ted Adams and Robbie Robbins, along with Matt Ruzicka and former DC executive Hank Kanalz, Clover Press publishes a wide variety of collected and original content ranging from re-mastered reprints of Terry and the Pirates and Dick Tracy, to horror graphic novels, and high-quality art books. Clover Press is working with a wide variety of creators including Kevin Eastman, Craig Yoe, Dean Mullaney, Steve Niles, Gabriel Rodriguez, Ruben Bolling, Timothy Truman, Jorge Coelho, Richard Bennett, Ricardo Delgado, Ray Troll, John K. Snyder III, Stewart Kenneth Moore, Aron Wiesenfeld, Alex Maleev, David Mack, David Nakayama, and more.
About Robert Cremer: Robert Cremer began his journalistic career as a syndicated columnist at the Hollywood Reporter in Hollywood. He later established the first university cable network at the University of California at Berkeley and directed the university FM radio station KALX there. He was a regular contributor to the entertainment section of the San Francisco Chronicle and was a feature writer for other newspapers on the West Coast. While in the U.S., he authored two books, Lugosi: The Man Behind the Cape and Orienteering with Map and Compass. Following his move to Germany in 1993, he authored a book in German, Die Geheimsprache des Blues, which he then translated into English ‒ The Secret Language of the Blues ‒ for distribution in the U.S. and other English-speaking countries. He currently lives in the Bavarian town of Bamberg, which has the densest concentration of beer breweries in the world. He attributes his continuing output in retirement to this fact alone.
About Lynne Lugosi Sparks: Lynne Lugosi Sparks is the granddaughter of Béla Lugosi and the CEO of Lugosi Enterprises. In the course of archiving and preserving the Lugosi family’s photos and memorabilia, she has also curated an extensive collection of Béla Lugosi’s work on film, including features, serials, and shorts, and coordinated the donation of these materials to the Béla Lugosi Collection at the Academy Film Archive. Along with her father, Béla Lugosi, Jr., she oversaw the transfer of Béla Lugosi’s iconic screen-worn cape from the Lugosi Family Collection to the Academy Museum. Managing the licensing of her grandfather’s name and likeness, she is proud to have established the Béla Lugosi brand, which features a large portfolio of highly sought-after, officially licensed products. Interacting with fans, artists and licensees is the most rewarding part of being a steward of her family’s heritage.