Discuss Jonathan Frid

Who, "of a certain age", doesn't remember Jonathan Frid's popular portrayal of gentleman vampire Barnabas Collins on the classic gothic daytime soap Dark Shadows? That role certainly gained Mr. Frid (1924-2012) a lot of pop culture attention and fans. (I personally, in childhood, owned a Dark Shadows lunchbox and corresponding thermos bottle, also the Barnabas Collins Dark Shadows Game - each mentioned thing which of course prominently featured illustration of Frid's Barnabas on the front of it.)

I was surprised when I learned, just the other year, that Mr. Frid was Canadian, rather than British. I always completely bought his Britishness when viewing Dark Shadows.

Following are excerpts from his 20 April 2012 New York Times obituary, authored by Margalit Fox:

Jonathan Frid, a Shakespearean actor who found unexpected...celebrity as the vampire Barnabas Collins on the...soap opera “Dark Shadows,” died...April 14....He was 87....// Though the befanged Mr. Frid was the acknowledged public face of “Dark Shadows” — his likeness was on comic books, board games, trading cards and many other artifacts — Barnabas did not make his first appearance until more than 200 episodes into the run. The character was conceived as a short-term addition to the cast, and early on the threat of the stake loomed large. // Broadcast on weekday afternoons on ABC, “Dark Shadows” began in 1966 as a conventional soap opera (with Gothic overtones), centering on the Collins family and their creaky manse in Maine. // The next year, with ratings slipping, the show’s executive producer...chose to inject an element of the supernatural. Enter Barnabas, a brooding, lovelorn, eternally 175-year-old representative of the undead....// The ratings shot up, and not only among the traditional soap-opera demographic of stay-at-home women. With its breathtakingly low-rent production values and equally breathtakingly purple dialogue, “Dark Shadows” induced a generation of high school and college students to cut class to revel in its unintended high camp. The producers shelved the stake. // Swirling cape, haunted eyes and fierce eyebrows notwithstanding, Barnabas, as portrayed by Mr. Frid, was no regulation-issue vampire. An 18th-century man — he had been entombed in the Collins family crypt — he struggled to comes to terms with the 20th-century world. // He was a vulnerable vampire, who pined for his lost love, Josette....He was racked with guilt over his thirst for blood, and Mr. Frid played him as a man in the grip of a compulsion he devoutly wished to shake. // Mr. Frid starred in almost 600 episodes, from April 18, 1967, to April 2, 1971, when the show went off the air....// Mr. Frid received nearly 6,000 fan letters a week....// It was...an exquisitely unimagined career path for a stage actor trained at the Yale School of Drama and the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art in London....//...Mr. Frid reprised the role [of Barnabas] in the 1970 feature film “House of Dark Shadows”; the few other screen roles that came his way also tended toward the ghoulish....


Please check out the following list of titles and celebrities I've created TMDb threads for: https://www.themoviedb.org/list/118052

Can't find a movie or TV show? Login to create it.

Global

s focus the search bar
p open profile menu
esc close an open window
? open keyboard shortcut window

On media pages

b go back (or to parent when applicable)
e go to edit page

On TV season pages

(right arrow) go to next season
(left arrow) go to previous season

On TV episode pages

(right arrow) go to next episode
(left arrow) go to previous episode

On all image pages

a open add image window

On all edit pages

t open translation selector
ctrl+ s submit form

On discussion pages

n create new discussion
w toggle watching status
p toggle public/private
c toggle close/open
a open activity
r reply to discussion
l go to last reply
ctrl+ enter submit your message
(right arrow) next page
(left arrow) previous page

Settings

Want to rate or add this item to a list?

Login