Showing posts with label letter e. Show all posts
Showing posts with label letter e. Show all posts

Friday, 5 April 2013

A-Z Blogging Challenge: E is for Edward Gorey


Edward Gorey
A page from The Haunted Tea Cosy, by Edward Gorey
American illustrator, playwright, set and costume designer, author and artist Edward Gorey was probably best known for his unusual and charming illustrated books, which often had macabre and Victorian-esque themes / styles. Gorey described a great deal of his own work as being in the  "literary nonsense" genre, though his styles were much more varied than that. 

The Gashlycrumb Tines by Edward Gorey
After his death in 2000, his house in Cape Cod, Massachusetts was transformed into The Edward Gorey House. The House serves as a museum dedicated to Gorey's creations and "also honors Gorey's passion and concern for animals, raising awareness about local and national animal welfare issues" (About the Gorey House; The Edward Gorey House website).


The Haunted Tea-Cosy by Edward Gorey

The Epiplectic Bicycle by Edward Gorey
A page from The Epiplectic Bicycle by Edward Gorey.
Poor alligator!
A page from The Gashlycrumb Tinies by Edward Gorey


This post is part of the A-Z Blogging Challenge, 2013.

Thursday, 5 April 2012

A-Z Challenge: E is for...Erik, The Phantom

E is for...Erik, The Phantom!
A figure of Lon Chaney Sr. as Erik, in the 1925 silent film
'The Phantom of the Opera'
E is for Erik, the disfigured antagonist of the 1910 Gaston Leroux novel, 'Le Fantôme de l'Opéra' ('The Phantom of the Opera'). I've chosen to concentrate this entry on the first portrayal of Erik on film, Lon Chaney in the 1925 silent movie version. For those of you wondering why the above photo shows Erik sitting at a modern keyboard instead of an organ, I should explain that it's a photo of a figure of Lon Chaney as Erik, sitting at my keyboard. That taken care of, on with the post...

Erik (Lon Chaney) and Christine (Mary Philbin)
Image Source: A Muchness of Me
In the novel, Leroux often describes Erik / The Phantom as an ominous and frightening character who sleeps in a coffin and has an unmasked visage resembling a rotting corpse or a skull. Chaney's portrayal of Erik is more faithful to this than many later versions, but this is largely due to the 1925 film's focus on horror rather than the more romantic elements, as is the case in Andrew Lloyd Webber's musical adaptation.  Obviously, Erik is still in love with Christine, but he's never viewed in a romantic light. Indeed, when the 1925 version was originally released, some cinemas were told to keep smelling salts nearby to wake terrified women that had fainted in shock during the unmasking scene!

Erik and Christine
Image Source: Classic Movie Monsters
However, many of the details about Erik's life before he lived under the opera house in Paris are glossed over or simply omitted completely. Unfortunately, it's those details, together with the complexity of his personality, that make Erik a much more sympathetic and mysterious man than the film allows for. Still, given that Erik is positioned as a figure of fright through much of the film, Chaney's method acting and special effects make-up expertise help him to portray the The Phantom excellently, without even speaking a word.


This post is part of the A-Z Blogging Challenge.


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