Top

arts

Stories

  • spacer

    Features

    How L.A. Neighborhoods Influence Artist Llyn Foulkes

    By Claire de Dobay Rifelj

  • spacer

    Blogs

    Theater to See in L.A. This Week

    By L.A. Weekly critics

  • spacer

    Blogs

    Top Art Shows to See in L.A. This Week

    By Catherine Wagley

  • spacer

    Features

    Two Angelenos Are Revolutionizing Magic

    By Zachary Pincus-Roth

  • spacer

    Slideshows

    20 Baddest Movie Villians

    By Voice Media Group

  • spacer

    Features

    American Idol Meets the Museum

    By Zachary Pincus-Roth

  • spacer

    Features

    How I Learned to Love Land Art

    By Andrew Berardini

  • spacer

    Blogs

    Inside the L.A. Dominatrix Industry

    By Amanda Lewis

 
  • Pin It
  • Elvira's World

    Cassandra Peterson, pushing 60 and still Mistress of the Dark

    Check out our picks for the "Top 5 Elvira Moments on YouTube" here.

    spacer
    PHOTO BY KEVIN SCANLON
    Cassandra Peterson, pushing 60 and still Mistress of the Dark
    spacer
    PHOTO BY KEVIN SCANLON
    "People think I have been retired in a trailer in Pacoima."

    Related Content

    More About

    • Cassandra Peterson
    • Maila Nurmi
    • Mark Pierson
    • Ted Biaselli
    • Arts, Entertainment, and Media

    At 17, Click|keyword[Cassandra+Peterson]" >Cassandra Peterson left home and headed straight for Vegas, where she soon became Sin City's youngest showgirl. Before she was old enough to legally vote, smoke or drink, she had made out with both Click|keyword[Jimi+Hendrix]" >Jimi Hendrix and Click|keyword[Elvis+Presley]" >Elvis Presley. At 22, she was fronting a rock band in Italy and met Click|keyword[Federico+Fellini]" >Federico Fellini on the street; he told her she resembled his wife, and gave her a bit part in Roma. By 1981, Peterson was living in Hollywood, a 30-year-old, struggling would-be starlet. While honeymooning out of town with her new husband, Click|keyword[Mark+Pierson]" >Mark Pierson, Peterson got a call from a girlfriend insisting that she hurry home to L.A., stat — local station KHJ-TV was looking for a sexy, funny chick to host its long-running showcase of cheesy old horror movies. Peterson — a sexy, funny chick with a long-standing thing for Click|keyword[Vincent+Price]" >Vincent Price — obviously was perfect for the part. But Peterson told the friend, "I'm not coming back from my honeymoon just for that!"

    When she did get back to L.A., Peterson showed up at KHJ, mocked the script they gave her in the voice of a Valley girl character she had been practicing at the Click|keyword[The+Groundlings]" >Groundlings, and landed the role of Elvira, Mistress of the Dark, the host of the late-night horror movie series Movie Macabre.

    "I wasn't, like, 'Oh yay, I got the greatest job in the world,' " Peterson says today. "I was, like, 'Oh, I guess this is something I can do. It only takes one day a week and it [pays] $300, and I can go look for other acting work during the week.' "

    The gig's saving grace, she figured, was that at least no one would recognize her out of costume. At least no one would associate Cassandra Peterson, Serious Actress, with that tacky thing she did on TV.

    But then a funny thing happened: Part Goth Playmate, part winking mall trash with a dazzling command of ultrabawdy double entendre, an alternative pinup and self-sufficient postfeminist dame, Elvira became a sensation. Peterson not only hung on for the ride; she also funneled her ambition into steering Elvira toward a business model that, at its peak, reportedly grossed seven figures a year.

    By 1982, Elvira's Movie Macabre was airing in dozens of markets nationwide. That same year, Peterson shot an episode in 3-D, making her the first person to be broadcast over American airwaves in three dimensions. By 1988, Click|keyword[U.S.+Air+Force]" >U.S. Air Force pilots had nicknamed the Stealth Bomber's computer system "Elvira." The character's reach also extended to less stealthy weapons: In 1998, Time reported, "When Click|keyword[Monica+Lewinsky]" >Monica Lewinsky worked in the Click|keyword[The+White+House]" >White House, she had nicknames. One was Elvira — a snickering reference to Lewinsky's big, black hair, her fondness for tight, chest-hugging outfits and her coquettish demeanor." In response to that revelation, Elvira quipped, "At least I wash my little black dress once in a while."

    Twelve years later, on a tiny set thrown together in a high-ceilinged office in West L.A., Peterson is poised on a red-velvet faux-Victorian parlor sofa in the classic Elvira position — legs splayed to her right, one hand planted in front of her hips, body bent in half at a right angle. This pose is such a key part of the character's persona that, chances are, it was the first image that came to mind when you read the name Elvira at the top of this page; as such, Peterson must have arranged her limbs according to these coordinates thousands of times. But it's apparently not as easy as it looks. "Cassandra, do you need anything?" an assistant calls out from off set. "Water, coffee?" Through gritted teeth, the actress responds: "I need to get out of this position as soon as possible."

    Peterson is back in Elvira drag — back on the blood-red sofa, back in that agonizing position, back assuming the role of, as Elvira refers to herself, "the piece everyone's dying to rest in" — because she's coming back to TV. More than 20 years after the first iteration of Movie Macabre faded from the airwaves, the 59-year-old Peterson is writing, producing, financing and starring in a new Movie Macabre, which launches Sept. 25 in national syndication.

    Though it may seem like a long-delayed second act for Peterson, Elvira never really went away. Having acquired the rights to the character from KHJ early on ("We kept asking if I could get a raise," Peterson remembers, "and in lieu of a raise, they would give me some rights, and, you know — eventually I had all the rights!"), Peterson quickly realized that leaving Elvira behind would mean walking away from a potential fortune. "Every time I make a licensing deal or do a show, I get 100 percent of the proceeds. So I thought, 'Why the hell am I trying to do something else?' Go work for Universal and get paid a dime on a dollar? It just didn't make sense."

    Post–Movie Macabre, Peterson launched Elvira video games, comic books, a microbrew, a pinball machine and a perfume (called — what else? — Evil). For 21 years, she performed a live revue every October at Knott's Scary Farm, for what she calls "an enormous amount of money — and I have to say, I deserved it because I worked three or four shows a night for practically 30 days in a row."

    1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | All | Next Page >>
     
    spacer spacer
    gipoco.com is neither affiliated with the authors of this page nor responsible for its contents. This is a safe-cache copy of the original web site.