Dominican-born American fashion designer Oscar de la Rentaโwhose work, blending European luxury with American ease, helped define standards of elegant dressing among socialites, U.S. first ladies, and red-carpet celebritiesโdied in Connecticut.
Bela Lugosi (born October 20, 1882, Lugos, Hungary [now Lugoj, Romania]โdied August 16, 1956, Los Angeles, California, U.S.) was a Hungarian-born motion-picture actor who was most famous for his sinister portrayal of the elegantly mannered vampire Count Dracula.
He went to Germany in 1919 and acted in films there until he immigrated to the United States in 1921.
Lugosi made his Hollywood film debut in The Silent Command (1923) but worked sporadically in film and theatre throughout the remainder of the decade, largely because he had not yet mastered the English language and had difficulty communicating with coworkers. In 1927 he managed to land the title role in the Broadway production of Bram Stokerโs novel Dracula.
Lugosi became a national celebrity when he reprised his stage success for the Universal Pictures film adaptation Dracula (1931). With his slow, thickly accented voice, he etched lines such as โI never drinkโฆwineโ into the national consciousness, and Lugosiโs name was thereafter associated with that of the bloodsucking count.
Lugosiโs subsequent shockers included Murders in the Rue Morgue (1932), an adaptation of Edgar Allan Poeโs short story; White Zombie (1932); Island of Lost Souls (1932); and Mark of the Vampire (1935). He costarred with Karloff in several films, including The Black Cat (1934), The Raven (1935), and The Invisible Ray (1936), and he appeared occasionally in non-horror films, such as the Paramount Pictures all-star comedy International House (1933) and Ernst Lubitschโs Ninotchka (1939).
Although Lugosi is most associated with the role of Dracula, many regard his portrayal of the half-crazed, broken-necked Ygor in Son of Frankenstein (1939) to be his finest screen performance. He again played Ygor in The Ghost of Frankenstein (1942), but by that time Lugosiโs star had faded. Thereafter he appeared in numerous low-budget, forgettable films.
There were a few exceptions, such as his appearance as Frankensteinโs Monsterโthe role he had turned down in 1931โin Frankenstein Meets the Wolfman (1943). He teamed with Karloff again in the eerie The Body Snatcher (1945), and he returned to the role of Dracula in Abbott and Costello Meet Frankenstein (1948).
Lugosiโs decline into poverty and obscurity was accompanied by a growing dependence on narcotics. In 1955 he voluntarily committed himself to the state hospital in Norwalk, California, as a drug addict; he was released later that year. About the same time, Lugosi began an association with Ed Wood, Jr., the man regarded by many as the most comprehensively inept director in film history.
Their collaboration produced such staggeringly shoddy efforts as Glen or Glenda? (1953), Bride of the Monster (1956), and Plan 9 from Outer Space (filmed 1956, released 1959), all now unintentionally hilarious cult favourites. Lugosi was buried, as he wished, wearing the long black cape that he had worn in Dracula.
The production was a success, and Lugosi stayed with the show for the duration of its three-year run, including on tours. It was also during this time that Lugosi was the subject of a national scandal when his wife (his third of five) filed for divorce after only three days of marriage and named actress Clara Bow as corespondent.