- The Amazing Criswell
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The Amazing Criswell
Still from the intro from "Plan 9"Born Jeron Criswell Konig
August 7, 1907
Princeton, Indiana, U.S.Died October 4, 1982 (aged 75)
Burbank, California, U.S.Cause of death Cardiac arrest Resting place Pierce Brothers Valhalla Memorial Park Residence The Highland Towers Apartments at 1922 N. Highland Avenue (in the early part of the 1950's) Other names Jeron Criswell King
Charles Criswell KingOccupation Showman, actor, writer, seer Years active 1950s - 1970s Known for Making erroneous predictions, predicting the future on TV, radio, books, records and in newspapers and as a narrator and actor in the films of Ed Wood Jr. Notable works Criswell Predicts From Now to the Year 2000! (author) Plan 9 From Outer Space (narrator and actor) Television Criswell Predicts Spouse Halo Meadows - For the mentalist Kreskin (born 1935), see The Amazing Kreskin.
Jeron Criswell King (August 18, 1907 – October 4, 1982), born Jeron Criswell Konig, and known by his stage-name The Amazing Criswell ( /ˈkrɪzwɛl/), was an American psychic known for wildly inaccurate predictions. In person, he went by Charles Criswell King, and was sometimes credited as Jeron King Criswell.
Criswell was flamboyant with spit curled hair, a stentorian style of speaking, and a sequined tuxedo. He owned a coffin in which he claimed to sleep. He grew up in a troubled family in Indiana with relatives who owned a funeral home, and said that he became comfortable with sleeping in caskets in the storeroom. The casket appeared in one of Ed Wood's later works, the 1971 pornographic film, Necromania.
Contents
Career
Criswell said he had once worked as a radio announcer and news broadcaster. He began buying time on a local Los Angeles television station in the early 1950s to run infomercials for his "Criswell Family Vitamins". To fill the time, he began his Criswell Predicts part of the show. They made him a minor, off-beat celebrity in Los Angeles and around Hollywood, and his friendship with old show-business types like Mae West and rising fringe celebrities like Korla Pandit made Criswell an entertaining presence at parties. His fame brought him appearances on The Jack Paar Show (1957–1962) and he published two books of predictions. Criswell found cinematic infamy in the movies of Ed Wood.
Filmography and Television Appearances
Year Medium Title Role Director filmed 1956, released 1959 Film Plan 9 From Outer Space Himself Ed Wood filmed 1959, released 1987 Film Night of the Ghouls Himself Ed Wood 1965 Film Orgy of the Dead The Emperor Stephen C. Apostolof 1982 Film It Came from Hollywood Archive Footage Malcolm Leo, Andrew Solt 1994 Documentary Ed Wood: Look Back in Angora Archive Footage Ted Newsom 1996 Documentary The Haunted World of Edward D. Wood Jr. Archive Footage Brett Thompson 1970, 1965, 1963 Television The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson Himself Frederick De Cordova 2007 Television Cinema Insomnia (Plan 9 From Outer Space & Hardware Wars) Himself Ernie Fosselius & Mr. Lobo Predictions
Criswell's predictions were nationally syndicated and he appeared on the television show Criswell Predicts on KLAC Channel 13 (now KCOP-13) in Los Angeles as well as being recorded for syndication. His announcer was Bob Shields, who later played the judge on Divorce Court. Criswell wore heavy makeup in public after his live program was broadcast in Los Angeles. Only selected people were allowed in the KCOP studio during his broadcast.
Criswell wrote several books of predictions, including 1968's Criswell Predicts: From Now to the Year 2000. In it, he claimed that Denver would be struck by a ray from space that would cause all metal to adopt the qualities of rubber, leading to horrific accidents at amusement parks.[1] He predicted mass cannibalism[2] and the end of planet Earth, which he set as happening on August 18, 1999.[2]
Criswell was a student of history. He believed history repeated itself, that the United States were the "modern Romans". Each day, he read the St. Louis Post-Dispatch looking for clues for his predictions.
Some sources claim Criswell's most famous prediction was on The Jack Paar Program (1962–65) in March 1963, when he predicted John F. Kennedy would not run for reelection in 1964 because something was going to happen to him in November 1963.[3]
Sources say that Criswell never claimed to be a real psychic however, those who knew him, such as actress and fellow Plan 9 alumna Maila Nurmi ("Vampira"), believed he was. According to writer Charles A. Coulombe, whose family rented an apartment from him, Criswell told Coulombe's father "[I] had the gift, but ... lost it when I started taking money for it."
Private life
Criswell married a former speakeasy dancer named Halo Meadows, who appeared on You Bet Your Life, and whom Coulombe describes as "quite mad": "Mrs Criswell had a huge standard poodle (named "Buttercup") which she was convinced was the reincarnation of her cousin Thomas.[4] She spent a great deal of time sunbathing ... which, given her size, was not too pleasing a sight."
Mae West used Criswell as her personal psychic, he once predicted her rise to President of the United States, whereupon she, Criswell and George Liberace, the brother of showman Liberace, would take a rocket to the moon.[4] Criswell and West were great friends and she would lavish him with home-cooked food she had delivered to the studio that he shared with Maila Nurmi ("Vampira").[5] It is said that West sold Criswell her old luxury cars for five dollars.[4] He died in 1982.
In popular culture
On Mae West's 1955 album The Fabulous Mae West, she recorded a song called "Criswell Predicts".[4][6]
Criswell has been portrayed by many different actors over the years. Perhaps the most notable portrayal was by Jeffrey Jones in the 1994 Tim Burton biopic, Ed Wood.[7] Since 1997, several stage actors, including Sean Phillip Mabrey,[8] have played Criswell in Plan 9 from Outer Space: The Musical, written by David G. Smith. Another incarnation of Criswell would appear in the 1999 homage to low budget films, Devil Girls,[9][9] played by Rob Gorden (in a poorly styled wig). Craig Brown played Criswell in Plan Live From Outer Space, the 2006 stage adaptation of Plan 9 From Outer Space which won a Canadian Comedy Award in 2007.[10] On September 9, 2009, a teaser trailer[11] was released by Darkstone Entertainment for the upcoming John Johnson film Plan 9,[12] a remake of Plan 9 From Outer Space. The voice of popular television horror host Mr. Lobo can be heard narrating the trailer as Criswell. He will also star in the film as Criswell who has a much larger role in this re-imagining of the original Ed Wood story. In addition, for the purpose of promoting the film on the internet, Mr. Lobo has produced 62 episodes of Criswell Predicts![13][14] which is a parody and homage to Criswell’s original television program of the same name sans the exclamation mark.
References
- ^ Dharma Pancakes: Criswell Predicts (Part 1)
- ^ a b Dharma Pancakes: Criswell Predicts (Part 5)
- ^ C-E-N-T-E-R ART PROJECT interview with Criswell biographer Edwin L. Canfield
- ^ a b c d http://www.criswellpredicts.com/criswell.htm
- ^ http://www.hulu.com/watch/85365/haunted-world-of-ed-wood-jr
- ^ http://musicnotmusic.wordpress.com/2009/01/02/mae-west-sings-about-criswell/
- ^ http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0109707/
- ^ http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7o3L539Xb5g
- ^ a b http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0198417/
- ^ http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1108860/
- ^ http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eJh-gdpJxJo
- ^ http://plan9movie.com/
- ^ http://vimeo.com/11636849
- ^ http://vimeo.com/11616048
External links
- Criswell at the Internet Movie Database
- Criswell at AllRovi
- "Criswell Predicts" — The Onion A.V. Club, August 11, 1999
Edward D. Wood, Jr. Feature films
directedGlen or Glenda (1953) • Jail Bait (1954) • Bride of the Monster (1955) • Plan 9 from Outer Space (1959) • Night of the Ghouls (1959) • The Sinister Urge (1961) • Take It Out in Trade (1970) • Excited (1970) • The Only House in Town (1971) • Necromania (1971) • The Young Marrieds (1972)Short films
directedTrick Shooting with Kenne Duncan (1953) • Final Curtain (1957) • The Night the Banshee Cried (1957)Television films
directedThe Sun Was Setting (1951) • Crossroad Avenger: The Adventures of the Tucson Kid (1953) • Boots (1953)Films written,
not directedThe Violent Years (1956) • The Unearthly (1957) • The Bride and the Beast (1958) • Anatomy of a Psycho (1961) • Shotgun Wedding (1963) • Orgy of the Dead (1965) • One Million AC/DC (1969) • The Love Feast (1969) • Venus Flytrap (1970) • The Undergraduate (1972) • Drop-Out Wife (1972) • Class Reunion (1972) • The Snow Bunnies (1972) • The Cocktail Hostesses (1973) • Five Loose Women (1974) • The Beach Bunnies (1976) • Hot Ice (1978)Posthumous
filmsCrossroads of Laredo (filmed 1948/released 1995) • Hellborn (filmed mid-1950s; released 1993) • Take it Out in Trade: The Outtakes (filmed 1970; released 1995) • I Woke Up Early The Day I Died (written 1970s; released 1999)Related
articlesBela Lugosi • The Golden Turkey Awards • Dolores Fuller • Conrad Brooks • Paul Marco • Tor Johnson • Vampira • Bunny Breckinridge • The Amazing Criswell • Stephen C. Apostolof • Ed Wood (biopic)Categories:- 1907 births
- 1982 deaths
- Actors from Indiana
- American film actors
- Burials at Valhalla Memorial Park Cemetery
- Cardiovascular disease deaths in California
- American psychics
- People from Gibson County, Indiana
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