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Posted

I saw Masque of the Red Death many, many years ago, but I have no recollection of Hazel Court. Maybe some of you aficiandoes do.

Wasn't Anne Taylor Fleming a PBS news op/ed commentator some time back? (Maybe still is. I haven't watched Jim Lehrer in years.)

Here is her LA Times obituary:

http://www.latimes.com/news/obituaries/la-...1,2621634.story

Hazel Court, 82; 'scream queen' in horror films in 1950s and '60s

template_bastemplate_bas From the Associated Press April 17, 2008

Hazel Court, an English beauty who co-starred with the likes of Boris Karloff and Vincent Price in popular horror movies in the 1950s and '60s, has died. She was 82.

Court died Tuesday at her home near Lake Tahoe from a heart attack, her daughter, Sally Walsh, said Wednesday.

37963722.jpg Actress clicktoenlarge.gif click to enlarge

Although she had a substantial acting career both in England and on American television, Court was perhaps best known for her work in such films as 1963's "The Raven." She co-starred with Price, Karloff and Peter Lorre in the Roger Corman take on the classic Edgar Allen Poe poem.

Corman directed her in five movies. Like other "scream queens" of the era, Court's roles often relied on her cleavage and her ability to shriek in fear and die horrible deaths.

"The Premature Burial," "The Masque of the Red Death," "The Curse of Frankenstein" and "Devil Girl From Mars" helped propel her to cult status and brought her fan mail even in her later years.

The daughter of a professional cricket player, Court was born Feb. 10, 1926, in the English town of Sutton Coldfield.

As a teenager, she was appearing in stage productions when she was spotted and signed by the J. Arthur Rank Organisation, which owned movie studios and theaters. Court got her first movie bit part by the time she was 18 and went on to become a popular actress and a pinup girl.

"She was one of the great beauties of all time," Walsh said. "She was a redhead with really green eyes and almost . . . the perfect face. She was on the cover of almost every magazine."

Court appeared in some of the low-budget Hammer Film Productions horror movies and co-starred with Patrick O'Neal in the 1957 British TV comedy series "Dick and the Duchess." In the late 1950s, she came to the United States to work on TV's "Alfred Hitchcock Presents."

Walsh, who lives in Los Angeles, said Court is survived by another daughter, Courtney Taylor of Ojai; a son, Jonathan Taylor of Reno; and stepdaughters Anne Taylor Fleming of Los Angeles and Avery Taylor of San Francisco.

Posted

Yes, Court's stepdaughter Anne Taylor Fleming was an essayist for the Newshour, and wrote novels too. Have to admit, I'm more familiar with her name than with the name Hazel Court.

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