Dolores Fuller Movies

If Dolores Fuller had ever thought in the 1970s, 1980s, or early '90s about what she would be known for professionally in the 21st century, it might well have been for writing songs for Elvis Presley and Peggy Lee or perhaps managing Tanya Tucker early in the singer's career. Instead, she is best known (downright famous, in fact) for her 40-years-past career as an actress, her mid-'50s relationship with director Edward D. Wood Jr., and the three movies that she made with him. The films were scarcely seen and virtually unreviewed at the time of their release and for decades after. Considering that one of those movies -- Glen or Glenda -- was the first American feature film dealing with the subject of transvestism and drew much of its content from one corner of Fuller's relationship with the cross-dressing Wood, her recognition for them seems all the more improbable, especially for a woman who started life in South Bend, IN, during the era of silent movies.
Fuller was born there in 1923 (some sources say 1925), but her family moved to California when she was very young. Setting her sights on an acting career, she worked in school plays and later became a model, also succeeding in getting some television work in the early days of the medium. An attractive young woman (Fuller was a stand-in for Jayne Mansfield in the theatrical production of Will Success Spoil Rock Hunter in the mid-'50s), she was a natural for set decoration on programs like Chevrolet Playhouse, Queen for a Day, and The Red Skelton Show. Not content to rely on her looks, however, she also studied acting in New York with Stella Adler. Fuller became a working actress, playing tiny roles in relatively high profile feature films, such as Fritz Lang's The Blue Gardenia, and getting larger roles in small movies, such as the notoriously low-budget Mesa of Lost Women.
According to Greg Douglass' fall 2000 article in Filmfax, Fuller met Edward D. Wood Jr., the legendary anti-genius director, when the latter placed an ad announcing auditions for a film planned under the title of The Hidden Face (completed as Jail Bait), which was to be produced by Howco, the same outfit that bankrolled Mesa of Lost Women. Wood and Fuller became entangled romantically very early on and they apparently were a good match for each other, despite the fact that she didn't understand his fetish for dressing up as a woman or his special fixation on her white Angora sweaters; they both loved movies and were fascinated by the idea of writing them and making them, and simply loved to talk film. Still, it was difficult for her when Wood put them both, along with his transvestism, into his semi-autobiographical film Glen or Glenda; the personal nature of the movie and the fact that it so closely paralleled their private life (which she wanted kept private) mortally offended the actress. Despite her unhappiness with that film, Fuller stayed with Wood for another two years and was also responsible for bringing future Plan 9 From Outer Space leading lady Mona McKinnon into the director's orbit; early in her relationship with Wood, Fuller had shared an apartment with McKinnon, which resulted in the actress playing a small role in Jail Bait. Fuller was to have been the female lead in Wood's Bride of the Monster, but in order to secure his financing, the director was forced to replace her with actress Loretta King, while Fuller was given a much smaller role. That decision -- coupled with Wood's increasingly erratic personal behavior -- led to the breakup of their romantic relationship. In contrast to most of the other people who moved in Wood's close orbit, however, Fuller had real talent and a real career ahead of her, even when she lived with Wood, she was represented by Paul Kohner, one of the top talent agents in Hollywood, and she was getting steady work on television as well as roles in films from major studios. Thus, she never fell, as others did, upon leaving Wood's orbit and, indeed, only ascended.
By the end of the 1950s, she'd started her own record company, Dee Records, and one of the talents that she discovered was a New York-born singer/guitarist named John Ramistella, who later became Johnny Rivers. Later on, her ability as a songwriter manifested itself through the intervention of her friend, producer Hal Wallis; Fuller had wanted to get an acting role in the Elvis Presley movie Blue Hawaii, which Wallis was producing, but instead he put her in touch with Hill & Range, the publisher that provided Presley with songs. Fuller went into a collaborative partnership with composer Ben Weissman and got one song, "Rock-A-Hula Baby," into Blue Hawaii. It was a beginning that eventually led to Presley recording a dozen of her songs. Fuller also had her music recorded by Nat "King" Cole, Peggy Lee, and other leading talents of the period.
By the end of the 1960s, in addition to writing songs, Fuller had also moved into talent management and can take credit for discovering 13-year-old Tanya Tucker. Fuller's focus on acting receded rapidly as her music career took off, and for 30 years was best known in the entertainment business as a creative, behind-the-scenes personality. The 1994 release of Tim Burton's film Ed Wood, however, brought new attention to her onscreen career (or, at least, the part of it with Wood) -- although she is on record as not appreciating the portrayal that she received in the film from Sarah Jessica Parker. In 2000, she was the subject of a documentary on German television that focused as much on her music career as her work with Wood and was reported to be working on a Broadway musical based on her life with the director. ~ Bruce Eder, All Movie Guide
2001  
 
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The Lotus Cat Food Company is up to its old tricks again, and this time some feline visitors from another planet arrive on planet Earth to add an interesting twist to the tale in director Ted V. Michaels belated sequel to the 1972 cult classic The Corpse Grinders. The nephews of the original Lotus Cat Food Company has discovered the secret of their uncles' success, and it's not long before they fire up the old corpse grinding machine and prepare to rake in the cash. There's a new breed of feline in town these days though, and once these man-sized cat-people from outer space acquire a taste of this unique brand of cat food, their preference for flesh may put the entire human race in peril. ~ Jason Buchanan, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Andy Freeman
1998  
 
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When Thomas was mortally wounded in World War II, a shrouded figure carried him away and restored his life by turning him into a vampire. Now, Thomas terrorizes the Ironbound section of Newark, constantly requiring human life to feed himself and his numerous naked vampire wives. One fearless vampire hunter has plans to stamp Thomas out, however, and if she succeeds without becoming a feast for the undead, she will be halting a source of horror that has reigned for 50 years. ~ Cammila Albertson, All Movie Guide

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1995  
 
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The strange life and the wonderfully awful films of 1950's Hollywood Z movie director Ed Wood are profiled in this documentary that was conceived of and researched several years before commercial-filmmaker Tim Burton made his feature film tribute. Actually, Wood does not appear much in this film. Rather, it centers on the lives and thoughts of his entourage and those who knew him. Among those interviewed are Wood's former lover and star of his earliest films, Dolores Fuller, whom he abruptly replaced in the middle of Bride of the Monster with actress Loretta King who is also interviewed. Also interviewed are Maila Nurmi (aka Vampira); Bela Lugosi, Jr., who believes Wood destroyed his troubled father's career; Rev. Dr. Lynn Lemon, the Baptist minister who backed Wood's most famous film Plan 9 from Outer Space in hopes that it would generate enough income to allow Lemon's church to produce religious films; Paul Marco, who played Kelton the Cop in several films, and actors Conrad Brooks and Lyle Talbot. ~ Sandra Brennan, All Movie Guide

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1956  
 
Put in charge of the "Daily Planet"'s advice-to-the-lovelorn column, Lois Lane (Noel Neill) begins to brood over the lack of romance in her own life. Just as mind begins wandering, Lois is astonished when Superman (George Reeves) shows up to declare his love for her--and to propose marriage! Elated, Lois accepts, then asks Clark Kent to be Best Man at the wedding, little realizing that Clark and Superman are one and the same. Meanwhile, criminal boss Farady (Milton Frome) plans to put his longtime nemesis Lois out of the way by planting a time bomb in the wedding cake. This highly fanciful episode (as if all the other episodes were realistic!) features a cameo appearance by Dolores Fuller, better known as the girlfriend and leading lady of the hilariously inept movie director Ed Wood Jr.. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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1955  
 
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To most outside observers, Bride of the Monster probably seems like a ridiculously inept horror film, and in many ways it is just that. To connoisseurs of the work of director Edward D. Wood Jr., however, it is the biggest budgeted film in his entire output, made with the resources of a normal B-movie (as opposed to his usual totally emaciated finances) and the most easily accessible of his three horror films. Bela Lugosi, in his final complete performance, portrays Dr. Eric Vornoff, a renegade Eastern European scientist with a plan to create a race of atomic supermen, giants charged with radioactivity. The problem is that the hapless hunters and other passersby at Lake Marsh, where he has set up shop with his hulking, mute assistant Lobo (Tor Johnson), whom the pair waylay, keep dying when he straps them in and switches on his atomic ray machine (which is a not-at-all disguised photographic enlarger). A dozen victims later, reporter Janet Lawson (Loretta King) goes out to investigate the disappearances -- attributed to a monster -- and falls into Vornoff's hands, with her police detective fiance Dick Craig (Tony McCoy) hot on her trail, and a devious spy (George Becwar) from Vornoff's former nation also nosing his way around the swamp and the old house. Vornoff dresses Lawson in a wedding gown and plans to irradiate her but Lobo refuses to allow it, straps Vornoff into the machine, and turns him into a radioactive giant (and into stuntman Eddie Parker, totally unconvincing in his doubling for Lugosi). ~ Bruce Eder, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Bela LugosiTor Johnson, (more)
1954  
 
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Jail Bait was the place where Edward D. Wood Jr.'s career as a director entered the mainstream. Having exposed the world of transvestism in Glen or Glenda, he now turned to less ambitious fare in an effort at commercial success. Loosely patterned after the television series Dragnet, Jail Bait tells the story of Don Gregor (Clancey Malone), the spoiled, arrogant son of a successful plastic surgeon (Herbert Rawlinson), who is out for some kicks and excitement and hooks up with Vic Brady (Timothy Farrell), a career criminal. Opening with Don's arrest for illegal possession of a pistol, the film tracks his interaction with a pair of detectives (Lyle Talbot, Steve Reeves); his deceiving of his sister (Dolores Fuller) and his father; the robbery that goes wrong and leads him to murder an ex-cop; and his attempt to go straight, which gets him killed. That action, and Brady's attempt to force Dr. Gregor to alter his face, leads to a bizarre revenge that makes up the final 15 minutes of the movie. Little of this plot is unfolded skillfully -- Wood was already out of his depth in directing actors -- but having access to Howco's finances (meager as they were) and facilities gives Jail Bait a slightly smoother, less emaciated look than most of Wood's later movies. Coupled with the fact that he was trying to do a straight crime film, and the resulting restraint he showed in the writing, Jail Bait can just about "pass" as a normal, albeit very low-budget film, although, as with all of Wood's movies, there is still an unintended laugh every minute or so. And just to show how close to the edge Wood was working even at the outset of his career, in terms of using marginal talent, neophyte performers, and one-time successful actors, Bela Lugosi was not the first leading actor in a Wood movie to die during production -- that distinction went to Herbert Rawlinson, who played Dr. Gregor here. The former silent-era leading man reportedly died the night after he finished shooting his role in Jail Bait. ~ Bruce Eder, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Dolores FullerLyle Talbot, (more)
1953  
 
Juvenile delinquency is the subject of the misleadingly titled Universal-International potboiler Girls in the Night. Patricia Hardy plays Hannah Haynes, the sister of good-boy-gone-bad Chuck Haynes (Harvey Lembeck). When Chuck ends up facing a murder charge, Hannah takes decisive action. She goes after crime boss Irv Kelleher (Don Gordon), risking life and limb in the process. Top-billed Joyce Holden plays Hannah's best friend, who helps cook up a scheme to entrap Kelleher. Glenda Farrell delivers the film's best performance as Chuck and Hannah's careworn mother. Ironically, Girls in the Night co-star Harvey Lembeck would go on to play one of the most lovable "j.d."s in screen history: Eric Von Zipper in the "Beach Party" series of the 1960s. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Joyce HoldenGlenda Farrell, (more)
1953  
 
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In his heart-felt cinematic debut, Edward D. Wood, Jr. himself stars under the pseudonym Daniel Davis as a young man with a dilemma: should he tell his lovely young fiancee (played by real-life girlfriend Dolores Fuller) about his burning desire to cross-dress? She has begun to notice articles of clothing missing from her closet; the suspense builds...what should he do? Bela Lugosi plays the omniscient narrator; note his conviction as he "pulls the strings." Amidst this unintentionally hilarious mish-mash of melodrama, social commentary and inexplicable stock footage, there is something for every taste: countless cross dressers, hallucinatory dream sequences, sex-change surgeries, spirited cat fights, borderline-pornographic simulated sex scenes, poetic monologues, a haunted house, and a stampede of wild buffalo. Released under various titles across the country -- I Lived Two Lives, I Changed My Sex -- this fiasco bombed across the board but managed to gain Wood enough notoriety in the "B"-movie world to launch a career that is today the stuff of legend. Hailed by most critics as the worst film of all time, Wood nearly matched his first effort with such atrocities as Bride of the Monster, Night of the Ghouls, the infamous Plan 9 from Outer Space, and, perhaps the world's first topless horror film, Orgy of the Dead. Although few may count Wood among the best American cinema has to offer, Glen or Glenda certainly places him among its most memorable. ~ Jeremy Beday, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Bela LugosiDaniel Davis [Edward D. Wood, Jr.], (more)
1953  
 
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Mutated spiders, mad geniuses, childlike mental patients, gold-digging blondes, and vengeful little people are only part of the madness in this legendary bit of oddball science fiction. Grant (Robert Knapp) and Doreen (Mary Hill) wander into a shack in the wastelands of Mexico's Muerto Desert, where the sunburned and dehydrated pair tell their tale to a surveyor for an American petroleum firm. Grant was working as a pilot for millionaire businessman Jan Van Croft (Nico Lek), who was to marry the much younger Doreen when engine trouble stranded them in a Mexican border town. Jan and Doreen were killing time in a roadhouse when they were joined by the eccentric Dr. Leland Masterson (Harmon Stevens), who had recently escaped from a mental hospital. Before Masterson's nurse, George (George Barrows), can lure his patient back to the hospital, Masterson pulls a gun and shoots entertainer Tarantella (Tandra Quinn) while she performs a wild dance routine; Masterson then takes Jan and Doreen hostage and demands that Grant fly them away. Further engine trouble strands the traveling party on a mesa, where they discover a handful of strange, tiny men and statuesque women. In time, we discover that Masterson knows the story behind the Mesa's unusual residents -- they're the products of a series of experiments by Dr. Aranya (Jackie Coogan), whose research into the pituitary glands of spiders has produced unusual results. The only screen credit for screenwriter and co-director Herbert Tevos (who helmed the project with Southern exploitation icon Ron Ormond), Mesa of Lost Women also features a memorably irritating guitar-and-piano score and a brief appearance by Dolores Fuller, best known for her work with one-time beau Edward D. Wood Jr. ~ Mark Deming, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Jackie CooganRichard Travis, (more)
1948  
 
This is the recently discovered, restored and re-edited first film of Hollywood's all-time worst filmmaker. It is the companion piece to the documentary The Haunted World of Edward D. Wood Jr. Unlike his other sci-fi oriented films, this short is a western that is so bad that some may find it funny. Shot in two days, with one take per scene, it is the story of an amoral cowpoke who steals the pretty gal of the good-guy. The bad-guy marries this girl and then turns her into little more than a slave. Later, her former boyfriend saves her by killing her husband in a gun-fight. To justify the shooting, he proves that the late husband was a murderer and a robber. Scenes to look for include the gun fight in which the cowboy's horses keep wandering in front of their blazing guns. As the original soundtrack was never recovered, the film is narrated via voice over by Dolores Fuller, an actress and former lover of the quirky Wood. Fuller also supervised the original musical score for the film by Elvis songwriter Ben Weisman. ~ Sandra Brennan, All Movie Guide

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