Maila "Vampira" Nurmi Movies
Wasp-waisted, exotic Maila Nurmi was perhaps best known under the name of Vampira, the character that she created. She was one of the more startling (albeit marginal) pop culture figures of the 1950s and made an indelible mark in movies -- principally in a role that didn't have a word of dialogue. The Finnish-born beauty contest winner and niece of Olympic athlete Paavo Nurmi, Maila Nurmi arrived in Hollywood at the end of the 1940s, crossing paths with Marilyn Monroe (during her pre-stardom days as Norma Jean Baker) in the course of working as a dancer, model, and actress. The turning point in her career came in 1953 when Nurmi attended a masquerade ball in Hollywood in the guise of the ghoul woman from the Charles Addams cartoons (later christened Morticia in the television adaptation). Binding her breasts and painting her body a stark white, she looked like a preserved corpse. Nurmi ended up winning the party's top prize and in the course of the attendant publicity, caught the eye of television producer Hunt Stromberg Jr., the son of the movie producer Hunt Stromberg. His station, KABC-TV, had a late-night horror movie showcase and he offered Nurmi the chance to host it in her ghoul woman guise. The Vampira Show, as it became known, was a campy phenomenon in Los Angeles in 1954-1955 and Nurmi earned a place in pop culture history as the first television horror movie host, a fraternity which later included such figures as John Zacherle and even kid-show host Claude Kirschner. Surrounded by spooky settings, plastic bugs, and other horror film accoutrements, Nurmi delighted audiences with her offbeat humor and sexually provocative persona, which was her own creation. Indeed, with her more sexually suggestive appearance as Vampira, Nurmi became the model for Carolyn Jones' Morticia Addams on The Addams Family, as much as was Addams' own ghoul woman creation, if not more so. She later took the act to television station KHJ in Los Angeles and built up a serious cult following, which included the actor James Dean. A dabbler in the offbeat, Dean initially approached Nurmi because he thought she was seriously involved in mysticism and the occult and only then discovered that it was all an act, although the two remained close friends. Nurmi's Vampira was the subject of coverage in Life magazine and Newsweek, and fan clubs sprang up around her persona. Her break into motion pictures -- though it hardly seemed like anything important at the time -- came about when director Edward D. Wood Jr. approached Nurmi about appearing in a movie he was making called Grave Robbers From Outer Space (later renamed Plan 9 From Outer Space). From an afternoon's work and 200 dollars, Wood got footage of the wasp-waisted Vampira wandering (or perhaps vamping) around a cheesy graveyard set with ex-wrestler Tor Johnson. She didn't have any dialogue and the movie was greeted with indifference and derision when it was finally released, but Nurmi's footage in Plan 9 From Outer Space became her most lasting pop-culture image, reprinted and recreated for decades. The mute portrayal was also her idea, since Nurmi reportedly couldn't abide the dialogue that had been written for her character. None of the Vampira shows from television were preserved and the program disappeared after the mid-'50s in a dispute between Nurmi and her producers (she describes herself as being "blacklisted". As an actress, Nurmi has appeared on Broadway in Catherine Was Great and in movies as lab technicians, beat poetesses, and other off-beat roles, but Vampira remains he trademark and signature. Nurmi disappeared from popular culture in the 1960s, although the Morticia Addams character kept the Vampira influence alive well into the middle of the decade and beyond in reruns. In the early '80s, she gained attention in regards to her friendship with James Dean (in the film James Dean: The First American Teenager). She also attempted (unsuccessfully) to sue the actress Cassandra Peterson over the latter's screen persona of Elvira, Mistress of the Dark. Well into her eighties, Nurmi was occasionally rediscovered whenever the work of Edward D. Wood Jr. was reshown and re-evaluated -- particularly after director Tim Burton's 1994 biopic Ed Wood was released. Nurmi was even the subject of a Finnish documentary, 1995's About Death, Sex and Taxes. She also turned up in 1998's little-seen Billy Zane vehicle I Woke Up Early the Day I Died adapted from an unproduced Wood script. ~ Bruce Eder, All Movie GuideThis documentary travels behind the scenes of camp classics such as Plan 9 from Outer Space to visit the life and career of onetime horror star and TV horror hostess Vampira (aka Maila Nurmi). The title figure was previously portrayed by Lisa Marie in Tim Burton's picture Ed Wood. ~ Nathan Southern, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Maila "Vampira" Nurmi, Forrest J. Ackerman, (more)

- 2001
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Pauline Kael once wrote that since movies were so rarely great art, if one weren't interested in great trash, there wasn't much reason to pay attention to them, and one could reasonably argue that few periods brought us more top-quality cinematic trash than the 1950s and '60s. With drive-ins and grindhouses across the United States making room for low-budget exploitation films of all stripes (such as horror, science fiction, teen exploitation, biker films, beach pictures, nudies, and much more) as the major studios were focusing their attention on big-budget blockbusters and television, this was a boom time for inspired trash, and Schlock! The Secret History of American Movies takes a look at the low-budget wonders of the 1950s and '60s, as well as the men and women who made them and the social and psychological subtexts lurking behind many of these movies. Schlock! includes interviews with Roger Corman, Peter Bogdanovich, David F. Friedman, Doris Wishman, Samuel Z. Arkoff, Dick Miller, Vampira, and more. ~ Mark Deming, All Movie Guide
Aris Iliopulos directed this campy comedy utilizing schlock filmmaker Ed Wood's last unproduced screenplay. Stock footage and old hygiene films are intercut with this near-silent story following a cross-dresser (Billy Zane), who escapes from the Casa de la Loco Sanitarium, manages to acquire some money, and then loses it at a funeral attended by eccentric mourners. He then seeks them out, killing them one by one. Some script instructions appear as titles. Bud Cort makes an uncredited appearance, and Wood aficionados can spot Kathy Wood (the filmmaker's daughter) in a walk-on, while Maila Nurmi re-creates her famed Vampira characterization. Larry Groupe's punk score alternates with standards by Nat "King" Cole and others. Shown at the Toronto Film Festival. ~ Bhob Stewart, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Billy Zane, Sandra Bernhard, (more)
Ths film takes an in depth look at the history of the vampire myth and its continuing hold on the public's imagination. Is there some truth to the legends and stories that would explain the endless fascination that humans have for the "children of the night"? William Marshall, star of the film Blacula narrates the show, which traces the vampire myth through various times and cultures. There is a wide sampling of vampire literature and lore, film clips from Hollywood's scariest vampire movies, and interviews with film stars whose work has led them to a deeper study of the vampire legend. ~ Rose of Sharon Winter, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- William Marshall, Bela Lugosi Jr., (more)

- 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
In this fun-filled adventure-fantasy, a rookie knight embarks upon a valiant quest to save a princess who has been captured by a malicious magician. Along the way he must battle the usual assortment of dragons, ogres and other mythical beings. He is assisted by a good witch who gives him a magic sword. Unfortunately, the magic fails and suddenly he must find his own magic from within. ~ Sandra Brennan, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Basil Rathbone, Estelle Winwood, (more)
Curvaceous Mamie Van Doren plays a super-genius who finds herself in charge of a college science department. Mamie would like to be appreciated for her intellect alone, but her male students (and most of the faculty) are preoccupied by her monumental breasts. The science department is virtually controlled by a huge robot called Thinko, which plays bets on horses. Gangsters Mickey Shaughnessy and Allan Drake try to neutralize Thinko, who's been right once too often. Strongarming their way on campus, the two crooks recognize Mamie as a former striptease artist. Forced to resign, she marries professor Martin Milner, who has loved her pure and chaste from afar. One expects to see such people as Jackie Coogan, John Carradine and Louis Nye in garbage like this-but how did Tuesday Weld get talked into participating? And wait till you see that nightclub number performed by Conway Twitty. Beauty and the Robot played in many markets under the step-right-up-folks title Sex Kittens Go to College. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
Set within the popular bohemian coffee houses of the late '50s where beatniks gathered to recite poetry and perform, this sensationalistic detective drama centers upon the attempts of an insensitive police detective to catch an arrogant serial rapist, a rich young man who believes himself mentally superior and therefore beyond the law. His favorite victims are married women. When he learns that the detective is after him, the rapist targets the cop's wife. Later the poor wife discovers she's pregnant and cannot be sure who fathered her child. The film is alternatively titled This Rebel Age. ~ Sandra Brennan, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Steve Cochran, Mamie van Doren, (more)
Night of the Ghouls (which was also known as Revenge of the Dead) was Edward D. Wood Jr.'s first attempt at making a horror film without any contribution, either in a true performance or through the presence of archival footage, from Bela Lugosi, who had died three years earlier. The plot, which was as confusing as most of Wood's scripts, seems to make it a sequel to Bride of the Monster and, to a lesser degree, Plan 9 From Outer Space, incorporating events and characters from both, including Paul Marco's portrayal of the ubiquitous Officer Kelton. (Indeed, some Wood scholars have referred to the three movies as a group as "the Kelton trilogy," since he is the only character to turn up essentially the same in all three films.) Duke Moore, who portrayed the detective lieutenant in Plan 9 From Outer Space, is back in this film, and now he seems to be identified as a specialist in bizarre and unusual cases, making him sort of Ed Wood's distant precursor to The X Files' agent Fox Mulder and The Night Stalker's Carl Kolchak. This time there are strange goings-on, including disappearances and ghostly apparitions, at a mysterious house in a remote part of town. It turns out that this is the same house (rebuilt) and the same locale where Bela Lugosi's mad scientist was creating zombies in Bride of the Monster, and that Tor Johnson's Lobo is still there, somewhat the worse for wear. Instead of a mad scientist, however, the man behind the mayhem is a phony mystic named Dr. Acula, played by ex-cowboy actor Kenne Duncan. None of it makes too much sense, as though anyone needs to be told that, knowing that this was an Ed Wood movie, but parts of it are fun in that unique way that Wood's movies can be -- the strange word usages and dialogue patterns, as well as odd characterizations, mismatched shots, and incomprehensible plot elements all weave their eerie spell on the viewer willing to absorb them. ~ Bruce Eder, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Criswell, Kenne Duncan, (more)
Mickey Rooney plays labor racketeer Little Joe Braun in this fast-paced and surprisingly violent drama about one man's determination to clean up his union. Bill Gibson (Steve Cochran) is Little Joe's nemesis and is one of the men who can testify that he saw the labor boss in an incriminating conversation with a known criminal -- something that Little Joe denied under oath. Knowing that Cochran and one other witness can bring him down, the crooked labor boss starts on a campaign of terror. One of Bill's friends is set on fire, someone else is thrown into a cement mixer (in the opening scenes), and finally, Little Joe kidnaps Bill's son Timmy (Jay North). The odds at this point, seem very much in the labor boss' favor. ~ Eleanor Mannikka, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Mickey Rooney, Steve Cochran, (more)
With its incoherent plot, jaw-droppingly odd dialogue, inept acting, threadbare production design, and special effects so shoddy that they border on the surreal, Plan 9 From Outer Space has often been called the worst movie ever made. But it's an oddly endearing disaster; boasting genuine enthusiasm and undeniable charm, it is the work of people who loved movies and loved making them, even if they displayed little visible talent. In Plan 9, alien invaders attempt to conquer the world by raising the dead, starting with an old man dressed in a Dracula costume (Bela Lugosi, in a few minutes of left-over footage grafted into this film), his much-younger and well-proportioned wife (Maila "Vampira" Nurmi), and a remarkably overweight police officer (Tor Johnson). Often funny and consistently entertaining (if almost always for the wrong reasons), Plan 9 From Outer Space is an anti-masterpiece if there ever was one, and as Criswell so brilliantly puts it, "Can you PROVE it didn't happen?!?" Its legendary director Edward D. Wood Jr. was played by Johnny Depp in Tim Burton's 1994 biopic, Ed Wood. One of the DVD releases of Plan 9 From Outer Space includes the documentary Flying Saucers Over Hollywood: The Plan 9 Companion, an exhaustive and entertaining look at the making of the film that runs a half-hour longer than the feature to which it pays tribute! ~ Mark Deming, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Bela Lugosi, Mona McKinnon, (more)
















