---
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title: "I Was a TV Horror Host: Memoirs of a Creature Features Man"
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---

# I Was a TV Horror Host: Memoirs of a Creature Features Man

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## Description

Once upon a time there were weird TV hosts in costumes who introduced old horror and science fiction movies on late-night programming. John Stanley, who hosted the highly rated "Creature Features" in the San Francisco-Bay Area for six years (1979-84), preferred to be just himself in normal clothing -- but in the process met some of the most unusual entertainment icons of the 20th Century. In addition to an historic overview of creepy storytellers from early movies and the Golden Age of Radio, this pictorial history, including 559 photos, many in print for the first time, updates Stanley's exclusive interview material to describe such leading players as Leonard Nimoy, William Shatner and Gene Roddenberry of "Star Trek," Lucille Ball, Arnold Schwarzenegger, fantasy author Ray Bradbury, Psycho novelist Robert Bloch, "Psycho" star Anthony Perkins, Vincent Price, Christopher Lee, special effects master Ray Harryhausen, B-picture producer Roger Corman, movie gimmick specialist William Castle, George Romero, and "Star Wars" figures Anthony Daniels, David Prowse and Peter Mayhew. Stanley also profiles fellow horror hosts Joe Bob Briggs, Elvira, Ghoulardi and Zacherley. The result is a swirling cauldron of fascinating media history -- as only Stanley, who spent 33 years at the San Francisco Chronicle writing about movies and TV production, could recast it.

Review: As Ray Bradbury says, "Everybody should read this book! EVERYBODY!" - As a long-time San Franciscan, I fondly remember the horror hosts Bob Wilkins and his successor, John Stanley. I watched them every Friday religiously and collected John's excellent movie review guides in more than one incarnation. I highly recommend this great book for anyone who loves old and not-so-old horror, sci-fi and fantasy films. John provides a surprisingly thorough overview of the old-time radio shows and pioneering TV horror hosts before rolling into the tale of Bob Wilkins' and his own careers as late night horror hosts. This book contains so many great interviews and photos with and of everyone who was anyone in the business! John has been a journalist for many years, so he was able to interview the top stars of the horror and sci-fi film genres on his show and elsewhere. They loved coming on his show and camping it up as much as he loved having them! There are anecdotes galore and lots of great information you'd be hard-pressed to find elsewhere. It's a treasure of memories and new info that's funny and fun to read! Get a copy and, as Bob and John used to say, "Watch Horror Movies, Keep America Strong!"
Review: Pleasant Memories - For those who were not around at the time, a lot of baby boomer horror fans got their start watching the horror film packages distributed to television starting around the late 1950s. I know I lived from one Saturday night to the next looking forward to my first chance to see some film like HOUSE OF FRANKENSTEIN that I had read about in FAMOUS MONSTER OF FILMLAND magazine. In Springfield, Massachusetts the Late Show would just have a science fiction or horror film every Saturday night. The larger stations made it a weekly program with a host who went by a name like Ghoulardi or Svenghouli, usually in some weird costume. The San Francisco area had a little more class. KTVU out of Oakland broadcast CREATURE FEATURES with its host Bob Wilkins. When horror hosts like Zacherley and Vampira were dressing up in Halloween costumes and doing skits, Wilkins looked relatively normal underplayed the horror host role with a sort of Bob Newhart deadpan style. His slogan was "Watch horror films... Keep America Strong." I enjoyed Wilkins a lot when I was at Stanford from 1972 to 1974. KTVU had John Stanley as the host of CREATURE FEATURES from 1979 to 1984 after Wilkins left. Unfortunately, I never saw John Stanley on the air. As far as I can tell John Stanley carried the Wilkins tradition of the laid-back style. (Oddly each looks like he has a portrait somewhere doing all his aging for him.) Stanley also published a guide to the kind of films he would show JOHN STANLEY'S CREATURE FEATURES MOVIE GUIDE. That brings me to John Stanley's current book, I WAS A TV HORROR HOST. As the name suggests, this is a memoir of his years as a horror host--probably the first memoir of a horror host. It covers a lot more including the history of horror hostdom going back to radio hosts like Raymond on "The Inner Sanctum." A little over half of the book chronicles John Stanley's adventures interviewing the major names associated with media fantasy in the 1970s. Several people associated with Star Trek and Star Wars were his guests. He interviewed Ray Harryhausen, Ray Bradbury, Robert Bloch, Vincent Price, Roger Corman, and John Newland (the host of TV's "One Step Beyond"). He finishes Christopher Lee, William Castle, George Romero, and Boris Karloff's daughter. The interviews are not in any great depth. Certainly they are not in the depth of Tom Weaver's interviews in numerous books published by McFarland. But as Stanley's interviews were interruptions of the evenings' Creature Feature, they were kept brief with some interesting tidbits. What do I like and not like about the book. Let us start with what I liked. -- I have rarely seen the subject of television horror hosts covered in book form anywhere else. There was a legion of them (and Stanley lists most in the book) and there must have been some good stories about them and their stations. -- John Stanley illustrates the book with a treasury stills. Every page has a photo and some have as many as three. -- The price tag of this book is $19.95. Unfortunately most books on popular media of the past years seem to be published by Scarecrow Press or their clone McFarland. This is the sort of book that McFarland might publish. They would tone down the silly title fonts, make sure it had the index it really needed, sandwich it between hardcovers, and slap a $55 price tag on it. McFarland has a great line of media books many of which I would love to own, but I am only a poor corrupt official. I slightly prefer Stanley's less dignified format and his $20 price tag is as nostalgic as the book itself is. -- Stanley does a good job of covering the subject of horror hosting, and the popular horror including hosts of the past like. -- John Stanley has an infectious enthusiasm that comes through in the book. -- I frequently find factual errors in books about the old horror films. Stanley seems fairly careful with his facts. Stanley is a fan of the horror genre and has an encyclopedic knowledge. Through the book John Stanley's positive personality comes through and lights up the entire narrative. He is the biggest asset of his own book. Now what about the negatives? -- The biggest fault is that book has no index. Perhaps Stanley felt his book was supposed to be just light reading and did not need one. Flipping through pages is no substitute for knowing what page to go to find the comments about Christopher Lee or Robert Bloch. -- There are many more attempted jokes than actual laughs. This is, of course, a matter of taste and probably is in the tradition of CREATURE FEATURES. And I have the same problem with my jokes. -- I was not looking for Stanley to dish dirt, but he seems unrelentingly positive on all the celebrities he discusses. Here and there he tells an anecdote that maybe Arnold Schwarzenegger would not like if he were not Arnold Schwarzenegger. But Stanley seems to have no pet peeves, no axes to grind, and he had no problems with the celebrities with whom he dealt. He likes everybody, so his narrative feels a little sugar-coated and perhaps not a good source for insight. For those who want to understand the state of popular fantasy in the 1970s or to just reminisce about the period this book is worth the modest purchase price. Admission: I have not finished reading the book yet. What is left I am going to save to read only on Saturday evenings while watching good (or bad) horror films.

## Technical Specifications

| Specification | Value |
|---------------|-------|
| Best Sellers Rank | #6,323,638 in Books ( See Top 100 in Books ) #53,054 in Performing Arts (Books) |
| Customer Reviews | 4.8 out of 5 stars 9 Reviews |

## Images

![I Was a TV Horror Host: Memoirs of a Creature Features Man - Image 1](https://m.media-amazon.com/images/I/51wH-KXc5VL.jpg)

## Customer Reviews

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ As Ray Bradbury says, "Everybody should read this book! EVERYBODY!"
*by S***T on November 23, 2010*

As a long-time San Franciscan, I fondly remember the horror hosts Bob Wilkins and his successor, John Stanley. I watched them every Friday religiously and collected John's excellent movie review guides in more than one incarnation. I highly recommend this great book for anyone who loves old and not-so-old horror, sci-fi and fantasy films. John provides a surprisingly thorough overview of the old-time radio shows and pioneering TV horror hosts before rolling into the tale of Bob Wilkins' and his own careers as late night horror hosts. This book contains so many great interviews and photos with and of everyone who was anyone in the business! John has been a journalist for many years, so he was able to interview the top stars of the horror and sci-fi film genres on his show and elsewhere. They loved coming on his show and camping it up as much as he loved having them! There are anecdotes galore and lots of great information you'd be hard-pressed to find elsewhere. It's a treasure of memories and new info that's funny and fun to read! Get a copy and, as Bob and John used to say, "Watch Horror Movies, Keep America Strong!"

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐ Pleasant Memories
*by M***R on October 2, 2007*

For those who were not around at the time, a lot of baby boomer horror fans got their start watching the horror film packages distributed to television starting around the late 1950s. I know I lived from one Saturday night to the next looking forward to my first chance to see some film like HOUSE OF FRANKENSTEIN that I had read about in FAMOUS MONSTER OF FILMLAND magazine. In Springfield, Massachusetts the Late Show would just have a science fiction or horror film every Saturday night. The larger stations made it a weekly program with a host who went by a name like Ghoulardi or Svenghouli, usually in some weird costume. The San Francisco area had a little more class. KTVU out of Oakland broadcast CREATURE FEATURES with its host Bob Wilkins. When horror hosts like Zacherley and Vampira were dressing up in Halloween costumes and doing skits, Wilkins looked relatively normal underplayed the horror host role with a sort of Bob Newhart deadpan style. His slogan was "Watch horror films... Keep America Strong." I enjoyed Wilkins a lot when I was at Stanford from 1972 to 1974. KTVU had John Stanley as the host of CREATURE FEATURES from 1979 to 1984 after Wilkins left. Unfortunately, I never saw John Stanley on the air. As far as I can tell John Stanley carried the Wilkins tradition of the laid-back style. (Oddly each looks like he has a portrait somewhere doing all his aging for him.) Stanley also published a guide to the kind of films he would show JOHN STANLEY'S CREATURE FEATURES MOVIE GUIDE. That brings me to John Stanley's current book, I WAS A TV HORROR HOST. As the name suggests, this is a memoir of his years as a horror host--probably the first memoir of a horror host. It covers a lot more including the history of horror hostdom going back to radio hosts like Raymond on "The Inner Sanctum." A little over half of the book chronicles John Stanley's adventures interviewing the major names associated with media fantasy in the 1970s. Several people associated with Star Trek and Star Wars were his guests. He interviewed Ray Harryhausen, Ray Bradbury, Robert Bloch, Vincent Price, Roger Corman, and John Newland (the host of TV's "One Step Beyond"). He finishes Christopher Lee, William Castle, George Romero, and Boris Karloff's daughter. The interviews are not in any great depth. Certainly they are not in the depth of Tom Weaver's interviews in numerous books published by McFarland. But as Stanley's interviews were interruptions of the evenings' Creature Feature, they were kept brief with some interesting tidbits. What do I like and not like about the book. Let us start with what I liked. -- I have rarely seen the subject of television horror hosts covered in book form anywhere else. There was a legion of them (and Stanley lists most in the book) and there must have been some good stories about them and their stations. -- John Stanley illustrates the book with a treasury stills. Every page has a photo and some have as many as three. -- The price tag of this book is $19.95. Unfortunately most books on popular media of the past years seem to be published by Scarecrow Press or their clone McFarland. This is the sort of book that McFarland might publish. They would tone down the silly title fonts, make sure it had the index it really needed, sandwich it between hardcovers, and slap a $55 price tag on it. McFarland has a great line of media books many of which I would love to own, but I am only a poor corrupt official. I slightly prefer Stanley's less dignified format and his $20 price tag is as nostalgic as the book itself is. -- Stanley does a good job of covering the subject of horror hosting, and the popular horror including hosts of the past like. -- John Stanley has an infectious enthusiasm that comes through in the book. -- I frequently find factual errors in books about the old horror films. Stanley seems fairly careful with his facts. Stanley is a fan of the horror genre and has an encyclopedic knowledge. Through the book John Stanley's positive personality comes through and lights up the entire narrative. He is the biggest asset of his own book. Now what about the negatives? -- The biggest fault is that book has no index. Perhaps Stanley felt his book was supposed to be just light reading and did not need one. Flipping through pages is no substitute for knowing what page to go to find the comments about Christopher Lee or Robert Bloch. -- There are many more attempted jokes than actual laughs. This is, of course, a matter of taste and probably is in the tradition of CREATURE FEATURES. And I have the same problem with my jokes. -- I was not looking for Stanley to dish dirt, but he seems unrelentingly positive on all the celebrities he discusses. Here and there he tells an anecdote that maybe Arnold Schwarzenegger would not like if he were not Arnold Schwarzenegger. But Stanley seems to have no pet peeves, no axes to grind, and he had no problems with the celebrities with whom he dealt. He likes everybody, so his narrative feels a little sugar-coated and perhaps not a good source for insight. For those who want to understand the state of popular fantasy in the 1970s or to just reminisce about the period this book is worth the modest purchase price. Admission: I have not finished reading the book yet. What is left I am going to save to read only on Saturday evenings while watching good (or bad) horror films.

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ A very fun book
*by J***S on August 21, 2013*

I read this book a couple of years ago. John Stanley divides the book into several parts. One was a general history of horror movie hosts. Then how Bob Wilkens became the horror movie host for the Creature Feature Show on KTVU-2 in Oakland, CA. Then how Stanley took over the job for several years. After that publishes several interviews he did with famous actors and writers such as Vincent Price, Christopher Lee, and Ray Bradbury. It's a very fun read and I recommend it.

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