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Freaks (also re-released as The Monster Story, [6] Forbidden Love, and Nature's Mistakes [7]) is a 1932 American pre-Code drama horror film produced and directed by Tod Browning, starring Wallace Ford, Leila Hyams, Olga Baclanova, and Roscoe Ates.
February 20, 1932 Freaks: February 27, 1932 Polly of the Circus: March 5, 1932 Arsène Lupin: March 25, 1932 Tarzan the Ape Man: March 26, 1932 The Wet Parade: April 9, 1932 But the Flesh Is Weak: April 24, 1932 Are You Listening: April 30, 1932 When a Feller Needs a Friend: May 14, 1932 Huddle: May 14, 1932 Letty Lynton: May 28, 1932 As You ...
John Eckhardt Jr, (August 27, 1911 – January 5, 1991), professionally billed as Johnny Eck, was an American freak show performer in sideshows and a film actor. Born with sacral agenesis, Eck is best known today for his role in Tod Browning's 1932 cult classic film Freaks and his appearances as a bird creature in several Tarzan films.
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Josephine Joseph is most prominently remembered for a role in the Tod Browning 1932 classic cult film Freaks. Although she only had two lines of dialogue, she still appeared in a number of scenes, most notably the scene at the wedding reception where she is the one who begins the chant: "We accept her, one of us! We accept her, one of us!".
Peter Robinson (born April 8, 1873; credited professionally as The Living Skeleton or as The Cigarette Fiend, and The Thin Man) was an American theater and sideshow art performer, perhaps best known for his only film appearance in the Tod Browning cult film Freaks, with a lengthy career in the carnival circus circuit at Coney Island and with Ringling Bros.
She appeared in a Tod Browning's Freaks (1932) which, according to the DVD documentary, [4] left her unhappy with the overall portrayal of the sideshow performers in the film. In April 1935, she was working at the Ringling Brothers' sideshow at Madison Square Garden. [1] In 1940, she was interviewed by Joseph Mitchell for an article for The New ...
The Mystic is a 1925 American MGM silent drama film directed by Tod Browning, who later directed MGM's Freaks (1932). It was co-written by Browning and Waldemar Young, writing a similar storyline to their earlier 1925 hit film The Unholy Three.