Count Dracula is perhaps one of the most recognizable fictional characters in media, and he's starred in quite a few TV series.
Read our review of comedy *Dracula, A Comedy of Terrors*, now in performances at the Menier Chocolate Factory to 3 May. Read more theatre reviews on LondonTheatre.co.uk.
Bela Lugosi’s definitive performance as Count Dracula, the urbane Transylvanian ... the first English language production of Bram Stoker’s classic novel. It’s a masterwork of atmosphere.
Dracula, A Comedy of Terrors is decidedly in the second camp, pun is absolutely intended. This is Dracula reimagined as a queer odyssey where both men and women are attracted to the blood-sucking ...
The melodrama is cranked up to impressively ridiculous heights in Gordon Greenberg and Steve Rosen's adaptation starring ...
Toothless, bloodless and lacking in bite, this arch spoof of Bram Stoker’s vampire tale ... but he’s not required to do much else. “Dracula old boy, you’re alive!” enthuses Stemp’s Harker when the ...
But as the vampiric count becomes infatuated with Hutter ... says Eggers had a different take on Irish author Bram Stoker’s Dracula, the 1897 Gothic horror novel that established the ...
A silent horror film with a spiritual lesson? The sacramental meaning hidden in Nosferatu is worth a closer look.