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{ Cast & Crew: Vincent Price }

Vincent Leonard Price Jr. (May 27, 1911 – October 25, 1993) was an American film actor, best remembered for his distinctive voice and serio-comic attitude in a series of distinctive horror films. His tall 6'4" stature and polished urbane manner made him something of an American counterpart to the older Boris Karloff.


Vincent Price was born in St. Louis, Missouri to Vincent Leonard Price and Marguerite Willcox. His father was president of the National Candy Company, and his grandfather invented "Dr Price's Baking Powder"--the first commercially manufactured one. Vincent Jr. attended St. Louis Country Day School. He was further educated at Yale in art history and fine art. He was a member of Alpha Sigma Phi Fraternity and the Courtauld Institute, London. He became interested in theater in the 1930s, appearing professionally on stage from 1935.


He made his film debut in 1938 with Service de Luxe and established himself as a competent actor, notably in Laura (1944), opposite Gene Tierney, directed by Otto Preminger. He also played Joseph Smith, Jr. in the movie Brigham Young (1940). During the 1940s, he appeared in a wide variety of films from straight-forward drama to comedy to horror (he provided the voice of The Invisible Man at the end of Abbott and Costello Meet Frankenstein in 1948). He was also active in radio, portraying the Robin Hood-inspired crime-fighter Simon Templar, aka. The Saint, in a popular series that ran from 1947 to 1951.


In the 1950s, he moved into horror films, enjoying a role in the successful curiosity House of Wax (1953), the first 3-D film to land in the year's top ten at the North American box office, and then the classic monster movie The Fly (1958). Price also starred in the original House on Haunted Hill (1959) as the eccentric millionaire Fredrick Loren. (Geoffrey Rush, playing the same character in the 1999 remake, was not only made to resemble Price, but was also renamed Steven Price.) He followed these credits up with numerous other roles throughout the 1960s in which he played characters in horror films who were often closely modeled on the Corman Poe films. He has also appeared in The Abominable Dr. Phibes (1971) and Theatre of Blood (1973), in which he created a series of campy, tongue-in-cheek villains. Price also recorded dramatic readings of Poe's short stories and poems, which were collected together with readings by Basil Rathbone. Working well into his eighties, his last significant film work was as the inventor in Tim Burton's Edward Scissorhands (1990).

Awards/Accolades:

International Fantasy Film Award for Best Actor: Fantasporto (1984)

Independent Spirit Award nomination for Best Supporting Male: The Whales of August (1988)

Walk on the Hall of Fame

For filmography and credits, visit VincentPriceExhibit.com and IMDB.com.

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