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Movie Night - "The Return of Dracula"
Movie Night - "The Return of Dracula"
October 18, 2016, 7:15 pm.
Township of Ocean Board of Education Offices (Old Oakhurst School), Auditorium, 163 Monmouth Road, Oakhurst, NJ 07755
Just in time for Halloween
We are celebrating Halloween in retro style this year with a screening of the 1958 cult classic, Return of Dracula, 7:15, October 18, in the auditorium of the old Oakhurst Schoolhouse (the Board of Education Building), 163 Monmouth Road. The old auditorium is a particularly fitting site to view the movie: it stars Oakhurst native and Oakhurst School graduate, Norma Eberhardt (1929-2011).
It’s an all-Norma evening. A short montage of her movie and television roles offers a whimsical overview of her acting career. Her 2006 video interview with Dallas Grove on the making of Return of Dracula sets up the film. (And if time allows, we’ll open to floor to personal stories and memories of Norma.)
In the almost 60 years since its release, Return of Dracula has become a favorite among horror movie aficionados. To her death in 2011, Norma had loyal fans of all ages—many of whom knew the movie only from seeing it on cable television. It was shot in black and white—and as Norma tells in the interview—in daylight only (a big challenge for a Dracula movie). The problem, she explains, was the meager budget. The solution, she tells, was a screen placed over the camera lens!
In the Return of Dracula, directed by Paul Landres, the famous vampire (played by Frances Lederer), ventures from Transylvania to California. Along the way, he kills a fellow traveler and assumes his identity. Pretending to be a distant relative, the Count takes up residence with the Mayberry family and sets his sights on young Rachel (played by Norma).
It’s great fun, and a bit scary. Though tame by today’s standards, it’s probably best to leave the little ones at home.
The screening of Return of Dracula is open to the public, free of charge. (Bring your nonperishable donations for the FoodBank of Monmouth and Ocean Counties.)
October 18, 2016, 7:15 pm.
Township of Ocean Board of Education Offices (Old Oakhurst School), Auditorium, 163 Monmouth Road, Oakhurst, NJ 07755
Just in time for Halloween
We are celebrating Halloween in retro style this year with a screening of the 1958 cult classic, Return of Dracula, 7:15, October 18, in the auditorium of the old Oakhurst Schoolhouse (the Board of Education Building), 163 Monmouth Road. The old auditorium is a particularly fitting site to view the movie: it stars Oakhurst native and Oakhurst School graduate, Norma Eberhardt (1929-2011).
It’s an all-Norma evening. A short montage of her movie and television roles offers a whimsical overview of her acting career. Her 2006 video interview with Dallas Grove on the making of Return of Dracula sets up the film. (And if time allows, we’ll open to floor to personal stories and memories of Norma.)
In the almost 60 years since its release, Return of Dracula has become a favorite among horror movie aficionados. To her death in 2011, Norma had loyal fans of all ages—many of whom knew the movie only from seeing it on cable television. It was shot in black and white—and as Norma tells in the interview—in daylight only (a big challenge for a Dracula movie). The problem, she explains, was the meager budget. The solution, she tells, was a screen placed over the camera lens!
In the Return of Dracula, directed by Paul Landres, the famous vampire (played by Frances Lederer), ventures from Transylvania to California. Along the way, he kills a fellow traveler and assumes his identity. Pretending to be a distant relative, the Count takes up residence with the Mayberry family and sets his sights on young Rachel (played by Norma).
It’s great fun, and a bit scary. Though tame by today’s standards, it’s probably best to leave the little ones at home.
The screening of Return of Dracula is open to the public, free of charge. (Bring your nonperishable donations for the FoodBank of Monmouth and Ocean Counties.)
An Evening at Ross-Fenton Farm
An Evening at Ross-Fenton Farm
Friday, November 18, 2016, at 4 PM - 9 PM
The English Manor, One English Land, Ocean, NJ 07712
Dinner-dance inspired by legendary nightclub
Mark your calendar for “An Evening at Ross Fenton Farm,” a dinner-dance at the English Manor, November, 13, inspired by Wanamassa’s storied nightclub. We’re recreating the excitement of the Farm in the Roaring Twenties. A full dinner, swinging music (from the Dorian Parreott band), flapper touches, and an $80 ticket price promise good value and a great time.
Who were Ross and Fenton?
Mabel Fenton and Charles Ross (born Ada Towne and Charles Kelly) were a married couple and perhaps the country’s top vaudeville comedy team of the late 19th and early 20th centuries. In 1898, Mabel and Charlie bought a “roadhouse” on the lake in Wanamassa and a year later, they opened Ross Fenton Farm. Their popularity and show business connections proved a winning combination. The biggest names in vaudeville performed at and frequented their new establishment.
Mabel and Charlie continued to tour and turned the operation of the Farm over to professional managers. But for years, they spent each summer there, hosting the celebrities and power brokers of their day.
Charlie died at Ross Fenton Farm in June 1918, shortly after his 31st wedding anniversary. Mabel returned to Wanamassa for several summers after his death before moving to California, where she died in 1931.
A mecca for thirsty vacationers
When Ross Fenton Farm opened, a NJ law was in effect banning alcohol within one mile of any religious camp—legislation that kept Asbury Park (sitting next to Ocean Grove), dry. Thirsty locals and vacationers flocked to the Farm, situated just beyond the one-mile limit. This beyond-the-limit appeal continued. For its almost 50 years—through Prohibition and beyond—Ross Fenton was famous for its gambling and free-flowing drink. Headlines splashed news of federal agents raiding its gaming tables and seizing illegal stashes of alcohol. Mabel herself was arrested in one raid!
A favorite rendezvous for half a century
Ross Fenton Farm operated on the banks of Deal Lake from 1899 to 1947. At its height, its 14 acres housed 32 structures, including a hotel, guest houses, greenhouses, training facilities, and casinos.
From the stars of burlesque to headliners like Fanny Brice, Danny Kaye, and Jackie Gleason, Ross Fenton Farm offered top-notch entertainment and world-class dance bands. For decades, it was the fashionable watering hole of society and show business elite.
Trains and trolleys carried patrons to the dock in Interlaken, where livery boats ran regularly to the Farm. On summer evenings, Deal Lake was dotted with rented canoes filled with locals enjoying the live music drifting across the water.
The Farm passed through a series of operators and owners. It defied Prohibition and flourished despite the Depression.
The final years
In the early 1940s, Ross Fenton Farm fell on hard times. Ocean Township foreclosed on the property. It was bought, remodeled, and re-opened in 1943 by theater executive Walter Reade who ran it until it closed for good in 1947.
The Farm burned in 1950. The Press put it well, “The brightest of the Shore’s bright spots died early today [Sept. 6, 1950] as it had lived, in a blaze of glory.”
Please join us at The English Manor November 13 for our own version of Ross Fenton fun. Contact the Museum to make your reservation (732-531-2136 or oceanmuseum.org).
Friday, November 18, 2016, at 4 PM - 9 PM
The English Manor, One English Land, Ocean, NJ 07712
Dinner-dance inspired by legendary nightclub
Mark your calendar for “An Evening at Ross Fenton Farm,” a dinner-dance at the English Manor, November, 13, inspired by Wanamassa’s storied nightclub. We’re recreating the excitement of the Farm in the Roaring Twenties. A full dinner, swinging music (from the Dorian Parreott band), flapper touches, and an $80 ticket price promise good value and a great time.
Who were Ross and Fenton?
Mabel Fenton and Charles Ross (born Ada Towne and Charles Kelly) were a married couple and perhaps the country’s top vaudeville comedy team of the late 19th and early 20th centuries. In 1898, Mabel and Charlie bought a “roadhouse” on the lake in Wanamassa and a year later, they opened Ross Fenton Farm. Their popularity and show business connections proved a winning combination. The biggest names in vaudeville performed at and frequented their new establishment.
Mabel and Charlie continued to tour and turned the operation of the Farm over to professional managers. But for years, they spent each summer there, hosting the celebrities and power brokers of their day.
Charlie died at Ross Fenton Farm in June 1918, shortly after his 31st wedding anniversary. Mabel returned to Wanamassa for several summers after his death before moving to California, where she died in 1931.
A mecca for thirsty vacationers
When Ross Fenton Farm opened, a NJ law was in effect banning alcohol within one mile of any religious camp—legislation that kept Asbury Park (sitting next to Ocean Grove), dry. Thirsty locals and vacationers flocked to the Farm, situated just beyond the one-mile limit. This beyond-the-limit appeal continued. For its almost 50 years—through Prohibition and beyond—Ross Fenton was famous for its gambling and free-flowing drink. Headlines splashed news of federal agents raiding its gaming tables and seizing illegal stashes of alcohol. Mabel herself was arrested in one raid!
A favorite rendezvous for half a century
Ross Fenton Farm operated on the banks of Deal Lake from 1899 to 1947. At its height, its 14 acres housed 32 structures, including a hotel, guest houses, greenhouses, training facilities, and casinos.
From the stars of burlesque to headliners like Fanny Brice, Danny Kaye, and Jackie Gleason, Ross Fenton Farm offered top-notch entertainment and world-class dance bands. For decades, it was the fashionable watering hole of society and show business elite.
Trains and trolleys carried patrons to the dock in Interlaken, where livery boats ran regularly to the Farm. On summer evenings, Deal Lake was dotted with rented canoes filled with locals enjoying the live music drifting across the water.
The Farm passed through a series of operators and owners. It defied Prohibition and flourished despite the Depression.
The final years
In the early 1940s, Ross Fenton Farm fell on hard times. Ocean Township foreclosed on the property. It was bought, remodeled, and re-opened in 1943 by theater executive Walter Reade who ran it until it closed for good in 1947.
The Farm burned in 1950. The Press put it well, “The brightest of the Shore’s bright spots died early today [Sept. 6, 1950] as it had lived, in a blaze of glory.”
Please join us at The English Manor November 13 for our own version of Ross Fenton fun. Contact the Museum to make your reservation (732-531-2136 or oceanmuseum.org).
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