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Page 1: RAY BRADBURY’S EARLIEST INFLUENCESThe Hunchback of Notre Dame, The Phantom of the Opera, Dracula, The Mummy, and The Invisible Man— movies that changed my life in the 1920s and

MONSTERS FROM THE VAULT #3038 SPRING 2012 39

By Terry Pace

Ray Bradbury was a32-year-oldwriteronthevergeoflife-alteringnationalrenownwhenamoviestudiohehadlonglovedandreveredhiredhimtodevelop an out-of-this-worldconcept foroneof theground-breakingscience-fictionthrillersoftheColdWarera. “Sixtyyears ago, in 1952,Universal hiredme towrite ascreentreatmentforthefilmthatbecameknownasIt Came from Outer Space,”Bradburyrecalled.“IwassothrilledtobeworkingatthesamestudiothathadmadeThe Hunchback of Notre Dame,The Phantom of the Opera,Dracula,The Mummy, andThe Invisible Man—moviesthatchangedmylifeinthe1920sand’30s.AssoonasImovedintothestudiobungalowandstartedwork,IwentovertoThe Phantom of the Opera stageandstoodinthemiddleofthetheaterwhere theyhadfilmedtheopera-house scenes. Itwassoglorioustobethereinperson,standing at long lastwith theghostofLonChaney,mychild-hoodhero.IfeltlikeIwasfiveyearsoldalloveragain.” The lingering specter ofChaney—silentcinema’smyth-ic“ManofaThousandFaces”—has inhabitedBradbury’s souland psyche throughout hislong, fruitful, and vastly in-fluential literarylife.ThefamedauthorofFahrenheit 451,The Martian Chronicles,The Illustrated Man,Dandelion Wine,Something Wicked This Way Comes,The Machineries of Joy,The Halloween Tree,From the Dust Re-turned,Farewell Summer,andothercorner-stoneworksofsciencefiction,fantasy,andthemacabrecreditsChaneyastheearliestandmostprofoundinspirationforhischild-hoodfearsandanxietiesandthedevelop-mentofhisflourishingyoungimagination. “Lon Chaney has been the centralmetaphorofmylifeallthewaythrough,”the92-year-oldBradburyinsists.“IsawChaney’sperformanceas thebell ringerQuasimodoinThe Hunchback of Notre DamewhenIwasthreeyearsold,andaverystrangethinghap-pened:Iwondered,atthatveryearlyage,ifIwasn’tahunchbackmyself.Iworriedthat

Imightgrowuptobejustsuchamisshapenoutcast.That’saverystrangefearforachildthatagetohave,isn’tit?ButIrememberthatfeelingquitevividly—Chaney’sperformanceinthatfilmaffectedmesodeeply.TheverynextyearIsawLonChaneyagaininHe Who Gets Slapped,withallthecircusclownsandthe lions—again,Chaneyprovidedmoremetaphorsthat lefta lastingimpressiononme.Intheendingof He Who Gets Slapped,theclownplayedbyChaneytrapsthesepeopleinaroomwithalion.Thatlionandthatroomturnedup25yearslaterinmyscience-fictionstory‘TheVeldt,’wheretwochildrenaresentintoavirtual-realityplayroominthefutureandencouragedbytheirparentstoplaytheretogetherand leave thegrownupsalone.Attheendof thestory, thechildrentraptheirdistant,uncaringparents intheroomtobe

eatenalivebylionsontheAfricanveldtthatthey’vecreatedthroughtheirownwishfulfill-mentinthevirtualrealityofthefuture.ThatstorywasmadepossiblebyLonChaney.” When Bradbury was only five, heexperiencedChaney’s iconicperformanceasanother tragic cinematicgrotesque—thedisfigured,mysterious, and occasionallymurderousmusicalgeniusErik,amad,love-lorn composer andorganist lurking in thedark catacombs beneath the ParisOperaHouse.Universal’s lavish,big-budget1925movieadaptationofFrenchauthorGastonLeroux’sgothicmelodramaThe Phantom of the Operamadeitsfirst-runbig-screenvisittotheAcademyTheatreintheauthor’ssleepyMidwesternhometownofWaukegan,Illinois. “Thatparticularfilmhasstayedwithmeforever—it’sjustsoperfectinsomany

R AY B R A D B U RY ’ S E A R L I E S T I N F L U E N C E S

wonderfulways,”Bradburymaintains. “Iwent to see it on openingnightwithmyolderbrotherSkip, andwewalked to thetheaterfromourhouse.Ithinktheperfor-mancewasatseventhatnight,andbynineo’clockwewereonourwayback,hauntedby thememoryofChaney’sPhantom.Toget home,we had towalk over a bridgethat ran across this big, dark ravine thatdivided the town.On thewaydown thelong steps that leddown the slope to thebridgethatranovertheravine,mybrothersuddenlyranaheadofme,withoutaword,anddisappearedintothedarkness.Heranall thewaytotheothersideof theravineandhidhimselfunderneaththebridge.SohereIwas,atnineo’clockatnight,crossingthisbigravine,surroundedbydarknessandsilenceandterrifiedbecauseIthoughtmybrotherhadrunhomeandabandonedme

toafateworsethandeath.WhenIreachedthefarendofthebridge,Skipjumpedoutinfrontofmeandscreamedandscaredthelivinghelloutofme.Iranscreamingupthehillandallthewayhome.MyfatherwassomadwhenIgothomeandtoldhimwhathad happened thathe beat the hell outofmybrother,whichmademe very hap-py at the time.Thatravine is still thereinWaukegan, in thecenterofwhat’snowcalledRayBradburyPark. The bridge isstill there, too, andthe far end of thebridge iswheremyb ro the r h id and

jumped out and frightenedmeafterwefirstsawThe Phantom of the Operaallthoseyearsago.That’samemoryyouneverforget.” Thedeep,dark, fearsome ra-vinethatterrifiedRayBradburysocompletely in his childhood laterworkeditssinisterandmysteriouswayintoseveraloftheauthor’sen-duringliteraryworks,mostnotablyhis quasi-autobiographical novelofmagical fantasy and a child’sfirst bittersweet tasteofmortality,Dandelion Wine (1957), alongwiththatbook’sbelatedsequel,Farewell Summer(2006).SetintheMidwest-ernhamletofGreenTown,Illinois(Bradbury’sfictionalizedversionofhisWaukeganbirthplace), duringthefatefulpre-Depressionsummerof1928,Dandelion Winefeaturesanunseen serial killer knownas theLonelyOne,who lurks near thedreadedravinelateatnight,terror-

izingthecitizensofGreenTownandstran-glingseveralofthetown’ssadandsolitaryspinsters.MorethanhalfacenturyafterhepennedDandelion Wine,BradburybelievesthelethalfigureoftheLonelyOnerepresentsoneofhisfirstattemptstore-createChaney’s

Author Ray Bradbury saw The Hunchback of Notre Dame when he was just three years old, and he wondered at the time if he was a hunchback himself. (Courtesy of Photofest)

The deep, dark, terrifying ravine (left) young Ray Bradbury (and brother Skip) had to cross during nighttime walks between his house and first-run theatrical screenings of Lon Chaney’s silent-movie chillers (including The Phantom of the Opera) is now part of Ray Bradbury Park in the author’s hometown of Waukegan, Illinois. (Ravine Photo Courtesy of Ray Bradbury/Phantom Photo Courtesy of Photofest)

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