Count Dracula is perhaps one of the most recognizable fictional characters in media, and he's starred in quite a few TV series.
The melodrama is cranked up to impressively ridiculous heights in Gordon Greenberg and Steve Rosen's adaptation starring ...
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.
Vampires have always had that sexy je ne sais quoi. Whether they have ever been this sexy and this funny at the same time is ...
The mystical world of vampires, ghosts and werewolves has long captivated audiences, be it through literature, drama or music, and Bram Stoker’s Dracula is no exception. Whether it be Edgar ...
Gordon Greenberg and Steve Rosen’s off-Broadway hit Dracula, a Comedy of Terrors isn’t that bad: it’s a goofy, gag-filled but fundamentally quite tame parody of Bram Stoker’s immortal 1897 novel that ...
Credit: Photo by Rich Ryan While the story Raturi tells veers quite a bit from that of the novel, the playwright does align with Stoker’s vampiric givens. Like Dracula in the novel, Q is deathly ...
In 1897, author Bram Stoker published the horror novel “Dracula,” about a vampiric count who feeds on his victims’ blood and the hunter named Abraham Van Helsing obliged to stop him.