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Goth icon Vampira dies
By: Greg Goodsell, Bakotopia.com contributor
Description: Long before Elvira, Maila Nurmi was TV’s original ‘Mistress of The Dark’

Topics: Vampira, Bakotopia, Greg Goodsell, Maila Nurmi, B-Movie Queen, ed wood, Plan 9, horror, Bakersfield
Posted by Bakontributor Mon Jan 21, 2008 15:47:13 PST
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Goth icon Vampira dies
Long before Elvira, Maila Nurmi was TV’s original ‘Mistress of The Dark’



By Greg Goodsell, Bakotopia.com Contributor

“The grief of his wife’s death became greater and greater agony. The home they had so long shared together became a tomb. A sweet memory of her joyous living. The sky to which she had once looked was now only a covering for her dead body. The ever-beautiful flowers she had planted with her own hand became nothing more than the lost roses of her cheeks. Confused by his great loss, the old man left that home, never to return again.”
- From “Plan 9 from Outer Space”

An original oil painting of Vampira from her role in “Plan 9 from Outer Space” hangs in a prominent place in my living room.

Three flying saucers flank the ghoulish matron, as she rises from a misty graveyard of tumbled gravestones against a miasmic background of violet and blue smoke. Sporting her trademark long black hair, chalk white skin and wasp waist cinched in a clinging black dress, Vampira stares into the void with a “come hither” look, her long red fingernails threatening to clutch the unwary. The painting by Woody Welch, along with its customized metal frame, cost me in excess of $300, of which its inspiration Maila Nurmi - who passed away on Jan. 10 at the ripe age of 87 - was not paid a cent.




I have a feeling that Nurmi wouldn’t have minded. The grand old dame that I met at numerous horror conventions over the years had long made peace with her scandalous - and some would say highly tragic - past. She was just happy that people remembered a spry octogenarian. Born on Dec. 21, 1921, Nurmi immigrated with her parents to the United States from her native Finland at a very young age. Blonde and very pretty, she pursued a career in acting and modeling and for a short while was Mae West’s understudy on Broadway. In Hollywood she caught the eye of a local talent scout when she attended a costume ball dressed as “glamour ghoul” Morticia Addams from Charles Addams’ classic comic strips in the New Yorker magazine. Paid the princely sum of $75 a week, Nurmi hosted The Vampira Show on KABC-TV Channel 7 in Los Angeles, which ran Saturday nights at midnight from 1954 to 1955. The only surviving footage from the program shows Nurmi walking towards the camera down a shadowy, cobwebbed hallway.


Vampira and Tor Johnson from 'Plan 9'

In a close-up shot Vampira lets out a blood curdling scream, then smiles warmly and says, “Screaming is so relaxing, don’t you think?”

Whereas the other brunette sexual icon of the ‘50s, Bettie Page traded on the inherent innocence of sex, Vampira served up the far headier cocktail of sex combined with death - something that struck a responsive chord in the staid, repressed Eisenhower era.



Drawing international attention and fan adulation, Nurmi along with her TV show were canned after a single year. Unemployed and destitute, and living with her mother after the dissolution of her marriage, opportunity came knocking in the person of director Edward D. Wood Jr.



The name of the project was Gravediggers from Outer Space, which certainly didn’t make any sense as gravediggers who do appear in the film are strictly terrestrial. The film became known as “Plan 9 from Outer Space” and Nurmi wanted no part of it. After a Wood flunky came to her door with 200 one dollar bills as down payment for her role, she agreed to the part on the condition she wouldn’t have to speak any of Wood’s turgid purple dialogue.

As depicted in Tim Burton’s 1994 biopic “Ed Wood,” Nurmi (played in the film by Burton’s then-girlfriend Lisa Marie) hopped on a city bus in full Vampira makeup and costume to a woebegone studio in an alley.


Actress Lisa Marie as Vampira in Tim Burton's 'Ed Wood'

“The graveyard set was only 3 feet wide,” remembered Nurmi during an interview I conducted some years ago with her. “Wood told me to turn this way, turn that way and turn this way. My part took an entire 15 minutes to shoot. I was wearing my paper dress and there was a tear up around my crotch area. I was wearing lacy panties, so it looked like something else. I said to myself at the time, ‘Well, who's going to see this thing?’ It turned out to be more than 17 million people!” she said with a wry laugh.

“Plan 9 from Outer Space” was voted by a wide majority of film fans as the worst film ever made, leading to endless revival screenings, cult appreciation and wide recognition, but not a penny for Nurmi.


The real Vampira

Like her mythical namesake, Nurmi would be resurrected time and again by journalists seeking intimate details about Hollywood royalty - she was a good friend of actor James Dean, as well as her involvement with Tinseltown’s deepest dregs, such as Wood and company.

Nurmi would unsuccessfully sue Cassandra Peterson, aka Elvira, for plagiarism in the ‘80s. Seeing as she appropriated her Vampira character from equal parts of Chas Addams’ Morticia, the Dragon Lady from the Terry and the Pirates comic strip, as well as the fetish cartoons and photos of John Willie, Nurmi really couldn’t make any valid claims to “artistic theft!”
 
Just before she died, Nurmi consented to being the subject of the documentary "Vampira: the Movie." The film combines talking head interviews, rare archival footage and celebrity testimonials to her lasting impact on popular culture. Filmmaker Kevin Sean Michaels confided to me last year that Nurmi, now in her late Eighties, no longer left her seedy Hollywood apartment. While her life may have been steeped in disappointment and poverty, Nurmi remained bright and personable to end, very much aware of the lasting impact her Vampira character had on the worlds fashion and lifestyles.

The next time you’re at the mall, and you spot a girl wearing dead-white makeup, black clothes and a plunging neckline, you have this indomitable Finnish granny to thank ….

Originally printed in Bakotopia Magazine, issue 20, 1-24-08

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Comment From: matt

Mon Jan 21, 2008 20:45:02 PST
Bravo Greggie, Bravo! Vampira..RIP.
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Comment From: Ninpire

Sun Jan 27, 2008 08:57:28 PST
<3
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