…Vincent Price Christmas.
Victoria Price told Fox News Digital that her father, the star of classic horror movies like “House on Haunted Hill” and “Edward Scissorhands,” had a “weakness for large jewelry that he loved buying his wives,” and after going to Poland in 1974 he gifted her stepmother a chunky bone butterfly necklace.
“My stepmother hated it,” Price said. “That wasn’t her cup of tea. And unlike us, she just said it. ‘I will never wear this. I hate it.’”
…
She continued, “My dad loved Christmas; he was like Father Christmas. Christmas was his favorite holiday. They were married for 18 years. Every year for the next 18 years, [her stepmother] would get in her thing of Christmas packages some beautiful Tiffany box or something, and there it was, every damn year that bone necklace, so that was my dad’s humor.”
…
She got one of her favorite gifts, a portable typewriter, while they were spending Christmas in England one year, but her favorite gift was one she got from her dad every Christmas – a $10 gift certificate to a bookstore in Beverly Hills where she was able to buy a stack of books. “My dad and I would go to Hunter’s Books after I got my certificate, and he would amuse himself for as long as it took. There was no time limit,” she remembered.
This also gives me a chance to vent mildly about one of my disappointments this year. Vincent Price’s cooking show, “Cooking Price-Wise” is being reissued on blu-ray…
…but it is a region B/2 blu-ray that won’t play in the US, and I don’t have a region-free blu-ray player, alas.
This entry was posted on Tuesday, December 24th, 2024 at 3:54 pm and is filed under Books, Christmas, Food, Movies. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed.
You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.
I love this about Vincent Price. He was a favorite actor, who not only did macabre films, but many serious movies as well.
I want to take this chance to wish everyone a Merry Christmas. Be well and stay safe.
One of the things I like about this is how important books were.
That sounds awfully familiar. 🙂