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Dark Shadows

  • TV Series
  • 1966–1971
  • TV-PG
  • 30m
IMDb RATING
8.1/10
5.8K
YOUR RATING
POPULARITY
2,915
879
Joel Crothers, Jonathan Frid, and Lara Parker in Dark Shadows (1966)
Dark Shadows
Play trailer0:36
1 Video
99+ Photos
Supernatural HorrorVampire HorrorDramaFantasyHorrorMysteryRomanceSci-FiThriller

The rich Collins family of Collinsport, Maine is tormented by strange occurrences.The rich Collins family of Collinsport, Maine is tormented by strange occurrences.The rich Collins family of Collinsport, Maine is tormented by strange occurrences.

  • Creator
    • Dan Curtis
  • Stars
    • Jonathan Frid
    • Grayson Hall
    • Alexandra Isles
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    8.1/10
    5.8K
    YOUR RATING
    POPULARITY
    2,915
    879
    • Creator
      • Dan Curtis
    • Stars
      • Jonathan Frid
      • Grayson Hall
      • Alexandra Isles
    • 69User reviews
    • 26Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Nominated for 1 Primetime Emmy
      • 1 nomination total

    Episodes1232

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    Videos1

    Dark Shadows
    Trailer 0:36
    Dark Shadows

    Photos562

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    Top cast99+

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    Jonathan Frid
    Jonathan Frid
    • Barnabas Collins…
    • 1967–1971
    Grayson Hall
    Grayson Hall
    • Dr. Julia Hoffman…
    • 1967–1971
    Alexandra Isles
    Alexandra Isles
    • Victoria Winters…
    • 1966–1968
    Nancy Barrett
    Nancy Barrett
    • Carolyn Stoddard…
    • 1966–1971
    Joan Bennett
    Joan Bennett
    • Elizabeth Collins Stoddard…
    • 1966–1971
    Louis Edmonds
    Louis Edmonds
    • Roger Collins…
    • 1966–1971
    David Selby
    David Selby
    • Quentin Collins…
    • 1968–1971
    Kathryn Leigh Scott
    Kathryn Leigh Scott
    • Maggie Evans…
    • 1966–1970
    David Henesy
    David Henesy
    • David Collins…
    • 1966–1970
    Lara Parker
    Lara Parker
    • Angelique…
    • 1967–1971
    Thayer David
    Thayer David
    • Ben Stokes…
    • 1966–1971
    John Karlen
    John Karlen
    • Willie Loomis…
    • 1967–1971
    Joel Crothers
    Joel Crothers
    • Joe Haskell…
    • 1966–1969
    Roger Davis
    Roger Davis
    • Jeff Clark…
    • 1968–1970
    Christopher Pennock
    Christopher Pennock
    • Gabriel Collins…
    • 1970–1971
    Jerry Lacy
    Jerry Lacy
    • Gregory Trask…
    • 1967–1971
    David Ford
    David Ford
    • Sam Evans…
    • 1966–1968
    Mitchell Ryan
    Mitchell Ryan
    • Burke Devlin
    • 1966–1967
    • Creator
      • Dan Curtis
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews69

    8.15.7K
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    Featured reviews

    Tabitha Lenox

    A great classic from the 60's

    1795- "I set a curse on you Barnabas Collins-" 1967- Dark Shadows, after being on for less than one year was on the verge of being thrown into oblivion, forgotten and lost forever, along with a 172 year old family secret. Then quite by accident, a vampire was released from his coffin and Television history was made!

    This show, campy, and low budget(who could afford anything else 40 years ago?) became a household word along with its star attraction, Vampire Barnabas Collins. Now that it is finally on DVD, (THANK YOU, MPI VIDEO!!!!) Those who remember can return to their childhood days and relive it all again, and those who were not there, can see for themselves what made this a soap opera hit! Nowadays, most soaps focus on "who slept with who," or "who is going to overthrow a corporate bigwig" Not this show! Vampires, witches, werewolves, warlocks and ghosts rule here!

    No other soap has been remembered this long and no other soap has ever made it to yearly conventions or VHS and DVD. This show is immortal as the vampire themselves. No matter how hard anti fans try to kill it, this show will always be resurrected! Dark shadows rules!
    miken-3

    An All-time Classic

    The series has so many memorable plot lines and had a superb cast that did a tremendous job on such a low budget. Re-takes were virtually non-existent so most of the bloopers were broadcast adding to the entertainment value of the series. The interplay between the actors was probably the best that I have ever seen in any television series. This series spawned two theatrical movies, a Broadway play and a revival series in 1991. Additionally, almost 29 years later conventions draw more fans than any other series ever made (except Star Trek) and having seen just about every episode I can understand why.
    9AlsExGal

    A history lesson on soap operas, yet it stands apart from its peers

    I didn't even see Dark Shadows on TV until it began running as reruns back in 1976. Even though these episodes were ten years old at the time, I was instantly hooked. I had never seen anything like it - a Gothic soap opera with a vampire as both heartthrob and sympathetic villain. The 1976 reruns did the same thing the initial DVD collection did. It ignored the fact that the first 210 episodes ever existed and started with the appearance of Barnabus Collins in Collinsport, Maine, and the simultaneous disappearance of Willie Loomis, the Collins' handyman. I've never seen the first 210 episodes, but I've read their descriptions. Apparently they revolved around a series of love triangles and mysteries that just weren't that interesting to viewers, and so the storyline was radically changed and TV history was made as a result.

    Jonathan Frid was really born to play the part of Barnabus. He is not a good looking guy in the classical sense, but he's got style, dignity, and class and was extremely magnetic in the role. Barnabus is a vampire in the mold of Lugosi's Dracula. However, rather than looking to expand an ever-growing harem as Dracula did, Barnabus is a romantic, intent on reclaiming only one lost love. That is the initial emphasis. Even with the magnetic Barnabus, you'll notice the show moves at a snail's pace compared to later episodes. However, what you are seeing is pretty much the way most soap operas progressed up through the early 1970's. The formula for most soap operas in those days was that there was one dynastic and wealthy family, and lots of middle class families with ordinary problems. Problems generally had to do with affairs of the heart with the occasional crime mystery thrown in, and resolution was very slow. Not until 1975 or so did you see everyone in town being CEO of their own company with fashion models as the cast. So have patience, because the pace is definitely worth the overall storyline and the atmosphere.
    preppy-3

    It's STILL good

    Like many people I used to rush home from grammar school to see this Gothic soap opera. I distinctly remember being petrified of the werewolf and running out of the room when Barnabas bit somebody.

    Seeing it now it's still sort of creepy. It moves very slow (of course) and the black & white seasons are extremely dull with really pathetic special effects and threadbare settings. But when the series switched to color and started to really be popular (in 1967) it really got going. The special effects improved, the settings and costumes got more elaborate and the plot lines went barreling out of control. Also they had a good cast who played all their roles seriously. That's good, because if they had camped it up or winked at the audience it would have fallen apart.

    A good, fun horror soap. It's a good thing it's available on video and DVD now.
    Gothick

    A legend never dies!

    To its fans, Dark Shadows was and remains the best fantasy television series ever produced for an American network. Its status as the best resulted from the chance interaction of a team of brilliant actors, writers, directors and producers who together made magic every afternoon at 4 pm out of what were often very unpromising materials. As the comment from a new teenaged viewer on this page shows, the show's appeal continues to draw in a new audience 30 years after its original broadcast.

    Barnabas Collins, the pivotal character of the "vulnerable vampire," has become a part of postmodern folklore. The influence of Barnabas as a character and a concept has been widely seen, from Anne Rice's vampire novels to such recent cult series as Forever Knight and Buffy the Vampire Slayer. The central drama of Dark Shadows--a doctor in unrequited love with her vampire patient, whom she was trying to cure--was intriguingly reprised in the Canadian series Forever Knight, with Geraint Wyn-Davies and Catherine Disher taking on the roles originally played by Jonathan Frid and Grayson Hall.

    Dark Shadows boasted perhaps the most impressive cast (in terms of sheer ability) ever assembled for an American daytime series. Actress Joan Bennett who played the matriarch provided a link with the world of film noir and Forties Gothic cinema upon which the style and mood of the series so clearly played. Jonathan Frid, Thayer David, the extraordinary Grayson Hall (probably the first instance of an Oscar nominated thesp taking a role in a soap opera), Nancy Barrett, Louis Edmonds, and John Karlen, all of whom had distinguished themselves both on and off Broadway, routinely turned in sterling performances with a minimum of rehearsal time. The show's initial realism gave way after a year or so to the "Dark Shadows school of acting"--a highly theatrical, dramatically stylised manner of putting the mood of a scene across with stunning effect. Among the newcomers who shone most strongly were Lara Parker (who enacted another variant of vindictive unrequited love as the witch Angelique), Alexandra Moltke as perennially clueless governess Victoria Winters, Don Briscoe as doomed werewolf Chris Jennings, and David Selby as roguish cousin Quentin Collins. One striking feature of the production was the use of multiple time periods and, ultimately, parallel time streams which allowed the actors to portray a wide variety of roles (Nancy Barrett and Thayer David each ended up playing some half a dozen sharply differentiated characters).

    The New York production setting favored the occasional introduction of such veteran character actors as Anita Bolster, Cavada Humphrey, Abe Vigoda, and others in cameo spots. Young actors just starting out such as Harvey Keitel, David Groh, Kate Jackson, Virginia Vestoff, and Marsha Mason found brief or steady work on the series. Vestoff did a tour de force as the ruthless Samantha Collins at the same time (1970) as she was performing nightly in the hit musical 1776.

    Derided by some, misunderstood by many, beloved by its legions of fans, Dark Shadows will never die!

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      The character of Quentin Collins was created at the request of Jonathan Frid, who asked that a second villain be brought in to lighten his workload.
    • Goofs
      Jeremiah Collins's headstone is misspelled "Jerimiah Collins."
    • Quotes

      Barnabas Collins: I didn't say she was dead, I said I killed her.

    • Connections
      Featured in Frankenstein and Me (1996)

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    FAQ

    • How many seasons does Dark Shadows have?Powered by Alexa
    • Was this show broadcast live?

    Details

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    • Release date
      • June 27, 1966 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Shadows on the Wall
    • Filming locations
      • Seaview Terrace, Newport, Rhode Island, USA(Collinwood)
    • Production companies
      • American Broadcasting Company (ABC)
      • Dan Curtis Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      30 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.33 : 1

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