Ed Wood Popular Books

Ed Wood Biography & Facts

Edward Davis Wood Jr. (October 10, 1924 – December 10, 1978) was an American filmmaker, actor, screenwriter, and pulp novelist. In the 1950s, Wood directed several low-budget science fiction, crime and horror films that later became cult classics, notably Glen or Glenda (1953), Jail Bait (1954), Bride of the Monster (1955), Plan 9 from Outer Space (1957) and Night of the Ghouls (1959). In the 1960s and 1970s, he moved towards sexploitation and pornographic films such as The Sinister Urge (1960), Orgy of the Dead (1965) and Necromania (1971), and wrote over 80 lurid pulp crime and sex novels. Notable for their campy aesthetics, technical errors, unsophisticated special effects, use of poorly-matched stock footage, eccentric casts, idiosyncratic stories and non sequitur dialogue, Wood's films remained largely obscure until he was posthumously awarded a Golden Turkey Award for Worst Director of All Time in 1980, renewing public interest in his life and work. Following the publication of Rudolph Grey's 1992 oral biography Nightmare of Ecstasy: The Life and Art of Edward D. Wood Jr., a biopic of his life, Ed Wood (1994), was directed by Tim Burton. Starring Johnny Depp as Wood and Martin Landau as Bela Lugosi, the film received critical acclaim and various awards, including two Academy Awards. Early years Wood's father, Edward Sr., worked for the United States Post Office as a custodian, and his family relocated numerous times around the United States. Eventually, they settled in Poughkeepsie, New York, where Ed Wood Jr. was born in 1924. According to his second wife, Kathy O'Hara, Wood's mother Lillian would dress him in girl's clothing when he was a child because she had always wanted a daughter (Wood had one brother, several years younger than himself). For the rest of his life, Wood crossdressed, infatuated with the feel of angora on his skin. During his childhood, Wood was interested in the performing arts and pulp fiction. He collected comic books and pulp magazines, and adored movies, especially Westerns, serials, and the occult. Buck Jones and Bela Lugosi were two of his earliest childhood idols. He often skipped school in order to watch motion pictures at the local movie theater, where stills from last week's films would often be thrown into the trash by theater staff, allowing Wood to salvage the images, and to add to his extensive collection. On his 12th birthday, in 1936, Wood received as a gift his first movie camera, a Kodak "Cine Special". One of his first pieces of footage, and one that imbued him with pride, showed the airship Hindenburg passing over the Hudson River at Poughkeepsie, shortly before its disastrous crash at Lakehurst, New Jersey. One of Wood's first paid jobs was as a cinema usher, and he also sang and played drums in a band. Subsequently, he formed a quartet called "Eddie Wood's Little Splinters" in which he sang and played multiple stringed instruments. Military service In 1942, Wood enlisted at age 17 in the United States Marine Corps, just months after the attack on Pearl Harbor. Assigned to the 2nd Defense Battalion, he reached the rank of corporal before he was discharged in 1946 at age 21. Although Wood reportedly claimed to have faced strenuous combat, including having his front teeth knocked out by a Japanese soldier, his military records reveal that to be false, apart from recovering bodies on Betio following the Battle of Tarawa, and experiencing minor Japanese bombing raids on Betio and the Ellice Islands. A recurring filariasis infection left him performing clerical work for the remainder of his enlistment. His dental extractions were carried out over several months by Navy dentists, unconnected to any combat. Wood had false teeth that he would slip out from his mouth when he wanted to make his wife Kathy laugh, showing her a big toothless grin. Wood later claimed that he feared being wounded in battle more than he feared being killed, mainly because he was afraid a combat medic would discover him wearing a pink bra and panties under his uniform during the Battle of Tarawa. Career Directing and screenwriting In 1947, Wood moved to Hollywood, California, where he wrote scripts and directed television pilots, commercials and several forgotten micro-budget westerns, most of which failed to sell. Wood biographer Rudolph Grey states that Ed Wood made approximately 125 commercials for Story-Ad films and approximately 30 commercials for Play-Ad Films, in addition to a few commercials for "Pie-Quick". In 1948, Wood wrote, produced, directed, and starred in The Casual Company, a play derived from his own unpublished novel which was based on his service in the United States Marine Corps. It opened at the Village Playhouse to negative reviews on October 25. That same year, he wrote and directed a low-budget western called Crossroads of Laredo with the aid of a young producer he met named Crawford John Thomas. The film was shot silent and was not completed during Wood's lifetime. In 1949, Wood and Thomas acted together in a play called The Blackguard Returns at the Gateway Theatre (Wood played the Sheriff and Thomas was the villain). Wood joined the Screen Actors Guild in 1951, and worked very briefly as a stuntman among other things. When writing, Wood used a number of different pen names, including Ann Gora (in reference to Angora, his favorite textile) and Akdov Telmig (the backwards spelling of his favorite drink, the vodka gimlet). In 1952, Wood was introduced to actor Bela Lugosi by friend and fellow writer-producer Alex Gordon (Wood's roommate at the time who was later involved in creating American International Pictures). Lugosi's son, Bela Lugosi Jr., has been among those who felt Wood exploited the senior Lugosi's stardom, taking advantage of the fading actor when he could not afford to refuse any work. However, most documents and interviews with other Wood associates in Nightmare of Ecstasy suggest that Wood and Lugosi were genuine friends and that Wood helped Lugosi through the worst days of his clinical depression and drug addiction. Lugosi had become dependent on morphine as a way of controlling his debilitating sciatica over the years, and was in a poor mental state caused by his recent divorce. Glen or Glenda In 1953, Wood wrote and directed the semi-documentary film Glen or Glenda (originally titled I Changed My Sex!) with producer George Weiss. The film starred Wood (under the alias "Daniel Davis") as a transvestite, his girlfriend Dolores Fuller, Timothy Farrell, Lyle Talbot, Conrad Brooks and Bela Lugosi as the god-like narrator/scientist. Fuller was shocked when she learned soon afterward that Wood actually was a transvestite. In 1953, Wood wrote and directed a stage show for Lugosi called The Bela Lugosi Review (a take-off on Dracula) that was put on at the Silver Slipper in Las Vegas. When Lugosi appeared on the TV show You Asked For It that same year, he announced that Ed Wood was producing a Dr. Acula TV.... Discover the Ed Wood popular books. Find the top 100 most popular Ed Wood books.

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  • What the Bears Know synopsis, comments

    What the Bears Know

    Steve Searles & Chris Erskine

    The incredible story of how one man went from a hired hunter to becoming one of America’s top champions for this iconic animal.A USA Today BestsellerIn this wonderous and eyeopenin...

  • The Country House Revealed synopsis, comments

    The Country House Revealed

    Dan Cruickshank

    Spanning the architectural history of the country house from the disarming Elizabethan charm of South Wraxall, the classical rigour of Kinross in Scotland, the majesty and ingenuit...

  • Wood v. Battle Ground School District synopsis, comments

    Wood v. Battle Ground School District

    Washington Court of Appeals

    Concurring: J. Dean Morgan, Carroll C. Bridgewater PUBLISHED OPINION This case involves the scope of the Open Public Meetings Act of 1971 (OPMA). We hold that the OPMA does not cov...

  • Woods v. Texas Bell v. Texas Brooks v. Texas Green v. Texas Demouchette v. Texas and Barefoot v. Texas synopsis, comments

    Woods v. Texas Bell v. Texas Brooks v. Texas Green v. Texas Demouchette v. Texas and Barefoot v. Texas

    Supreme Court of the United States

    Certiorari denied. JUSTICE BRENNAN and JUSTICE MARSHALL, dissenting.

  • Santa Fe Edge synopsis, comments

    Santa Fe Edge

    Stuart Woods

    Santa Fe attorney Ed Eagle returnsand so does his pastin this riveting thriller from #1 New York Times bestselling author Stuart Woods.Ed Eagle, the sixfootseven, takenoprison...

  • One of Those Things synopsis, comments

    One of Those Things

    Ed Wood

    Christmas is already going to be a very sad time for George, a sixyear old boy whose daddy won't be coming back home. But his luck seems to be getting even worse when the twentypou...

  • Short Straw synopsis, comments

    Short Straw

    Stuart Woods

    In the second Ed Eagle novel, #1 New York Times bestselling author Stuart Woods delivers a compulsively readable thriller full of crosses and doublecrosses, featuring a shrewd crim...

  • The Cinematic Misadventures of Ed Wood synopsis, comments

    The Cinematic Misadventures of Ed Wood

    Andrew J. Rausch & Charles E. Pratt, Jr.

    Edward D. Wood, Jr. has been called the "Worst Filmmaker in History." In this hilarious and reverential study, authors Andrew J. Rausch and Charles E. Pratt, Jr. investigate this c...

  • Lieutenant Colonel Stearns v. Brigadier General Wood synopsis, comments

    Lieutenant Colonel Stearns v. Brigadier General Wood

    Supreme Court of the United States

    This is a direct appeal from the District Court which held that the original bill states no cause of action. It must be dismissed unless the case involves the construction or appli...

  • Spirits of the Woods With John Zaffis synopsis, comments

    Spirits of the Woods With John Zaffis

    Taffy Sealyham

    Much like the conversations about extraterrestrials, vampires and werewolves, this conversation is absent of the usual hauntings, ghosts, and evil spirits. This conversation is ful...

  • Lieutenant Colonel Stearns v. Brigadier General Wood synopsis, comments

    Lieutenant Colonel Stearns v. Brigadier General Wood

    Supreme Court of the United States

    MR. JUSTICE McREYNOLDS delivered the opinion of the court. This is a direct appeal from the District Court which held that the original bill states no cause of action. It must be d...

  • Wood Et Al. v. Georgia synopsis, comments

    Wood Et Al. v. Georgia

    Supreme Court of the United States

    Petitioners in this case are three persons who were convicted of distributing obscene materials and sentenced to periods of probation on the condition that they make regular instal...

  • The Disaster Artist synopsis, comments

    The Disaster Artist

    Greg Sestero

    New York Times bestsellernow a major motion picture directed by and starring James Franco!From the actor who somehow lived through it all, a “sharply detailed…funny book about a ci...

  • Writing with the Master synopsis, comments

    Writing with the Master

    Tony Vanderwarker

    With seven unpublished novels wasting away on his hard drive, Tony Vanderwarker is astonished when John Grisham offers to take him under his wing and teach him the secrets of thril...

  • Bishop v. Wood Et Al. synopsis, comments

    Bishop v. Wood Et Al.

    Supreme Court of the United States

    Acting on the recommendation of the Chief of Police, the City Manager of Marion, N.C., terminated petitioners employment as a policeman without affording him a hearing to determine...

  • A Breeze from the Woods, 2nd Ed. synopsis, comments

    A Breeze from the Woods, 2nd Ed.

    W. C. Bartlett

    This book is perfectly adapted and layout for a pleasant reading on a tablet, smartphone or computer. To improve your reading experience, this digital version has been edited and f...

  • Cool for Qat synopsis, comments

    Cool for Qat

    Peter Mortimer

    When author Peter Mortimer was commissioned to write a play about a littleknown riot between Yemeni and British seamen at Mill Dam, South Shields, in 1930, he decided to take the l...

  • The Summit synopsis, comments

    The Summit

    Ed Conway

    The idea of world leaders gathering in the midst of economic crisis is now familiar. But 1944's meeting at Bretton Woods was different. It was the only time countries agreed to ove...

  • Land Rover synopsis, comments

    Land Rover

    Ben Fogle

    As quintessentially British as a plate of fish and chips or a British Bulldog, the boxy, utilitarian Land Rover Defender has become an iconic part of what it is to be British.It is...

  • Santa Fe Rules synopsis, comments

    Santa Fe Rules

    Stuart Woods

    Successful movie producer Wolf Willett is stunned when he sees his own death reported in a major newspaper. It says he was a victim in a triple homicide during a sordid tryst with ...

  • A Breeze from the Woods, 2nd Ed. synopsis, comments

    A Breeze from the Woods, 2nd Ed.

    W. C. Bartlett

    With centuries of literature, it's inevitable that some will fall through the cracks. We hunt down public domain works and restore them so they're not lost to the world. Who are w...

  • Santa Fe Dead synopsis, comments

    Santa Fe Dead

    Stuart Woods

    #1 New York Times bestselling author Stuart Woods returns with the third fastpaced thriller featuring Santa Fe, New Mexico’s takenoprisoners attorney Ed Eagle...When his black wido...

  • Seven Grains of Sand synopsis, comments

    Seven Grains of Sand

    Ed Wood

    Seven Grains of Sand is a new collection of seven short stories that explore the essence of human existence from seven totally different perspectives.Collected together for the fir...