. . "Bela Lugosi (1882-1956) was a 20th century actor who frequently costarred in many horror films with other horror icons such as Boris Karloff. Together they appeared in the film The Black Cat. Charles \"Trip\" Tucker III suggested this film to Hoshi Sato for movie night on the Enterprise in 2152. (ENT: \"Stigma\")"@en . . . . . . . . "Bela Lugosi was a man who made a living spitting on children, eating raw oompa loompas, vonting to suck your bluud! being rubbish at communism, acting as a monster and pretending to be dead. Now he is dead. No amount of fame can change that."@en . . "Bela Lugosi shot to stardom in the title role of the 1931 film version of Bram Stoker's Dracula and set the standard for movie vampires. A successful stage actor in his native Hungary and in Germany, he emigrated to the United States in the 1920s and played various character roles until grabbing the lead in the stage production of Dracula in 1927. Lugosi's talent for playing a villain led to a career of playing monsters and mad scientists, and it's generally accepted that he made a lot of bad choices. Some of his more memorable movies include The Black Cat (1934), Ninotchka (1939, starring Greta Garbo), The Wolfman (1941), and Abbott and Costello Meet Frankenstein (1948). After years in Hollywood limbo he would be in the Ed Wood film Glen or Glenda for the sake of money. This would start the infamous working relationship with Wood, eventually leading to Bride of the Monster. Which very B-movie, was well received for the money spent. During this time Lugosi committed himself to an institution, admitting an addiction to methadone and after leaving was difficult to work with. He died while working on what has been called one of the worst movies ever made, Plan 9 From Outer Space (released in 1959). On a happier note, his works increased in popularity after his death and he is now immortalized as a legendary horror movie actor. In MST3K context, Lugosi appears in the movies from the twilight years of his career, among them Ed Wood's Bride of the Monster. Earlier in his life, Lugosi was decorated for his service in World War One where he fought on behalf of Austria-Hungary; he was forced from Hungary because of activism in support of actor's unions.2"@en . "Bela Lugosi (1882-1956; born B\u00E9la Ferenc Dezs\u0151 Blask\u00F3) was a Hungarian-born stage and screen actor mostly known for his work in horror movies, in particular the title role in the 1931 version of Dracula. Following this film's success, he suffered severely from type-casting and the limitations of his heavy native accent, and spent the vast bulk of his career eking out a living in various low-budget productions, culminating (if that is the word) in his work with director Ed Wood. Also rather well known for being dead."@en . . . . "Bela Lugosi was a man who made a living spitting on children, eating raw oompa loompas, vonting to suck your bluud! being rubbish at communism, acting as a monster and pretending to be dead. Now he is dead. No amount of fame can change that."@en . . . . "Bela Lugosi"@de . . . . "Bela Lugosi (1882-1956) was a 20th century actor who frequently costarred in many horror films with other horror icons such as Boris Karloff. Together they appeared in the film The Black Cat. Charles \"Trip\" Tucker III suggested this film to Hoshi Sato for movie night on the Enterprise in 2152. (ENT: \"Stigma\")"@en . . . . . . . . . . "Bela Lugosi (1882 to 1956) was a Hungarian actor best known for playing Count Dracula in many movies, as well as in the stage play that preceded them. In 1997, Dana Scully suggested that the person responsible for several exsanguinations in Chaney, Texas had \"seen one too many Bela Lugosi movies\". (TXF: \"Bad Blood\")"@en . . . "Bela Lugosi"@en . . . "Bela Lugosi (1882-1956) was a Hungarian actor who become a cinematic icon through his portrayal of Dracula in the 1931 Universal film, and thereafter was largely typecast in horror movies. Lugosi began his career on stage, touring in his native land (even performing in Transylvania, appropriately enough). Following a successful, lengthy stint with Budapest's National Theater, he moved to the United States in the 1900s, performing in New York, on and off Broadway, in the early 1920s. In 1927, he was selected to play the lead in the Broadway play Dracula, with a West Coast tour following until 1929. As Dracula, Lugosi used his own slick-backed hair, coming to a point in the center of the forehead, wore evening dress and a cape, and adopted an aristocratic manner while speaking in his thick n"@en . "nm0000509"@de . . "Bela Lugosi \u00E9tait un acteur am\u00E9ricain du 20\u00E8me si\u00E8cle, c\u00E9l\u00E8bre pour ses r\u00F4les dans des films d'horreur et fantastiques. (R\u00E9alit\u00E9 extrapol\u00E9e *) En 1934*, il joua dans le film \"The Black Cat\" avec Boris Karloff. En 2152, Charles \"Trip\" Tucker III indiqua \u00E0 Hoshi Sato que ce film allait \u00EAtre projet\u00E9 \u00E0 bord de l'Enterprise. (ENT: \"Stigma\") En 1948, il interpr\u00E9ta \u00E9galement un r\u00F4le dans \"Abbott and Costello Meet Frankenstein\". (R\u00E9alit\u00E9 extrapol\u00E9e *)"@fr . . . . "Human"@en . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . "Bela Lugosi"@fr . . . . . . . . . . "Bela Lugosi ist ein menschlicher Schauspieler aus dem 20. Jahrhundert der Erde. Er spielt an der Seite von Boris Karloff im US-amerikanischen Horror-Spielfilm Die schwarze Katze. (ENT: ) Im Jahr 2152 schl\u00E4gt Commander Tucker in einem Gespr\u00E4ch mit Ensign Sato vor, sich diesen Film anzuschauen und erw\u00E4hnt dabei die beiden Hauptdarsteller. Hoshi ist jedoch alles andere als begeistert \u00FCber Trips Wahl und nennt den Film einen obskuren Horrorfilm. (ENT: ) Lugosi spielte auch im Film Abbott und Costello treffen Frankenstein mit."@de . . . "Bela Lugosi (1882-1956) was a Hungarian actor who become a cinematic icon through his portrayal of Dracula in the 1931 Universal film, and thereafter was largely typecast in horror movies. Lugosi began his career on stage, touring in his native land (even performing in Transylvania, appropriately enough). Following a successful, lengthy stint with Budapest's National Theater, he moved to the United States in the 1900s, performing in New York, on and off Broadway, in the early 1920s. In 1927, he was selected to play the lead in the Broadway play Dracula, with a West Coast tour following until 1929. As Dracula, Lugosi used his own slick-backed hair, coming to a point in the center of the forehead, wore evening dress and a cape, and adopted an aristocratic manner while speaking in his thick native accent. When Lugosi reprised the role on film in 1931, all of these elements became the quintessential image of Dracula, just as Boris Karloff's Frankenstein Monster (with a square-head, bolts, and stitches) and stage actor Arthur Wontner's Sherlock Holmes (with deerstalker cap, Inverness cape, and curved pipe) defined the characters in the public mind. In all three instances, none of these elements were present in the source text. Lugosi was offered the part of the monster in the 1931 Frankenstein, Universal's follow-up to Dracula, but declined, since the part involved heavy make-up and no dialogue; the part went to Boris Karloff instead, launching a horror career that would eclipse Lugosi's. He instead freelanced in a variety of horror films, in a range of non-vampiric roles: the evil voodoo master Murder Legendre in White Zombie (1931), the goat-like Sayer of the Law in The Island of Lost Souls (1932), and teamed with rival Karloff as a desperate, tragic doctor who skins his evil nemesis alive in The Black Cat (1934), interspersed between various mysteries (the 1931 Charlie Chan vehicle The Black Camel), adventure serials (playing first villain and then hero in three Chandu serials), and a rare comedic turn as a pompous general in W.C. Fields' International House (1933). Lugosi starred in 1935's Mark of the Vampire, though his Count Mora is revealed to be an actor hired to ferret out the real culprit, and he gradually was reduced to working for \"poverty row\" studios PRC (as a mad pharmacist in 1939's The Devil Bat) and Monogram, appearing in nine movies from 1940 through 1944 (including two outings opposite the East Side Kids). Universal offered him occasional respites in their continuing monster franchise, with a key cameo as the tortured lycanthropic gypsy Bela in The Wolf Man (1941) and originating the role of the broken-necked Ygor in Son of Frankenstein (1939) and Ghost of Frankenstein (1941), before finally playing the monster himself in Frankenstein Meets the Wolfman (1943). Following more low-budget B-movie fodder, Lugosi finally returned to his most famous creation, reprising Count Dracula in the monster rally comedy Abbott and Costello Meet Frankenstein (1948). It was to be his last movie for a major studio, as increasingly poorer work opposite no-name actors followed, in such spoofs as Bela Lugosi Meets a Brooklyn Gorilla and Mother Riley Meets the Vampire, finally culminating in work for the legendarily bad director Ed Wood. Lugosi died after filming scant footage for Wood's infamous Plan Nine from Outer Space (replaced by a stand-in holding a cape over his face). He was buried in his Dracula cape."@en . "Bela Lugosi (born B\u00E9la Ferenc Dezs\u0151 Blask\u00F3, 20 October 1882 - 16 August 1956) was a Hungarian actor who lived on Earth during the 19th and 20th centuries. He was well known for his numerous horror film appearances, including the 1934 film The Black Cat in which he co-starred with Boris Karloff. In 2152, Trip Tucker suggested that the film be shown aboard Enterprise for movie night. (ENT episode: \"Stigma\")"@en . . . . "Bela Lugosi (1882-1956; born B\u00E9la Ferenc Dezs\u0151 Blask\u00F3) was a Hungarian-born stage and screen actor mostly known for his work in horror movies, in particular the title role in the 1931 version of Dracula. Following this film's success, he suffered severely from type-casting and the limitations of his heavy native accent, and spent the vast bulk of his career eking out a living in various low-budget productions, culminating (if that is the word) in his work with director Ed Wood. He worked on several occasions with/was overshadowed by Boris Karloff. He managed to make a sort of comeback in death, however, when Martin Landau won an Oscar for his brilliant potrayal of Lugosi in Tim Burton's 1994 film Ed Wood. Other notable or infamous movies in which he appeared: White Zombie, Murders in the Rue Morgue, The Wolf Man, Son of Frankenstein (as Ygor, generally regarded as one of his best performances), The Ghost of Frankenstein, Abbott and Costello Meet Frankenstein, Glen or Glenda and Plan 9 from Outer Space. He also had a supporting role in the classic Greta Garbo comedy Ninotchka, and many Mystery Science Theater 3000 fans will also remember him from the serial The Phantom Creeps (\"Zees vill zimplify everytink!\"), as well as the movie Bride of the Monster (\"He tampered in God's domain\"). Also rather well known for being dead."@en . "B\u00E9la Lugosi"@en . . . . . . "Male"@en . . . "Actor"@en . . "Bela Lugosi ist ein menschlicher Schauspieler aus dem 20. Jahrhundert der Erde. Er spielt an der Seite von Boris Karloff im US-amerikanischen Horror-Spielfilm Die schwarze Katze. (ENT: ) Im Jahr 2152 schl\u00E4gt Commander Tucker in einem Gespr\u00E4ch mit Ensign Sato vor, sich diesen Film anzuschauen und erw\u00E4hnt dabei die beiden Hauptdarsteller. Hoshi ist jedoch alles andere als begeistert \u00FCber Trips Wahl und nennt den Film einen obskuren Horrorfilm. (ENT: ) Lugosi spielte auch im Film Abbott und Costello treffen Frankenstein mit."@de . . "Bela Lugosi"@de . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . "Bela Lugosi shot to stardom in the title role of the 1931 film version of Bram Stoker's Dracula and set the standard for movie vampires. A successful stage actor in his native Hungary and in Germany, he emigrated to the United States in the 1920s and played various character roles until grabbing the lead in the stage production of Dracula in 1927. Lugosi's talent for playing a villain led to a career of playing monsters and mad scientists, and it's generally accepted that he made a lot of bad choices. Some of his more memorable movies include The Black Cat (1934), Ninotchka (1939, starring Greta Garbo), The Wolfman (1941), and Abbott and Costello Meet Frankenstein (1948)."@en . . . . . . . "Ed Wood"@en . . . . . "Bela Lugosi \u00E9tait un acteur am\u00E9ricain du 20\u00E8me si\u00E8cle, c\u00E9l\u00E8bre pour ses r\u00F4les dans des films d'horreur et fantastiques. (R\u00E9alit\u00E9 extrapol\u00E9e *) En 1934*, il joua dans le film \"The Black Cat\" avec Boris Karloff. En 2152, Charles \"Trip\" Tucker III indiqua \u00E0 Hoshi Sato que ce film allait \u00EAtre projet\u00E9 \u00E0 bord de l'Enterprise. (ENT: \"Stigma\") En 1948, il interpr\u00E9ta \u00E9galement un r\u00F4le dans \"Abbott and Costello Meet Frankenstein\". (R\u00E9alit\u00E9 extrapol\u00E9e *)"@fr . . . . . "Bela Lugosi (born B\u00E9la Ferenc Dezs\u0151 Blask\u00F3, 20 October 1882 - 16 August 1956) was a Hungarian actor who lived on Earth during the 19th and 20th centuries. He was well known for his numerous horror film appearances, including the 1934 film The Black Cat in which he co-starred with Boris Karloff. In 2152, Trip Tucker suggested that the film be shown aboard Enterprise for movie night. (ENT episode: \"Stigma\")"@en . "Bela Lugosi (1882 to 1956) was a Hungarian actor best known for playing Count Dracula in many movies, as well as in the stage play that preceded them. In 1997, Dana Scully suggested that the person responsible for several exsanguinations in Chaney, Texas had \"seen one too many Bela Lugosi movies\". (TXF: \"Bad Blood\")"@en .