| Vampire Prey
Babcock also - starred with a bat in 'The Munsters' the "Bats
of a Feather episode).
"Chosen Survivors and the Munsters are aspects of my past that
I don't even put on my resume anymore, she laughs. "I think
there were animals in the Munsters I did. I was Eddie Munster's
teacher and there were creatures in the classroom- a bat and a squirrel.
That's what I remember about it, it was great fun to do. It was
like playing 'let's pretend' and becoming a child again.
She was a resident of Stephen King's ' Salem's Lot'. (1979) the
small main town populated by vampires. "That was a two part
movie for television and I'll tell you why l did it, she says in
a conspiratorial
tone. 'The reason- the only reason I did that, was to work with
James Mason (Staker, the head vampire's emissary) He had been an
idol of mine when I was starting out. I went to see every one of
his movies because he was the consummate film actor. I learned so
much from watching that man work.
"Even though my Salem's Lot' role was very small and my agent
said, You mustn't do this- it's sliding back wards rather than going
forward! I said, I'm going to do this film because I have a scene
with him and I want to work with him. even though it's a small scene!'
I wanted to express my appreciation because I had studied James
Mason and his work for years.
"I was in awe of this man," she smiles. He was sitting
across from me and we were waiting for the shot to be ready so we
could film. I kept thinking,' How am I going to talk to him? What
am I going to say?' I had
only just been introduced to him. Someone got up and left so there
was an empty chair next to him. I thought, 'I've got to do it now!'
I got up and as I walking towards him,, somebody else sat down in
the chair!
I found myself still walking towards him and I ended up kneeling
at his feet," Babcock sheepishly confesses.
"There I was in this reverential pose. I told him how much
he meant me. I supose it all came pouring out of me because I was
kneeling. He was so moved tears came to his eyes. I learned then
that no matter what the status of an actor is.' she smiles, every
actor likes, to be appreciated!"
Babcock ,suffers aI horrible death in Salem's Lot when Barlow the
vampire slams her and her husband's heads together in front of their
vampire-hunting son, Lance Kerwin. "It scared the hell out
of me when I was killed," the performer reveals. "It was
also technically scary because the whole room comes down at that
point! The room was literally rigged so that the ceiling and walls
collapsed and all of us were just bombarded with flying objects!
Everyone was on wires and that all had to be done perfectly the
first take".
The actor was able to do the stunt for her own death scene- "It
helps where you're a dancer," Babcock relates. We use our bodies
as our instrument. Having done gymnastics, I know how to fall backwards
and not get hurt myself. I didn't have to use a stunt person for
when I fall off the table and onto the floor There's I great kick
to it as when you're close to danger. you feel more alive. Tthat's
what I've been told by racing car drivers and that makes sense,
up to a point! "
Babcock was born in theUnited States and "went to Japan when
I was I0 months old. We were Americans, but I loved Japan. My first
word as a child was in Japanese,"she smiles. "We went
there because my
father was partly in the Army, partly in the diplomatic corps."
The story of her parents' meeting is one Babcock enjoys telling.
"My mother was an actress and was working in Carmel when it
was an artists' colony. My father saw her play Juliet in Romeo and
Juliet and said,"That's the woman I'm gonna marry." '
Sure enough, he did, whisking her away." she laughs.
"If I didn't go into acting, my original goal was to be a diplomat.
Since the only women who got to be diplomats at that time
were actors, I thought, ''I'll become an actor and when I'm really
well-known, I'll be a diplomat." She cites Shirley Temple Black
as an example. "It hasn't happened yet!"
Babcock is a tireless crusader for animal rights. "I've worked
with scientists in the Amazon jungle and Africa on research expeditions
and projects. For instance. in the Amazon jungle, we studied a species
of monkey called Callaseabus Torquatis. which was endangered.
We spent about four weeks in very dense jungle, where not even the
indigenous people went. We hacked out trails with machetes in order
to be able to follow the monkeys, because they're arboreal-they
never come down from the trees.
"It's very difficult to he able to observethem. It rained 20
hours a day- we lived on platforms that we constructed three feet
off the ground in order to avoid snakes. which are instantly letha.
\\'e had a doctor on the expedition but he privately told me, 'I'm
just window dressing-if you ever get bitten by one of these things-
you're a goner!' It was a remarkable experience for me."
Babcock is also a teacher. "I have developed a workshop which
I have taken into academic circles and the corporate world, which
is to teach non-actors how to act in front of the public. Not acting,
but how to give lectures. (lot interviews and behave in front of
a camera, because there are more and more people who have to do
that kind of work. I find it much more interesting thanteaching
acting to actors.To teach the craft, an actor has to learn to instruct
people who need to use it for things other than acting in daily
life "
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