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The Screengrab

Ben Chapman, 1928--2008

Posted by Phil Nugent

Ben Chapman has died, at the age of 79. The name probably means nothing to you, unless you were a member of his family or keep all your back issues of Famous Monsters of Filmland carefully sealed in protective Mylar bags. But for some of us, it's like hearing that the Blob died. Chapman played the title role in The Creature from the Black Lagoon back in 1954; more accurately, he played half the role, the half that took place above water. (The rest of the part was played, or rather swum, by Ricou Browning, who would later direct the underwater action sequences in the James Bond movie Thunderball and other aquatic potboilers.) The movie, which was directed by Jack Arnold (The Incredible Shrinking Man, The Mouse That Roared) and originally issued in 3-D, dealt with a team of scientists who are exploring what is supposed to be the Amazon and who encounter the titular creature, who mistakenly thinks that the heroine, played by Julia Adams, has been lured to his lagoon after seeing his picture at Match.com. It is sometimes called a classic, which is stretching things, but there's no question that a generation that was beginning to discover the classic Universal horror movie monsters on television and that was eager to have ghouls that it could call it own really took the frog-faced boy to their bosom. With his rubber-eggplant head and fixed expression, which gave it a passing resemblance to Lon Chaney, Sr.'s Phantom of the Opera, but with gills, he was an instant camp icon, one of the most endearingly pitiful monsters of his day.

Mr. Chapman, who was awarded the role on the basis of his strapping six- foot, five-inch frame, was a contract player at Universal at the time. Both he and Mr. Browning were uncredited in the film, and its box-office success doesn't seem to have opened any doors for him. He didn't even reprise the role in the sequels that followed. Instead, after playing the Creature, Chapman had bite-sized roles in two 1955 productions, Jungle Moon Men (with Johnny Weissmuller) and Ma and Pa Kettle at Waikiki (with Ma and Pa Kettle) before retiring from movies after his option with the studio expired. But he remained appreciative to fans who helped him secure his place in pop culture history; he maintained a website, The Reel Gillman, and was a much-loved fixture on the autograph/convention circuit. A longtime resident of Hawaii, Chapman left instructions that his ashes be scattered along the waters of Waikiki Beach.


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