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Movies => Bad Movies => Topic started by: Flangepart on January 21, 2005, 01:02:56 PM



Title: THELMA WHITE dies at 94. Reefer madness, anyone?
Post by: Flangepart on January 21, 2005, 01:02:56 PM
I caught this in yesterdays paper. She was very embarressed about being in Reefer Madness.
Anyone else able to link to an obit? iI can't.



Title: OBITUARY
Post by: kriegerg69 on January 22, 2005, 12:44:51 AM
Flangepart wrote:

> I caught this in yesterdays paper. She was very embarressed
> about being in Reefer Madness.
> Anyone else able to link to an obit? iI can't.

Amazing what a websearch will turn up....

Thelma White, 'Reefer' Star, Dies at 94
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Published: January 18, 2005


OS ANGELES, Jan. 17 - Thelma White, an actress best known for playing a drug addict in "Reefer Madness," a 1936 antimarijuana propaganda film that resurfaced decades later as a cult classic, died here last Tuesday. She was 94.

The cause was pneumonia, said Michael Homeier, her godson and only survivor. She died at the Motion Picture and Television Hospital in the Woodland Hills section.

Ms. White played a hard-boiled blonde named Mae who peddles "demon weed" to unsuspecting young people in "Reefer Madness," a low-budget cautionary tale written by a religious group. In the film, she lures high school students to her apartment for sex and drugs, turning them into addicts who shoot their girlfriends, run over pedestrians and go insane.

A musical and comedy actress who made more than 40 movies, Ms. White was horrified when RKO Studios picked her for the antidrug film. But because of her contract, she had little choice but to accept the role.

"I'm ashamed to say that it's the only one of my films that's become a classic," she told The Los Angeles Times in an interview in 1987. "I hide my head when I think about it."

Born Thelma Wolpa in Lincoln, Neb., in 1910, Ms. White was a carnival performer as a toddler before moving on to vaudeville, radio and movies.

"Reefer Madness" was destined for obscurity, but in 1972, Keith Stroup, founder of the National Organization for Reform of Marijuana Laws, discovered it in the Library of Congress archives, bought a print and screened it at a New York benefit.

Robert Shaye, founder of New Line Cinema, saw the film and recognized its appeal as an unintentional parody. He re-released it through his then-fledgling company, holding midnight showings.

Ms. White twice saw an off-Broadway musical that spoofed the movie. The musical "was campy and over the top, and she loved it," Mr. Homeier said.

(http://images.amazon.com/images/P/B00006G8FC.01.LZZZZZZZ.jpg)



Title: Re: THELMA WHITE dies at 94. Reefer madness, anyone?
Post by: Max Gardner on January 23, 2005, 11:05:42 AM
That's a shame. I think I'll go take one puff on a joint and go stark staring insane in memory of her.


Title: Re: THELMA WHITE dies at 94. Reefer madness, anyone?
Post by: raj on January 23, 2005, 07:31:10 PM
Sniff.
First time I saw the movie was in college. . .