Stephen C. Apostolof(1928-2005)
- Director
- Producer
- Writer
Stephen C. Apostolof (25 February 1928 in Burgas, Bulgaria - 14 August
2005, Mesa, Arizona), sometimes credited under aliases A.C. Stephen(s)
or Robert Lee, was a Bulgarian-American filmmaker specializing in the
"erotic" film genre.
Born in the Bulgarian Black Sea town of Burgas, he claimed asylum in
the US in the 1940s. His large body of work was produced mainly between
the late 1960s and the late 1970s. In 1957 he produced
Journey to Freedom (1957), an
anti-Communist picture inspired by his own life. The film teamed
Apostolof with director of photography
William C. Thompson and
Swedish-born actor 'Tor
Johnson', both now
best-known for their work with the infamous director
Edward D. Wood Jr.. Thompson later
introduced Apostolof to Wood. In an interview conducted in the
beginning of the 1990s, Apostolof recalls his first meeting with the
eccentric director, who appeared at the "Brown Derby" restaurant in Los
Angeles, in drag and with a mustache.
Apostolof made his directorial debut with
Orgy of the Dead (1965). Ed Wood
wrote the script and acted as production assistant. The film starred
Criswell, the famous television oracle
immortalized in Wood's
Plan 9 from Outer Space (1957).
Outtakes from this film and interview segments with Apostolof are
included in the 1994 documentary
Ed Wood: Look Back in Angora (1994),
released by Rhino Home Video. During the 1960s and 1970s Apostolof
directed nine screenplays written by Wood.
Apostolof was interviewed for an in-depth article on the making of
"Orgy of the Dead" in the horror/science fiction magazine Femme Fatales
(7:1, June 1998). In 1990 the specialized magazine Psychotronic Video
published an eight-page interview with Apostolof entitled "Stephen C.
Apostoloff: Bulgarian nude director".
Stephen Apostolof died on August 14, 2005, aged 77. He is survived by
his second wife and five children.
2005, Mesa, Arizona), sometimes credited under aliases A.C. Stephen(s)
or Robert Lee, was a Bulgarian-American filmmaker specializing in the
"erotic" film genre.
Born in the Bulgarian Black Sea town of Burgas, he claimed asylum in
the US in the 1940s. His large body of work was produced mainly between
the late 1960s and the late 1970s. In 1957 he produced
Journey to Freedom (1957), an
anti-Communist picture inspired by his own life. The film teamed
Apostolof with director of photography
William C. Thompson and
Swedish-born actor 'Tor
Johnson', both now
best-known for their work with the infamous director
Edward D. Wood Jr.. Thompson later
introduced Apostolof to Wood. In an interview conducted in the
beginning of the 1990s, Apostolof recalls his first meeting with the
eccentric director, who appeared at the "Brown Derby" restaurant in Los
Angeles, in drag and with a mustache.
Apostolof made his directorial debut with
Orgy of the Dead (1965). Ed Wood
wrote the script and acted as production assistant. The film starred
Criswell, the famous television oracle
immortalized in Wood's
Plan 9 from Outer Space (1957).
Outtakes from this film and interview segments with Apostolof are
included in the 1994 documentary
Ed Wood: Look Back in Angora (1994),
released by Rhino Home Video. During the 1960s and 1970s Apostolof
directed nine screenplays written by Wood.
Apostolof was interviewed for an in-depth article on the making of
"Orgy of the Dead" in the horror/science fiction magazine Femme Fatales
(7:1, June 1998). In 1990 the specialized magazine Psychotronic Video
published an eight-page interview with Apostolof entitled "Stephen C.
Apostoloff: Bulgarian nude director".
Stephen Apostolof died on August 14, 2005, aged 77. He is survived by
his second wife and five children.