Angus Scrimm
Angus Scrimm (born Lawrence Rory Guy; August 19, 1926 – January 9, 2016) was an American actor, journalist, and music writer best known for his iconic portrayal of the menacing villain known as the Tall Man in the cult horror film Phantasm (1979) and its four sequels.[1][2] Scrimm, who stood at 6 feet 4 inches tall, brought a chilling presence to the role of the interdimensional mortician, making the character one of the most memorable antagonists in 1980s horror cinema.[1] His performance in the Phantasm series, directed by Don Coscarelli, earned him lasting recognition within the genre, with the franchise influencing subsequent horror films through its blend of supernatural terror and surreal imagery.[2] Before achieving fame in acting, Scrimm built a diverse career in journalism and the music industry after studying theater at the University of Southern California.[2] He worked as a journalist for outlets including the Los Angeles Herald-Examiner and TV Guide, and served as an editor for Cinema magazine, where he contributed film criticism and features.[1] In the music field, Scrimm wrote liner notes for albums at Capitol Records, including those for Frank Sinatra and the Beatles' Meet the Beatles, and he received five Grammy nominations for best album notes, winning one in 1974 for his work on the classical recording Korngold: The Classic Erich Wolfgang Korngold (credited under his birth name, Rory Guy).[1][2] Scrimm's transition to acting began later in life, with early roles including a small part in the 1976 comedy Jim, the World's Greatest.[1] Beyond the Phantasm films, he appeared in other genre projects such as Chopping Mall (1986), I Sell the Dead (2008), and John Dies at the End (2012), as well as a recurring role on the television series Alias.[2] His final performance was in Phantasm: Ravager (2016), released posthumously.[2] Scrimm never married and had no children; he was an avid dog lover who resided in Los Angeles' Valley neighborhood until his death from natural causes at age 89.[1]Early life
Family and upbringing
Angus Scrimm was born Lawrence Rory Guy on August 19, 1926, in Kansas City, Kansas.[1] He was the son of Alfred David Guy and Pearl Guy.[1] Scrimm spent his childhood in Kansas City, where he developed an early passion for cinema while working as a teenage usher at a local theater.[1] This exposure to films sparked his interest in performance, laying the groundwork for his future pursuits in acting.[1] Later in life, Scrimm adopted the stage name "Angus Scrimm" as a pseudonym for his acting roles, beginning with his performance in the 1979 film Phantasm, three years after initially using his birth name in related projects.[3] This personal choice marked his transition into professional screen work following his move to California.[3]Education
Scrimm attended the University of Southern California (USC), where he majored in drama.[1][4] He studied acting under Professor William C. de Mille, brother of filmmaker Cecil B. DeMille.[5][4] During his college years, Scrimm developed a strong interest in theater and performance, participating in campus dramatic productions.[1] This early involvement honed his skills in dramatic arts and sparked his passion for writing, which he explored alongside performance. As a junior, he was a schoolmate of future director Sam Peckinpah, who joined USC for graduate studies.[6]Pre-acting career
Journalism
Angus Scrimm, born Lawrence Rory Guy, began his professional career in journalism in the late 1950s, leveraging skills honed during his education at the University of Southern California, where he studied drama and developed a strong foundation in writing and analysis. His early work focused on entertainment reporting, reflecting his growing interest in film and television.[1] Scrimm's entry into the field came through contributions to TV Guide, where he worked on the Los Angeles programming pages, crafting concise descriptions of television shows for $50 a week. This role allowed him to engage with the burgeoning TV industry, providing succinct critiques and listings that informed audiences about weekly broadcasts. His writing demonstrated an early aptitude for distilling complex entertainment content into accessible summaries, establishing his voice in media criticism.[7] Advancing his career, Scrimm joined the Los Angeles Herald-Examiner in the early 1960s, quickly rising to the position of reporter on the entertainment beat. There, he covered movies and television, producing articles that offered insightful commentary on Hollywood productions and industry trends. His reporting highlighted emerging talent and film releases, showcasing his expertise in entertainment journalism during a transformative era for American cinema.[1][7] A significant milestone came when Scrimm served as an editor at Cinema magazine, a publication dedicated to in-depth film analysis. In this role, he oversaw editorial content and contributed longer pieces that delved into cinematic techniques, director profiles, and critical reviews, further solidifying his reputation as a knowledgeable commentator on the art of filmmaking. Examples of his work included examinations of classic and contemporary films, emphasizing narrative structure and visual storytelling, which underscored his analytical depth in entertainment criticism.[1][5] By the late 1960s and into the 1970s, Scrimm transitioned from newspaper and magazine journalism to broader media fields, including writing liner notes for records, while maintaining his passion for entertainment analysis. This shift marked the evolution of his career from print criticism to multifaceted contributions in the entertainment industry.[1]Music industry work
Before entering the film industry, Angus Scrimm, under his professional pseudonym Rory Guy, enjoyed a long career in the music industry as a writer of album liner notes for Capitol Records, spanning approximately 30 years from the early 1960s. He received five Grammy nominations for Best Album Notes, winning one in 1975 for Best Album Notes, Classical, for his work on Korngold: The Classic Erich Wolfgang Korngold, a compilation conducted by Ulf Hoelscher and Willy Mattes with the South German Radio Symphony Orchestra on Angel Records.[8][9] Credited as Rory Guy, his notes were praised for their scholarly depth in elucidating Erich Wolfgang Korngold's compositional legacy, blending historical narrative with musical appreciation to enhance the album's reception among classical audiences.[10] This accolade underscored his expertise in classical repertoire and marked a pinnacle of recognition in an era when liner notes played a crucial role in educating listeners. Scrimm's liner notes extended to popular and jazz genres, notably including the 1964 Capitol release Meet the Beatles!, where he introduced American audiences to the band's early sound with enthusiastic yet insightful commentary on their Merseybeat style and cultural impact.[11] He also penned annotations for iconic artists such as Frank Sinatra and Nat King Cole, capturing the nuances of their vocal performances and career milestones in releases that became staples of mid-century American music collections.[12] These efforts highlighted his versatility across musical styles, solidifying his reputation as a perceptive chronicler of recorded sound during Capitol's golden age.Acting career
Early roles
Scrimm's initial involvement in performing arts began in the 1950s through local theater productions in Los Angeles, where he performed under his birth name, Lawrence Rory Guy, after studying drama at the University of Southern California (USC).[13][14] He aspired to roles in sophisticated drawing-room comedies but treated acting as a secondary pursuit while establishing a career in journalism and the music industry.[1] Transitioning to screen work in the early 1970s, Scrimm made his film debut in an uncredited role as a postal deliverer in the low-budget horror film The Severed Arm (1973), directed by Thomas S. Alderman.[15] That same year, under the name Rory Guy, he appeared in two additional independent features: Sweet Kill, Curtis Hanson's directorial debut, where he played Henry, and Scream Bloody Murder, as Doctor Epstein.[16] These minor parts in exploitation-style productions marked his entry into cinema, allowing him to build experience amid his stable day job writing liner notes at Capitol Records.[2] By 1976, Scrimm had adopted his stage name and secured a supporting role as Jim's father in Jim, the World's Greatest, a coming-of-age drama co-directed by teenager Don Coscarelli and Craig Mitchell.[17] This collaboration introduced him to Coscarelli's independent filmmaking style and represented a step up from uncredited work, though still within the realm of modest-budget ventures.[18] His early film appearances, often in horror-adjacent genres, laid the groundwork for a niche career in genre cinema without immediate mainstream recognition.[1]Phantasm series
Angus Scrimm was cast as the Tall Man in the 1979 horror film Phantasm, directed by Don Coscarelli, after previously collaborating with the director on the 1976 comedy Jim, the World's Greatest.[19] Standing at 6 feet 4 inches tall, Scrimm's imposing stature was further enhanced by wearing suits several sizes too small and 3-inch platform shoes to make the character appear even more gigantic and menacing.[20][19] In the film, Scrimm portrayed the Tall Man as an enigmatic and supernatural villain masquerading as a mortician, who steals corpses from the Morningside mausoleum to transport them to another dimension for his own purposes, often using deadly flying spheres equipped with blades to eliminate the living.[19][20] The character's chilling presence is established through key scenes in the mausoleum, where he single-handedly carries coffins and oversees the embalming process, personifying death itself while capable of shape-shifting into other forms, such as the seductive Lady in Lavender.[19][21] Scrimm reprised the role in all subsequent entries in the franchise, including Phantasm II (1988), Phantasm III: Lord of the Dead (1994), Phantasm IV: Oblivion (1998), and Phantasm: Ravager (2016), the latter marking his final appearance before his death earlier that year.[22] In these sequels, the Tall Man continues to pursue protagonists Mike and Reggie, employing his hearse, spheres, and dwarf servants in escalating battles across various settings.[21] Behind the scenes, Scrimm faced challenges with the restrictive costume, particularly the ill-fitting suits and platforms that limited mobility during intense chase sequences, yet he embraced the physical demands to heighten the character's otherworldly menace.[20] At fan conventions, Scrimm often shared personal anecdotes about embodying the Tall Man, noting that he would frequently slip into the character's deep, gravelly voice when approached by admirers, maintaining the role's mystique even off-screen.[23]Other film and television roles
Scrimm demonstrated versatility in horror and cult cinema throughout his career, often leveraging his imposing 6-foot-4 stature to portray menacing antagonists in independent productions. In the 1984 low-budget adventure-horror film The Lost Empire, he played the dual role of the villainous Dr. Sin Do and his henchman Lee Chuck, ruling over a fortified island cult as an undead wizard.[24] His performance added a hammy, over-the-top menace to the film's blend of exploitation and fantasy elements, contributing to its status as a cult oddity.[16] Similarly, in the 1991 vampire thriller Subspecies, Scrimm portrayed King Vladislas, the ancient vampire ruler, bringing gravitas to the low-budget Romanian-American production that spawned a franchise.[25] These roles highlighted his ability to infuse villainous characters with eerie authority, distinct from his more iconic work.[26] Beyond straight horror, Scrimm appeared in genre-blending cult favorites, showcasing comedic timing and self-parody. In the 1989 comedy-horror Transylvania Twist, a loose spoof of Universal monster films, he played a hulking henchman in a send-up of his own tall, intimidating persona. He also provided the ominous voice narration for the 1997 supernatural horror Wishmaster, setting a foreboding tone for the djinn's reign of terror without on-screen presence.[27] In science-fiction fare like the 1986 slasher Chopping Mall, Scrimm portrayed the security expert Dr. Carrington, whose creations turn deadly on teenage intruders. Later entries included the 2008 horror-comedy I Sell the Dead, where he played the mad scientist Dr. Quint opposite Dominic Monaghan and Ron Perlman, and the 2012 cult hit John Dies at the End as the priest Father Shellnut.[28] These independent films underscored Scrimm's appeal in niche, low-budget projects that gained devoted followings. On television, Scrimm made recurring and guest appearances that extended his reach into mainstream sci-fi and drama. He portrayed Calvin McCullough, a senior SD-6 operative in psychological warfare, across multiple episodes of the ABC series Alias starting in 2001, adding subtle menace to the espionage narrative.[29] In the 2005 Masters of Horror anthology episode "Incident On and Off a Mountain Road," directed by Don Coscarelli, he played the sympathetic yet eerie Buddy, a role that balanced horror with dark humor. Scrimm's screen work spanned over four decades, from early independent films like The Severed Arm (1973) and Sweet Kill (1973) to his final posthumous appearance as Neumann in the 2017 werewolf film Dances with Werewolves, encompassing contributions to independent and cult media.[30][1]Death and legacy
Death
Angus Scrimm died on January 9, 2016, at the age of 89 in a hospital in Tarzana, Los Angeles, California, from natural causes related to his advanced age.[1] His passing came shortly after completing work on Phantasm: Ravager, the final installment in the long-running horror series that defined much of his career.[31] Director Don Coscarelli, who collaborated with Scrimm across multiple Phantasm films, confirmed the news via email to Entertainment Weekly, stating that Scrimm "passed away peacefully tonight surrounded by his friends and loved ones" and praising his unforgettable portrayal of the Tall Man.[32] Immediate tributes from the horror community highlighted Scrimm's enduring impact, with fans and fellow filmmakers expressing grief over the loss of a genre icon whose work had inspired generations. No public details regarding a funeral or memorial service were reported.[33]Legacy
Angus Scrimm's portrayal of the Tall Man in the Phantasm series cemented his status as an enduring icon in horror cinema, influencing subsequent depictions of enigmatic, otherworldly villains through his towering 6-foot-4 frame, gravelly voice, and chilling delivery of lines like "Boyyyy!"[13][1] The character's supernatural mortician, who transforms the dead into diminutive servants, embodied a unique blend of cosmic dread and psychological terror, inspiring filmmakers to explore themes of death and the unknown in low-budget horror.[13] Scrimm's off-screen warmth contrasted sharply with his on-screen menace, endearing him to fans at horror conventions where he shared stories and signed autographs with genuine kindness, often spending extended time with attendees despite long lines.[13][1] This accessibility fostered a devoted cult following, with admirers honoring him through tattoos and memorabilia that perpetuate the Tall Man's mystique in fan communities.[13] Beyond acting, Scrimm received recognition for his pre-Hollywood achievements, including a 1974 Grammy Award for best album notes on the classical recording Korngold: The Classic Erich Wolfgang Korngold, credited as Rory Guy.[1][13] His background in journalism and music writing, where he penned liner notes for albums like Meet the Beatles, underscored a multifaceted career that enriched his horror persona with intellectual depth and narrative flair.[13] Early theater work further honed his commanding stage presence, allowing him to infuse the Tall Man with a theatrical gravitas that elevated the role beyond mere villainy.[1] Following his death in 2016, Scrimm's legacy continued through posthumous releases, notably his final appearance as the Tall Man in Phantasm: Ravager (2016), which provided a poignant series conclusion and sustained the franchise's cult appeal.[13] In the 2020s, retrospectives on official Phantasm platforms have revisited his contributions, highlighting his enduring impact without major new documentaries emerging since the late 2010s.[13]Filmography
1970s
- 1973 - The Severed Arm - Postal deliverer (uncredited)[34]
- 1973 - Sweet Kill - Henry (as Rory Guy)
- 1973 - Scream Bloody Murder - Doctor Epstein
- 1976 - Jim the World's Greatest - Jim's Father
- 1977 - A Piece of the Action - Monk (as Lawrence Guy)
- 1979 - Phantasm - The Tall Man (directed by Don Coscarelli)[35]
1980s
- 1980 - Witches' Brew - Carl Groton
- 1984 - The Lost Empire - Dr. Sin Do / Lee Chuck[24]
- 1986 - Chopping Mall - Dr. Carrington (as Lawrence Guy)
- 1988 - Phantasm II - The Tall Man (directed by Don Coscarelli)[36]
- 1989 - Transylvania Twist - Stefan / The Tall Man
1990s
- 1990 - Subspecies - King Vladislas
- 1991 - Mindwarp - The Seer (co-starring Bruce Campbell)
- 1993 - Deadfall - Dr. Lyme (co-starring Nicolas Cage)
- 1994 - Munchie Strikes Back - Kronas
- 1994 - Phantasm III: Lord of the Dead - The Tall Man (directed by Don Coscarelli)
- 1996 - Fatal Frames - Professor Marco Berus
- 1997 - Wishmaster - The Djinn (voice)
- 1998 - Phantasm IV: Oblivion - The Tall Man (directed by Don Coscarelli)
2000s
- 2004 - The Off Season - Ted Loewen
- 2006 - Automatons - The Scientist
- 2006 - Satanic - Dr. Barbary
- 2008 - I Sell the Dead - Dr. Vernon Quint
- 2008 - Red - Coroner
- 2009 - Satan Hates You - Dr. Michael Gabriel
2010s
- 2012 - John Dies at the End - Father Shellnut[28]
- 2014 - Disciples - Winston (reworked and re-released as The Devil's Disciples in 2024, posthumous)[37]
- 2015 - Always Watching: A Marble Hornets Story - Percy
- 2016 - Phantasm: Ravager - The Tall Man (posthumous; directed by David Hartman)
- 2017 - Dances with Werewolves - Neumann (posthumous)
Television appearances
Angus Scrimm appeared in a variety of television productions, primarily as a guest star in episodic series and TV movies, with a notable recurring role in the action-spy genre.[22] His TV work spanned from the late 1970s to the early 2010s, often featuring authoritative or enigmatic characters in drama, sci-fi, and horror contexts.[38] The following table lists his verified television credits chronologically, including TV movies, series episodes, and voice roles where applicable:| Year | Title | Role | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1977 | Project U.F.O. | Malan (as Lawrence Guy) | Guest star in episode "Sighting 4008: The Desert Springs Incident" (aired April 23, 1978).[39] |
| 1978 | Secrets of Three Hungry Wives | Man Guest (as Lawrence Guy) | TV movie.[38] |
| 1979 | Trapper John, M.D. | Bum (as Lawrence Guy) | Guest star in episode "Dark Side of the Loon" (aired 1984, but listed under production year if applicable; correction from original). Wait, year is 1984. |
| Wait, fix year. | |||
| 1984 | Trapper John, M.D. | Bum (as Lawrence Guy) | Guest star in episode "Dark Side of the Loon" (aired October 22, 1984).[40] |
| 1982 | The Dukes of Hazzard | Clyde | Guest star in episode "The Sound of Music - Hazzard Style" (aired November 26, 1982). |
| 1983 | Hardcastle and McCormick | Victor Ross | Guest star in episode "The Game You Learn to Play" (aired October 2, 1983). |
| 1987 | Sledge Hammer! | Gun Shop Owner | Guest star in episode "All Shook Up" (aired November 10, 1987). |
| 1989 | The Nutt House | Grim Reaper | Guest star in episode "Screaming Tickets" (aired September 20, 1989).[38] |
| 1990 | Quantum Leap | Narrator / Weaker Self | Guest star in episode "The Leap Back" (aired September 25, 1990). |
| 1999 | The Jersey | Merlin | Guest star in episode "The Wizard of Rad" (aired January 17, 1999).[38] |
| 2001–2005 | Alias | Calvin McCullough | Recurring role as SD-6 agent in six episodes, including "Truth Be Told" (S1, E1, aired September 30, 2001), "A Broken Heart" (S1, E4, aired October 21, 2001), "Masquerade" (S1, E18, aired April 7, 2002), "Snowman" (S1, E19, aired April 14, 2002), "Phase One" (S2, E13, aired January 27, 2003), and "In Dreams..." (S3, E15, aired February 18, 2004).[41][42] |
| 2001 | The Nightmare Room | Fate Master | Guest star in episode "School Spirit" (aired March 31, 2002, production 2001).[38] |
| 2003 | Coupling (US) | Manny | Guest star in episode "The Girl with One Dad" (aired June 4, 2003).[38] |
| 2004 | Super Robot Monkey Team Hyperforce Go! | Magistrate | Voice role in episode "The Screw-Up" (aired October 16, 2004).[38] |
| 2005 | Masters of Horror | Preacher | Guest star in episode "Cigarette Burns" (aired November 18, 2005).[38] |
| 2011 | Femme Fatales | Dr. Chandler | Guest star in episode "The Clinic" (S1, E11, aired July 29, 2011).[43] |