Raymond Dennis Steckler was born in
Reading,
Pennsylvania, where his grandmother, who largely raised him, nurtured his love of movies. At 15, upon receiving an
8mm home movie camera from his stepfather, Steckler shot an amateur
pirate film with friends. Ray served three years in the
United States Army from 1956 to 1959, being discharged as a Sergeant. He was an Army
photographer, fired for almost knocking an A-frame onto
Alfred Hitchcock, Steckler turned to the B-movie circuit. Working with
Arch Hall Sr.'s Fairway Pictures, Steckler started as
cinematographer and sometimes actor in the vehicles for Hall's son,
Arch Hall, Jr. Steckler made his directorial debut with the Hall vehicle
Wild Guitar. When Arch Hall Sr. was worried whether his film would play when the original choice of the heavy was black, Steckler told his friend he had to go and took the role under his onscreen name, Cash Flagg.
The Incredibly Strange Creatures Who Stopped Living and Became Mixed-Up Zombies In 1963 he co-produced his second film,
The Incredibly Strange Creatures Who Stopped Living and Became Mixed-Up Zombies, co-starring his then wife,
Carolyn Brandt. Filmed for a budget of $38,000, the film was photographed by cinematographer
Joseph V. Mascelli Initially distributed on the lower half of a double-bill by Fairway, Steckler took
Creatures on the road himself and made it a success under a number of titles, including
Diabolical Dr. Voodoo and
The Teenage Psycho Meets Bloody Mary. Steckler's next film was his answer to
Psycho, entitled
The Thrill Killers, released in 1964. The film marked the first effort between Steckler and
Ron Haydock, who would be Steckler's creative partner up until the latter's death in the 1970s. It also notably features
Gary Kent as a blood-thirsty killer. Steckler continued to produce a number of low-budget but fanciful films which soon attained cult status, including
Rat Pfink a Boo Boo (a spoof of
Batman) and
Lemon Grove Kids Meet the Monsters (an homage to the
East Side Kids films). By the late 1960s, he also directed the
music video for
Jefferson Airplane's "
White Rabbit", as well as promos for
Jimi Hendrix,
Nazz, and
Frank Zappa. ==Later life and career==