advertisement from 1957 featuring
Voodoo Woman with companion feature,
The Undead. Paul Blaisdell who played the monster and also appeared in a small role as a drunken customer in the bar room sequence believed that as producer Alex Gordon had a big hit with
The She-Creature, he decided to produce a second film for American International Pictures about a female monster. As the scriptwriters of that film were busy on other films, Gordon turned over the writing to actor
Russ Bender, who was a pre-war
pulp fiction writer and V.I. Voss. (It wound up being the only script Bender would ever write.) Blaisdell recalled the shoot was not a pleasant one. A prop man handed Tom Conway a small vial of real acid in one scene that was to be poured on the creature's leg, and Blaisdell wound up with a scar on his shin that lasted the rest of his life. Marla English developed a bad case of flu, and Lance Fuller and Mike Connors had a "Who can be taller?" contest with each actor adding higher lifts to their shoes. Originally titled
Black Voodoo, the film was shot during the frigid California winter of 1956-57 under a fast working schedule of six days and a budget of $80,000. Producer Alex Gordon wanted
Peter Lorre who again refused to work with him and then called
George Zucco, the star of
Voodoo Man, who was too ill to work. With the shooting date drawing near, Tom Conway was chosen, who like Marla English and Paul Dubov, had also been in
The She-Creature. Publicity for the film declared "Not since he starred in
The Cat People and
I Walked with a Zombie has Tom had a role like his current one!". In an interview with Tom Weaver, Mike Connors said, The original make-up design for the Voodoo Woman was deemed unsuitable at the last minute and the title monster is actually the
She Creature costume hurriedly stripped of its tail, fins and
pincer-like claws. What remained was the bulky
Thing-style body, which was wrapped in a
burlap sarong and topped with a modified
skull mask and big
blond wig. Cahn worked actively to conceal this fact, using quick cuts and keeping her mostly in shadows or behind foliage. The rumbling growl of a
lion was also
dubbed for added effect. Makeup man Harry Thomas supplied the skull mask and wig for the monster (purchased from a Halloween costume store), but it looked so phony, at the last minute, Blaisdell had to totally rework the head to make it look more acceptable. Lance Fuller reportedly had a two-films-a-year deal over five years with Golden State Productions. ==Reception==