André de Lorde  

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"Ah! (Utters a piercing cry.) Oh! who was that who screamed! Martha! Martha! Was that you? Answer! Answer! I say! What are they doing? What are they doing to you? Ah! — they're being killed! They're being strangled — ah! — Help! — Murder! Help! (Leaving the telephone and rushing out like a madman, while MONSIEUR and MADAME RIVOIRE try to restrain him.) Help! — Murder! — Murder! — Help! (Continues to scream as the curtain falls.)"--At the Telephone (1901) by André de Lorde

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André de Lorde (1869–1942) was a French playwright, the main author of the Grand Guignol plays from 1901 to 1926. His evening career was as a dramatist of terror; during daytimes he worked as a librarian in the Bibliothèque de l'Arsenal. He wrote 150 plays, all of them devoted mainly to the exploitation of terror and insanity, and a few novels. For plays the subject matter of which concerned mental illness he sometimes collaborated with psychologist Alfred Binet, the developer of IQ testing.

During the 1920s de Lorde was elected "Prince of Fear" (Prince de la Terreur) by his peers.

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Alfred Binet, Alfred Masson-Forestier, André Heuzé, Berthe Bady, Charles Dechamps, Fantastique, Figures de cire, Frantz Funck-Brentano, Gaston Leroux, Grand Guignol, Henri Monteux, Jack the Ripper in fiction, Jose Levy, Lois Weber, Napoleon, Paul Milliet, The Cheat (1915 film), The Diary of a Chambermaid (1946 film), The Diary of a Chambermaid (novel), The Lonely Villa, The System of Doctor Goudron, Théâtre Fémina, Timeline of twentieth-century theatre, Tod Browning, William Cameron Menzies





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