Welcome back to Horror Street, my ongoing journey in search of awesome yet spooky graffiti art on the streets and little-traveled corners of New York City!
Today’s subject is the one and only King Kong, who celebrates his 90th anniversary today. It was March 3, 1933, when Kong made his big-screen debut with the worldwide premiere in New York City of his soon-to-be-classic film. The creation of movie producer Merian C. Cooper and author Edgar Wallace, brought to stop-motion life by effects master Willis O’Brien, King Kong went on to become a worldwide cultural icon that inspired generations of Monster Kids who grew up to be directors, writers, and special-effects creators.
He’s also inspired artists, as you can see here. It was in September 2021 that I first came across this graffiti mural in Long Island City, Queens, but a recent check last week showed that it’s still there. It’s an incredible piece of art, don’t you think?
It’s the work of Calicho Arevalo, a Colombian-born mural artist who arrived in New York in 2018 to share his artistic gifts. In this Third Rail interview with Arevalo, you can learn a great deal about his background and check out some photos of the Kong mural in progress.
Kong’s popularity also inspired the folks at Pan’s publisher, StarWarp Concepts, to add the story of the king of the simian monsters to their line of Illustrated Classics, joining Edgar Rice Burroughs’s sci-fi adventure A Princess of Mars, J. Sheridan Le Fanu’s vampiric love story Carmilla, and the Brothers Grimm’s childhood tale Snow White.
King Kong is a republication of the 1932 novelization of the original movie classic. Written by Delos W. Lovelace, based on the story by Edgar Wallace and Merian C. Cooper and the screenplay by James A. Creelman and Ruth Rose, it includes scenes that didn’t appear in the final cut of the film—including the notorious “spider pit” sequence in which Kong’s human pursuers are attacked by horrific arachnids and insects. The SWC version features six original black-and-white illustrations by comics artist Paul Tuma, whose work has appeared in the pages of The Twilight Zone, Paul Kupperberg’s Secret Romances, and Bloke’s Terrible Tomb of Terror.
Not familiar with the beauty-and-the-beast story of Kong and his “love interest,” Ann Darrow (who was played in the 1933 original by the queen of the scream queens, Fay Wray)? Well, here’s our edition’s back-cover copy to bring you up-to-date:
Ann Darrow was a down-on-her-luck actress struggling to survive in Depression-era New York when she met moviemaker Carl Denham. He offered her the starring role in his latest film: a documentary about a long-lost island—and the godlike ape named Kong rumored to live there. Denham needed a beauty as a counterpart to the beast he hoped to find, and Ann was the answer to his prayers.
Mystery, romance, a chance to turn her life around, even the possibility of stardom—to Ann, it sounded like the adventure of a lifetime! But what she didn’t count on were the horrific dangers that awaited her on Skull Island—including the affections of a love-struck monster…
King Kong (the 1932 novelization) is available as a digital exclusive, so visit its product page at StarWarp Concepts for ordering information.
Stay tuned for further installments of Horror Street—there’s plenty of macabre graffiti art to be found on the streets of New York, if you look in the right creepy places! And be sure to check out my previous HS entries: the Brooklyn Vampire, Jason Voorhees, and many more!