My Generation’s version of Twilight
June 27, 2023
- A Tuesday Newsday Classic – updated

Ask any person of my generation if they know who Barnabas Collins is and you are likely to get an enthusiastic response something to the effect of:
“I made sure I was home by 4 o’clock every day so I wouldn’t miss an episode.”
The aforementioned Barnabas was, by any definition, the romantic hero of the always melodramatic Dark Shadows. One look at his face and you might ask yourself “Really?”
Hold that thought. We’ll get back to his appeal in a bit.
June 27, 1966 marked the date when Dark Shadows premiered on ABC. The show, originally cast in black and white, captured the imaginations of millions of teens and pre-teens and became ‘must watch’ TV. In the course of its five year run, 1,225 episodes were aired. Like other daytime soap operas it featured storylines which took months to resolve and characters that became household names. But unlike any other shows at that time it was centered on vampires and werewolves, time travel and alternate existences.
From the Infallible Wikipedia:

“Perhaps one of ABC’s first truly popular daytime series, along with the game show Let’s Make a Deal, Dark Shadows found its demographic niche in teenagers coming home from school in time to watch the show at 4 p.m. Eastern / 3 p.m. Central, where it aired for almost all of its network run, the exception being a 15-month stretch between April 1967 and July 1968, when it aired a half-hour earlier. Originally, it was aired in black-and-white, but the show went into color starting with the August 11, 1967 installment transmission. It became one of ABC’s first daytime shows to actually win its timeslot, leading to the demise of NBC’s original Match Game and Art Linkletter’s long-running House Party on CBS, both in 1969.”
Dark Shadows reached its peak in March 1969. It was in those episodes when Barnabas figured prominently and was romantically involved with Angelique Bouchard. One particular episode stands out.

Barnabas was in love with the blonde beauty and he takes her to his room. Ahem. Barnabas is conflicted as he wants to be with her but is concerned his passion will carry him away and he will ‘bite’ Angelique’s neck, thus killing her and she, too, will become a vampire. An outcome he does not want. I cannot recall if he did or did not bite her but I do recall that the show implied that the two of them engaged sexually. Powerful stuff for a kid of 12.
Barnabas did not have to be young or classically handsome as he was a compelling character and we Dark Shadow’s fans were completely enthralled.
I know that Dark Shadows influenced me as a writer. The power of the show was derived by what was left out; the idea of mysterious forces at work which left much to the imagination. In the late 1960’s and early 1970’s you couldn’t air a program that showed explicit acts and that, I think, was a good thing.
Supernatural themes are not uncommon in literature, film, or television, of course. And each generation seems to have their share of it. The year my own daughter turned twelve, 2005, she got her vampire and supernatural fix from the Twilight series of books. She and her friends were all agog over Bella, Edward, and Jacob, the main characters.

Being the ever watchful mother, I attempted to read the first novel so I would know what she was reading, but was put off by the pedestrian writing style and an overabundance of adverbs and gerunds. I never it made it to chapter two.
Somewhere along the way, apparently, I had become a grammar snob with a clear preference for active verbs and richer, more descriptive language.
But my daughter loved the books. And then the movies. I tried to watch one of those also but, alas, they just didn’t appeal to me.
Which brings us full circle to Dark Shadows. I’m certain if I were to watch the old episodes now the mystique would evaporate and I would find the characters and plot lines laughable. Instead, I choose to remember how much I enjoyed them as a pre-teen and let the snippets of a few remembered scenes live in my brain to serve as inspiration.
A couple of Infallible Wikipedia links:
Ask any person of my generation if they know who Barnabas Collins is and you are likely to get an enthusiastic response something to the effect of:
Barnabas was in love with the blonde beauty and he takes her to his room. Ahem. Barnabas is conflicted as he wants to be with her but is concerned his passion will carry him away and he will ‘bite’ Angelique’s neck, thus killing her and she, too, will become a vampire. An outcome he does not want. I cannot recall if he did or did not bite her but I do recall that the show implied that the two of them engaged sexually. Powerful stuff for a kid of 12.
If you wish to learn more, here’s the Wikipedia link: