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Columbus on the ‘Fritz’: Local night owl returns to the theater for movie series

harriman.14@osu.edu

Published: Thursday, March 1, 2012

Updated: Saturday, June 16, 2012 01:06

Fritz the Nite Owl

Katie Harriman / Lantern reporter

Frederick Peerenboom, better known as Fritz the Nite Owl, will host 'Nite Owl Theatre,' featuring the 1959 mystery 'The Bat,' at Studio 35 Cinema & Drafthouse in May.


Fritz the Nite Owl has saved the universe with Captain Marvel and Superman, hosted more than 3,000 movies on live TV and won five Emmy Awards, but he won't stop there.

At 77, Frederick Peerenboom, better known as Fritz the Nite Owl, is once again hosting his late-night movie program "Nite Owl Theatre." With his Elton John-inspired glasses and a velvety, baritone voice, Peerenboom augments cult classics with ad-lib commentary, special "Fritz effects" and his choice of music. The original format ran seven days a week from 1974-1991 on WBNS-TV.

Peerenboom will host the next screening of "Nite Owl Theatre," featuring the 1959 mystery "The Bat," in May at Studio 35 Cinema & Drafthouse, according to the program's Facebook. He will also make an appearance at the horror movie and film festival, HorrorHound Weekend, in Columbus March 23-25.

After going off the air in 1991, Peerenboom hosted a jazz radio show, "Nite Owl Jazz," on WJZA-FM until the station switched its format in 2009. When he was approached to reprise his role as host of "Nite Owl Theatre" in 2010 for a year of monthly screenings at Grandview Theater, he jumped at the chance. Peerenboom told The Lantern his fans have stayed with him for so long because many of them started watching when they were children, new mothers who couldn't sleep or people getting off the late-night shift.

"It was kind of like a personal thing that I was with all these people," Peerenboom said. "I was like a friend with them every night in their living rooms."

Peerenboom has worked in broadcasting for more than 50 years. In addition to his 17-year run at WBNS-TV, his extensive resume includes radio gigs at WOSU, WMNI, WWCD, CD101 and WJZA, author of a jazz review column in the Short North Gazette and freelance voice-over work in commercials. Despite his status as a local celebrity, Peerenboom is still reaching for more.

"I would like to know what it would be like to have a popular, national and international thing going for me," Peerenboom said. "I think it would be a lot of fun and open doors that I can't afford to. I keep hoping for fame, fortune, the wisdom of the ancients, but so far all of that has eluded me. They will chisel on my tombstone, ‘A nice guy, but he procrastinated and was late and lazy.'"

Producer Mike McGraner said he grew up watching "Nite Owl Theatre." McGraner started to make a documentary about Peerenboom when he had the idea to bring the show back for theaters and the Internet. He said Peerenboom is too modest about his career.

"He has fans everywhere," McGraner said. "People remember and know who he is. He thinks he's this guy who didn't make it, but in reality he's bigger in people's minds than he thinks he is. He's very humble."

Part of the appeal of seeing "Nite Owl Theatre" in a theater is the vintage commercial breaks from the era when the movie was made. They also don't have to censor the films or commentary. McGraner said they still hope to get the show back on the air at a local station.

"We just hope people keep coming out," McGraner said. "Fritz and I haven't made a dime doing this, and we don't care, but the guys shooting it and doing the special effects, we haven't been able to pay them. We just want to get enough money to pay people, whether it's through sponsorship or getting picked up by a station."

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7 comments

Anonymous
Wed Dec 5 2012 22:07
Fritz lives! Excellent! I remember both Chiller and Night Owl theatre. I also remember Flippo the Clown and Lucy's Toy Shop.
Anonymous
Mon Oct 29 2012 00:29
fritz was so much fun. i'll never forget the double chiller theatre presentation of "Dr. Strangelove, or How I
Stopped Worrying and Learned to Love the Bomb" followed by the post-apocalyptic absurdist comedy
"The Bed-Sitting Room" starring Ralph Richardson, Michael Mordern, and Rita Tushingham. Now the
latter movie can be streamed from NetFlix. Fritz isn't wrong--give it a try.
Anonymous
Fri Oct 5 2012 22:18
I live in New York now and I also treasure my late nites on a Friday as a kid, staying up until 3am watching scary movies. I thought Fritz was cool and it also was a cherished childhood memory.
Anonymous
Tue Jul 17 2012 23:30
Great memories of the anticpation of double chiller theatre nightls!!!!
JakeinSeattle
Fri Jul 13 2012 18:18
My father would let my younger brother and I stay up late on Friday nights to watch Nite Owl Theatre. We called it "ooo ahhh night", those late night monster movies with my brother, my dad and Fritz is one of my most cherished memories from childhood. Thank you Fritz!
SquareState
Sun Mar 4 2012 23:56
I was an avid fan of Nite Owl Theatre and once had the privilege to appear .on a four-hour segment hosted by Fritz on WOSU-AM radio one summer afternoon during a fund drive.
gspetka
Thu Mar 1 2012 22:55
Before he did Nite Owl Theatre, Fritz hosted "Chiller Theatre," which entertained many of us in the late 1960s and early 1970s. Glad to see Fritz is hooting once more!




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