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Warrene Ott
★ Acting

Warrene Ott

1942 – 1995 · Active 1959–1969

Warrene Ott, an actor from the 1960s, made her mark in the realm of cult cinema with roles in The Phantom Planet (1961) and The Witchmaker (1969). In The Undertaker and His Pals (1966), she embodies the quirky charm that defines the film's offbeat humor and horror blend. Her performances contribute to the cult film conversation, highlighting the era's experimental storytelling and unique character portrayals. With appearances in Rat Fink (1965) and A Guide for the Married Man (1967), Ott's work captures the eclectic spirit of the time.

▶ Watch on SassyFlix 5 films available
The Witchmaker

The Witchmaker

1969 ★ 6.2
as Young Jessie

After four local girls are found, murdered, hung up downside down in tree, and drained of blood in a Louisians swamp , an intrepid documentary team comes to investigate. They're actually a lot more intrepid than intelligent though because they decide to stay in an isolated cabin in the middle of the swamp with their only way in or out being a local yokel in a boat who promises to come back and get them in a week, but is incommunicado in the meantime. One of the female members of the team is a "sensitive" who is attuned to witches and who had a grandmother who was an actual witch. The perpetrators turn out to be a female witch, Jessie, and a male "berserker", Lucas, who maintain their youth by drinking human blood. They make short work of most of the team, but take special interest in the "sensitive" who they hope to add to their coven. This has elements of a lot of future movies--not only "The Blair Witch Project", but also "The Legend of Hell House" as well as other Louisiana-filmed regional obscurities like "The Crypt of Dark Secrets". On the other hand, however, this film is really quite unique in a lot of ways and there never has really been another film like it. It kind of invents its own mythology what with the "berserker", the witches who stay young by drinking blood(which sounds more like vampires), and odd facts like garlic making one invisible to witches and pig's blood being very bad for black masses. The film is also strange in that it in many ways seems like a 50's film, but then it also contains some surprisingly graphic violence and not-so-graphic sex and nudity, and it has the kind of nihilistic ending much more common in 70's films. The most weird and memorable aspect though comes at the end when the villains hold a coven meeting/black sabbath and their coven turns out to include any number of witches, real and fictional, from throughout history, including "Goody Hale" (one of the few Salem residents NOT accused of witchcraft).

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Career Highlights Top 6 by popularity · TMDB

Filmography

13 credits
1960s 12 credits
1969
Where It's At as Betty Avery
Movie ★ 4.0
1969
The Naked Witch as Young Jessie
Movie ★ 5.0
1967
Movie ★ 5.9
1966
Movie ★ 4.8
1965
Rat Fink as Vera Finlay
Movie ★ 5.1
1964
TV ★ 7.1
1964
Bewitched as Ellen
TV ★ 7.9
1963
Black Zoo as Mary Hogan
Movie ★ 5.7
1963
TV ★ 6.3
1962
Movie ★ 6.1
1961
Movie ★ 4.0
1950s 1 credit
1959
TV ★ 5.6