I came by pure coincidence on this, yet another segment from Robert Fuller's interesting but obscure (in every sense) British TV series, while performing a "You Tube" search for more MYSTERY AND IMAGINATION (1966-1970) episodes! Like the previous ones I caught a few days ago from the same source, the print quality is far from optimal and time coded throughout; this particular entry is also plagued by intermittent audio issues which required me to alter the volume as it played out! Anyway, as with the other two episodes I watched, the main narrative of this is retold in flashback to a gathering of disbelieving men; here the raconteur is a long-white-haired Gordon Jackson – who, on his quest to chronicle what really went on in the Villa Deodati in that haunted Summer of 1816 in Geneva – lands his wife (the aptly-named Kathleen Byron) and daughter in Vladek Sheybal's pretty vacant guest-house. The enigmatic exploits of Lord Byron, Percy and Mary Shelley and John Polidori – which spawned the publication of the latter's "Frankenstein" and "The Vampire" respectively – will later also engage the imaginations of Ken Russell in the maligned Gothic (1986) and Ivan Passer in the ultra-rare HAUNTED SUMMER (1988). What we have here, however, is that Sheybal's previous lodgers were transformed into life-size (and very rowdy) marionettes for his own act and one of them – dressed as Frankenstein's Monster, no less! – runs amok and assaults Jackson's daughter who, in the meantime, seems to have become possessed by the spirit of the latter's literary creator herself! Incidentally, I have two (or three) more adaptations of "Frankenstein" to go through before this ongoing Halloween Challenge reaches its conclusion...