"there is no such this.. Rob Zombie meant it as in drag car but he changed the title of the song"
Wrong, the Drag-U-La was the name of the Munsters drag car built from a casket. It has been given to any type of souped up car with a gothic twist, most commonly hearses. Rob Zombie owns one.
There is no such word as "dragula" so it can't be translated into Hebrew.
Dragula - song - was created in 1998-08.
Dragula - 1973 was released on: USA: 1973 (New York City, New York)
The song is called Dragula and is based on the drag racer "DRAG-U-LA" featured in the sitcom The Munsters.
1,000 dollars or about, for a few yards or so!
Probably 1998 or 1999
I think it's his wife Sheri Moon
I think it's his wife Sheri Moon
As of 2005 it hung from the ceiling in Planet Hollywood in Atlantic City, New Jersey. It gets sketchy after that. That Planet Hollywood closed later in 2005. If you go to Munstercoach.com you can see several photos of it since a person building a replica was granted permission to go up on a ladder & photograph it. You can pretty much tell it's the original & alot of parts (including the grillshell, nameplate, rear lights, & twin air scoops) had been stolen off of it over the years. Many say the one I mentioned isn't the original either due to some mods it has such as the roll bar & missing glass bubble... but Dragula was modified a few times for some movies after the series ended if you read details of it's history. Some websites claim the original car no longer exists, no explanation offered. A friend of mine says there's a Planet Hollywood in Florida that displays Dragula today, but that one may be the replica Dragula that resided in a defunct car museum elsewhere in Florida. Hope this helps
Hellbilly Deluxe was released on August 25, 1998. The artist is Rob Zombie and includes several songs such as "Call of the Zombie", "Superbeast", "Dragula", and "Living Dead Girl".
I assume you must mean which movie clips are playing during the Superbeast Video? During that particular video there are no movie clips playing. I think you may be thinking of the Dragula music video, if so the movie clips playing during Dragula (from what I can identify) are: The Phantom Creeps (1939), The House on Haunted Hill (1959), & Frankenstein. The words spoken at the beginning of the song "superstition, fear and jealousy" are from the movie The City of the Dead.
Dracula is associated with Whitby Abbey, because Bram Stoker, who wrote Dracula holidayed in Whitby. It is thought he took part of his inspiration from the book from Whitby's spectacular scenery.