Getting Ready With TERRIFIER’s Art The Clown And Damien Leone

Leone just figured out something "crucial" to the franchise, and more things we learned during our ScarePros visit.
The TERRIFIER gang at ScarePros
The TERRIFIER gang at ScarePros

Art the Clownโ€” once the prince of Halloween, based on early Terrifer franchise loreโ€” has now become the Clown that Stole Christmas, thanks to the massive success of Terrifer 3, and Fango bore witness to a day of Yuletide fun with Team Terrifier

ScarePros Halloween & Christmas storeโ€” located in Levittown, Pennsylvania and just 35 minutes outside of Philadelphiaโ€” has been a prime outlet for horror and holiday fans alike for over three decades, and store owner Chris Sembrot recently welcomed Terrifier mastermind Damien Leone, along with Art portrayer David Howard Thornton, as well as franchise producer Phil Falcone and Stream creators Michael and Jason Leavy, for a special photo opportunity for fans to take pictures with Thornton dressed as Santa Art, complete with a dazzling Santa mall setup, akin to that scene in the movie.  

โ€œThis area is a hotbed for Terrifier,โ€ Sembrot tells me, with the store walls adorned with the most hyper-specific Terrifier merch imaginable. โ€œThis is a breeding ground. Everybody involved with making the movies is within an hour (of here), and a lot of the cast and crew were customers of the store for a long time, so weโ€™ve been rooting for friends.โ€ 

Inside, I find king-of-the-franchise Leone sitting on a fitting throne (which Sembrot playfully insists Leone sit in for today) as he meets and greets fans, some of which have traveled from across the country, as well as Canada, to be in attendance this weekend. (Even T3โ€™s memorable little rat costars were brought in for a mini reunion.) โ€œI know this can go away at any second, so Iโ€™m very grateful,โ€ a humble Leone, a former flower delivery boy while writing the screenplay for the first film, says to me. โ€œIโ€™m too old not to be. (Laughs).โ€ 

The vibe is filled with (dark) Christmas cheer, with one side of the store fit for a horror collectorโ€™s dream, as every niche horror figurine and movie icon mask adorns ScareProsโ€™ walls, while the other side is decked out with lovely Christmas lights and decorations. Fans admire the merchandise while they wait in line to meet their heroes, with many donning their bloodiest holiday Art fitsโ€” but they will pale in comparison when itโ€™s finally Thorntonโ€™s turn to put on the Santa suit.

For the next portion of the afternoon, I join Leone and Thornton as an eyewitness to Artโ€™s getting ready routine, as hundreds of fans line up for their turn to sit in Santa Artโ€™s lap. With Leoneโ€™s first love of SFX, heโ€™s responsible for applying Artโ€™s makeup today, as he still typically does for events like this one. Weโ€™re skipping pre-prosthetic skincare products and heading straight for โ€œdown and dirty,โ€ as Leone calls it.

Art the Clown makeup Scare Pros
Damien Leone applies Art the Clown prosthetic on David Howard Thornton at ScarePros Halloween & Christmas

Art drag takes about an hour of application and approximately half of that for removal. Todayโ€™s a long one, as Thornton will be in makeup for at least six hours for this event. The guys tell me that Artโ€™s eyebrows are always the one little detail thatโ€™s hard to get exactly right every time, and keeping continuity with Artโ€™s Santa look for the third installment has been tricky (as the ball of the Santa hat has to be on the same side his tiny black hat usually is.) 

โ€œThe entire prosthetic was changed for 3,โ€ Leone explains, as the most recent film was the first time the Art mold was fit for Thorntonโ€™s face, as opposed to the previous iterations, which were sculpted for original Art portrayer Mike Giannelliโ€™s face. โ€œSo, for this one, we took my sculpture, and we made a clay press so they could study it and measure it, and one of Tinsley Studioโ€™s crew members sculpted it again from scratch and made it identical. The way itโ€™s sculpted now is from (Thorntonโ€™s) lifecast.โ€ 

Between makeup layers drying and casual movie chat, the guys lament about the SFX challenges on the set of T3. Leone immediately mentions the dual chainsaw kill as its most exhausting, as well as the scope of the filmโ€™s ambitious third act. โ€œThe entire climaxโ€” everything in that house, from the moment heโ€™s torturing Sienna, was just brutal. Itโ€™s just such a big scene, and so much to it, with characters moving this way and that way. I was cutting things out of the script before we even shot it just because we knew it was turning into another two-and-a-half-hour-long movie.โ€ 

terrifier 3 santa art the clown ScarePros

To that point, Thornton adds that many fans seem to have ironically wanted more time with 3, even though they made it a point to keep it shorter in length than its predecessor. โ€œ(The climax) was a lot darker in the original script,โ€ he notes. 

โ€œThatโ€™s alright because Iโ€™m going to put all of that into Part 4,โ€ Leone teases. โ€œEven when I wrote Part 2, I knew where the finale was going to go. I still have to fill in a lot of puzzle pieces, but thereโ€™s one major thing that was crucial to the entire franchise that I just figured out, like three weeks ago. It was the hardest thing for me to figure out, and Iโ€™m so excited for it.โ€ He promises an epic that will answer questions you may have about the Art lore, but assures me itโ€™s too soon to know if weโ€™ll be getting a Part 5

Only Leone knows what Artโ€™s future entails, but for now, his turn as a demented Santa is complete with a costume pieced together from various sources. Thornton is goofily singing โ€œO Christmas Treeโ€ in a Jerry Lewis-impersonating voice. He loves making people laugh, as he reminds us. And humor might be the only thing he and Art have in common, as Thornton refers to Artโ€™s motivation for his antics from a line from the first film: โ€œHe does it because he thinks itโ€™s funny.โ€ Leone insists heโ€™ll never give fans an actual motivation for Artโ€™s violence, though. Thatโ€™s all a part of his slasher mystique. 

As Leone places the white wig on Thorntonโ€™s head and applies the finishing touches, he speaks to the creative risks heโ€™s taken for his latest iteration. โ€œ[The Santa costume] was such a gamble,โ€ Leone explains. โ€œItโ€™s a risky thing to do to a slasher and them out of their costume. Weโ€™re completely changing the look of Art the Clown, taking him out of his element. Thatโ€™s always the risk, but itโ€™s rewarding when it works.โ€ (And enjoy it now, kids, as we likely wonโ€™t see Art in a Santa getup again for foreseeable sequels, Leone informs.)

terrifier 3 scarepros bts

โ€œPeople love it,โ€ Thornton declares, evidenced by the throngs of cheering Art fans present today, including dozens of families hoping to make this photo op their 2024 Christmas card, as well as a few soon-to-be families with sweet marriage proposals in front of the guys. Producer Falcone and wife Lisa are amazed at the amount of excited young children (including toddlers!) here to tell Art if they were naughty or nice today. 

santa art the clown scarepros

Thornton remarks how much little girls, in particular, love these movies. T2โ€™s The Little Pale Girlโ€™s inspiration origins might have begun from Leoneโ€™s love for the 1968 film Spirits of the Dead, but it blossomed once he noticed how many young girls approached him at cons dressed as Art the Clown.

On a serious, but touching note, when asked about the most sentimental fan story the pair has had in the wake of 3โ€™s success, Leone recounts a recent horror con interaction with a police officer. The officer had received a domestic disturbance call involving a 9-year-old girl, to which she was extricated from her parents. When asked if she was okay, the brave young girl simply said, โ€œโ€™Iโ€™m going to be okayโ€” Iโ€™m going to stay strong, just like my hero, Sienna,โ€™โ€ Leone recalls. 

โ€œThatโ€™s something you canโ€™t really process. It was beautiful.โ€

For some, the Terrifier films may be little more than gory killer clown movies. But for othersโ€” like those who have traveled far and wide to be here this day and share their families and personal stories with those who created these moviesโ€” theyโ€™re Christmas miracles.

Damien Leone, David Howard Thornton, and the owner of ScarePros, Chris Sembrot.
Damien Leone, David Howard Thornton, and the owner of ScarePros, Chris Sembrot. Photo courtesy of ScarePros.