Bride of Frankenstein
0 sources
Bride of Frankenstein
Summary
Bride of Frankenstein is a character[1]. She ranks in the top 4% of character entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (453 views/month).[2]
Key Facts
- Bride of Frankenstein is the creator of Mary Shelley[3].
- Bride of Frankenstein's image is recorded as Brideoffrankenstein.jpg[4].
- Bride of Frankenstein is recorded as female[5].
- Bride of Frankenstein's instance of is recorded as character[6].
- Bride of Frankenstein's instance of is recorded as film character[7].
- Bride of Frankenstein's instance of is recorded as undead in a work of fiction[8].
- Bride of Frankenstein's performer is recorded as Elsa Lanchester[9].
- Bride of Frankenstein's performer is recorded as Jennifer Beals[10].
- Bride of Frankenstein's performer is recorded as Helena Bonham Carter[11].
- Bride of Frankenstein's performer is recorded as Susan Denberg[12].
- Bride of Frankenstein's performer is recorded as Jessie Buckley[13].
- Bride of Frankenstein's Commons category is recorded as Bride of Frankenstein (character)[14].
- Bride of Frankenstein's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/0h5klqd[15].
- Bride of Frankenstein's present in work is recorded as Bride of Frankenstein[16].
- Bride of Frankenstein's name in native language is recorded as {'lang': 'en', 'text': 'Bride of Frankenstein'}[17].
- Bride of Frankenstein's Comic Vine ID is recorded as 4005-17381[18].
- Bride of Frankenstein's Fandom article ID is recorded as monster:Bride_of_Frankenstein[19].
- Bride of Frankenstein's Fandom article ID is recorded as pdsh:Bride_of_Frankenstein's_Monster[20].
- Bride of Frankenstein's Fandom article ID is recorded as frankenstein:Bride_of_Frankenstein_(character)[21].
- Bride of Frankenstein's Personality Database profile ID is recorded as 89006[22].
Body
Works and Contributions
Bride of Frankenstein is the creator of Mary Shelley[3].
Why It Matters
Bride of Frankenstein ranks in the top 4% of character entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (453 views/month).[2] She has Wikipedia articles in 5 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[23] She is known by 3 alternative names across languages and contexts.[24]