The Conjuring: Ed and Lorraine Warren’s Daughter Judy Opens Up About New Travel Channel Documentary (2024)

Fans of the paranormal know that investigators don't get more prolific than Ed and Lorraine [...]

By Patrick Cavanaugh

0 Comments

  • 0

Fans of the paranormal know that investigators don't get more prolific than Ed and Lorraine Warren, who not only made a name for themselves for decades due to their research into the supernatural, but were also the inspiration for The Conjuring series, as brought to life by Patrick Wilson and Vera Farmiga. The original 2013 film was a massive success in its own right, but also inspired a number of sequels, spinoffs, and prequels films to chronicle their many investigations. In Travel Channel's new documentary Devil's Road: The True Story of Ed and Lorraine Warren, viewers will learn all about the pair and the truth behind what we see on the big screen, which includes interviews with their daughter Judy Spera. Devil's Road premieres on the Travel Channel on Monday, September 7th at 9 p.m. ET.

In the documentary, audiences will learn about how, during the 1970s and 1980s, the Warrens made numerous appearances on television talking about their cases and spreading the word about the paranormal and preternatural worlds that exist all around us. Their life's mission: to prove the existence of good and evil; God and the devil. Along the way, they pioneered many techniques still used in the field today, including audio and visual recording devices, advanced electromagnetic devices and even produced their own television show. This two-hour special features interviews with their daughter and son-in-law, Judy and Tony Spera, who share never-before-broadcast audio of Ed conducting interviews for the Bridgeport, Connecticut, poltergeist case, and rare video of the Warrens helping a young woman coming under demonic possession. Tony also has granted the production access to his catalog of footage from his television series, "Seekers of the Supernatural." It includes many hours of Ed and Lorraine discussing their work with Tony.

ComicBook.com recently caught up with Judy Spera to talk about her parents' legacy, The Conjuring, and Devil's Road, ahead of its premiere on Monday, September 7th at 9 p.m. ET.

Header photo courtesy of JC Olivera/WireImage/Getty Images/Travel Channel

Annabelle's Whereabouts

The Conjuring: Ed and Lorraine Warren’s Daughter Judy Opens Up About New Travel Channel Documentary (1)

ComicBook.com: Fans first met Annabelle, supposedly the most haunted doll in the world, in the original The Conjuring, which is based on a real artifact your parents had. Bizarre rumors spread across social media recently that the doll escaped your parents' museum, which isn't even open anymore, so obviously the internet was completely wrong. I was curious about Annabelle's current whereabouts and wondered if there were plans to ever reopen the museum, or possibly move it to a new location?

Judy Spera: We do plan to do that, to look for a place.

There's an actress, her name is Annabelle, and she was doing an interview and I guess the Chinese press or a Chinese newspaper reporter or something, mistranslated it, and when they mistranslated it, it came out that Annabelle escaped.

That's what my husband found out, whether that's true or not, I don't know. And boy, did that cause a stir up. And it must have been all over America because the next day we were bombarded on Facebook and on our website about questions about it. "Is it true that Annabelle escaped?" Then people started to come to the house and so we have a lot of security around there and we had a lot of problems there.

So, touchy thing, you're asking me where she is and I don't want to say that. I don't want people looking for her, just to be very careful about that. The neighbors there, it's been really hard for them. People have been going up to their doors, even the town clerk, going, "Where's the Warrens' house?" It's not hard to find it. They find it, even with big [private property] signs and everything there. I mean, five-foot signs and they're still all over the property. We have lights and we have cameras and we have the alarms, they just don't care.

So to anyone reading, what's important is that Annabelle is safe and fans shouldn't come looking for her, because she's safe somewhere and that's all that matters.

That's right. People had pictures of her all over the world, on a beach in France, and then they had her sitting next to the Queen. That was a little bit strange.

prevnext

Unexpected Insight

Especially thanks to seeing your parents as characters in movies and how that inspires fans to do their own research on them, what do you think would surprise audiences most to learn about your parents that wasn't covered in either Devil's Road or in The Conjuring movies?

I didn't know if it would surprise them or not, but [my parents] didn't set out to have this outcome. It just started as a hobby and an interest of my father's. Then it became a big thing when he started to paint pictures of the houses, the haunted houses, and he had art shows, people were interested and they wanted to know the story behind the houses. And then they were doing the college lecture circuit and everything else all over the world.

I know they didn't ever intend for things to get to where they are, especially my dad, he never knew about ... well, he may know about the movies. My mom did. Over the years, they used to have people saying, "Oh yeah, we're going to make a movie. We're going to do this and do that." And these things never came to happen, so nobody really thought it would. We didn't even think that The Conjuring was going to be real until we saw them promoting it on TV and we're looking at each other. "Wow. That is real."

I think they did a fantastic job. And the actors, too, especially Vera, with my mother. Oh wow. They came to the house to meet her and she really studied my mother. They got along very well. And they went out in the gazebo and sat there and talked and it was really nice. But she got it right, down to the rosary beads and the rings on her fingers.

prevnext

Compelling Characters

The Conjuring: Ed and Lorraine Warren’s Daughter Judy Opens Up About New Travel Channel Documentary (2)

And what people love so much about The Conjuring movies, while they are effective haunted house movies, there are countless of those kinds of movies out there, so it's really the appeal of seeing that connection and that chemistry between your on-screen parents that makes people so excited for the franchise.

Well, they spent every day together, every single day, and this COVID [quarantine] thing, as you find out, isn't always good. For them, it worked really well. And then, it was really spontaneous. My father used to get up and go down in his office and he read constantly, all these books on the paranormal and the devil and Satanism, and all these things. He retained all that knowledge and he was always answering questions. He always had the answer for everything, which is wonderful.

My husband [Tony Spera] worked with them and he worked with them for years and he'd do the projector. He introduced them to that, but he always listened to everything my father and my mother said. He worked with my mother after my dad collapsed and he's very good now, too. He's had enough, a lot of knowledge, himself. When he sits down, he said to me, the first time he did it on his own, he said to me, "I don't know where those answers came from. I think it was your father talking through me." There were a lot of things that my father seems to be involved with.

And I know, for sure, my mother's still around because she leaves little things for me in her house. I clean the house. I go down and clean and I take care of the cats and I have somebody else who does it, too, because it's 40 minutes away. But I find things there that weren't there the day before, like an angel wing, a glass angel wing.

prevnext

Lasting Legacy

It must be comforting to not only have those firsthand encounters that let you know that they're still around, but also getting to see how accurately they're portrayed on-screen means that they live on through the movies, in a way, so they're never really gone.

Oh, absolutely, it is. Like when my husband went to help clean up the different DVDs, upstairs there, and I can hear my father talking and my mother talking. It's almost like they're there, like they never left. I just read a quote, and I'm not going to have it exact, but it was so perfect about, "A person is not really dead until the ripples in the stream stop," to that effect. And I thought, "Well, that's actually how their after-life is."

They're still here because of that, because people are still interested in everything they're doing, and they'll quote them and read about them. And they sell their books, the books sell unbelievably. But The Demonologist, I don't know if you read that, it's been probably the most-read book out there, it's evolved. I never read it, never read one of the books, because I don't need all that in my head.

prevnext

Rejecting Beliefs

I feel like all kids, at some point, reject their parents' beliefs so they can find answers for themselves, and being raised to believe in ghosts and demons isn't something all kids experience, so were there ever any points where you rejected what you were told and didn't believe in the supernatural? Maybe even didn't believe your parents' claims?

No, never, never. I was always afraid of it because I did believe it. I used to not mention who they were, as I was getting older, because I thought, "They're going to think we're a bunch of nuts." "What do your parents do?" "Well, they're ghost hunters." I had gone to Catholic School too and you would never mention that there.

Telling someone in 2020 that your parents are ghost hunters is much different from the reaction you used to get.

Usually, if you've mentioned something about the Warrens, they're so well known, it's so nice to know that people appreciated them and the work they did. It was a lot of work and it was a lot of hard knocks, too. They took a lot of criticism, a lot of bad press and people saying, "Oh, they're charlatans. They're in it for the money, the fame, this and that." And that wasn't the case and they earned their place, I guess, with where it is today. There probably wouldn't be any paranormal shows on TV, other than for them.

prevnext

Intrusive Audiences

The Conjuring: Ed and Lorraine Warren’s Daughter Judy Opens Up About New Travel Channel Documentary (3)

Obviously there have been a lot of positive things to come from the attention your parents have received, and we talked a little bit earlier about fans invading your privacy, but are there other drawbacks to your family earning so much attention in the paranormal community?

Well, having the museum where it is, it's a very hard thing to move. That's probably been the biggest problem we've had, is trying to keep people away from there and you have to worry about it all the time. We're 40 minutes away from there.

There's a neighbor across the street, she doesn't take any crap. She sees somebody over there, she flies over there immediately. She's worked out really well for us, and even with all the alarms, really. And it's a dead-end and so you can't miss people because they pull up and they creep around and then they try to see through the trees.

[In one instance,] you hear these voices and this whole family, standing at one of the driveways, backwards, taking a selfie of themselves with the house behind them. I'll tell you, they stop at nothing. They walk up there, they walk up and come to the door, even with all these big signs and everything. So that's why I didn't want you to mention anything about where the museum is.

prevnext

Potential Adventures

There's already a third Conjuring movie that was filmed, but do you have an investigation of your parents that you think is really fascinating and would like to see turned into a movie?

The Ocean-Born Mary House in Henniker, New Hampshire. It's always my favorite story. I think there's something romantic about it or a romantic thing about it. That's one of the first houses that they went into, where they realized my mother had this psychic ability. And actually, "The Devil in Connecticut," that was one I really, really wanted them to do. And there were so many lawsuits around it, that Warner Bros. took care of. I'm telling you, they're good. That is a really, really good story, and it's going to be a really good movie when it comes out. But yeah, Ocean-Born Mary House in Henniker, New Hampshire.

Is there anything else you'd like to let fans know about your parents?

I also want you to know that my mom and dad were big animal advocates and animal lovers and rescuers. That was their thing, they used to take in animals all the time.

*****

Devil's Road: The True Story of Ed and Lorraine Warren premieres on the Travel Channel on Monday, September 7th at 9 p.m. ET.

prev

0comments

of

The Conjuring: Ed and Lorraine Warren’s Daughter Judy Opens Up About New Travel Channel Documentary (2024)

FAQs

Who is the daughter of the Warrens in the conjuring? ›

The fictionalized character of Judy Warren in The Conjuring films is based on a real person, the daughter of paranormal investigators Ed and Lorraine Warren. Unlike her film counterpart, the real Judy Warren lived a relatively normal life and did not actively participate in her parents' paranormal cases as a child.

What did Lorraine see in The Conjuring? ›

However, the opening scene takes place at the infamous Amityville house, where Lorraine is drawn into a vision during a seance in which she directly encounters Valak for the first time and witnesses Ed being impaled. In Enfield, Lorraine eventually discovers that Valak has been behind the family's haunting all along.

What is the storyline of the conjuring? ›

Which conjuring movie is about the daughter? ›

Judy Warren is a main character in The Conjuring, The Conjuring 2, The Conjuring spin-off; Annabelle Comes Home as the main protagonist, and the sequel, The Conjuring: The Devil Made Me Do It. She is portrayed by Sterling Jerins and Mckenna Grace. She is the daughter of Ed and Lorraine Warren.

How old is the real Annabelle doll? ›

Though not quite as menacing-looking as its movie counterpart, which has been featured in three spin-off "Conjuring" movies, the original doll is much larger than most Raggedy Anne dolls, standing at roughly three feet tall when stood upright. The doll was given as a gift to a Hartford nurse in 1970.

Is the Annabelle doll real? ›

Annabelle is an allegedly-haunted Raggedy Ann doll, housed in the now closed occult museum of the paranormal investigators Ed and Lorraine Warren. Annabelle was moved there after supposed hauntings in 1970. A character based on the doll is one of the antagonists that appear in The Conjuring Universe.

Does The Conjuring have a doll? ›

The cursed doll Annabelle was first introduced to horror audiences in The Conjuring (2013), and proved to be so compelling that the porcelain figure quickly became the subject of her own franchise with Annabelle (2014), Annabelle: Creation (2017) and the latest, Gary Dauberman's Annabelle Comes Home.

How did The Nun end? ›

Sister Irene ultimately defeats Valak using the Blood of Christ, but the pain and terror left behind by the demon suggests that its presence may continue in future films, including The Nun II.

Is The Conjuring based on a true story? ›

Is 'The Conjuring' based on a true story? That depends on whether you believe in ghosts. But the movie is based on the Perron family, who moved into the house in 1971, and said they began experiencing paranormal phenomena.

Why The Conjuring is so scary? ›

The cinematic style of The Conjuring is very much a homage to the way horror movies were filmed in the 1970s, when they took their time to build things up in a way where you knew exactly what was about to happen, and it still scares you when it does happen.

What conjuring is the scariest? ›

The Conjuring (2013)

The movie that started it all remains the tightest, scariest, and most creative of the bunch. In their cinematic debut, the Warrens investigate a disturbing possession at a remote family home in Rhode Island.

Is The Conjuring scary? ›

Parents need to know that The Conjuring is a truly scary horror movie that's based on a true story about a haunted house, a demon possession, and an exorcism. It's more frightening than gory; no characters die (except a dog), and not much blood is shown, except during an intense demon-possession scene at the climax.

How scary is Annabelle? ›

Parents need to know that Annabelle is a prequel to the horror movie The Conjuring, about a possessed doll. There's lots of bloody horror, splattering blood, and scary images, plus some jump-shock moments, shooting, fighting, and dead bodies. A pregnant woman and, later, a small child are in jeopardy.

Who made Annabelle? ›

Annabelle is a 2014 American supernatural horror film directed by John R. Leonetti, written by Gary Dauberman and produced by Peter Safran and James Wan. It stars Annabelle Wallis, Ward Horton, and Alfre Woodard. Principal photography began in January 2014 in Los Angeles.

Which Annabelle is the scariest? ›

Annabelle: Creation (2017) is the best and scariest of the Annabelle movies, thanks to its talented director, period setting, great performances, and a chilling ending that connects to the first film.

Is Lorraine related to sister Irene in conjuring? ›

The Nun 2 director Michael Chaves suggests that Lorraine and Irene are connected through a shared bloodline The Conjuring Universe, which is not just a coincidence since the characters are played by real-life sisters Vera and Taissa Farmiga.

Who was Judith Penney? ›

At the center of THR's reporting is Judith Penney, who claims that she began a sexual and romantic relationship with Ed in 1963 at the age of 15 with Lorraine's knowledge. In a sworn declaration given in November 2014, Penney, now in her 70s, claimed to have lived with the Warrens as Ed's “lover” for 40 years.

Who is Annabelle the daughter of? ›

Annabelle "Bee" Mullins is a character on Annabelle: Creation and Annabelle Comes Home. She is portrayed by Samara Lee. She is the seven-year-old daughter of Samuel and Esther.

Who plays the eldest daughter in The Conjuring? ›

Shanley Caswell plays Andrea Perron, the family's eldest daughter, in “The Conjuring,” a horror film by James Wan.

Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Melvina Ondricka

Last Updated:

Views: 5836

Rating: 4.8 / 5 (48 voted)

Reviews: 87% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Melvina Ondricka

Birthday: 2000-12-23

Address: Suite 382 139 Shaniqua Locks, Paulaborough, UT 90498

Phone: +636383657021

Job: Dynamic Government Specialist

Hobby: Kite flying, Watching movies, Knitting, Model building, Reading, Wood carving, Paintball

Introduction: My name is Melvina Ondricka, I am a helpful, fancy, friendly, innocent, outstanding, courageous, thoughtful person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.