This is my post for
the Joan Crawford Blogathon, celebrating the life and work of one of Old
Hollywood’s most legendary actresses. It’s an event well worth checking out,
full of great entries looking at all aspects of her career, hosted by the wonderful In The Good Old Days of Classic Hollywood.
Steven Spielberg was only twenty-one years old when he was
hired to direct a segment for Rod Serling’s new series, Night Gallery. It was Spielberg’s very first paid directing gig,
and he was going to be working with Joan Crawford on the story of a blind woman
receiving an ocular nerve transplant.
Joan Crawford.
The grande dame of the classic era. Mildred Pierce. Sadie
Thompson. Daisy Kenyon. The woman F. Scott Fitzgerald had once written about as
“the best example of the flapper.” The legendary rival of Bette Davis and chairwoman
of the Pepsi Cola board of directors.
It was a little intimidating.
Sid Sheinberg, head of Universal’s television division at
the time and the guy who’d given Spielberg the assignment, suggested it might
be a good idea for the young director to take his star to dinner. So,
Spielberg, under-dressed and fresh-faced, found himself ringing the doorbell of
a bona fide legend.
A voice called to him from inside, telling him the door was
open and he could come right in. So that’s what he did, and he found Joan
Crawford with bandages around her eyes, getting a feeling for how a blind woman
would work her way around a room. Neither producer William Sackheim (producer of Night Gallery) nor
Sheinberg had told Crawford her director was going to be a guy who, according
to Spielberg, “looked like he was fourteen.”
“She was hoping they would hire George Marshall, Henry King,
or Henry Hathaway, or King Vidor,” he told TheHollywood Reporter.
“She finally walked over to me,” Spielberg remembered in a 1982 interview with Gene Shalit, “Undid her wrappings, and she looked at me, and
she almost screamed, and she said: ‘My god! We can’t go out for dinner! People
will think you’re my son!’”
By this point in her career, Crawford was taking fewer and
fewer acting jobs. She was mostly focused on her work at Pepsi, and she’d had
an absolutely terrible experience on Hush…
Hush Sweet Charlotte, which resulted in her being replaced by newly minted
centenarian Olivia de Havilland. She’d experienced illness and personal turmoil
through the 60’s, and now in 1969, she was willing (and excited) to take the
part of Miss Menlo for the Night Gallery
pilot.
By all accounts, she was the consummate professional on set, treating Spielberg
with respect and encouraging the crew to do the same. Also by all accounts, she
had tried in vain up to the eleventh hour to get him replaced with someone more
experienced.
“I think he’ll be great someday,”
she told Universal, in most versions of the story, “But can’t we get somebody
who’s great right now?”
When all was said and done, she was pleased enough
that she did a small cameo for him on his episode of The Name of the Game, and the two of them corresponded on and off
until Crawford’s death in 1977.
Time now to enter the Night Gallery. (In case this is your first visit, spoilers ahead!)
Each episode opened on a framing device – intentional pun
– involving Rod standing in a haunted art gallery full of paintings related to
each terrifying segment. He remains, as always, comfortingly tour guide-ish.
Having finished the first story of the night, “Cemetery”
starring Ossie Davis and Roddy McDowell, we now come to our second painting. A
portrait, very flattering, of Joan Crawford as Claudia Menlo.
“A blind queen who reins in a carpeted penthouse on Fifth
Avenue,” Rod tells us, unveiling the painting from beneath a piece of bright
red velvet. “An imperious, predatory dowager who will soon find a darkness
blacker than blindness. This is her story.”
We’re treated to some overhead shots of New York circa 1969,
when the buildings were big but not yet ostentatiously so, and the ads on
billboards never moved.
An expensive car pulls up alongside a Fifth Avenue apartment
building. Dr. Heatherton – played by the ever-reliable Barry
Sullivan – steps out, dressed in a heavy coat, scarf, and gloves. It’s late in
the grey New York autumn, but the real chill isn’t to be found in the wind.
It’s to be found in the apartment at the top of the building.
Dr. Heatherton swings open the glass doors that lead to the
lobby, and bumps into an artist stepping off the elevator. The artist is
carrying a large portrait, the one we saw in the Night Gallery itself. It looks
just about finished.
“That’s a very good likeness,” the doctor says cheerfully,
nodding at the painting as he steps into the waiting elevator.
“Not really,” the artist replies, his voice soaked in
bitterness. “There was one thing I couldn’t capture. Her cruelty.”
As the doors close on Dr. Heatherton, the artist shouts
after him that Miss Menlo is a “tiny, fragile little monster.”
Artists are so dramatic.
Blind since birth, we soon learn that Miss Menlo has lived a
life of wealth and privilege and cocooned herself in the penthouse suite of
this steel and glass tower. She had the building commissioned and
erected, then refused to admit any other tenants. Self-imprisoned in her tower,
like some twisted Rapunzel, she’s chosen to become a pitiless manipulator of
those who enter her life. More spider than princess fair.
Because it turns out that Claudia Menlo was born without
something more crucial than sight. She was born without a conscience.
When Dr. Heatherton arrives at the penthouse, we watch him
walk through the front hallway by his reflection in a chandelier crystal. You
could argue that this is done to give the sense that whatever else he may be,
this man is just another bauble in Miss Menlo’s world; or you could argue that
Spielberg had just come out of a film school obsessed with European cinema, and
it’s more derivative than meaningful.
Either way, it’s time to meet Miss Menlo herself.
We hear her before we see her, that wonderful sharp and
demanding tone that Crawford had mastered playing the big shouldered broads of the
golden age. She scolds the doctor for being an hour late, and he tries to
soothe her by telling her he likes the new portrait she’s had commissioned.
Why would a blind woman want a portrait of herself, you ask?
So that there’s something to hang in the Night Gallery, obvs. But also for a
more interesting reason.
It’s not really explained in the episode, but we learn in
the short story that Miss Menlo’s greatest satisfaction comes from tactile
interactions with art. She likes to caress expensive statues, and feel the
rough grains of oil paintings on the wall. Because she was born into wealth,
she inherited many of the pieces she owns, but she also collects and hoards
masterpieces for her own pleasure.
She’s often described as “mummified” in appearance. And
while it’s never overtly connected to her stash of treasures, you can’t help
but think of those tombs of the pharaohs, filled to the brim with gold and
statues that they could never use. All that value and beauty, sealed up inside
with them, while they ever so slowly decayed.
From behind, as she sits in her elegant and purposefully
selected chair, we see a stack of red curls. Then she turns slowly, casually
cursing god for her blindness, and reveals herself. Once upon a time, Crawford
had been praised for how well the plains of her face caught the light, but
those plains have softened by the time she appears here. Thankfully, she
eschews the garish caricature makeup she donned for Straight-Jacket and Whatever
Happened to Baby Jane? in favour of something more neutral. This is the most
subtle she looked on screen in her later years.
The whole reason Miss Menlo’s summoned Dr. Heatherton today
is because she’s heard about an experimental operation that transplants optic
nerves from sighted subjects into blind subjects. It’s been successful in two
cases, once with a dog and once with a chimpanzee. Both times, the recipient
only gained vision for eleven to thirteen hours.
Miss Menlo wants Dr. Heatherton to perform this operation on
her.
But it’s not as easy as she’s making it sound. First of all,
you can’t just assume that what worked once on a chimp is going to work again
on a human. We’re in the early trial stages of this thing, and medical progress
is a pretty slow jam. Second, for this particular operation, Miss Menlo is
going to need someone willing to donate their healthy optic nerves. They can’t
use a corpse’s, because the eyes are the first thing to kind of kick out after
you die, and it was 1969, so transplants weren’t very advanced.
Whoever donates their optic nerves to Miss Menlo will be
rendered permanently sightless.
Dr. Heatherton doesn’t think that there’s anyone in the
world willing to give up their eyes to a malicious old rich lady, just so she
could see for roughly twelve hours.
“Nonsense,” Miss Menlo blithely dismisses him. “Everyone has
a price.”
She’s had her lawyer track down the most desperate person he
could, a man who he’d represented in a criminal case a few years before. A man
who needs money urgently, and has agreed to part with his optic nerves for the
grand sum of nine thousand dollars. (Adjusting for inflation, that’s about fifty
thousand bucks in modern cash.)
So, fine. She’s got her pigeon. But there’s still one more
obstacle.
“There are four men who could conceivably perform the
operation you’re talking about,” Dr. Heatherton says. “I’m one of the four, but
I can speak for the others as well. I would no more remove the eyesight of
another human being so that you might enjoy a few hours of sight than I would
deliberately kill a child. Is that clear to you?”
Clear as a chandelier bauble, doc. But when Miss Menlo says
that everyone has a price, she means everyone.
Including you, o gentle healer.
Artistic masterpieces aren’t the only thing Claudia Menlo
collects. She also has a team of private investigators tracking down the secrets of everyone who works for her or knows her. It’s not for
security, or out of curiosity, it’s entirely for leverage in situations like
these. And Dr. Heatherton’s secret is a total life-ruiner.
Miss Menlo goes to her ornate desk and retrieves a manila
envelope full of all the information necessary to destroy everything Dr.
Heatherton has accomplished with his life.
She holds it out to him, uncertain of his expression or
whether he means to take it from her. It’s a wonderfully acted moment, with
Miss Menlo missing the cues that explain his hesitation, and Dr. Heatherton
staring at the proffered envelope like it was a death sentence.
Both of them are caught in a moment of uncertainty, and
neither of them like it.
Finally, he takes the envelope.
Inside is what he fears most. A photo of a young woman,
Grace Reardon, who died as a result of a botched abortion when she was
twenty-two years old.
“She made the trip to that butcher at the behest of you –
that rigidly moral, antiseptically pure physician who might on occasion, as he
did on this occasion, reveal a slightly gamier side to his character.” Miss
Menlo taunts.
Dr. Heatherton looks halfway between a volcano about to
explode with rage and a volcano about to explode with vomit.
Unable to see the expression on his face as he crumples the
photograph with contempt, Miss Menlo reminds him that such a scandal would do
no good to his career. Or his marriage.
But she’s quick to explain that she doesn’t want to help or hurt him, nor the lawyer she
blackmailed into finding a donor, nor anyone else she’s stepped on to get this
far in her quest. The only person Claudia Menlo cares about, one way or
another, is Claudia Menlo.
It’s time for her big speech, and in preparation, Spielberg
has chosen to light her blinded eyes the way a director might light Dracula’s
eyes while he was hypnotising someone. We’re also going with a steady zoom that
matches the slow-building intensity of Crawford’s delivery, and some quick cuts
to highlight each word towards the end. It’s pretty ham-fisted on Spielberg’s
part, but it was literally his first day. Dude was legit new.
“Eleven hours, twelve hours, it makes no difference. I want
to see something. Trees. Concrete.
Buildings. Grass. Airplanes. COLOUR!”
It should be the moment where we have the most sympathy for
Miss Menlo. A spoiled heiress, given every single thing she could want, except vision.
And because of this petulance and bitterness she’s forced on herself, she’s
willing to do anything and destroy anyone to get a pair of eyes. It’s
horrifically reasonable when you think about it. Unfortunately, this turns out
to be the campiest, silliest moment of the episode.
Dr. Heatherton agrees to perform the operation.
Time now to meet the man who will be giving up his sight for
the rest of his life.
Sidney Resnick, played by Tom Bosley, is what Miss Menlo
referred to in passing as “an inconsequential little hoodlum.” When we first
encounter him, he’s being spun around on one of those playground
ring-around-the-rosie dealies with the… things.
I have no idea what they’re called. Here’s a photo:
They’re basically extinct now.
What’s important is that he’s on a playground to emphasize
his childlike nature.
He’s talking to his friend, Lou, the world’s friendliest
loan shark. Lou lets us know that Sidney owes nine thousand dollars, and if he
doesn’t pay up soon it’s what the goons call “curtains.” In order to intimidate
Sidney, Lou took him to a playground and
spun him around too fast. It is not
Lou’s first day, so he has no excuse.
Sidney quickly spills the beans about the pending operation,
but says he can’t give Lou too many of the details. He signed a paper about it.
It’s illegal or something.
Lou listens with a look of some concern, and I have to say
that these are the least sinister underworld types ever presented on TV. The
only thing more baffling than how Sidney managed to get in so deep that he owes
nine thou is how Lou got a job as a leg-breaker. Both of them seem more like
they should be, like, working at a family restaurant or something. Totally unintimidating.
Still, Lou warns that he’ll be at Sidney’s apartment at
three o’clock on the day after the operation, and if Sidney doesn’t have the
money, he won’t have a pulse either.
Sidney is naïve and simple, we’re seeing that plainly
displayed, but it’s never explained why he didn’t ask for some cushion money.
Like, sell your eyes for eleven
thousand and use the extra two to hire a nurse to help with the transition or
something.
Anyway, the next stop is the office of Miss Menlo’s lawyer,
a man named George Packer. (He’s being played by Byron Morrow, whose last on screen
appearance would be again alongside Tom Bosley in an episode of Father Dowling Myteries, an interesting
and meaningless coincidence.) Packer is allowing Dr. Heatherton to use his
office to give Sidney a quick preliminary eye exam, just to make sure his optic
nerves are eligible for the procedure.
It’s also so Dr. Heatherton can give a speech about how Miss
Menlo tips the dominos of misfortune.
“The threat to destroy passed through the channels. ‘You do
it to him, or I’ll do it to you.’ Until it reaches the bottom echelon. Then
there emerges one poor hapless soul who can find no one lower or more
vulnerable than he is, and this is the one who is destroyed.”
He says all of this with great intensity, while Sidney is in
the washroom freshening up. The door’s open, just so we can see the face of the
“poor hapless soul” – but it also makes it feel like Dr. Heatherton doesn’t
know how earshot works.
We discover, with the signing of the last document, that
Sidney is not totally clear on what he’s donating and what this procedure will
do to him. Heatherton tells him that he’s about to permanently lose his
eyesight. He does not sugar coat it in any way.
Surgeons. Terrible at everything but surgery.
To soften the blow, he hands Sidney a stiff
drink in a truly hideous glass. It’s red enamel with a raised paisley pattern
gilded in fake gold. If that’s the last glass you ever see, Sid, I’m really
sorry.
“What’s it gonna be like when it’s midnight all the time,
and nobody’s paid the electric bill?” Sidney wonders, red-rimmed eyes trembling
with either tears or fear. Maybe both.
Now’s as good a time as any to mention that blind people can
live awesome lives full of awesome moments. This episode is using blindness as
a kind of metaphorical super darkness, but being blind isn’t the worst thing
that could happen to a person. It’s going to be a tough transition, that’s for
sure, and maybe Sidney doesn’t have the support network in place to make it any
easier. Which is exactly why, if you’re ever going to sell your eyes to pay off
gangsters, you need to remember to pad the price.
Sidney wants to know if he’ll still be able to cry.
He will.
Packer, upset by all this guilt and awfulness, gives Sidney
an envelope with the nine thousand dollars in it. He adds that he and Dr.
Heatherton kicked in an extra five hundred between them. Apparently, everyone
except Sidney realized that nine thousand is way too cheap.
We learn that Sidney is a gambler, and that’s how he got
into the pickle with Lou’s boss.
Then he gets a little philosophical about his future. He
lays the doctor and the lawyer five-to-one that twenty-four hours after they
make him blind, he’s going to want to cut his throat. And he’ll lay them even
money that he’ll do it.
Packer looks away from him, unable to handle the situation
any longer.
Heatherton meets Sidney’s gaze, though. His face is heavy with
an apology he can’t bring himself to deliver.
Miss Menlo has turned the lives of these men into a contest
of self-preservation, devoid of anything but remorse.
And her reward will be twelve hours of perfectly scheduled
sight. She has a plan, a chartered tour of New York’s most famous vistas. A
desperate gulp of all she can drink in while she has vision; her statues and
paintings lined up in specific order for the night in question. The schedule to
visit Central Park, Broadway, to see the silhouettes of the city she’s lived in
her entire life, is perfectly laid out.
She’ll look at it just once, and remember it for the rest of
her life.
(Or it’ll never be enough to go back to being blind, and
she’ll arrange for another poor luckless creature to give her their optic
nerves, and then she’ll get another twelve hours. Like a sight vampire, constantly
feeding on the downtrodden.)
In Spielberg’s best artsy choice of the episode, we watch as
Miss Menlo and Sidney are wheeled into surgery from different sides of the same
hallway. Dr. Heatherton double checks everything one last time, then heads in
to begin the transplant. It emphasizes that everyone is human on the operating
table, and that both characters arrived in this same room from totally
different lives.
In Spielberg’s worst artsy choice, we then have to look at a
downright weird shot of Sidney and Miss Menlo’s eyes almost overlapping, their
eyebrows on one another’s cheeks, as a spooky sound effect plays, and we swipe
to the next scene with a terrible spiral dissolve that gradually reveals a
porcelain doll with golden ringlets. It’s… creative?
The porcelain doll is among Miss Menlo’s personal treasures,
gathered for The Great Viewing twelve days after the surgery.
Miss Menlo herself is sitting in her royal throne, in an
airy and autumnal orange dress, her eyes bandaged in stark white, her
hands folded demurely in her lap. She gives every appearance of a spoiled
little girl waiting to open her birthday presents.
“May I offer you some advice?” Dr. Heatherton asks coldly
from across the room, the low winter sun setting in the windows overlooking the
street below. “Remove the bandages very gradually. I’d keep my eyes closed, if
I were you, throughout the process. I’d also keep the room dark. The
introduction of light should come in stages, degrees. It’s sort of like
becoming used to an artificial limb. It may take time for the eyes to focus.”
He looks at the carefully curated exhibit of statues and
mementos with a deep disgust. A row of marble busts are all facing him, smiling
faintly. Something about them calls to mind the Erinyes of Greek mythology, the
goddesses of vengeance who punished crimes against the natural order. Beside
the doctor, looking alongside his gaze, is a dark statue of a woman in
mourning.
“My eyes will take pictures,” Miss Menlo announces proudly,
hungrily. “Pictures of everything to be filed for future reference. A rather
long future reference.”
Dr. Heatherton wishes her a fruitful twelve hours, hoping
that whatever she sees has been worth the trouble. She wishes him a permanent goodbye, and
he flashes a wry smile, leaning between two of the marble busts. He’s being
discarded now that he’s been used up.
“The used lightbulbs of Miss Menlo’s life,” Miss Menlo says
in the third person for some reason, “When they cease lighting her way – out
they go.”
She asks him to turn on the light switch in the hall as he
leaves. Then she adds if he’s around town this evening, he should introduce
himself. She’s never seen his face.
Dr. Heatherton chuckles sardonically.
“Oh, you can’t miss me, Miss Menlo. I’ll be the tall man
with the sick eyes, the one with the ache in his gut, the infection in his
conscience so miserably incurable. You can’t miss me, Miss Menlo.”
He flicks the switch, and the chandelier springs to life,
light bouncing off of all the crystals just above Miss Menlo’s head. With that, he
leaves the apartment, and the story.
Bye, Dr. Heatherton! Enjoy having another soul-corroding
secret!
Once alone, Miss Menlo totally ignores medical advice and
starts tearing the bandages off her face as fast as she can, using her
perfectly manicured fingernails like claws. The statues look on, with their
cold, immobile and sinister little smiles.
Beneath the bandages are a protective pair of what look like
white cat-eyed sunglasses. The last layer waiting between Claudia Menlo and a
world of sight. A whole new, vivid sense to send messages to a brain that has
never received them, and a mind that has only imagined them.
She pulls the glasses off, and is greeted by a single image.
The twinkle of the chandelier.
Overcome with joy, she quietly thanks Dr. Heatherton.
But the moment is all-to-brief and not to last.
The light disappears.
Miss Menlo is in darkness again; but now we join her there. All we can see is her. Vividly orange against a blackness so deep, it swallows the entire room.
The light disappears.
Miss Menlo is in darkness again; but now we join her there. All we can see is her. Vividly orange against a blackness so deep, it swallows the entire room.
Miss Menlo’s all alone, having sent away the maid and the
cook so that they wouldn’t interrupt or intrude on her experience. Furious and
alone, she navigates through the apartment confidently and gets to the
elevator. She presses the button and pounds on the doors, but the elevator
won’t open.
All the while, she’s cursing Dr. Heatherton and calling him
a quack for botching the operation.
She thinks she can catch up with him, he only left the very
moment before she took off the bandages. (And if she catches up with him, she
can claw his eyes out in vengeance, and they can both be blind!) She wants him
to fix his mistake, or comfortingly tell her this is part of the process, or explain
that she blew her eye fuses by looking directly
at a light source first thing but her vision will be back. Whatever the reason, she wants Heatherton
and she wants him now, damn it!
Making her way down the stairs of the building – super
impressive given that she’s on the penthouse of a Fifth Avenue skyscraper –
Miss Menlo inwardly panics.
By the time she gets out on the street, her hair has fallen out
of place, and her expression is one of bewildered desperation. She calls out:
“Can anybody see me? I need help!”
It’s so imbued with pain, it almost works against the
story’s idea of Miss Menlo as a woman who deserves her ironic comeuppance.
Despite her reputation, Joan Crawford’s greatest on screen
asset was her vulnerability. That’s why she paired so well with rival Bette Davis. Davis was the one who looked tragic, with those huge mournful eyes, and had liquid nitrogen in her veins when she needed it.
Crawford looked menacing, but was always deeply yearning for something.
Here, she’s not just yearning for the sight she spent all
those clever little bargaining chips on. She’s yearning for the guidance and
assistance she’s had her whole life. This is a woman who’s paid people to do
everything for her, and regardless of whether or not she’s blind, she doesn’t
know what to do now that she’s totally alone.
A few streets away, cars are honking and people gathering in
confusion. All the lights are out in New York City. A cop on horseback explains
to an inquiring motorist that it’s a city-wide blackout.
So Miss Menlo isn’t still blind, there’s just nothing to
see.
Except…
This has always bothered me about this particular story,
because maybe it’s to do with me never being in New York at eight o’clock on a
winter night, but… there’s always some
light, isn’t there? Even if the clouds are full of snow, there’s some light.
Some shadow cast somewhere, something to hint to a woman who has never seen any
play of light that there are objects and outlines in the darkness. And all the
car headlights are still working. Why can’t she see the headlights in the
distance?
Regardless of logic, she is trapped in deep darkness. Maybe
she did blow out her eye fuses with the chandelier, and the blackout is
compounding the early damage.
Bruised and defeated, in her torn dress with her hair
tumbling over her shoulders, Miss Menlo heads back to her apartment. She slumps
into her chair, and falls asleep.
At sunrise, she feels the warmth of the rising sun on her
face, and it stirs her.
She blinks open her eyes, and sees the sun. The sun and the
skyline of New York.
“That’s colour,” she thinks, noting that this is what was
meant all along when people said the sun was golden. “Oh god, it’s beautiful!”
She approaches her window, which she cracked somewhere along
the way in her distress last night. The trouble is that Spielberg bathed the
whole room in darkness, so that the audience couldn’t see anything but Miss
Menlo herself. She threw something in a rage, it might have been the telephone,
so that’s probably when the glass was cracked.
In the original story, she explicitly throws her Louis XV
chair straight through the glass and onto Fifth Avenue when she thinks
Heatherton screwed her over. She’s a lot
less likeable in the original story.
But, her time is up and her vision is fading. All the time
has gone as she slept through a blackout. Desperate to keep the sun, she
reaches forward towards the cracked glass.
It shatters beneath her touch, and she falls from the window
to her death.
It’s a quick moment, it happens a little too fast, and it’s
shown to us by the glass shattering over the sidewalk while Miss Menlo’s scream
fades into a manic music box tune, as an overlaid picture of her face spins
around and around the image of the breaking glass.
Once again, it was his first job.
The glass fades into the image of Miss Menlo’s portrait
hanging in the Night Gallery, and Rod kind of shrugs and takes us to the next
painting without saying anything. Useful insight, Rod. Thanks for helping me
close out.
Joan Crawford would go on to appear in her final film, Trog, in 1970. Apart from her cameo on Name of the Game, she’d have two more
television appearances, one on an episode of The Virginian, and the other on The
Sixth Sense. That episode was called “Dear Joan: We’re Going to Scare You
to Death,” it aired in 1972 and was her final appearance as an actress.
Steven Spielberg went on to become Steven Spielberg, and he knocked
off the dumb trippy overlays. The latter probably assisted in achieving the
former.
Night Gallery
turned out to be a hot mess, but that’s a long story for another day.
If you enjoy watching Joan Crawford take part in
experimental surgeries, you should check out 1952’s This Woman is Dangerous, where she play a mob boss who learns she’s
going blind and enlists an earnest young surgeon to help. The results are very
different than they are here.
And don’t forget to check out the other entries in
this blogathon! Thanks for reading!
This film looks interesting! I love suspense films so I will have to check it out! Sorry my post is a bit late- I really need to start reading more of your posts- You're awesome! -Emily!
ReplyDeleteAww, thanks! You're awesome too!
DeleteThis sounds really interesting. I've never seen this series, but there are a few episodes on YouTube. Will investigate further to see if the Joan C./Steven Spielberg episode is included.
ReplyDeleteSpeaking of the divine Joan C., thanks for including the story of her initial meeting with Spielberg. I can see why she'd be reluctant to go with an inexperienced director, but to her credit she went ahead with it.
Thanks for introducing me to the Night Gallery series. :)
Joan Crawford wasn't the only one who had reservations about using a first-time director on this episode. The crew had a serious problem with it, and were very vocal about it for the first day of the shoot. But, Spielberg says that at the end of the day, Joan gave a speech about how confident she was in his abilities, and that everyone was to treat him with respect. After that, things got a little easier.
ReplyDeleteI hope you enjoy Night Gallery! It's not as good as Twilight Zone, but it has some really strong segments. Also, if you have a hard time finding "Eyes" you can email me, and I'll see what I can do.
Thanks so much for participating in the blogathon. Sorry for the late reply. I've been battling with illness and haven't been on here that much. You're article was well worth waiting for however. I admire your efforts.
ReplyDeleteSince coming back into the blogging fold, I've just announced another blogathon, and would love to invite you to join in. The link is below with more details.
https://crystalkalyana.wordpress.com/2016/09/05/announcing-the-agnes-moorehead-blogathon/
I'm glad you enjoyed it! I'm sorry to hear you haven't been well. I suffer from chronic migraines myself, and I've been laying off writing a little bit lately, so I know how it is. I will happily go sign up for the next event! ^_^
Delete