Twilight Zone Companion Read online




  THE TWILIGHT ZONE COMPANION

  BY MARC SCOTT ZICREE

  INTRODUCTION

  I

  If youve bought this book, or if youre reading this introduction in a bookstore, you are reading it for one reason and one reason only: Rod Serlings The Twilight Zone entertained you, touched you, and left its mark. You are not alone in this. During its original five-year run on CBS from 1959 to 1964, The Twilight Zone attracted an average weekly audience of close to eighteen million people, and since then the numbers that have watched it in syndication have added countless millions more.

  When The Twilight Zone debuted in 1959, it was a flower blooming in a television desert, made vacant by an endless number of situation comedies, westerns, and cop shows. To its faithful viewers, The Twilight Zone offered far more than empty laughs or a lesson in urban or frontier justice. Instead, at its best, it lived up to the promise of its opening narration, revealing a vista of realities not weighed down by the merely probable. At a time when the rest of television was hammering home the unstated but nonetheless apparent message that the realities and expectations of life were bracketed within very narrow borders, The Twilight Zone presented a universe of possibilities and options. Most importantly, with few exceptions the characters inhabiting The Twilight Zone were average, ordinary people: bank clerks, teachers, petty hoods, salesmen, executives on the rise or decline. It took no great leap for us to identify ourselves with these frail and vulnerable souls and imagine that perhaps in some flight of fancy, some slight tangent from the reality of the ordinary routine, what happened to these characters might very well happen to us.

  In the next several hundred pages, we will look behind the magicians curtain, peek into the top hats and under the tables, and learn all the secrets. With minor magic tricks, revelation brings only disappointment, but with luck, examination of The Twilight Zone’s grander wizardry will bring greater understanding and appreciation of the intricacies behind the art. The first object of our scrutiny will be the Grand Sorcerer of the Twilight Zone himself, master of ceremonies and principal sleight-of-hand artist. Ladies and gentlemen … Mr. Rod Serling.

  ROD SERLING

  I

  If the name Rod Serling were to pop up in some nationwide word association test, virtually everyone in America would venture the automatic response, The Twilight Zone such is the degree to which Serlings name is attached to his creation. But during the 1950s, prior to The Twilight Zone, Serlings name summoned up references of an entirely different nature. He was counted one of a small, elite group of young and innovative writers, among them Paddy Chayefsky and Reginald Rose, whose works were defining television as a dramatic art form, one with a realism surpassing movies and an immediacy rivalling the stage. To public and press alike, Serling was viewed as videos equivalent of Arthur Miller or Tennessee Williams. One commentator even compared him to Sophocles.

  Given this, it came as quite a shock when Serling announced in 1959 that he was going to devote all his energies to a weekly series of science-fiction and fantasy stories.

  To go from writing an occasional drama for Playhouse 90, a distinguished and certainly important series, to creating and writing a weekly, thirty-minute television film, he conceded, was like Stan Musial leaving St. Louis to coach third base in an American Legion little league.

  Worse than the change in length, however, was the seemingly 180-degree shift in subject matter. It was as though Serling were saying that he was going to stop commenting on the human condition and go play in a field of daisies. To many, science fiction was considered three notches below grafitti in terms of literary importance. During an interview with Serling on September 22, 1959, TV newsman Mike Wallace said, . . youre going to be, obviously, working so hard on The Twilight Zone that, in essence, for the time being and for the foreseeable future, youve given up on writing anything important for television, right?

  At the time, Serlings harshest critics made the assumption that The Twilight Zone was not only a step down but a choice made entirely out of the blue. To any astute observer, however, his decision should have come as no surprise, for it was a totally logical and predictable progression in his career. Like an Agatha Christie mystery, clues leading to Rod Serlings involvement in The Twilight Zone were sprinkled throughout his youth and early works.

  Rodman Edward Serling was born in Syracuse, New York, on December 25, 1924 (I was a Christmas present that was delivered unwrapped, he later said). Shortly thereafter, Rod and his familyhis brother Robert, seven years his senior, and his parents, Samuel Lawrence Serling, a wholesale meat dealer, and Esther Cooper Serlingmoved to Binghamton, a small city in upstate New York where, throughout his childhood, Rods imagination and creativity were allowed to flourish.

  He was about the greatest extrovert you could ever hope for, says Bob Serling, now a successful novelist (The President’s Plane Is Missing). He was a good-looking kid and he knew it. Very popular, very articulate, very outspoken. He had no arroganceit was confidence. There was a hell of a difference.

  We were fairly close as kids and we played together a hell of a lot, despite the seven-year difference. The two of us used to read Amazing Stories, Astounding Stories, Weird Talesall of the pulps. If we saw a movie together, wed come home and act it out, just for the two of us. Our bikes became airplanes with machine guns on them. We were always playing cowboys.

  Rod was not bookish by any means; he was outgoing, enthusiastic, loved to be center stage. His mouth was hinged open like the front end of a steam shovel running amok, Bob Serling recalls. The big treat for the family was to drive from Binghamton to Syracuse, which was seventy miles away, and my father once tipped us off that nobody was to say a word from the start of the trip until Rod stopped talking. Now, in those days it took approximately two and a half hours to drive the seventy miles and, so help me, he never stopped talking from the time he got into the car to the time we arrived in Syracuse. My mother and father were in absolute hysterics. He must have been six or seven years old. He was in a world all by himself. Hed sing, hed act out dialogue, hed talk to us without waiting for answers. He just kept talking.

  He was that way all through school, that I can remember. A class leader, always into dramatics. Hed try out for anything. There was some kind of compulsion in him to do something that nobody elsethe ordinary kidwouldnt do. And this included joining the paratroopers in World War II. He was a damn fool to do it.

  The day he graduated high school, Rod enlisted in the U.S. Army 11th Airborne Division paratroopers. During basic training, he took up boxing for extra pay and privileges, winning seventeen out of eighteen bouts.

  Following basic training, he was sent into combat in the Pacific. In 1945, while Rod was fighting in the Philippines, his father died of a heart attack at the age of fifty-two. When Rod was finally able to return to Binghamton, it was to a home lacking forever the security and stability he had known as a child.

  Without World War II, there is no way of knowing whether or not Serling would have become a writer, but the war both broadened his experience and placed an emotional pressure on him that demanded catharsis. I had been injured with the paratroopers [a severe shrapnel wound in the wrist and knee requiring hospitalization] and I was bitter about everything and at loose ends when I got out of the service. I think I turned to writing to get it off my chest.

  Upon his discharge from the Army in 1946, Rod enrolled at Antioch College in Yellow Springs, Ohio, on the G.I. Bill. I really didnt know what the hell I wanted to do with my life, but I went to Antioch because my brother [had gone] there. I majored in physical ed that first year because I was interested in working with kids. But physical education couldnt fill the pressing need he had for self-expression. He s
oon changed his major to language and literature. During the war he had written scripts for Armed Services Radio, as well as lots of bad poetry. Now radio seemed the ideal medium. He became manager of the Antioch Broadcasting Systems radio workshop and wrote, directed and acted in weekly, full-scale productions which were broadcast over radio WJEM, Springfield. During the 1948-49 school year, the entire output of the workshop was written by Serling, and, with the exception of one adaptation, all the scripts were entirely original. Later, he would call this work pretty bad stuff, adding, Style is something you develop by copying the style of someone who writes well. For a while youre a cheap imitation. I was a Hemingway imitator. Everything I wrote began, It was hot. However, he was getting invaluable training and discipline, plus his first taste of practical business matters: every script he wrote he mailed out to at least one national radio show for consideration.

  In the fall of 1946, Rod met Carolyn Louise Kramer, a strikingly attractive, articulate, no-nonsense young lady of seventeen, majoring in education and psychology. Serling was twenty-one. Says Carol of their first meeting, He struck me as being very intelligent, with a wonderful sense of humor. And there was something about him that fascinated me. I had never met anyone who was as self-assured before.

  Initially, Carol was a little wary of Rod. He had the reputation at Antioch College of being quite a ladies man, she recalls. He had dated just about every other girl in the school before he got to me. Soon it became clear to both that theirs was more than just a passing college romance. In the summer of 1948, the two were married. It was a marriage that would last until Serlings death twenty-seven years later.

  Marriage did little to tone Serling down. If anything, the emotional security of a wife increased his creativity and his determination to succeed. Also undiminished was his often outrageous sense of humor.

  Carol Serling: I remember one time it was dark and we were in a trailer which had two hatches in the top which could be opened to let in fresh air. I had to go out for a moment and when I returned Rod had disappeared. Then I looked up and there was this head hanging through the open hatch. In the darkness of the trailer it looked horrible and I screamed.

  It was Rod hanging upside down on top of the trailer … He got stuck in the hatch and friends had to free him. I thought he really deserved it. Serlings first big break came on March 16, 1949, while he was still a college student. Dr. Christian, a radio show that obtained all its scripts through an annual contest (its slogan was the only show on radio where the audience writes the scripts) sent him a telegram informing him that his script, To Live a Dream, had won second prize. The prizes included five hundred dollars cash and an all-expense-paid trip to New York for me and Carol, Serling recalled. By the time we were dizzily installed in a big suite of rooms in a plush midtown hotel I felt like Norman Corwin! Carol Serling noted, The college newspaper ran a story about it with a headline that said, Serling Goes to Christian Reward.

  To Live a Dream, was about a prizefighter slowly dying of leukemia who keeps a stiff upper lip while starting a younger fighter on the road to the top. That same year, Rod sold two radio scripts to Grand Central Station, and the following year, his first television script, Grady Everett for the People, to Stars Over Hollywood for one hundred dollars.

  Upon graduation, Rod and Carol moved to Cincinnati, where Rod got a job as a staff writer with WLW radio. His duties, though numerous, were less than fulfilling. He provided folksy banter for two entertainers he described as a hayseed M.C. who strummed a guitar and said Shucks, friends, and a girl yodeler whose falsetto could break a beer mug at twenty paces. He composed phony testimonials for a patent medicine remedy (It had about twelve percent alcohol by volume and, if the testimonials were to be believed, could cure everything from arthritis to a fractured pelvis). He wrote documentaries honoring local towns, of which he said: In most cases, the towns I was assigned to honor had little to distinguish them save antiquity. Any dramatization beyond the fact that they existed physically, usually had one major industry, a population and a founding date was more fabrication than documentation.

  Rod was desperate to break away from this and devote all his energies to writing things he sincerely cared about, but at the same time he was a married man with responsibilities. At best, freelance writing was a tremendous financial risk, one he was extremely hesitant to take. So, for a short time, his schedule went like this: write all day at WLW, come home, have dinner and write all evening on his own projects. It was during this double-shift period that I collected forty rejection slips in a row. Nobody but a beginning writer can realize just how crushing this is to the ego. Clearly, this was an impossible situation. The process of writing cannot be juggled with another occupation, Serling wrote in 1957. Writing is a demanding profession and a selfish one. And because it is selfish and demanding, because it is compulsive and exacting, I didnt embrace it. I succumbed to it. Rod quit his job at WLW. For lush or lean, good or bad, Sardis or malnutrition, Id launched a career.

  Fortunately for Serling, his timing couldnt have been better. In 1951, television was much easier to break into than it is today. Today, there are virtually no anthology shows, but in 1951 they were all over the dial. If one show rejected his script, Rod could send it, with no changes whatsoever, to another. During his first year freelancing, he earned just under $5,000, selling scripts to such shows as Hallmark Hall of Fame, Lux Video Theater, Kraft Television Theater, Suspense, and Studio One. It was hard work, but it was a livingand Serling was his own man.

  A lot of these early scripts were rough, underdeveloped, hurried; some, admittedly, were still pretty bad stuff. But to be fair, it should be said that if they were bad at least they were bad in the right direction. A quality which could be seen in these scripts, even as it can be seen in Serlings later scripts for The Twilight Zone, was that even the worst of them revealed a primary concern for people and their problems. Sometimes the situations were cliched, the characters two-dimensional, but always there was at least some search for an emotional truth, some attempt to make a statement on the human condition.

  Needless to say, this is not what most television concerned itself with in the early fifties (or today, for that matter). For example, take this television guide from the Cincinnati Times-Star of November 12, 1953, reprinted verbatim. These program listings include time and channel, and were listed under the heading DRAMA:

  6:30 Supermans secret identity is threatened by a gangsters dog.

  7:00 Captain Video advises Rangers to blast at full space speed.

  7:30 Tom Conway stars as Inspector Mark Saber.

  8:00 Joan complicates Brads hobby of collecting tropical fish.

  8:30 Colonel Flack outswindles a tout at the racetrack.

  8:30 My Little Margie causes A Slight Misunderstanding worth $35,000.

  9:00 Cincinnatian Rod Serlings A Long Time Till Dawn, story of tumultuous conflict in a young poet, is produced.

  Given this kind of comparison, its easy to see why young Serling, only twenty-eight in 1953, quickly gained the notice of both the public and a number of television critics.

  On Wednesday, January 12, 1955, Kraft Television Theater presented Serlings seventy-second television script. To Rod and Carol, at the time, the script seemed little different from the seventy-one before it and they expected it to receive no greater reaction. Says Carol of that evening, I remember that we had some business to do in upstate New Yorkwe were living in Connecticutand we got a babysitter for our daughter, Jodi, and said, We just moved into Connecticut. No one will call us, nothing will happen. And while we were in upstate New York, the show was on. The name of the show was Patterns.One minute after the show went off the air my phone started to ring, Serling said seven years later. Its been ringing ever since.

  Patterns dramatized a struggle for power involving three men: Ramsey, the ruthless president of a major corporation (superbly played by Everett Sloane); Andy Sloane (Ed Begley), the aging vice-president Ramsey wants to pressure into resigning; and
Fred Staples (Richard Kiley), the unwitting but basically decent young hotshot brought in to replace Andy. It was simple, direct, and tremendously powerful. The reaction to it was overwhelming.

  Nothing in months has excited the television industry as much as the Kraft Television Theaters production of Patterns, an original play by Rod Serling, Jack Gould wrote in the New York Times. The enthusiasm is justified. In writing, acting, and direction, Patterns will stand as one of the high points in the TV mediums evolution… . For sheer power of narrative, forcefulness of characterization and brilliant climax, Mr. Serlings work is a creative triumph that can stand on its own. Goulds reaction was typical. From coast to coast, newspaper critics hailed Serling a brilliant new find.

  On February 9, 1955, a little under a month after the original broadcast, Patterns was again performed live, by popular demand. This was unprecedented. On March 17, 1956, Patterns won for Serling the first of what would eventually be six Emmys. And on March 27, 1956, a little over a year after the initial airing, the movie version of Patterns was released. It was directed by Fielder Cook, who had directed the television show, and starred Everett Sloane, Eg Begley, and, in the Kiley role, Van Heflin.

  Thanks to Patterns, Serling was now a hot property. In two weeks after its initial broadcast, he received twenty-three firm offers for television writing assignments, three motion picture offers, fourteen requests for interviews from major newspapers and magazines, two offers of lunch from Broadway producers, and two offers to discuss novels with publishers.

  Accordingly, Serling took a lot of these people up on their offers: … I was the hungry kid left all alone in the candy store. Man, I just grabbedV That season alone, he had twenty of his plays telecast, earning him eighty thousand dollars. Most of these scripts were ones he had written in college and just afterward in Cincinnati for a local television program called The Storm.