|
Gladys Cooper as Wanda Dunn, a woman hiding from Mr. Death |
“Nothing in the Dark”
Season Three, Episode 81
Original
Air Date: January 5, 1962
Cast:
Wanda
Dunn: Gladys Cooper
Harold
Beldon: Robert Redford
Building
Contractor: R.G. Armstrong
Crew:
Writer:
George Clayton Johnson (original
teleplay)
Director:
Lamont Johnson
Producer:
Buck Houghton
Production
Manager: Ralph W. Nelson
Director
of Photography: George T. Clemens
Art
Direction: George W. Davis, Phil
Barber
Set
Decoration: Henry Grace, H. Web
Arrowsmith
Assistant
Director: E. Darrell Hallenbeck
Casting:
Stalmaster-Lister
Editor:
Jason Bernie
Sound:
Franklin Milton, Bill Edmondson
Music:
Stock
And Now, Mr. Serling:
“Next
week an excursion into the shadowland of the hereafter. Ms. Gladys Cooper and
Mr. Robert Redford combine sizable talents to bring a script by George Clayton
Johnson entitled ‘Nothing in the Dark.’ The dark in this case being the little
nooks, crannies, and closets of those regions presided over by Mr. Death. I hope
you’ll be with us next week for ‘Nothing in the Dark.’”
Rod Serling’s Opening Narration:
“An
old woman living in a nightmare. An old woman who has fought a thousand battles
with death and always won. Now she’s faced with a grim decision. Whether or not
to open a door. And in some strange and frightening way she knows that this
seemingly ordinary door leads to the Twilight Zone.”
Summary:
On a cold winter day, Wanda Dunn, a very old woman, is awakened from an
afternoon nap within her dilapidated apartment. She sees movement through a
space in a boarded window. A police officer is on the street outside the window.
Suddenly, he sounds a whistle and a gunshot is heard. Alarmed, Wanda moves to her
front door and peers though a small opening, careful to leave the chain lock
fastened.
The
police officer is injured and lying feebly in the snow near her doorway. The
young man tells her that his name is Harold Beldon and he needs help lest he
should die. The old woman is reluctant to help because she believes the injured
man is not who he says he is. “I know who you are,” she tells him. “I know what you are.”
Confused
and in pain, the man continues to beg for help until Wanda cannot bear his pleading
any longer. She unlocks the door and moves slowly toward the injured man. She
touches him tentatively. “I’m still alive,” she says, clearly astonished. She
pulls the injured man inside her apartment.
The
old woman situates the policeman in a comfortable space and serves him tea. When
the injured man reiterates his need of a doctor, the old woman explains that calling
a doctor isn’t possible. She has no telephone and couldn’t risk letting a
doctor into her home even if she had. When she sees the look of confusion on
the young man’s face, she explains her plight.
For
many years she has remained within this apartment, never venturing out or letting
anyone in for fear of coming into contact with Mr. Death. Years ago, she saw a
young man touch an old woman’s hand. When this old woman died shortly afterwards,
it became clear that the young man who touched her was Mr. Death. Wanda has been
hiding from Mr. Death ever since.
Again,
there is movement from without the apartment followed by an urgent knocking at
the door. The policeman encourages Wanda to answer the door. She reluctantly opens
the door. On the other side is a contractor who has scheduled Wanda’s apartment
building to be torn down and whose job it is to ensure the old woman vacates
the premises. Wanda resists, terrified at the prospect of leaving her
apartment. The man forces his way into the apartment and knocks the old woman
unconscious upon the floor.
When
Wanda awakens, she is lying upon her bed and the contractor is leaning over her
with an expression of relief. He is holding her hand. Again, the old woman is
amazed to still be alive after being touch by this stranger. She has mistaken
him for Mr. Death.
The building contractor
explains that he isn’t trying to be cruel but that the building is clearly
unfit to live in. The city has condemned the dwelling and charged him with
tearing it down. Wanda stands and pleads with the young policeman to help her
explain to the contractor why she can’t leave the apartment. The contractor doesn’t
seem to notice the policeman and gives Wanda an ultimatum to gather her
possessions and vacate the premises.
After the man leaves it
dawns on Wanda that the contractor couldn’t see the young policeman. The policeman
is Mr. Death and has tricked Wanda into bringing him into her home. Wanda is
terrified at this revelation but Mr. Death convinces her that he isn’t going to
cause her pain and that death is not an end but a beginning. He implores her to
take his hand and make the journey to the afterlife. She does so reluctantly.
Together they walk from the apartment.
Rod Serling’s Closing Narration:
“There
was an old woman who lived in a room, and like all of us was frightened of the
dark. But who discovered in a minute, last fragment of her life that there was
nothing in the dark that wasn’t there when the lights were on. Object lesson
for the more frightened amongst us, in or out of the Twilight Zone.”
Commentary:
I.
George
Clayton Johnson’s “Nothing in the Dark” is a haunting and evocative fantasy
with individual characters of clear delineation and a refreshingly optimistic
view of a fundamentally bleak subject. It stands in the absolute first rank of
the series. The simplicity of both the concept and its execution work entirely in its
favor. The Twilight Zone often
presented character-based fantasies that focused on story and performance and
thus required little in the way of setting or design (at least in the way these
things are noticed by the average viewer), presenting the viewer with
essentially a filmed stage play, harkening back to the earlier days of the
medium and the Golden Age of live television drama, an area in which many of
the major creators on the show got their starts. “Nothing in the Dark” could
serve as a model of this type of production as it utilizes a single setting to
evoke a feeling of dilapidation, claustrophobia, and imprisonment without
sacrificing the Emmy Award-winning cinematography for which the series is
renowned.
“Nothing
in the Dark” was originally intended to be the closing episode of the second
season and was filmed during the second season production schedule, evidenced by the way in which the credits are displayed on the episode, as it followed the method
used during the second season in which all credits, including the title, were
displayed following the episode. For the third season, the title and primary
credits were displayed at the beginning of the episode, after Rod Serling’s
opening narration, with the remainder of the credits following at the end of the episode. “Nothing
in the Dark” retains its second season formatting to this day.
This
means that “Nothing in the Dark” was the debut episode of director Lamont
Johnson. As it happened, two of Johnson’s other episodes filmed for the third
season (“The Shelter” and “Five Characters in Search of an Exit”) arrived in
front of viewers before “Nothing in the Dark,” which was pushed back to the
middle of the third season.
After
the departure of director Douglas Heyes from the series, Lamont Johnson stepped
in as a director who could lend a distinctive stylistic touch to his episodes and
one who fundamentally understood the versatility inherent in the advances in television cinematography. Johnson’s directing style is smooth and
accomplished, with one fluid camera motion connecting to another via effective
low-angle framing shots. Of course, accomplished cinematographer George T.
Clemens is equally responsible for much of this excellent camera work but Clemens
was a photographer who tended to adapt his style to that of the director with which
he was working. If the director had a very staid style, Clemens’s camera was likewise
content to simply cut from one framing shot to the next. The camerawork here is
marred only once by a fairly obvious jump cut to achieve the effect of Mr.
Death’s lack of reflection in a mirror on a wall.
A
more interesting aspect of Johnson’s direction and staging is the heavy use of symbolism in
the episode. There is the obvious symbol of Wanda Dunn’s dilapidated dwelling
as a physical representation of her own crumbling existence. There is also the
obvious symbolism in the character of the building contractor, brought to life
by a fine performance from veteran character actor R.G. Armstrong, whose
occupation (the razing and construction of buildings) is a parallel to the
life/death process in the natural world. A more subtle use of symbolism is
that of imprisoning bars as a symbol of the nature and effects of Wanda’s
psychosis. We first view Gladys Cooper’s sleeping form through the latticework
of a chair back. She pushes this away as though opening a door when she is
awakened by noise in the street. Later, when she awakens from the fall caused
by the building contractor, Lamont Johnson chooses to film Gladys Cooper
clutching the iron bars of a bed frame, giving the distinct impression of an
imprisoned person (see photo in summary section above).
Johnson’s
choice of filming the exit of Wanda and Mr. Death is also interesting. He
chooses to follow the two completely out of the apartment, up the tenement
steps and along the street until they disappear from the frame. Johnson’s
camera never leaves the interior the apartment and the two characters stop
briefly in the street for a final framing shot, reinforcing the optimistic tone
of the episode. It would have been interesting to film the two characters
leaving the apartment and then not reveal them on the outside, defying the
viewer’s expectation of seeing them through the partially boarded window and suggesting a passage beyond.
After
working in radio as an actor and announcer, Lamont Johnson began his directing career on the New
York stage before moving into television drama. He specifically desired Gladys
Cooper for the role of Wanda Dunn based on her long and varied career on the
stage. Cooper was a beauty of the London stage and of silent films since before
the start of the First World War. She began appearing on Broadway by the 1930's
and moved gracefully into middle and late age in a variety of film and
television roles, amassing three Academy Award nominations along the way for
performances in Now, Voyager (1942), The Song of Bernadette (1943), and My Fair Lady (1964). Cooper would appear
twice more on the series and was always exceptional in her performances. Cooper
also had the fortune of working with the three principle writers of the show not
named Rod Serling. She worked with George Clayton Johnson here on “Nothing in the
Dark,” with Charles Beaumont on the fourth season episode “Passage on the Lady
Anne,” and with Richard Matheson on the fifth season episode “Night
Call,” exceptional episodes all.
In “Nothing in the
Dark,” she elicits pathos in her performance in a manner that is perhaps
unmatched by any other performer on the series. There was, however, some
reluctance when Cooper, a highly refined British actress, was cast in the role of the poverty-stricken Wanda Dunn,
many believing the actress would struggle to bring herself low enough to
achieve verisimilitude in the performance. Though Cooper had to work with
Lamont Johnson during pre-production in order to achieve the most effective
accent and manner, she eventually hit upon a flawless method of bringing Wanda
Dunn to life as a once highly refined and beautiful woman brought low by old
age and an incapacitating fear of death. The moment in which Wanda remembers
the beauty of her youth and passes her aged hand through a band of sunlight upon the
floor remains one of the more poignant moments from the series.
Lamont
Johnson was also involved in the selection of Robert Redford as the young
policeman Harold Beldon. Redford has, of course, gone on to a highly successful
career as both an actor and director but was still working his way up the
acting ranks via character work at the time of filming this episode. He had,
however, a previous connection to Rod Serling in that Redford performed the
role of a Nazi soldier in Serling’s Playhouse
90 episode “In the Presence of Mine Enemies,” which originally aired on May
18, 1960. That final regular episode of Playhouse
90 was one of Serling’s more effective plays and featured an outstanding cast
including Charles Laughton, Sam Jaffe, Arthur Kennedy, and George Macready. Redford’s
performance in “Nothing in the Dark” has been lamented in some critical circles
as leaden and unfeeling but this seems to have missed the point of both the
character and the performance. Redford is essentially performing as the human
form of an elemental being and can hardly be expected to turn in a highly
charged or emotional performance. This would be highly out of character,
especially for so melancholy a character as Death. Redford presents Death as a
calm, rational, inevitable force, much like Death’s other two appearances on
the series, in the first season episodes “One for the Angels” and “The
Hitch-Hiker.” Though Redford was primarily cast for his pleasing appearance, his
performance is an effective foil to Cooper’s highly emotional turn.
II.
George Clayton Johnson's original story treatment for the episode, entitled "There Is Nothing in the Dark That Wasn't There When the Light Was On," presents a very different set of events. Although the setup of the story is fundamentally the same, with Harry Beldon shot by a hoodlum and seeking help at the door of Wanda Bloor, the rest of the story differs considerably. In the original story treatment, Beldon is actually a wounded police officer. Wanda takes him into her home and promises to shield him from Mr. Death. Three characters come knocking at the door in succession, a worker from the gas company, a real estate agent, and another police officer. To Wanda, all three men look exactly the same, justifying her fears that it is Mr. Death trying to get inside to get at her and Beldon. Beldon, sensing Wanda's madness, calls out to the police officer, who pushes his way inside, inadvertently sending Wanda reeling backwards to avoid his touch. Wanda falls through a hole in the floor of her dilapidated apartment and dies. All three of the men who came knocking at the door are then shown to look completely different. The similarity in their appearances was all in Wanda's fractured mind. The story ends with Beldon seeing the driver of the hearse who has come to take Wanda's remains away. The hearse driver has the same face as seen on the three men through Wanda's eyes.
It ends: "Beldon peers at him uncertainly. 'Don't I know you?' 'No,' says the driver, with a strange smile. 'But you will.'"
The genesis of Johnson's story lies in a Ray
Bradbury story published about a year before production began on the episode. Bradbury
was a strong influence on the core writers on The
Twilight Zone. As such, his work was occasionally borrowed from in
order to create a variance on a theme. It’s all the more astounding and
frustrating that Bradbury was only able to place a single workable script with
the series, the troubled third season episode “I Sing the Body Electric.”
George Clayton Johnson, like his Twilight
Zone co-writers Charles Beaumont and Richard Matheson, was mentored to a large degree by Bradbury
while in the early stages of his professional career. Johnson clearly idolized
Bradbury, going so far as to tell author Matthew R. Bradley in an interview for Filmfax magazine that
through Bradbury’s work he (Johnson) was shown that perfection in writing could
be achieved. Johnson would point to “Nothing in the Dark” as his own stake to
the claim of perfection, an irony considering its close association with the
Bradbury story titled “Death and the Maiden.”
The
similarities between the stories are unmistakable and Johnson admitted as much to author Matthew R. Bradley. When asked about the relationship of "Nothing in the Dark" to Bradbury's "Death and the Maiden," Johnson stated: "It's a perfect Bradbury forgery, too, when you stop to think. He's got a story called 'Death and the Maiden,' in which Death comes up to a castle where there's a beautiful maiden, sings to her about the glories of going off to his kingdom, finally lures her down from the castle, gets her onto his charger, cuddles her close, and races off, and she is then happy as can be. He has not lied to her, he's been very sincere and hasn't used any tricky language to get her to do it. So, you can see that the idea of Death as an innocent person, which is the soul of that story, has got its roots in Bradbury, and I freely admit it."
The opening of Bradbury's story, shared from my copy of The Machineries of Joy (1964), illustrates the close relationship between the stories, as it essentially offers the entire setup for "Nothing in the Dark." "Death and the Maiden" begins:
"Far out in the country beyond the woods, beyond the world, really, lived Old Mam, and she had lived there for ninety years with the door locked tight, not opening for anyone, be it wind, rain, sparrow tapping or little boy with a pailful of crayfish rapping. If you scratched at her shutters, she called through:
"God away, Death!"
One can reasonably assume that Johnson read Bradbury’s fiction as it was published
and so came upon “Death and the Maiden” in the
March, 1960 issue of The Magazine of
Fantasy and Science Fiction. It is fair to note here that although Johnson
all but certainly took the germ of “Nothing in the Dark” from Bradbury’s “Death
and the Maiden,” he subsequently crafted an emotionally effective story from that initial inspiration and included enough of a variation
of the theme to make the story his own.
Bradbury’s
story concerns a woman who lives far out in the country and is known in the
nearest town by the name Old Mam. Like Wanda Dunn in “Nothing in the Dark,” Old
Mam has shut herself away for many years in her home for fear of Death, which
has tried many times to lure her out and seal her fate. It is here that the two
stories diverge somewhat. “Nothing in the Dark” is about facing the fear of the
unknown and the inevitability of death. “Death and the Maiden,” though also
approaching these themes, concerns itself more with the idea that one is not truly
alive if all the effort of life is spent avoiding death, though Johnson does
include a major theme in the Bradbury story: the mournful remembrance of a
youth long gone.
In Bradbury’s story,
Old Mam is confronted by a young man carrying a vial of bright green liquid.
She immediately recognizes the young man as Death and the young man soon
acknowledges this as well, claiming that the green liquid contained in the vial is the essence of Old Mam's life at eighteen years old. Death appeals to the vanity of her younger self,
when she was a beautiful, energetic woman using her real name, Clarinda. Death
offers her a glimpse of her lost youth. He tempts her to taste of the green
liquid and promises her twenty-four hours as herself at eighteen years old in
exchange for an eternity in the afterlife. Like Wanda Dunn, Old Mam agrees to
take the frightening journey hand-in-hand with Death. “Death and the Maiden”
was first published in book form in Bradbury’s 1964 collection The Machineries of Joy.
Bradbury
previously approached similar material in a far more ghoulish manner with his
story “There Was an Old Woman” from the July, 1944 issue of Weird Tales. This darkly comedic and
highly entertaining story concerns a woman who is unwilling to proceed to the
afterlife after dying. She is tricked by an ever-patient Death and must
doggedly pursue her physical remains before an autopsy is performed. After
hounding the mortician, the old woman interrupts her own autopsy and is allowed
to reenter her physical body. The story ends with her proudly displaying her autopsy
scars. “Not bad sewing, for a man,” she intones. The story is far different in
tone from either of the later tales as it was written at the height of that
wonderful 1940s period in which Bradbury was firmly committed to crafting his
unique style of weird tale, a style of story that would be highly influential
to William M. Gaines and Albert Feldstein, the primary architects of the EC
line of horror comics Tales from the
Crypt, The Vault of Horror, and The
Haunt of Fear. Feldstein adapted “There was an Old Woman” for Tales from the Crypt #34 (Feb/March,
1953) and the story was illustrated by the supreme master of horror art
“Ghastly” Graham Ingels. The Feldstein/Ingels adaptation was included in the
1965 Ballantine paperback The Autumn
People, which collected the best of the EC adaptations of Bradbury’s weird
tales. The story was first published in book form in Bradbury’s first book, Dark Carnival, from Arkham House
publishers in 1947, as well as in Bradbury’s famous collection of weird tales The October Country from 1955.
Charles Beaumont, another acolyte of Bradbury and an early mentor to George Clayton Johnson, crafted a story similar to "Nothing in the Dark" but of a more humorous cast. It is also possible that Johnson took his inspiration from Beaumont's story as it was published some years before. The story in question is "The Customers," first published in 1957 in Beaumont's collection The Hunger and Other Stories. It concerns an elderly couple who hide away in their home in fear of a visit from Death, whose form they see in every person who comes knocking upon their door. When they are visited by a young man dressed all in black they resign themselves to let him in and get it over with. The humor stems from the fact that the reader understands that the young man is selling cemetery plots and the elderly couple believe him to be death itself. Beaumont's story also contains a strong element of the cold of winter.
It is important to remember that these writers were part of a collective group of writers, the Southern California School, who were very close personal friends and frequent collaborators in which the exchange of ideas was constant. One telling example of this is the story of Ray Bradbury and Charles Beaumont driving along one day in the early 1950's and both noticing a sign on the side of road advertising "free dirt." From this sprung one of Beaumont's most acclaimed short stories, "Free Dirt," published in 1955 in The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction. More than forty years later Bradbury tried his own hand at a story titled "Free Dirt," sparked from the same memory of that sign on the side of the road. It appeared in his 1996 collection Quicker Than the Eye. All of this is a way of saying that the exchange of ideas among this group of young writers was frequent and perhaps not beholden to common views on plagiarism, although Bradbury did take exception to "Nothing in the Dark."
Unfortunately, Rod Serling, who was only a peripheral member of the Group, was not given as much leeway when his work crossed thematic lines with the work of the other writers on the series. As a result, "Nothing in the Dark" became a focal point for the slow dissolution of the relationship between Rod Serling and Ray Bradbury. It was a relationship which began in 1958 but began to dissolve as Bradbury struggled to get his work produced on The Twilight Zone while also coming to believe that Serling was freely lifting his story ideas for his own episodes. With "Nothing in the Dark," both Bradbury and Charles Beaumont warned Clayton Johnson about the similarities between his story and Bradbury's "Death and the Maiden." Bradbury did not want the script produced. When the episode finally aired and was seen to be such a moving and memorable episode, Bradbury largely held Serling accountable for knowingly producing a plagiarized work.
Despite its debt to similar works of fiction, “Nothing
in the Dark” remains an episode that rises far above the novelty of its
surprise ending and contains enough thematic and symbolic material to appease
even the most demanding viewer of the show. It also showcases the debuts of
Lamont Johnson (in production, not broadcast), one of the three or four finest directors for the series, and
Glayds Cooper, who must be counted in the absolute front rank of performers on
the series. It is a justifiably famous episode that manages to perfectly
capture that unique blend of melancholy and optimistic that distinguished the
series from similar television material.
Grade:
A+
Notes:
-Lamont
Johnson directed seven additional episodes for the series, including the
exceptional season three episodes “Five Characters in Search of an Exit” and
“Kick the Can.”
-Gladys
Cooper appeared in two additional episodes, “Passage on the Lady Anne” from
season four and “Night Call” from season five.
-“Nothing
in the Dark” was adapted as a Twilight Zone Radio Drama starring Marshall
Allman and Roz Alexander. The adaptation is by M.J. Elliott and is one of the finest offerings of the series. It includes an interesting opening sequence in which Wanda suffers a recurring nightmare where she is lost outside in an unfamiliar place. There, she meets a man who soon reveals himself to be a terrifying incarnation of Death.
--Grateful acknowledgement to George Clayton Johnson's Twilight Zone Scripts and Stories for information on the original story treatment of the episode.
-Jordan
Prejean