Morgan Jones and Barney Phillips ponder the stranger in their midst |
"Will the Real
Martian Please Stand Up?"
Season Two, Episode
64
Original Air Date: May 26, 1961
Cast:
Trooper Dan Perry: Morgan Jones
Trooper Bill
Padgett: John Archer
Ross: John Hoyt
Haley: Barney Phillips
Avery: Jack Elam
Olmstead: Bill Kendis
Ethel McConnell: Jean Willes
Peter Kramer: Bill Erwin
Rose Kramer: Gertrude Flynn
George Prince: Ron Kipling
Connie Prince: Jill Ellis
Crew:
Writer: Rod Serling
(original teleplay)
Director: Montgomery Pittman
Producer: Buck Houghton
Production Manager: Ralph W. Nelson
Production Manager: Ralph W. Nelson
Director of Photography: George T. Clemens
Art Director: George W. Davis and Phil Barber
Set Decoration: Henry Grace and H. Web Arrowsmith
Assistant Director: Darrell Hallenbeck
Editor: Leon Barsha
Sound: Franklin Milton and Bill Edmondson
Art Director: George W. Davis and Phil Barber
Set Decoration: Henry Grace and H. Web Arrowsmith
Assistant Director: Darrell Hallenbeck
Editor: Leon Barsha
Sound: Franklin Milton and Bill Edmondson
Music: Stock
Makeup: William Tuttle
And Now, Mr.
Serling:
"It's been said
that singularly the most difficult feat of all mankind is to find a needle in a
haystack. On the Twilight Zone next time, we do it one better. We pose a
problem of finding a Martian in a snow bank. It all adds up to a kind of
extraterrestrial who's who with a couple of laughs and more than a couple of
tangents. We recommend this to the space buffs and the jigsaw puzzle addicts.
Next time on the Twilight Zone, our story is called "Will the Real Martian
Please Stand Up?"
Rod Serling's
Opening Narration:
"Wintry
February night, the present. Order of events: a phone call from a frightened
woman notating the arrival of an unidentified flying object. And the check-out
you've just witnessed with two State Troopers verifying the event but with
nothing more enlightening to add beyond evidence of some tracks leading across
the highway to a diner. You've heard of trying to find a needle in a haystack?
Well, stay with us now and you'll be part of an investigating team whose
mission is not to find that proverbial needle. No, their task is even harder.
They've got to find a Martian in a diner. And in just a moment you'll search
with them because you've just landed in the Twilight Zone."
On a snowy
February night, two state troopers respond to a call to check out an
unidentified flying object which has taken off the tops of some trees and
landed in Tracy's pond at Hook's Landing. The troopers find evidence that
something did indeed land in the pond and, unbelievable as it seems, tracks in
the snow appear to indicate that something crawled out of the pond and walked
across the highway to a secluded diner. After getting a radio warning about a
nearby bridge being too dangerous to pass upon, the troopers follow the tracks
in the snow to the diner.
The troopers find nine people within
the diner, seven passengers on a bus line, the bus driver, and the counterman
running the diner. After telling the bus driver about the impassable bridge, to
the particular disdain of one of the passengers, a grouchy businessman named
Ross, the troopers question the bus driver about how many passengers were on
the bus. Though the driver does not have any information on the individual
passengers, he is certain that there were six passengers on the bus. There are,
however, seven passengers within the
diner.
The troopers explain the situation
to the people in the diner and set in motion a situation in which each person
attempts to exonerate themselves from suspicion of being the outsider. The group
of passengers includes an old couple, a young couple, a pretty young woman, the
grouchy businessman, and an energetic old coot. The passengers admit that with
all the snowfall it is possible that an extra person could have slipped into
the diner with the others as they unloaded the bus. None of the passengers are
certain about who else was on the bus.
Strange phenomena begin to occur in
the diner, including the overhead lights blinking on and off and the jukebox
playing on its own before even more violent action occurs as the glass sugar
containers burst open upon each table. The tension slowly rises as everyone
waits for the bridge to open so the bus can go on its way. When the call
finally comes that the bridge is now passable, the troopers have no choice but
to allow all the passengers onto the bus, as they have no real cause to prevent
anybody from leaving.
Some minutes later Ross, the grumpy
businessman, returns to the diner. When Haley, the counterman, asks him what
happened, Ross replies that the bridge wasn't passable and that the bus and the
state trooper car both went down into the river. No one survived. No one, that
is, except Ross. And he isn't even wet. When Haley points this out, Ross is
ignorant of the term "wet" and suddenly reveals a third arm from
beneath his coat and explains that he is a Martian scout sent ahead to clear
the Earth for invasion. Haley seems unperturbed. He nods and agrees that Earth
is indeed a great place for an alien settlement but that it won't be coming
from Mars. Haley is revealed to be from Venus and informs Ross that his alien friends
have been overtaken by Venusians. Haley removes his cap to reveal a third eye.
Rod Serling's
Closing Narration:
"Incident on a
small island, to be believed or disbelieved. However, if a sour-faced dandy
named Ross or a big, good-natured counterman who handles a spatula as if he'd
been born with one in his mouth, if either of these two entities walks onto
your premises, you'd better hold their hands, all three of them, or check the
color of their eyes, all three of them. The gentlemen in question might try to
pull you into the Twilight Zone."
"Will the Real Martian Please
Stand Up?" is certainly one of the most clichéd, predictable, ludicrous,
derivative, and outlandish episodes of the Twilight Zone's first two
seasons. That said, it is also certainly one of the most purely enjoyable
episodes in the show's entire run. It effectively functions as the cumulative
success of all Rod Serling's previous efforts to combine humor, fantasy, and
suspense into a workable mix for the show, bettering the substantial failures
of previous episodes "The Mighty Casey," "Mr. Dingle,
the Strong," and "The Mind and the Matter." Though Serling
borrowed from previous sources, including one of his own first season scripts,
he produced a fun, fast paced thriller that is fondly remembered as one of the
most recognizable and enjoyable episodes of the show.
Nearly three years prior to the
airing of the episode, on October 12, 1958, Serling wrote a story treatment
while the show was still in development. The treatment was titled "The
Night of the Big Rain," the basics components of which would
eventually become "Will the Real Martian Please Stand Up?" For the filmed episode, Serling's switched the heavy rainfall which
strands the group inside the diner to snowfall instead, a wise choice as the snowfall adds a distinct atmosphere to the episode. Also in
his original treatment, Serling had the alien being revealed as the cafe
owner's new pet dog. This ending proved too absurd and unworkable even for an episode with the
premise of "find the alien in the diner." Serling wisely chose to
change the ending and also the title, first to "Nobody Here But Us
Martians," the title used during the filming of the episode, and finally to "Will the Real Martian Please Stand Up?," a play on the
catchphrase of the television game show To Tell the Truth, which began
airing on CBS in 1956.
The sources for the episode outside
of Serling's initial treatment are not terribly difficult to discern. The first is certainly Agatha Christie's 1939 million copy bestseller And Then
There Were None. In Christie's novel, a group of people are coerced into visiting a
secluded island only to be killed off one by one. The killer is eventually revealed
to be one among the company. This work virtually created the modern "a killer among us" fictional template. The second literary source is probably
science fiction writer and editor of Astounding (later Analog) John
W. Campbell's 1938 short story "Who Goes There?" Campbell wrote the
story under the name Don A. Stuart. It concerns a group of scientists in Antarctica
who inadvertently release an alien being that can change its form and image
into almost anything, including members of the group. The story was famously
filmed as The Thing From Another World in 1951 by director Christian Nyby (at the helm for a pair of Zone episodes) and producer Howard Hawks.
It has since been filmed two additional times, once in 1982 by John Carpenter,
as The Thing, and again in 2011 as a prequel to the Carpenter film, also
titled The Thing. The idea of an isolated group of people against an
alien menace was surely an appealing concept to writers working in the science
fiction field in the wake of Campbell's story and Hawks’s popular film version.
Serling also has the character Avery,
the eccentric old man, make a reference to Ray Bradbury. Though no
Bradbury work directly correlates to the plot of "Will the Real
Martian Please Stand Up?” (the closest may be Bradbury’s 1947 short story, “Zero
Hour”), Serling was illustrating the level of reverence and respect he held for Bradbury's work. According to an introduction to John Collier's story collection Fancies and Goodnights (New York Review Books, 2003), Serling came to Bradbury's California home in the late 1950's to
seek the writer's advice on how best to develop The Twilight Zone. This makes
it all the more unfortunate that Bradbury was only able to contribute a single
episode to the show, the third season's "I Sing the Body Electric." Bradbury was unable, or perhaps unwilling, to provide scripts which reasonably
met budgetary restraints for the show. Combined with a bit of communication error, Bradbury took the subsequent rejection of his
work by Serling as a personal slight, doing much to sour the relationship, both
personal and professional, between the two men. Marc Scott Zicree, author of the The Twilight Zone Companion (Bantam, 1982; second revised ed. 1989), tells the story of the relationship between the two men and their work on The Twilight Zone here.
"Will the Real Martian Please Stand Up?" is ultimately informed mostly by Serling's own work, as it directly parallels his grim Cold War
masterpiece, "The Monsters Are Due On Maple Street," even including
an absurd but somehow thematically perfect ending. With its cast of excellent
character actors portraying recognizable American stereotypes in an episode heavy on dialogue, it also resembles a number of Serling's other episodes,
including "The Shelter" and "It's a Good Life," the latter
taken from the Jerome Bixby short story. The difference here is that Serling is
obviously having fun with "Will the Real Martian Please Stand Up?"
and this difference is what makes the episode an unqualified success. To adopt the same
grim approach used on "The Monsters Are Due On Maple Street" or
"The Shelter" would have doomed the episode laughable for the wrong
reasons, much like that suffered by the deadly serious episodes "The Rip Van Winkle Caper" or "A Thing About Machines."
The production wisely used the three
most talented character actors in the three prime roles on the show, that of
the grouchy businessman Ross, the counterman Haley, and the red herring Avery,
played perfectly by John Holt, Barney Phillips, and Jack Elam, respectively. As
it played out, these three characters were the only ones that could have
possibly been the alien as Serling's script virtually eliminated the remainder of the
cast characters. The couples were eliminated because of
their pairing of two in a situation where the outsider is a single being. The
bus driver was eliminated because, obviously, he was driving the bus. The young
woman was eliminated because she was the only person the bus driver noticed. Then you have the two state troopers and the short order cook. What remains is that Ross and Avery are the only possible suspects. One is an obvious red
herring in that he behaves in an exaggerated way which draws attention to his
eccentricity and tendency for instigation. Ross is left as the grumpy businessman who is the most eager to
leave the situation even when doing so requires driving an old bus on a shaky
bridge in the middle of a snowstorm. Figuring out which of the people in the
diner was the alien is not difficult nor is it really the point of Serling's
script. Serling wanted to examine how each of us has little eccentric aspects
of our personality which can, when perceived the wrong way, make us an
attractive scapegoat in a paranoid situation. We are also, Serling points out,
terribly unreliable as observers of the world around us.
The two special effects in the
episode were achieved cheaply and efficiently. Jack Hoyt, as Ross, is to have
three arms. This was achieved by having a second person, whose right arm
was clothed in the same manner as Hoyt's costume, reach around Hoyt and interact with
Hoyt's own two arms. A coat was draped over the actor's shoulders to finish the
effect and a bit of rehearsal was required to manage a believable fluidity of
motion between the three arms. William Tuttle applied the third eye to the
forehead of actor Barney Phillips. Tuttle ran a thin wire from the eye (which
could cause the eye to roll) through Phillips's hair to be manipulated by a
technician situated behind Phillips. The initial idea for the third eye was to use double exposure photography, but this
looked even less convincing that the kitschy fake eye applied to Phillips's forehead. However unconvincing the effect was then or now, it remains one of
the more memorable images from the show.
There are a few other interesting
aspects of the episode. The first is that the bus, when seen in the exterior of
the diner, is labeled on the side as Cayuga Bus Lines. Cayuga is, of course,
the name of Rod Serling's production company which produced The Twilight
Zone. It is also interesting to note how Serling slyly hints at Ross
being the alien. At one point in the episode, in the midst of strange
occurrences within the diner (lights dimming, jukebox playing on its own, etc.),
Ross looks at the telephone on the wall two seconds before it starts ringing,
in an attempt to make the viewer believe Ross caused the phone to ring when in
fact an actual call was coming through for the state troopers. After the bridge
is ruled passable and the diners are paying for their tickets, Ross is charged
for drinking fourteen cups of coffee.
Now, that's an excessive amount of coffee by any standard. It also reminds one of The Outer Limits episode "Controlled Experiment" in which a pair of Martians (Barry More and Carroll O'Connor) are very fond of coffee. There is also a
constant, shameless plug for cigarettes in the episode, with the brand finally
revealed to be Oasis cigarettes during the final encounter between Ross and Haley.
Ross even utters that the cigarettes "taste wonderful" as though he
were actually performing in a cigarette commercial. That line was not in
Serling's script but added last minute. The constant product placement,
according to Martin Grams, Jr.'s book, The Twilight Zone: Unlocking the Door to a Television Classic (OTR, 2008), was planned from the
beginning.
"Will the Real
Martian Please Stand Up?" is a highly enjoyable and entertaining episode
that has a surprisingly high re-watch value. It comes highly recommended as it
might be the most successfully episode of the show that also includes a broad
amount of comedy. It is successful because, unlike in previous comedic episodes
of the show, Serling spices the script with enough suspense and atmosphere to
render a sort of fun, spook house sort of an episode. With its quick pace and fun makeup effects, it is an especially effective episode to introduce younger viewers to the series.
Grade: B
Illustrations by Kim Zimmerman from the Feb, 1986 issue of Rod Serling's The Twilight Zone Magazine, which presented Serling's teleplay for "Will the Real Martian Please Stand Up?" :
Illustrations by Kim Zimmerman from the Feb, 1986 issue of Rod Serling's The Twilight Zone Magazine, which presented Serling's teleplay for "Will the Real Martian Please Stand Up?" :
Notes:
-Montgomery Pittman
also directed the third season episodes "Two," "The Grave,"
"The Last Rites of Jeff Myrtlebank," and "Dead Man's
Shoes."
-Barney Phillips is
also in the first season episode "The Purple Testament," the second
season episode "A Thing About Machines," and the exceptional fourth
season episode "Miniature."
-John Hoyt was
previously in the second season episode "The Lateness of the Hour."
-"Will the Real
Martian Please Stand Up?" was adapted as a Twilight Zone Radio Drama,
starring Richard Kind.
-Bill Erwin also appeared in the Twilight Zone Radio Drama episode "Ninety Years Without Slumbering."
-Bill Erwin also appeared in the Twilight Zone Radio Drama episode "Ninety Years Without Slumbering."
--JP
Easily an A+ for this episode, which I can (and have) watch over and over! I love the mood and atmosphere of the snowbound cafe. This one just makes me feel good when I see it.
ReplyDeleteI hear you, Jack. This one is definitely a fun episode and I can watch it repeatedly with enjoyment. The B grade, which isn't shabby by our standards, is simply objective.
ReplyDeleteDo you know the song titles and artists from the juke box? I would love to know. There are two or three songs played during the episode. Thanks.
ReplyDeleteIm looking too cant seem to find it
DeleteNot sure about this one. None of the reference books I have access to mention anything about it.
DeleteBelated:
DeleteThat's what they call "source music", from the CBS music library.
Every studio kept a library of different kinds of musical cues, reflecting many moods and such, to be tracked onto movies and TV shows as background sound, with everybody talking over them.
CBS had a pretty large collection of these music cues, which they used on all their shows. If you listen closely enough, you can hear a lot of Twilight Zone music on other CBS productions like Perry Mason, Rawhide, Have Gun - Will Travel, Gunsmoke, etc.
The man in charge of music use at CBS was named Lud Gluskin; he occasionally got onscreen credit as conductor of "bits-and-pieces" scores, such as jukebox tunes and stings, contributed by many contract composers, stitched together by Gluskin and his crew.
I dearly love this episode, have ever since I saw it first run. The cast is well above average even for this usually well cast series. The snow, the isolated dinner, the desolate upstate New York setting, in addition to the alien on the loose, suggest a send-up of the 1951 classic The Thing From Another World, a movie that itself had a sense of humor.
ReplyDeleteAlthough it's not generally classed as a true comedy episode, that's what it really is. There's little sense of real terror in the show, A "few startle moments" here and there but nothing heavy, and certainly nothing philosophical; and Jack Elam is a hoot. The Big Reveal, in its day, depending on one's age, either a source of much afterschool talk and speculation or a water cooler topic at work, still works its charms after all these years.
"Will the Real Martian Please Stand Up?" is one of those special, one off, unexpected Zones that made the series not merely fondly remembered after all these but much beloved as well.
A re-watchable episode to say the least!
ReplyDeleteThe "crazy" guy drove me crazy, but I love the episode, as I do most all of the episodes.
ReplyDeleteA very over-the-top performance and a clear red herring but I enjoy it. I think this one may have the best collection of Rod Serling characters of any episode.
DeleteI've loved this episode since the first time I saw it. Well, almost! I was a 12-year old kid when it first aired, but when Haley removed his cap at the end to reveal his third eye, well, it scared the hell out of me. The third arm on Ross never bothered me though for some reason. I'm watching it now as part of the SYFY Channels' New Year's Day Marathon. It's probably my favorite episode of the TZ.
ReplyDeleteI agree with Unknown from January 1st. I was 3 months due when this episode aired in May of 1961! LOL. This episode is one of my all time favorites and the first time I saw it maybe in college or years later, the big reveal at the end of the show did scare the daylights out of me with the third eye and the hysterical laughing by Haley the Counterman. I love the snow scenes at the beginning with the two state troopers and the isolated feel of the diner and its patrons. I have watched this episode time and again and never tire of it. John Hoyt, appeared in many 60's TV shows including the Star Trek pilot, The Menagerie, as the ship's doctor and also playing one of the German generals in Hogan's Heroes. Jack Elam is funny and dates the episode where he replies to one of the trooper's question, that the Pittsburgh Pirates beat the Yankees 4 games to 1 in the World Series, which of course, was the year 1960 which was just prior to the episode being broadcast. I love TZ because it is a time capsule of the 1960'S nostalgia!
ReplyDelete"I love the snow scenes at the beginning with the two state troopers and the isolated feel of the diner and its patrons"
DeleteAmen - that snowy isolated diner in the distance in the beginning has never left my head. Such a great establishing mood in the opening.
It's supremely ironic that this generally broad and funny episode (which always seems to me to be on the verge of turning into a "Carol Burnett Show" sketch) has one of the higher body counts in the series. (Right up there with "The Old Man in the Cave" and "The Monsters Are Due On Maple Street"). It's one of the best proofs of how much like a revue skit this episode is that we don't really care all that much about the dead characters -- much less than we do in the other two episodes I named.
ReplyDelete