Thursday, October 31, 2024

The Hitchcock Project-The Indestructible Mr. Weems by George F. Slavin [2.37]

by Jack Seabrook

The Knights of the Golden Lodge have a problem. The four board members meet and recite their pledge: "'We, Knights of the Golden Lodge, pledge ourselves in brotherhood unstintingly to help our fellow members and those less fortunate than ourselves.'" Cato Stone, currently in charge, sits in a large, wooden, throne-like chair at the head of the table and leads the discussion of the difficulty they have been having in selling plots in their new cemetery, which they have recently renamed Elysium Park in an effort to make it more appealing.

Brother Elkins fondly recalls when the cemetery was a golf course and Harry Brown comments that no one wants to be the first to sign up. He mentions Clarence Weems, whom no one has seen at lodge meetings recently, since his wife died, his business went sour, and he got sick. The poor man is not expected to live out the year. Brown proposes a solution: the lodge will offer to pay Weems the sum of fifty dollars a week if he will agree to be the first person buried in Elysium Park.

Robert Middleton as Cato Stone
The foursome agree to give it a try and visit Brother Weems, who lives in a fourth-floor walkup apartment. After they trudge up the stairs, Weems's pretty daughter Laura greets the lodge members at the door. Cato is noticeably winded from the climb. To the surprise of three members, Laura is dating Harry and reminds him that he is taking her to the movies tonight. Harry confesses that their wedding had to be postponed last December but, before he can explain why, they are summoned into Clarence's bedroom, where he lies in a large, four-poster bed and admits that he may not last much longer.

Cato makes an "'honest business proposition'" and Weems points out that Stone's real estate office handled the sale of the golf course to the lodge. Weems accepts the offer, remarking that "'it has the sound of an honorable arrangement,'" and signs a contract. He tells the lodge brothers that, now that Laura knows he has been taken care of, she can give up her job and get married; Cato shoots a look at Harry, aware that he will also benefit from the arrangement. Brodsky optimistically assures Cato that Weems won't last a month.

Joe Mantell as Harry Brown
After Cato and the other lodge brothers leave, Mrs. Collins, Weems's neighbor, brings him chicken broth, but he perks up and says that he feels like a steak. He also surprises her by complimenting her appearance and telling her, "'Call me Clarence.'"

Sometime later, at another board meeting, Brodsky remarks that Harry is getting married next month and Harry opens an application for active membership from Clarence Weems, who enclosed six months' worth of dues. Elkins rushes in to announce that he saw Weems walking with a woman in the park and looking very healthy! The four men head back up the three flights of stairs to check on Weems, with Cato looking visibly winded at the top and fanning himself with his hat, only to have Laura answer the door and say that her father is napping and can't be disturbed. Brodsky looks on the bright side and suggests that perhaps Clarence is just holding on until his daughter's wedding.

Russell Collins as Clarence Weems
At a lodge dance, Cato is shocked when Clarence and Mrs. Collins enter and Weems buys two tickets. Cato calls an emergency board meeting and accuses Harry of fraudulently talking the others into the scheme to support Weems so that he could marry Laura. Harry fires back that Cato's firm got the commission for the sale of the old golf course. They agree to speak to Clarence's doctor to find out how sick he really is.

Back in the Weems apartment, the board members uncomfortably share a sofa as Laura serves coffee. Dr. Allen emerges from Clarence's bedroom and explains that Weems had given up and was wasting away until the lodge gave him a reason and a will to live. The doctor compliments the men for having "'brought a dying man back from the grave.'" Stone, Elkins, and Brodsky leave while Harry stays with Laura.

At another board meeting, the brothers try to figure out how to stop the financial bleeding. Cato suggests offering Clarence $500 to tear up the contract and the others agree that it's worth a try. They climb the three flights of stairs again, with Cato rushing at first but getting progressively more winded. On the fourth-floor landing, Weems is seen pushing a heavy piece of furniture toward Mrs. Collins's apartment; when Cato sees this he cries out, "'Look! He's as strong as an ox!'" and collapses, dying of a heart attack at the top of the stairs. Dr. Allen arrives on the scene moments later and explains that Stone's heart failed because he was climbing three flights of stairs every week to check on Weems.

Don Keefer as Elkins
At Cato's funeral, there is a large flower arrangement donated by Clarence, who admits that he also gave Stone his cemetery plot: "'It was the least I could do; he tried dreadful hard to make a success out of this place.'"

"The Indestructible Mr. Weems" is a wonderful, comedic episode of Alfred Hitchcock Presents with an original teleplay by George F. Slavin that is a textbook example of story construction. There is no murder or crime at all, beyond some questionable ethical decisions by two of the lodge brothers: Cato Stone profits off of the sale of the golf course to the lodge to be used as a cemetery, and Harry Brown frees his girlfriend from the burden of working to care for her father by talking his lodge brothers into providing a steady stream of income for the older man. The surprise ending, where Cato Stone collapses from a heart attack, is set up beautifully by having him display a temper and by showing him get tired every time he has to make the long ascent to Clarence Weems's apartment, yet there is never a sense that he is in danger until the end.

Harry Bellaver as Brodsky
Stone and Weems are on opposite trajectories during the episode; Stone starts out seeming hale and hearty, only to decline and suffer a fatal cardiac event at the end, while Weems begins the show in bed, lamenting the short time he has left to live, only to improve steadily throughout the tale until, in the end, he outlives Stone. The direction of the show by Justus Addiss is excellent, using only a few minimal sets to tell an engaging and fast-moving story. Funniest of all are the stairs leading up to the Weems apartment; each level is clearly the same set, but on the first level there are two framed pictures on the wall, while on higher levels the walls are bare. The design of the lodge meeting room is also effective, with Stone's large, ornate chair demonstrating his seeming power and influence in what is really a social gathering place for local businessmen.

The Alfred Hitchcock Presents Companion quotes Slavin as saying that this was the first comedic episode of the series; earlier episodes had had humorous elements but this does appear to be the first one not focused on crime or murder. Slavin added that a rabbi told him the story that became "The Indestructible Mr. Weems" at his father's funeral! He comments that the production was kept quiet from Hitchcock, who was on vacation at the time and who was not in favor of comedies on the series. In the end, Slavin said that his teleplay was nominated for a Writer's Guild award.

Rebecca Welles as Laura Weems
George F. Slavin (1916-2001) served in the Air Force in WWII and then wrote for film and TV from 1947 to 1980. In addition to writing this episode of Alfred Hitchcock Presents, he wrote an episode of Star Trek. His papers are held at the University of Wyoming.

Director Justus Addiss (1917-1979) worked in television beginning in 1953 and directed ten episodes of Alfred Hitchcock Presents, including "A Bullet for Baldwin." In his private life, he was the lifetime companion of Hayden Rorke, who played Dr. Bellows on I Dream of Jeannie. Addis worked almost exclusively in television, from 1953 to 1968. He also directed three episodes of The Twilight Zone. His only feature film was The Cry Baby Killer (1958) for producer Roger Corman; this film was notable for being Jack Nicholson's first onscreen role.

Gladys Hurlbut as Mrs. Collins
Leading a terrific cast of character actors is Robert Middleton (1911-1977) as Cato Stone. Middleton was a formidable presence on TV and in films from 1951 to 1977. Born Samuel Messer, he was on Alfred Hitchcock Presents three times, including "Crack of Doom," and he was on Thriller twice.

Joe Mantell (1915-2010) plays Harry Brown. Mantell appeared twice on Alfred Hitchcock Presents; his other episode was "Guilty Witness." He was on screen from 1947 to 1990, appeared twice on The Twilight Zone, and had a role in Hitchcock's The Birds (1963). Film fans will best remember him for delivering the final line in Chinatown (1974): "Forget it, Jake, it's Chinatown."

Theodore Newton as Dr. Allen
The indestructible Clarence Weems is played by Russell Collins (1897-1965) in one of ten appearances on the Hitchcock TV show. A wonderful actor whose stage career began in the 1920s, he began appearing in films in the 1930s and on TV in the early 1950s. Most of what we see of him today is from later in his career, such as his role in "Kick the Can" on The Twilight Zone and his appearances on the Hitchcock show, including Fredric Brown's "The Night the World Ended."

In smaller roles:
  • Don Keefer (1916-2014) as Elkins; a familiar face to viewers of The Twilight Zone from his role in the classic episode, "It's a Good Life," he was in three episodes of that series and three episodes of the Hitchcock series, including "The Percentage." Keefer had a long career on screen, from 1947 to 1997, and was also on Star Trek and Night Gallery as well as being part of the original Broadway cast of Death of a Salesman (1949-1950).
  • Harry Bellaver (1905-1993) as Brodsky; a veteran of stage, screen and television, he appeared on Alfred Hitchcock Presents twice (see "Silent Witness") but is best known as one of the policeman on Naked City, appearing in nearly every episode of the series, which ran from 1958 to 1963.
  • Rebecca Welles (1928-2017) as Laura Weems; prior to 1957, she acted under her real name, Reba Tassel. She was married to director Don Weis and appeared in four episodes of Alfred Hitchcock Presents, including "Backward, Turn Backward." Her career was mostly on TV from 1951 to 1964.
  • Gladys Hurlbut (1898-1988) as Mrs. Collins; she worked on Broadway from 1920 to 1949 as both an actor and a playwright before starting a screen career that lasted from 1951 to 1961. She was in one other episode of Alfred Hitchcock Presents, "The Perfect Murder."
  • Theodore Newton (1904-1963) as Dr. Allen; he was on Broadway from 1928 to 1951, in films from 1933 to 1963, and on TV from 1949 to 1963. He was in seven episodes of the Hitchcock show, including "O Youth and Beauty!"
Watch "The Indestructible Mr. Weems" here or order the DVD here. It aired on CBS on Sunday, June 9. 1957. Read the GenreSnaps review here.

Sources:

Grams, Martin, and Patrik Wikstrom. The Alfred Hitchcock Presents Companion. OTR Pub., 2001.

IMDb, www.imdb.com.

"The Indestructible Mr. Weems." Alfred Hitchcock Presents, season 2, episode 37, CBS, 9 June 1957.

Wikipedia, www.wikipedia.org.

Listen to Al Sjoerdsma discuss Fredric Brown's "The Night the World Ended" here!

Listen to Annie and Kathryn discuss "The Indestructible Mr. Weems" here.

In two weeks: "Forecast: Low Clouds and Coastal Fog," starring Inger Stevens!

Monday, October 28, 2024

Batman in the 1960s Issue 34: July/August 1965


The Caped Crusader in the 1960s
by Jack Seabrook
& Peter Enfantino



Infantino/Giella
Detective Comics #341

"The Joker's Comedy Capers!"
Story by John Broome
Art by Carmine Infantino & Joe Giella

Eccentric gazillionaire Cornelius Van-Van has grown tired of contemporary comedies; no one makes 'em like they used to. So Van-Van grabs the bull by the horns and hires movie producer B.C. DeNil to make a batch of slapstick comedies for Van-Van's private viewing.

Fifty grand check in hand, DeNil exits the estate and heads back to his Gotham hideout, removing his mask to reveal... the Joker! Yep, freshly paroled after six long weeks in the pokey, the Clown Prince of Crime is back! His plot is to get at Van-Van by making a series of comedies starring facsimiles of old comedians while performing robberies (got that?).

So, a bank is robbed by the famous washed-up comic, the Tramp, using his deadly pie-throwing machine, all while being filmed by a camera crew. Batman and Robin arrive just as the waddling Tramp is exiting the building. They attempt to nab the hobo but are tripped up by the criminal's sticky bubbles. Back at Wayne Manor, Bruce Wayne and Dick Grayson are having a nice afternoon reading the paper in front of the fireplace when Dick exclaims, "Check this out, boss!" and then details the Caped Crusaders' failed attempts at apprehending the culprit. It's right then and there that the World's Greatest Detective declares "Hey, that wasn't us! Those guys are phonies! Wait a sec; comedy and crime blended together like a souffle! Who does that sound like, Dick?" After Dick guesses Bill Cosby, Bruce pours himself a drink.

The crime wave continues (with each heist committed by a different faded comedy star) and the boys seem helpless until Batman receives an invitation to the home of Cornelius Van-Van, where the first annual Cornelius Awards ceremony will be held. The Dynamic Duo have won the Best Supporting Players of the Year award and Corny would be grateful if they would accept in person. Using that enormous brain of his yet again, Batman decides this is the best way to catch the Joker and his cinema-graphical cronies.

At Van-Van's estate, Joker admits to his henchmen that the whole comedy-producing schtick was cooked up to get invited to the zillionaire's mansion. The real heist is about to happen. Batman and Robin show up but Joker is wise to their presence and meets them halfway. After a brief tussle, Joker is once again in handcuffs and hauled off to a waiting cell (doubtless to be soon released on parole). Van-Van thanks the boys and asks if there's anything he can do for his heroes. Batman admits he'd love to see the finished films. The delighted entrepreneur fires up the projector and pops some corn and the trio have a grand laugh. Gotham is once again safe from crime.

And once again, in "The Joker's Comedy Capers," we see a criminal genius going to extreme lengths to pull off a heist when he could just pull off the heist. Weeks of planning and the drudgery of filming accomplish what the Joker probably could have done by showing up at Van-Van's and hoisting him up over a giant blueberry pie or something equally loony. The highlight, for me, is the finale, where Bats, Robin, and Van-Van guffaw while viewing the footage of Joker committing felonies and, ostensibly, risking the lives of many innocent victims. And I'd question just how wonderful the robbery dailies were, since the boneheaded henchmen were inside a van parked outside the targets! Did the Joker only rob solid glass buildings? Definitely not a strip you'll find in The Greatest Joker Stories Ever Told.-Peter

Jack-I liked it, mainly because Infantino and Giella draw the Joker as menacing, something Moldoff and Paris didn't do. I don't know why DC insisted on pretending that the Tramp was not Chaplin and the Banjo was not Harpo Marx; for some reason they always change the names of famous people. The GCD reminds us that this story was adapted for the Batman TV show but it featured the Riddler instead of the Joker. It makes sense because most of the crimes are committed by the villain in costume, so the Riddler works just as well.




Mortimer and Moldoff
80-Page Giant #12: Strange Worlds of Batman and Robin

"The Captive Planet"
(Detective Comics #256, June 1958)

"The Caveman Batman"
(Batman #93, August 1955)

"King Batman the First"
(Batman #125, August 1959)

"There Was a Crooked Man"
(Batman and Robin Sunday strips, 11/12/44-12/31/44)

"The Three Super-Sleepers"
(World's Finest Comics #91, December 1957)

"Batman's Roman Holiday!"
(Batman #112, December 1957)

"The Interplanetary Batman"
(Batman #128, December 1959)

"The Winged Bat-People"
(Batman #116, June 1958)

The Batman Annuals have been replaced with issues of the 80-Page Giant series. The letters page in this one tells us that what would have been annual #8 was released as 80-Page Giant #5 with a December 1964 cover date, but we missed covering it because we were waiting for the next annual!

Batman Annual #9 is 80-Page Giant #12, with a July 1965 cover date, featuring Batman and Robin's Bizarre Adventures in Time and Space! The best story has nothing to do with time or space, however; it's eight pages of Batman Sunday newspaper comics from late 1944 that are an utter delight. The art by Jack Burnley and Charles Paris is excellent and the story, which involves a crooked man, is engaging and ends with a real surprise.

The other stories are a mixed bag. I like the ones penciled by Dick Sprang, and this time we are lucky to get four of them! The stories drawn by Moldoff are about what we'd expect. Still, this is an unusually good giant-sized comic.-Jack


Infantino/Giella
Batman #173

"Secret Identities for Sale!"
Story by John Broome
Art by Sheldon Moldoff & Joe Giella

"Walk, Batman--To Your Doom!"
Story by John Broome
Art by Sheldon Moldoff & Sid Greene

One night, Batman, Robin, and the Gotham Police break into the secret hideout of Mr. Incognito, "the masked mastermind of crime in Gotham City"! While the good guys knock the bad guys around, a photographer snaps a couple of pics before being ejected. Mr. Incognito escapes through a trap door.

Later that day, freelance photographer Elwood Pearson visits the mayor with a shocking offer: one of his photos reveals the secret identity of Mr. Incognito and he'll sell it to the city for a cool million. Pearson explains that his days shooting photos of celebs on vacation ended when he invented an x-ray camera that reveals the faces behind the masks. The mayor asks for time and suggests that the Dynamic Duo investigate Pearson before the deadline expires.

Meanwhile, the photographer calls Mr. Carter of the Carter Real Estate Agency to say two things: 1) I have a couple of "Secret Identities for Sale" and 2) I know that you are Mr. Incognito, since my other photo showed the face beneath your mask. Carter promises to visit Pearson in an hour with a million bucks to purchase the photos.

Night falls and, while Batman and Robin are looking around outside the photographer's studio, Mr. Incognito has entered by means of a secret passageway. Pearson holds the photo of Batman and Robin up to a mirror and Bruce and Dick's faces are displayed, but neither Pearson nor Incognito recognize them. The Dynamic Duo crash through a skylight, knock out both men, and retrieve the photo. Incognito is sentenced to 99 years in jail and Pearson is found guilty of assault for trying to stop the Dynamic Duo out of greed.

It's hard to believe that Mr. Incognito is such a big deal when we've never heard of him before. On Infantino's gorgeous cover he looks like Kirby's Sandman, but inside Moldoff draws him in more mundane fashion.

Everyone is shocked when the jury returns a not guilty verdict in the trial of a criminal named Bunky Galliver. The D.A. summons the Dynamic Duo to his office and shows them photos of the people in the audience at four recent trials that all ended in unexpected verdicts. Batman notices that the same man, in disguise, was at each trial, and the Caped Crusader decides to investigate! Coincidentally, the same man's name and photo are in the daily paper, which reports that he's Franklin Knott and he's running for governor of Gotham State!

Dick Grayson disguises himself as a street urchin and tails Bucky while Bruce Wayne attends Knott's speech at Gotham Hall. Something in the way Knott speaks makes Bruce feel compelled to vote for the candidate. Dick reports that Bucky and his gang plan to rob the Keller mansion, so Batman and Robin rush to the scene of the crime and make short work of Bucky and his gang.

At the Batcave, Batman looks into Knott's past and visits a scientist named John Grover, who reveals that Knott worked for him and was fascinated by his work with E-Rays, which compel behavior in those bathed by them. Batman deduces that Knott has been using E-Rays to influence juries and make people vote for him. Suddenly, Knott walks in and shoots E-Rays at Batman, Robin, and Grover. Knott commands them to walk into Pima Lake and drown! Compelled, the trio walk into the lake. Batman recalls that he was also ordered to vote for Knott, so he uses that compulsion to save himself and the others.

Batman visits a Knott rally and knocks out the crooked politician, who is soon found guilty by a jury that is not bathed in E-Rays.

Unfortunately, John Broome's story, "Walk, Batman--To Your Doom," is as dumb as anything we read prior to the dawn of the New Look. Moldoff's graphics are as weak as ever and even Giella's inks don't help.-Jack

Peter-I would call baloney on the fact that Pearson doesn't recognize Gotham's most recognizable resident but we have to remember that the entire population of the city is drawn by Shelly Moldoff. For Mr. Incognito to receive a 99-year sentence for piddly little crimes, while Penguin, Joker, and Riddler are paroled before being arrested, is a mockery of justice. My favorite panel of "Secret Identities for Sale!" is when Bats, Robin, and the entire Gotham police force bust down a door and find Incognito sitting on a throne, a lone lamp sitting in the corner. Who thought "hey, we need a little light in this criminal's hideout!" Less enjoyable but even more ridiculous is "Walk, Batman--To Your Doom," wherein my favorite line of dialogue would have to be "Must vote for Knott--Can't drown--Must vote for Knott..."


Infantino/Giella
Detective Comics #342

"The Midnight Raid of the Robin Gang!"
Story by John Broome
Art by Sheldon Moldoff & Joe Giella

Gossip columnist Cal Carroll has Gotham abuzz (and Dick Grayson livid) with his columns about the possible break-up of the Dynamic Duo due to Robin's jealousy about Batman's celebrity. Does the Dark Knight hog the limelight? Dick and Bruce agree to file this one under "Misunderstandings" but, as Robin heads off to elementary school, the billionaire playboy wonders if there might be a spark of truth to the rumblings.

At that moment, the hardest-working cop in America, Commissioner Gordon, calls on the Bat-Phone to invite Bats in for a chat and our hero hops in the Batmobile and runs twenty red lights to make it there in minutes. Pushing aside the empty pizza boxes on his desk, Gordon gets down to business: there's a mystery man in Gotham who's recruiting school-age kids into a life of crime. Does Batman think Robin could go undercover and get the skinny on this bad dude? Batman smiles and agrees that this is a job for Robin!

Walking home from school, Dick Grayson decides to drop in on Tom Willard, a school chum who hasn't been in class for some time. Though Tom is not in, Dick heads into the shack on the property that he and Tom used to use for... chinwags. On the wall hangs a Robin outfit. Startled, Dick pulls down the uni just as Tom enters the shack and tears the costume from Grayson's hands. Tom tells Dick there's no way he's going back to school and Dick, using the World's Second Greatest Detective Brain, decides to play along and confess to his old bud that he wants to join the gang that Tom had told him all about at one time in the past. Tom happily agrees and promises to take Dick to "the boss." Later, the boys visit the gym owned by Al Craig (the aforementioned "boss" and a wrestling promoter) and, entering the man's office, Dick is startled to see three kids in Robin uniforms! Holy Triplicate Tornado!

Dick is introduced to Craig, who locks our teen hero in a room while he gives directions to his four Robins. Dick can hear his plans through the wall: each Robin will commit a crime in a different part of Gotham. Dick picks the lock and heads out into the night to try to talk sense into Tom Willard. Meanwhile, across town, while on patrol, Batman comes across Robin robbing a jewelry store! While Bats chases the phony, the real Robin swoops in but, due to temporary blurry vision, accidentally knocks his boss off the roof. After saving his pre-teen partner from a similar tumble, Bats tosses Robin in the Batmobile and tears off. It's there that the Teenage Titan spills the beans about the Robin Gang.

Arriving at Craig's Gym, the boys are set upon by wrestlers (who have been misled by Craig to believe these guys are phony Caped Crusaders auditioning for a ring gig) but make quick work of the dopes. They arrest the Robin Gang and Al Craig and then attend to more important matters: getting Dick an eye test. Commissioner Gordon's twin brother, who happens to be an optometrist, diagnoses Robin as recovering from a blow to the head, nothing a few eyedrops, rest, and refraining from dirty magazines for a while can't cure. The Gotham Tattler headlines scream "Robin's Eyes Are Perfect Again" and the boys have a laugh until the damn Bat-Phone rings again.

You might find it amazing that every teen in this strip looks like Dick Grayson until you remember that's the m.o. of Sheldon Moldoff. All the kids look like Dick, middle-aged men (and women) resemble Bruce, and old-timers naturally appear to be Gordon; there are no deviations. The phony/legit Robin scene, where Dick knocks Bats off the roof, is a knee-slapper and could have led to all sorts of fun misidentifications . I thought, for a moment, that Batman might have tossed the wrong Robin into the hot rod a la Jill St. John in the premiere of the '66 show, but no such luck. For once, I loved the minimalist (nonexistent?) artwork by Moldoff and Giella. A dumb script begs to have laughable graphics.-Peter

Jack-Did anyone picking up this comic in 1965 believe for one minute that Robin had really gone rogue? I thought it was funny that Commissioner Gordon referred to Robin's friends as "playmates"; I suspect Bruce Wayne has playmates of a different sort. This wasn't a bad story overall, just not up to the Infantino entries.

Next Week...
That ol' Sinnott Magic!

Monday, October 21, 2024

Journey Into Strange Tales Issue 123: Atlas/Marvel Horror & Science Fiction Comics!

 


The Marvel/Atlas 
Horror Comics
Part 108
June 1956 Part II
by Peter Enfantino
and Jack Seabrook


Mystery Tales #42
Cover by Sol Brodsky

"The Darkroom" (a: John Forte) ★
"The Captive" (a: Jerry Robinson) ★1/2
"The Man who Was Nowhere!" (a: Jack Abel) 
"The Trap!" (a: Bob Bean) ★1/2
"We Claim This Planet!" 
(a: Lou Morales & Christopher Rule) 
"The Hidden One!" (a: Tony DiPreta) ★1/2

Donald Short is an amateur photographer and, as we zoom into his darkroom one evening, we overhear him whining out loud about his wife. If only she would be like other wives and adopt an interest in his hobby. "Oh well," moans the big baby, "might as well get these photos developed." Just then, an Atlas lightning bolt zigzags its way in through the window of Donny's darkroom and zaps the tray of developing liquid. The shot Don had taken, of soldiers marching in a parade, comes to life!

Experimenting, Don discovers that he can blow up the photos and enlarge the uniformed men. As a bonus, the soldiers seem to ignore the fact that Don is a big sissy who mewls about girls who won't play in his sandbox and follow his orders. Like any accidental Atlas genius, Don decides world domination is in the cards. But first, he's sleepy, so he grabs some warm milk and goes to bed. The next morning, the new emperor of the universe awakens and heads to his darkroom, only to discover it's been tidied up. His wife enters and explains that, for Don's birthday, she took the plunge and became an amateur photographer. Her first duty was to clean up "The Darkroom." Well, he wanted a photo pal, he got one. Poor Don wishes it was still 1954 so he could bury the hatchet in his wife's head. It certainly would have given this strip a much-needed kick in the ass.

Screenwriter Brad French has his panties in a bunch when an exploitation director wants to turn his script about a screwed-up Richard the Lion-Hearted into a noble epic. Brad harrumphs off set only to find himself in some sort of 14th-Century time warp. What gives? Well, actually, Brad discovers he's "The Captive" of some aliens dressed as knights, ready to conquer Earth. When Brad tells them they're not dressed for the day, they jump in their spaceship and fly away, vowing to return when they get it right. Nothing about "The Captive"  makes sense except the striking Jerry Robinson art.

Don's the test pilot for an incredibly fast jet (how about 100,000 feet altitude in five seconds flat?) but, as so many Atlas test pilots before him can testify, going really fast can be detrimental to your time/space continuum. Before he knows it, Don has gone back in time and landed in some 15th-Century kingdom populated by unfriendly villagers. They chase the pilot around the town a few times but he manages to get back to his jet and fly off back to our time. If he'd only stuck around a couple more panels, Don would have found out that it wasn't the past he was visiting!

These accidental time warp travel stories are beginning to stack up on top of each other and the writers (in this case, pulp hack Carl Wessler) aren't finding original ways to get their characters into these situations. It doesn't even seem like Wessler did any research for "The Man Who Was Nowhere!" (yeah, I know, they were only getting a buck a page or some ungodly wage, so research was definitely not in the cards) on jet planes. No jet has ever hit 100,000 feet (never mind in five seconds) and then at 100,000 feet, he's got Don "leveling off at five miles," which is roughly 26,000 feet. That's quite a leveling off. Never mind all my muttering, this story is nowhere.

Mind reader Julius Keaton is in the middle of his show when the thoughts from a foreign agent spill into his brain. He announces to the crowd that there are three men in the audience who will be selling government secrets to the scumbag commies and, sure enough, three guys get up and run for the exit. Afraid the mind reader will spill the beans to the cops, the trio attempt to hunt him down, but to no avail. The only solution is to hire another mind reader to find the Great Keaton! "The Trap!" is so dumb it's almost enjoyable. The three stooges, after being fingered at the auditorium, forgo hiding out somewhere and, instead, wait at the back exit for Keaton to leave, but the illusionist is two steps ahead of the dolts and heads out the front with the crowd! I said almost enjoyable.

In "We Claim This Planet," Mars and Venus happen to send advance scout teams at the same time in anticipation of a full-scale invasion of Earth. A huge blast sends them running for their ships. Yep, both parties landed in White Sands during A-Bomb testing. Not one to be left out, it turns out that the planet Mercury has been visiting Earth as well. One alien child has been entrusted to a foster family in Mayville to grow up as an Earthling (Mercury is "no place to bring up a boy these days!"). The only way to distinguish Mercurian kids from our own is that the aliens have a green-toned band of skin around their chests. 

Town bigot Bull Morgan does not like it one bit; in fact, he's staging rallies to incite his neighbors to toss this alien out (in this case, a wall will do no good, I suppose) and, once his anger has caught fire with the other ding-dongs of Mayville, he demands that every male child in town be brought to the square and forced to take their shirts off to display their chests. That way, the alien will be outed. But the joke's on Bull since the Mercurian lad has a lot of friends in Mayville and every child who disrobes has a green band.

"The Hidden One!" is an effective but subtle anti-racism tale that doesn't outstay its welcome with a lot of preachiness. I'd call it an equally powerful anti-Blacklist commentary, but we all know Stan was about as anti-Commie as anyone in the 1950s. If you squint just right and picture Bull with orange hair, you could also make the claim that this Atlas cautionary tale is timely. The story arrives just in time to save Mystery Tales #42 (and the Atlas output of 1956, frankly) from being totally awful.-Peter


Mystic #48
Cover by Carl Burgos

"He Changed at Midnight" (a: Hy Fleishman) 
"Across the Threshold" (a: Bill Benulis) 
"The Strange Switch!" (a: Lou Morales) 
"Out of the Storm" (a: Tony Mortellaro) ★1/2
"The Matter with Harry!" (a: Manny Stallman) 
"The World That Vanished!" (a: Pete Morisi) ★1/2

Another of those pesky Mercurians has landed on Earth, this time in the small town of Thornton, and is witnessed by Denny Robbins, the local couch potato. Once the creature exits its ship it morphs into human form, but Denny can ID the thing. He just won't until a large enough reward is posted. The alien gets the last laugh in "He Changed at Midnight." The art is just barely at average level and the script is lazy. The Mercurians were busy cats in the 1950s and, oddly, none of them seemed to be made of fire.

Fred buys an old estate cheap at auction but his buddy, Milt, claims the house has an "air of the unknown" about it and Fred should take care not to piss off any supernatural beings. Fred scoffs and gets to work cleaning up. That night, after Fred hits the sheets, a group of alien thingies from another dimension pop up out of the well in the basement and have a look around. Observing Fred in bed, sawing logs, the creatures determine this would be a great world to invade.

They head back down the well, vowing to venture back "Across the Threshold" soon, but that ain't happenin' since, the next day, Fred unknowingly staves off the end of mankind by capping the well. It's hard for me not to like any story that Bill Benulis illustrates. So much care and style go into each panel, as if Benulis had months to work on each page instead of hours. It's high time for a book-length study on the artist. Can you hear me, Fantagraphics?

In the forgettable "The Strange Switch," it turns out the new kid helping the scientists at the observatory is from Pluto. He just wanted some good shots of his home planet and then hoofed it, without even mopping the floor! Bob has (literally) reached a crossroads in his life, the doctors saying he has something in his brain that's too small to diagnose. Bob falls into a pit of self-pity and depression until he comes to that literal fork in the road while out walking one night. A scream forces him to investigate a house by the side of the road. A man with a gun is threatening a group of party-goers until Bob gives the thug a firm right cross. The crowd react as if they know Bob, one woman identifying herself as his wife. The vision disappears and Bob realizes he's seen into the future. There's a lot of haziness in "Out of the Storm" and it's not all because of the rough Mortellaro art. The maudlin finish, where Bob ponders the frailty of mankind and the whims of the universe, made me want to guffaw rather than contemplate.

Timid Harry Townes would do anything to get a date with the boss's daughter, Velma, but she doesn't even know he exists. One day, two events collide at the same time: Velma announces she's going on a cruise and Harry's uncle dies, leaving him the princely sum of three hundred pounds (three hundred pounds of what is never clarified). Harry says "Screw it!" and books passage on Velma's cruise ship. 

While on board, Harry does whatever he can to spend time with Velma, including fetching her drinks and mopping her sweaty brow, but the girl won't budge on a date. While the ship is anchored in an African port, Harry visits a bazaar and buys a striking ring which, the seller claims, empowers the wearer. Suddenly, from out of the blue, a woman screams. Harry swirls and sees a girl being chased by a giant wearing a red suit. As the woman approaches him, Harry pokes the big man with his parasol and watches in amazement as the brute goes down in a heap.

The girl introduces herself to Harry as a Venusian and explains the big lug is a Martian who followed her to Earth. Her ship ready to blast off, the Venusian begs Harry to come back with her to her planet and live as royalty. Harry, remembering he's in love with Velma, politely declines and returns to the boat. There, Velma confesses she saw the entire fight and now finds Harry extremely macho and charismatic. Harry grabs her, lands a big one on her lips and releases her, realizing he never really loved her. He returns to the Venusian he rescued and they blast off into space, together forever. A truly cute and whimsical tale, "The Matter With Harry!" found this grumpy old man actually rooting for the titular pipsqueak. I even liked the primitive Stallman art, which actually fits this tale very well. 

The first successful expedition to Mars discovers that the planet was inhabited at one time and the evidence is a great, abandoned city. When the crew breaks into one of the buildings, they discover a room where a recorded voice details the evacuation of the planet but never confesses which planet the escapees came to rest on. When the crew make it back to Earth, they get their answer. "The World That Vanished!" is a clever little sci-fi yarn that makes good use of black and white in the "documentary" of the death of Mars. Overall, Mystic #47 is one of the best Atlas comics since the advent of the Code.-Peter


Mystical Tales #1
Cover by Bill Everett

"On a Lonely Planet" (a: Bill Everett) ★1/2
"Just Say the Magic Words" (a: Sol Brodsky) ★1/2
"Nomad of Outer Space!" (a: Bob Powell?) ★1/2
"The Endless Search" (a: Joe Orlando) 
"The Man Who Saw Too Much!" (a: Ed Winiarski) ★1/2
"Anyone Want a Jinni?" (a: Syd Shores) ★1/2

Captain Edward Parker is both a baseball fan and an astronaut who lands his rocket ship "On a Lonely Planet," where he encounters purple aliens with big ears who don't seem to respond to his efforts to make friends. After a tense standoff, he catches a ball that comes sailing toward him from a nearby field. He tosses it to an alien and soon discovers that they play baseball and that sports are the common denominator that will link planetary races.

Bill Everett does his best with this story, but the constant positivity about humans meeting aliens is wearing thin.

Hiding out in a cheap room, an escaped convict reads a newspaper ad about a crash course in magic and sends away for it in hopes that he'll learn how to become invisible and avoid the cops. When the book comes, he says the magic words and manages to make fire spring up from a stove. He ventures out to the street and, when the police spot him, he conjures up a herd of large animals to block the fuzz. More cops arrive and he does the rope trick, climbing a rope into the sky. Suddenly, he finds himself back in prison, where his roommate admits that he wrote the magic book and it was a fraud!

"Just Say the Magic Words" is entertaining for a three-pager, but the conclusion makes no sense. If the magic book was fraudulent, why was the convict able to make magical things happen, and why did he end up back in prison? Sol Brodsky's art is barely adequate.

Simon Miller enjoys telling his young son John about his dreams that men will build space ships that will travel between planets someday. Simon's wife tell him to stop, but when John grows older he builds a rocket ship and takes off. Years go by and Simon grows older, sad that his son is gone. One day, while Simon is out walking, a whole fleet of rocket ships land in a field and John emerges, telling his father that he was a "Nomad of Outer Space!" who would not return home until he had built the fleet his father dreamed of. Simon is delighted that his dreams were not in vain.

The GCD puts a question mark next to Bob Powell's name as artist but this is undoubtedly his work, and fine work it is. Powell is one of my favorite artists to appear frequently in Atlas comics. This story is particularly impressive, despite a thin premise.

Cedric Chalmers is a modern artist whose portraits are scorned by their subjects because they have a somewhat cubist appearance. He exhibits the portraits at an art gallery and, to his surprise, receives a check for $50,000 from the royal family, who bought all of the paintings. Cedric conducts "The Endless Search," looking all over the world for the royal family, only to learn in the end that they are on Saturn and look just like the people in his paintings!

Joe Orlando does an adequate job drawing regular people and the cubist figures in the paintings, but the end of this story is telegraphed early on. At least our old pal Carl Wessler concludes with a logical finish and not something out of left field.

When a horn-like object falls from the sky into Carl Avery's back yard, Carl picks it up, thinks it resembles a trumpet, and blows into one end. He is catapulted fifty years into the future, where he is branded a spy and chased by the authorities. He blows into the horn again, hoping to return to his own time, but is tossed further into the future, where he witnesses a terrible war of rocket ships.

Carl tries blowing into the other end and suddenly is back in 1956, where an Army colonel arrives to retrieve the horn, which is really a vital section of a new, experimental rocket. Carl decides to keep his mouth shut about what he saw.

"The Man Who Saw Too Much!" suffers from Winiarski's art, which reminds me of the kind of strips one would see filling the back of comics in the 1940s. The story isn't much of a story at all and exhibits Carl Wessler's usual confusing plotting.

A Jinni wishing for a master finds his lamp rubbed by a succession of people who don't appreciate his gifts. First, a fisherman wishes for a boatload of big fish, but the onslaught sinks his vessel. Next, a peddler wishes for a wagon full of gold, but the heavy cart crashes through a bridge. Third, a young man wishes for a sports car but soon totals it. Still thinking, "Anyone Want a Jinni?" the Jinni is summoned by a poor man who only wishes for a job and food for his children. All goes well and the Jinni settles in, happy to serve someone who thinks of others.

Syd Shores provides art that fits this morality play perfectly. The Jinni is a big, half-naked man wearing a turban, a loincloth, and slippers with toes that curl up to a point. The contrast between the greedy men and the generous man is well told and the four-page length is just right. It's not a great story, but, as Peter always says, the art is what we come for.

This is the first issue of a new title, but it is interchangeable with any of the other Atlas titles.-Jack


Spellbound #28
Cover by Bill Everett

"When Time Stood Still!" (a: John Romita) 
"The Forbidden Garden" (a: John Forte) ★1/2
"The Strange Guests!" (a: Bill Everett) ★1/2
"The Old Man of the Sea!" (a: Gene Colan) ★1/2
"Farewell to the Sun!" (a: Werner Roth) 
"This is the Forest Primeval" (a: Joe Orlando) ★1/2

Visiting the abandoned fishing village of Bay Harbor, a young man is surprised to find a single resident: an elderly man in a shop filled with clocks who explains that each clock ticks 61 seconds per minute, thus allowing him to have saved up an extra 89 years to live in the town. The young man asks the old man to engrave his initials on his pocket watch and sees that everything the man does is invisible, including eating, driving his horse and carriage, and attending a square dance. Suddenly, a bell rings and the man rushes back to his shop, saying that today is an important day in his life. The young man follows and finds the man gone and the shop in ruins. He assumes he imagined it all, but how did the initials get engraved in his watch?

Early in the story, the young man recalls that the village was thriving 84 years ago until everyone left when the fishing ran out. All I can figure is that, at the sound of the bell, the old man's time ran out, he disappeared, and his shop fell into ruin as if he'd not been there for decades. The uncredited writer of "When Time Stood Still!" doesn't provide any explanation, so the reader is left to puzzle it out. John Romita's art reminds me a little of the work of Jack Davis in spots. As we'll see in his run on Spider-Man in the '60s, he's fond of drawing gents wearing hats and smoking pipes.

When artist Frank Bond visits a large, castle-like house in Paris to see if he wants to rent it as a studio, the agent has yet to arrive, so he explores the interior and comes upon "The Forbidden Garden." He witnesses a meeting between Pierre and Marianne, lovers kept apart by her father, a duke. Three swordsmen appear and Frank leaps into action to help Pierre defeat the swordsmen. The couple make a run for it and, when Frank re-enters the house, he meets the real estate agent, who tells him about a long-ago couple who were aided by a mysterious man.

We've read this story umpteen times in Atlas comics and there's nothing new or fresh in this version. I find John Forte's art to be wooden, so it adds little to a tired narrative.

John and Isabel Gilford meet a couple at the airport who look lost, so they invite them to stay at their home. The couple introduce themselves as Osgood and Nola Whitley and, before you know it, the Gilfords and the Whitleys are fast friends. The only thing unusual about "The Strange Guests!" is that they go to bed very early. For their part, the Whitleys have a secret that they don't want to reveal to the Gilfords. Eight years pass and it's time for the Whitleys to leave. At the airfield, they board a rocket ship bound for Venus! Meanwhile, the Gilfords decide to visit the folks and also rush to the airport, where they, too, board the ship for Venus!

It makes very little sense, I know, especially the final panels where all of the Venusians suddenly have oblong faces once they board the rocket ship. At least we are treated to three decent pages by Bill Everett.

A ship sailing across the Atlantic toward Portsmouth keeps changing course every time the crew spots "The Old Man of the Sea," who is in a small rowboat and who looks like the survivor of a shipwreck. The ship barely misses destruction by an undersea eruption, a pod of whales, dangerous rocks, and a meteor. Upon finally reaching port, they observe that the old man was not a figment of their imagination but rather King Neptune, who boasts that he was happy to cheat Davy Jones out of a victim.

Seeing a new story by Gene Colan reminds me of how little we've seen of his art in recent months at Atlas. It's a shame, because no one's pages look like Colan's. His style is unmistakable and his use of shadows is great. The story is a letdown; we read along, wondering who the old man is, only to have him be revealed as Neptune. I would've preferred a ghost.

Don and Louise Todd can't afford to spend the summer in Europe like their friends, the Hitchcocks. Instead, they visit Moonbeam Amusement Park and take a trip to the sun on a flying saucer. To their surprise, the ship actually heads into space and flies to the sun; it passes through a wall of fire and lands in an idyllic spot, where the Todds are welcomed by the locals, who resemble munchkins. They work one day a week and spend the rest of their time enjoying themselves. The Todds return to their home on Earth after saying "Farewell to the Sun," but when the Hitchcocks visit and tell them all about their trip to Europe, the Todds keep mum, certain they would not be believed.

I associate Werner Roth with mediocre art on The X-Men in the '60s, but his work on this story is actually pretty good. The highlight is the sun people, who look like chubby little folk who smile a lot. I didn't mind the ending, which is not really a twist and probably more satisfying for that reason.

Henry Parker waits to hear if the board will elect him president of the world's most powerful company despite his radical ideas and his thirst for change. Suddenly, while walking to the water cooler, Henry passes through a time warp and realizes that "This is the Forest Primeval." He stomps around, trying to cause change, and returns to the present to find that giant ants have replaced humans as the dominant species! But wait, it was only a dream! Henry awakens, is made president, and vows to make no big changes, having learned his lesson.

If only Peter and I could learn our lesson and realize that Atlas comics in 1956 are not destined to reveal many hidden gems! Yet we beat on, boats against the current, borne back ceaselessly into the past.-Jack

Next Week...
Four More Exciting
Batman and Robin Adventures!

Thursday, October 17, 2024

The Hitchcock Project-Crackpot by Martin Berkeley [2.15]

by Jack Seabrook

What seems like a chance encounter turns into a frightening experience in "Crackpot," which aired on CBS on Sunday, January 6, 1957.

Ray and Meg Loomis have just gotten married and are on their honeymoon when they get a flat tire on their way to a hotel in Santa Barbara, California. Ray's Aunt Florence was recently murdered by a burglar whom she surprised robbing her safe and, although the publicity around the crime gave the couple second thoughts, they went ahead with the wedding. Ray finishes putting on the spare tire and his hands are dirty when he notices that it is also flat. Just then, another car drives by on the remote road and Ray flags it down.

The driver of the other car introduces himself as Mr. Moon, a heavyset, genial man in a white suit and hat who uses a handy air hose to equalize the pressure between the spare tire in his trunk and the one on Ray's car. Ray trips while handing the tube back to Moon and his dirty hands land on the front of the man's suit, leaving two large grease stains. Moon's demeanor immediately switches and he flies into a rage, using the air hose as a whip and telling Ray, "'I could kill you for what you did.'" Moon suddenly gets back into his car and drives off, leaving Ray to remark to Meg that the man must be insane.

Biff McGuire as Ray Loomis
When Ray and Meg reach their hotel, the lobby is crowded due to a convention and the suite they had reserved is not available. They are ushered into the manager's office, where a policeman named Sergeant Carpenter says that a man who fits Ray's description of his aunt's murderer was picked up in Ventura the night before. He had a bracelet with him, but Ray examines it and says that it did not belong to his aunt.

Soon the problem with the room is cleared up and Ray and Meg are in their honeymoon suite, where he picks her up and opens the door to carry her over the threshold only to encounter Mr. Moon once again. He is back to being friendly and cordial; a valet cleaned the grease stains off of his white suit and he is staying in the room right next door. Once Moon has left, Ray hears him banging on the wall between the rooms and yells at him to stop, only to have the desk clerk telephone to tell Ray that Moon is complaining about him doing the same thing.

Robert Emhardt as Moon
Ray goes out onto the balcony and walks over to Moon's room, where he looks in and sees Moon creating a large hole in the wall with a hammer and chisel. When Ray bangs on Moon's door from the hallway and Moon opens it, the man denies hammering on the wall and Ray sees that a large mirror is hanging over the spot where he saw the hole. He turns to see Moon pointing a gun at him and the man tells Ray to leave, suggesting that Ray needs a psychiatrist. Moon adds that if there is any more trouble, he will call the police and have Ray put away.

Ray returns to his room, visibly upset, and tells Meg that they need to leave because Moon has a gun and threatened to kill him. Ray says that he recalls seeing Moon on the night his aunt was murdered and concludes that the man wants to kill him because he knows that Ray can identify him. Meg stays positive, suggesting they order champagne and forget their troubles, but Ray begins to hear a ticking sound coming from the wall. On the other side, Moon listens to what is happening in Ray's room and pulls a clock out of the hole whenever Meg leans over to listen, making her think that her husband is hearing things.

Mary Scott as Meg Loomis
Fearing that Moon has planted a time bomb in the wall, Ray is shocked when Moon appears in the doorway holding a gun and telling Ray that he has three minutes until the bomb goes off. Ray accuses Moon of killing his aunt, claiming that she caught him robbing her safe and he panicked and hit her. Moon seems unstable, alternating between smiling and sudden fits of anger. As he reaches around the door to engage the lock, Ray hits him and seems to knock him out. Ray sends Meg to the lobby and rushes into the bedroom to get her overnight case when suddenly Moon is on his feet and approaching Ray.

Moon takes the case from Ray, his gun pointed at the newlywed; he searches the case and uses his gun butt to smash the mirror in the lid, revealing a cache of hidden jewels. Ray begs Moon to let him go before the bomb goes off and Meg rushes in with Sergeant Carpenter. Moon reveals that he is really a detective with the Pasadena Police; Carpenter explains to Meg that her husband was in debt and that he was the one who robbed his aunt's safe and murdered the woman when she surprised him in the act. The detective says that the charade was the only way he could think of to trap Ray. The alarm goes off on the clock in the wall and Moon chides himself for forgetting to turn it off. Meg tears up as she looks at her husband and realizes that their honeymoon is at an end.

"Crackpot" is an entertaining episode that succeeds due to the performances of the three leads. After watching it, one wonders about the detective's plan. Moon must have been following Ray's car, since Meg remarks that the road they were on was a shortcut suggested by the same gas station attendant who checked their spare tire. Did the attendant purposely engineer the flat tire so Moon could come on the scene and act crazily? Moon must have pretended to be the crackpot of the title in order to set up the later events at the hotel.

The "bomb" in the wall.
The police were waiting for Ray and Meg at the hotel, and perhaps the initial problem with the room reservation was created so that Ray could be brought into the manager's office to examine the necklace and confirm that it was not his aunt's, thus demonstrating that he was familiar with her jewelry. Moon arranged to book the room next to Ray's in order to set his plan in motion; creating the hole in the wall and pretending to plant a ticking time bomb were all part of his elaborate plan to trick Ray into revealing the location of the hidden jewels. Moon's continuing bizarre behavior was all to support the suggestion that he was a dangerous crackpot. When Moon sees Ray with the overnight case, he takes it from him at gunpoint and comments that the police had already searched his luggage; however, on the spur of the moment, Moon smashes the mirror in the bag and finds the jewels in the one place they had not already looked.

The end credits for "Crackpot" say that the teleplay was by Martin Berkeley, based on a story by Harold Gast. The story was not published but rather was the teleplay for an episode of the early, live TV series The Web that was broadcast on September 5, 1954. The synopsis for this episode says that "an ice cream stain on the suit of a stranger develops into a murder threat that disrupts a young couple's honeymoon." Unfortunately, this episode is lost, so it is not possible to see how Ray got an ice cream stain on Moon's suit rather than a grease stain from changing a flat tire.

Harold Gast (1918-2003) started out in the late 1940s writing for radio and then spent the rest of his career writing teleplays, from 1954 to 1994. His script for "Crackpot" on The Web was his first TV credit. He also worked as a TV producer on shows like Judd for the Defense and Cannon.

Michael Fox as
Sergeant Carpenter
Martin Berlekey (1904-1979) was a performer in Broadway shows in the late 1920s and began writing films in 1941. He wrote for TV from 1949 to 1963. Among his screenplays were Revenge of the Creature (1955) and The Big Caper (1957), which was directed by Robert Stevens. His script for "Crackpot" was his only work for the Hitchcock TV show. Berkeley cooperated with the House Un-American Activities Committee in the early 1950s and was said to have volunteered more names than any other witness.

"Crackpot" was directed by John Meredyth Lucas (1919-2002), a writer and director who worked mostly in television from the early 1950s to the early 1980s. He directed only three episodes of Alfred Hitchcock Presents, including "Jonathan"; he also directed episodes of Star Trek and Night Gallery. He grew up in Hollywood and wrote a memoir called Eighty Years in Hollywood; of interest is the fact that his stepfather was film director Michael Curtiz.

Phil Garris as
the bellhop
Starring as Ray Loomis is Biff McGuire (1926-2021), who was born William McGuire and who started out on Broadway, including a role in the original cast of South Pacific (1949). He acted on screen from 1950 to 2013 and was in the classic 1973 film, Serpico. He appeared in four episodes of Alfred Hitchcock Presents, including "The Gentleman from America."

As Moon, Robert Emhardt (1913-1994) switches with ease between seeming innocent and dangerous. Emhardt was Sydney Greenstreet's understudy on Broadway in the 1930s and a founding member of the Actors Studio; his career on TV and in film stretched from 1949 to 1982. He was seen in six episodes of Alfred Hitchcock Presents, including "De Mortuis," one unforgettable episode of The Alfred Hitchcock Hour ("Return of Verge Likens"), and episodes of The Twilight Zone, Night Gallery, and The Night Stalker.

Meg Loomis is played by Mary Scott (1921-2009). Born in Los Angeles, she appeared in movies beginning in 1942 and on TV beginning in 1951. She is best remembered today for her roles in eight episodes of the Hitchcock TV show, including "The Diplomatic Corpse." In the late 1940s, she was on Broadway in a production of Shaw's Caesar and Cleopatra when she met the English actor Cedric Hardwicke; she got pregnant and he divorced his wife. Hardwicke and Scott wed in 1950, when he was 57 years old and she was 29. She later wrote an autobiography called Nobody Ever Accused Me of Being a 'Lady,' and there is an interesting obituary here.

In smaller roles:
  • Michael Fox (1921-1996) as Sergeant Carpenter; Fox had numerous screen credits from 1952 to 1991 and was also seen on The Twilight Zone, Batman, and The Night Stalker.
  • Phil Garris (1919-2004) as the bellhop; he played small parts on screen from 1946 to 1979.
  • Raymond Guth (1924-2021) as the hotel desk clerk; he was on screen from 1956 to 2000 and also had a role in "Terror at Northfield."
Raymond Guth as
the desk clerk
Watch "Crackpot" here or order the DVD here.

Sources:

"Crackpot" Alfred Hitchcock Presents, season 2, episode 15, CBS, 6 January 1957.

CTVA US Anthology - “The Web” (CBS) Season 4 (1953-54), ctva.biz/US/Anthology/Web_04_(1953-54).htm. 

Grams, Martin, and Patrik Wikstrom. The Alfred Hitchcock Presents Companion. OTR Pub., 2001.

IMDb, www.imdb.com.

Wikipedia, www.wikipedia.org.

Listen to Al Sjoerdsma discuss "Crackpot" here!

In two weeks: "The Indestructible Mr. Weems," starring Robert Middleton!