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Score: 8.7 Great 90 votes

The Silence

Episode Number: 61    Season Num: 2    First Aired: April 28, 1961    Prod Code: 173-3658
A talkative man takes an offer to keep silent for a year for $500,000.

Cast and Crew

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Writer: Rod Serling
Director: Boris Sagal
Star: Rod Serling (Narrator/Host),  Jonathan Harris (George Alfred),  Liam Sullivan (Jamie Tennyson),  Franchot Tone (Col. Archie Taylor)
Guest Star: Cyril Delevanti (Franklin),  Everett Glass (First Club Member),  Felix Locher (Second Club Member),  John Holland (Third Club Member)

Notes

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A rare opportunity to see Jonathan Harris (best known as "Dr. Zachary Smith" from the TV series Lost In Space) perform sans his characteristic accent. (edit)
Included on volume 39 of Image-Entertainment's DVD collection. (edit)
Franchot Tone filmed the club sequences in the early part of production. Then, something happened that caused him damage to the left side of his face. Tone's account of the incident, according to Liam Sullivan, is that it was an accident. He fell off a terrace trying to pick a flower for his girlfriend and fell on a driveway. Serling says it was Tone hitting on someone else's girlfriend in a parking lot. The boyfriend took offense and beat up Tone. Regardless of the cause, the left side of his face was temporarily puffed up. Rather then reshoot with a different actor, the director filmed the remainder of Tone's scenes, in the glass-room chamber, with the actor in profile so that you never see the left side of his face. This means that Tone's character is taunting Tennyson without ever actually facing him, giving the character an even more sinister aspect. (edit)

Quotes

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Archie Taylor: You'll have to take my word.
Jamie Tennyson: I see. It's my courage against your credit. Well a year from tomorrow night both can be proved. (edit)
Jamie Tennyson: Do you know my wife, sir? Her name is Doris. She's a lovely thing, frail, beautiful, fragile. Like a cameo brooch, but her tastes run to unfragile things. Sizable baubles with sizable price tags. She shops at Tiffany's the way other women enter a supermarket. My miserable misfortune is that I happen to be very much in love with her. (edit)
George Alfred: But the ugly affair has proved two things, hasn't it, Archie? That that boy down there is stronger than you gave him credit for, and you are considerably weaker. (edit)
Jamie Tennyson: May I ask what is the reason for this wager?
Archie Taylor: What I'm about to say might horrify the average person, but to someone as insensitive as you, it probably won't mean a thing. I dislike you intensely, Tennyson. It goes much beyond the ordinary distaste I feel for someone without breeding, without principles, without manners. Your voice has become intolerable. I sit here each night and the sound of it makes me wince. I cannot ask you to resign from the club. I haven't got that right. So, it occurred to me that I'd be willing to offer a large sum of money just to have some quiet. You see, Tennyson, you could not possibly remain silent for a year. It's not in your nature. You're a shallow, talkative, empty-headed ne'er-do-well, and to remain silent would destroy you. So what I assume will happen. You will perhaps withstand the pressures for... three or four weeks, maybe a couple of months, and then you will succumb. That's again, your nature. In the meantime, I will derive, oh, several months of exquisite silence. Well, Tennyson? Does it appeal to your sporting blood?
Jamie Tennyson: Oddly enough, it does appeal to my sporting blood.
Archie Taylor: Now that, too, is patently ridiculous. There's nothing sporting about you, Tennyson. I happen to know that you're delivering your nightly financial fahlderal because you're in desperate straits. You've run through your inheritance, your debts are insurmountable, and you'd do practically anything for money, except perhaps to remain silent for a year. (edit)
(Opening Narration)
Narrator: The note that this man is carrying across a club room is in the form of a proposed wager, but it's the kind of wager that comes without precedent. It stands alone in the annals of bet-making as the strangest game of chance ever offered by one man to another. In just a moment, we'll see the terms of the wager and what young Mr. Tennyson does about it. And in the process, we'll witness all parties spin a wheel of chance in a very bizarre casino called the Twilight Zone. (edit)

Trivia

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Trivia: This episode begins on June 3, 1962. (edit)

Allusions

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This episode does not have any allusions. Add some now!
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Community Reviews (2)

 
10.0
Perfect
The Silence
"Exactly why I watch this series"
a man bets he can keep quite for a year so he can prove a point to a rich man, and earn a couple dollars. he succeeds in humiliating the rich man...but goes too far and pays a harsh price
Continue » Posted May 9, 2006 7:12 pm PST

rugby5513
Report Abuse 1 user disagrees
with this review
10.0
Perfect
The Silence
"Series classic"
At a gentlemen's club an elderly man grows tired of a boasting young man who claims he can make money. He offers him a bet of half a million to keep quiet for six months. Spoilers in review
Continue » Posted Feb 7, 2006 11:31 am PST
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Episode Vital Stats

 
Episode: The Silence
Season Number: 2
Episode Reviews: 2
Episode
Score:
8.7 Great 90 votes
Rating Statistics:
superb: 26 (28.9%)
perfect: 25 (27.8%)
great: 19 (21.1%)
good: 13 (14.4%)
Other: 7 (7.7%)
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