Elegy (The Twilight Zone)

"Elegy"
The Twilight Zone episode
Episode no. Season 1
Episode 20
Directed by Douglas Heyes
Written by Charles Beaumont
Featured music Nathan Van Cleave
Production code 173-3625
Original air date February 19, 1960
Guest appearance(s)

"Elegy" is episode 20 of the American television anthology series The Twilight Zone. It originally aired on February 19, 1960 on CBS.

Opening narration

The time is the day after tomorrow. The place: a far corner of the universe. A cast of characters: three men lost amongst the stars. Three men sharing the common urgency of all men lost. They're looking for home. And in a moment, they'll find home; not a home that is a place to be seen, but a strange unexplainable experience to be felt.

Plot

Running out of fuel, astronauts Meyers, Webber, and Kirby land their spaceship on a remote asteroid in 2186. They find the place quite Earth-like although "655 million miles away from Earth". There are buildings and people, but after looking around begin to wonder where everyone is. The first place they come to is a farm where they can find no one. No one, that is, until they see a farmer gazing off into the distance. They approach him, tap him on the shoulder and try talking to him, but realize he is nothing more than a statue.

The men later come to a town hall in which a man is being sworn in as mayor. There is a large audience and a band playing. They can hear music, but everyone and everything is dead-still. A beauty pageant, in which several lovely ladies are participating on stage, is where they find themselves next. Again there is a large audience and the sound of much activity, but no one is moving—as if they are frozen. Just as they leave the room, an old man in the audience suddenly turns around and, unseen by the astronauts, smiles at the camera, thereby breaking the fourth wall.

The astronauts explore the area for some time, and grow more and more disturbed by their surroundings as they find everything—even the animals—eerily motionless. Finally, they are startled to find someone who does move—"Jeremy Wickwire", the caretaker of this place (and the old man in the previous paragraph). Wickwire explains to the astronauts that the asteroid they have landed on is an exclusive cemetery called "Happy Glades", founded in 1973 where rich people can live out their life's greatest fantasy—after they die. He is told by the men that a nuclear war destroyed much of the Earth in 1985, and that it has taken over two hundred years to recover from it. Wickwire serves the three men Liebfraumilch wine, toasts their safe arrival, and asks each man what his greatest wish is. All three reply that they wish they were on their ship heading for home. Suddenly, they realize that their drinks have been poisoned with what Wickwire refers to as "eternifying fluid." Wickwire, when challenged, states that, unfortunately, there is no antidote. As the men are dying, Wickwire (who is actually a robot that has been deactivated for "about 200 years" and only turns on for occasional duties such as cleaning, dusting, and performing minor maintenance on a few clocks, most of which have no hands) apologizes to them, and explains that it is his job to ensure peace and tranquility at "Happy Glades". He emphasizes that they "are men, and where there are men there can be no peace."

Later, Wickwire re-installs the embalmed astronauts in their ship, posing them at their posts as if they were, indeed, on their way home—just as they had wished.

The episode's title, Elegy, refers to a "poem of serious reflection, typically a lament for the dead." And so this episode is just that.

Closing narration

Kirby, Webber, and Meyers, three men lost. They shared a common wish—a simple one, really. They wanted to be aboard their ship headed for home. And fate—a laughing fate—a practical joke with a smile stretched across the stars, saw to it that they got their wish with just one reservation: the wish came true, but only in the Twilight Zone.

Cast

Origin

This episode is based on the short story "Elegy" by Charles Beaumont. The story was first published in Imagination (February, 1953).

Episode notes

Inside the spaceship, "equipment" originally constructed for the film Forbidden Planet was reused for this episode, and show up in a number of other Twilight Zone episodes. The set of the room of the frozen mayor addressing the crowd had been used in the previous episodes "The Sixteen-Millimeter Shrine" as part of Barbara Trenton's home, as well as in "The Purple Testament" as the lobby of an Army hospital. It would be used again as a hallway of a college campus in "Long Live Walter Jameson".

Further reading

External links

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