
Hat, hat.
Iris Teleton and Blanche Herbert meet in a tea room that has by far the largest number of extras ever seen in this series; or customers in a tea room. I hope the guys over at bare bones take a look at this episode so I can find out what the hell was going on. One possibility, judging from the head-wear, is that it was filmed during the Bad Hat Convention of 1958.
Blanch has asked Iris to meet her here. Iris immediately tells Blanche that she knows she has been having an affair with her husband. Iris doesn’t seem too upset by this — she orders tea and macaroons. Iris says she is just surprised that her husband did not hook up with someone younger. This is interesting as Blanche is five years older than Iris (at least in the actor’s ages).
Blanche tells Iris that Oliver is in love with her. She suggests that Iris can’t want to stay in this loveless marriage. She promises a quiet divorce and that she and Oliver would wait a respectable length of time before marrying so as to avoid any embarrassment. Iris takes this exceptionally well and says she is shocked at Oliver’s indiscretion. She is willing to tolerate Oliver having an affair and even setting Blanche up in a little apartment; she even picks up the check. She has no intention of divorcing Oliver, though.

Maitre d’, hat.
As Iris is walking out, Blanche plays her trump card — Robert Cressant. This finally gets Iris’s attention. Blanche claims to have a letter that Iris wrote to Cressant. This time they order a couple of scotches. [1] Iris wrote to him the day before her wedding that she did not love Oliver but was marrying him for a fancy house and hat money. She assured Cressant that they could go on seeing each other behind Oliver’s back.
Blanche is giving Iris a chance to divorce Oliver without her showing him the letter. That way, she says Iris can get something out of the divorce. Interesting that the fact that Oliver is also having an affair is irrelevant.

Hat, hat.
Iris goes home to Oliver. She suggests they go away together. He suggests that maybe she could go alone with friends. The next morning, she surreptitiously cuts a button off of his coat sleeve. After Oliver goes to work, she calls Blanche and they agree they will meet at Blanche’s apartment at 4 pm.
Iris offers to buy the letter. Being pre-Xerox, this would prevent Blanche from showing Oliver the letter after they are married. Blanche notes that this would cause any settlement with Iris to be set-aside. So apparently this was pre-Lawyer also. Iris produces several pieces of jewelry as payment. Blanche demands another $26,000 and gives Iris half of the letter as security. All this is pointless, though, as Iris shoots Blanche with Oliver’s gun and plants the button as evidence.

Hat, hat, hat, hat.
Iris goes to Oliver’s office. She overhears Oliver talking on the phone to a PI named Harper who saw her go to Blanche’s apartment. She also hears that Oliver already knew about Cressant and has the original letter in his safe. He hangs up with Harper and speaks to someone unseen in his office. He tells her that he could never have married Blanche, but she was well-compensated to pull this ruse. A blonde floozy comes out of Oliver’s office and Iris realizes it was all for nothing.
It was very clever to include the conversation with Harper in the script. Otherwise, Iris would still be in good shape — Blanche dead and her husband in jail.

Hat, hat, hat, hat, Maitre d’, hat.
Post-Post:
- [1] The drinks brought to them must be Crystal Scotch as they are clear. Also, the drinks are served in tumblers. I thought I was the only one to drink scotch like that.
- AHP Deathwatch: Marsha Hunt is still with us.
- Fritz Feld was also credited as Maitre d’ in Amazing Stories, History of the World Part 1, Silent Movie, The Odd Couple, Way Way Out, Herbie Rides Again, The Patsy, Paris Playboys, and Skylark. He also played an insanely long list of waiters.
Horace Ford is sitting at his drafting table where a mouse is running in circles. I’m not sure if we’re supposed to see the little string, but I love it. Phillip Pine walks in and Horace shoots him with a cap pistol. Horace is a toy designer and seems never to have grown up. It’s one thing to toss out great ideas like Tom Hanks in
He tells a friend at work about the kids he saw and about a Mickey Mouse watch he had 20 years earlier. It’s close, but damn if they weren’t introduced exactly 20 years before this aired. At dinner that night, he tries to tell the same old stories to his wife and mother. He goes on and on about his childhood and a friend who used to say “Shakespeare, sock in the ear,” then tweaks his wife’s ear. She is horrified, but not as much as if he had tried the old “
Horace gets fired for neglecting his job. His mother reacts by yelling at him about her needs. At least his wife tells her to beat it. Jesus Christ, he just won’t stop his infantile whining about having to go to work to support his wife and mother while his little friends are playing.

The opening shots of this episode made me think of
She asks her bridesmaid to point out the woman — described as tall with a red scarf on her head — who gave her the note. They actually see the woman outside the church, but she gets in a cab before they can catch her. Samantha and Carlos get hitched without a hitch. Well, until a guy starts hacking up phlegm during the always-suspenseful “if anyone objects” section. False alarm, but well played!
She regrets that when she starts hearing strange noises. She ventures out in the hall which is now dark thanks to a gloved hand turning off the lights. She runs into the preacher and he tells her that he had performed the wedding of Carlos parents. It was memorable for reasons he won’t divulge.
Post-Post:
The sponsor is still Kreisler Watch bands. Their new jeweled band will be popular with the ladies because ladies “love jewels from their forehead to their fingertips.” What? But on to the show . . . .
Vic finds the locals afraid to discuss the reported flying saucer. He comes back to his room to find the old geezer going through his stuff. He has learned Vic’s true identity — an army pilot who was grounded for talking too much about flying saucers.
He goes with the geezer to see a flying saucer. The geezer takes him to a shack, but the occupant disappeared after seeing the saucer. After he goes to look for the saucer, Ginny tells a confidant that there are too many people on their literal alien tails.
Our introduction to Lucius Winton is quick and to the point. His house-keeper comes into his estate and sees that the vast lighting system he has installed is out. She turns the lights back on and we see only Winton’s withered, radiated arm drooped from a chair streaming blood to the floor. The end.
As he settles in for his first night, he begins putting away his clothes. There are even bright lights in each drawer Winton opens. One of them brightly illuminates a dead radiated rat. When he turns off the light, he hears creepy sounds so sleeps with the lights on like a child. Imagine if he had actually seen the menacing shadows that crept along the walls — he might have made a wittle pillow-fort.
Sadly Matson rings the doorbell before the creeping shadows reach Winton. He again stresses how Lucius Winton exploited the townspeople. He suggests that Winton is profiting from this and might like to donate the house to the city to ease his conscience. Winton quite appropriately tells him to buzz off. The idea might not seem so crazy when a few minutes later Winton actually sees the creepy shadows fry a rat.