Oh joy, another episode set in England.
Laffler takes his friend Costain to an exclusive dining club; so exclusive that it is down by the docks, hidden behind a plain door like that secret restaurant at Disneyworld with the topless Snow White waitresses. [1] The club has only 40 members and they come from as far away as Singapore to dine there.
There is no menu and only one meal is served each night. Sadly the titular Specialty of the House is not being served tonight. The waiter brings out a cart with the soup course. Costain takes a sip and finds it a little flat. He suggests it could use a little salt and is chastised as if he had put ketchup on a steak. [2] He is told no condiments are allowed, although, I would put that more in the seasoning category.
The main course comes. Laffler says it is fine but nothing compared to the titular Specialty of the House, Lamb Amirstan. They make plans to return the next night.
They have another fine meal, but Laffler is disappointed that they again are not offering the titular Specialty of the House. He tells Costain that the lamb dish is prepared only with lambs from a certain flock on the Ugandan border. This is the only restaurant in the world where it is available, although I suspect the Ugandan farmer sneaks a rack occasionally.
Costain finally meets the owner, Spirro. She modestly says she only supervises the kitchen. The only dish she actually prepares is the titular Specialty of the House, Lamb Armistan. She says the meat takes 3 days to marinate, that it should be ready for tomorrow night.
The next night, Laffler tries to prevent his friend from entering, but Spirro allows him in. They are sitting at the same table when the titular Specialty of the House is served.
All seems to be forgiven as Laffler leaves Costain in charge of his Import / Export business while he goes on vacation. Before going to the airport, Laffler has time for one last meal at Spirro’s. Costain will join him later after drawing up a memo about a bauxite shipment, trying to make the spell-check accept aluminium. Laffler spills the beans that he is becoming a lifetime Spirro’s member and has nominated Costain as a member.
Outside the club, Laffler finds the waiter fighting with another man. The man falls and cracks his noggin. Laffler wants to call the police, but the waiter says Spirro will take care of it. When Laffler learns the titular Specialty of the House is not being served that night, he demands to see Spirro. She consoles him by taking him into the kitchen. The other members are astounded as this has never happened before.
She shows him around the kitchen, then introduces him to the chef who is holding a butcher knife. When Costain arrives, she promises him that the titular Specialty of the House will be on the menu soon.
The story here is counted on to sweep you away, and it pretty much does. When you look closer there are a few problems. I just watched the episode, but I couldn’t pick Costain out of a line-up 5 minutes later. Robert Morley was fine as Laffler, but I always get the feeling with him that I’m supposed in awe of his awesomeness, and I never see it. Spirro was a man in the short story. IMDb Trivia says the character was changed to a woman to appeal to a wider audience. It also might have helped to not cast a woman that looked liked the love-child of Kathy Bates and Aunt Bee.
- In the plot, I see no reason for the scuffle involving the waiter. All it does is telegraph the twist if you give it any thought.
- There is no need for another body anyway. They already know Laffler is going to be next on the menu. Proof of that is that Costain is bringing Laffler’s picture for the lifetime member wall.
- And why is that, anyway? Is Costain in cahoots with Spirro?
- He did seem to settle into Laffler’s office pretty quickly. In England, does the temp who fills your position inherit your estate? That would still make more sense than that crazy entail on Downton Abbey.
- At the end, why is Spirro vague about when the next titular Special of the Day will be served? We know it takes 3 days to marinate the meat. Three days would have been a perfect answer to end the episode.
Still, it is a great episode. I appreciate the subversive subject matter just as I did on the previous cannibalism episode Arthur. In that episode, people were eating chickens that had been fed people. Here, the cannibalism is direct. As AHP edges closer to the sixties, it just gets weirder. Groovy!
Other Stuff:
- [1] Further research suggests I might have dreamed this.
- [2] I planned linking to an article about Trump giving the media vapors by eating ketchup on his steak. They were all asinine, just looking for a reason to spew hatred. Who gives a sh*t; dude likes ketchup. It’s not like he put it on a hot dog — now that is grounds for impeachment.
- AHP Deathwatch: Costain is still on the menu.
- The original short story won the Best First Story Award in the Ellery Queen’s Mystery Magazine contest of 1948.
“Spectroscopic readings indicate that the atmosphere is in perfect chemical equilibrium.” OK, what but do these figures mean? They can’t be percentages because they don’t add up to 100%. Whatever they are, Carbon Dioxide seems to be winning in a rout. Sensors show no life, not even “simple amino acids in the oceans.”

Knowles goes back to the building and shouts to the souls, “You cowards! Show yourselves!” They reappear, and the leader explains. They can’t travel in space in this form. But if they can possess the crew as he did with Knowles, they might be able to make the journey. He admits he doesn’t know what would happen to the crew’s bodies as a result of this prolonged possession. Oh the irony, of using them up like they did to the Earth and casting them aside.
Well, the episode gets right to business; I’ll give it that. Mono-monikered Broadway composer Bluestone is pounding out a new tune on the piano in his swanky Manhattan condo when a man appears. He says, “Who the hell are you, and how did you get in here?” The man compliments the tune, but says Bluestone will never get a chance to see it performed. Bluestone steps through the piano and is horrified to see his body in a sweater-vest; also, because it is on the floor dead.
Bluestone is greeted by his original moniker Binky Blaustein as he enters the party of high schoolers. He realizes that his memories of Mary Ellen are warped, that she is “just a kid”. He spots another girl, the titular Teresa Golowitz. The Devil has now possessed the body of Laura — Gina Gershon, who frankly blows every other girl at this hootenanny off the screen. Binky admits he never paid much attention to Teresa because she was too plain. The Devil reminds Binky that Teresa committed suicide the night of this party. He tells Binky the whole sad story, then says, “Excuse me. Laura has to go to the little girl’s room.” What? Ewwwww . . . That’s creepy even for the devil.
Despite having no physical resemblance to Bluestone, Grant Heslov is excellent as Binky. I didn’t really associate him with the older character, but I completely bought him as a character older and more mature than his physical appearance. Gene Barry as the Devil seemed to play his role a little effeminate for reasons that elude me. The other performances were unexceptional; except Gina Gershon who was exceptional.
A racket to mulct the multitudes is plenty reason for murder.
Chief Surgeon Dr. Foyle is chewing out his protegee Dr. Tyrell for his bold work in the operating room. The 67 year old Foyle says he has 25 years of experience, so maybe he ain’t such an expert if it took him until he was 42 to become a surgeon.
That afternoon, Martha informs Tyrell that Foyle has gotten sick and that Xenon was right — he will be performing the operation. Tyrell wonders if Foyle is just faking it to avoid the responsibility for this 1,000 to 1 operation.