Alfred Hitchcock Presents: The Waxwork


01:35 am - 02:05 am, Wednesday, June 10 on WJLP MeTV (33.1)

Average User Rating: 7.97 (66 votes)
My Rating: Sign in or Register to view last vote

Add to Favorites

About this Broadcast
-

The Waxwork

Season 4, Episode 27

A chilling tale of a reporter's lonely vigil in the murderers' den of a wax museum.

repeat 1959 English Stereo
Drama Anthology

Cast & Crew
-

Barry Sullivan (Actor) .. Raymond Houston
Barry Nelson (Actor) .. Hewson
Everett Sloane (Actor) .. Marriner
Shai Ophir (Actor) .. Bourdette
Charles Davis (Actor) .. Night Watchman
Hal Thompson (Actor) .. Albert
John O'Leary (Actor) .. Head Security Officer
Patrick Westwood (Actor) .. Lab Technician

More Information
-

No Logo
No Logo

Did You Know..
-

Barry Sullivan (Actor) .. Raymond Houston
Born: August 29, 1912
Died: June 06, 1994
Birthplace: New York City, New York
Trivia: Actor Barry Sullivan was a theater usher and department store employee at the time he made his first Broadway appearance in 1936. His "official" film debut was in the 1943 Western Woman of the Town, though in fact Sullivan had previously appeared in a handful of two-reel comedies produced by the Manhattan-based Educational Studios in the late '30s. A bit too raffish to be a standard leading man, Sullivan was better served in tough, aggressive roles, notably the title character in 1947's The Gangster and the boorish Tom Buchanan in the 1949 version of The Great Gatsby. One of his better film assignments of the 1950s was as the Howard Hawks-style movie director in The Bad and the Beautiful (1952). Sullivan continued appearing in movie roles of varying importance until 1978. A frequent visitor to television, Barry Sullivan starred as Sheriff Pat Garrett in the 1960s Western series The Tall Man, and was seen as the hateful patriarch Marcus Hubbard in a 1972 PBS production of Lillian Hellman's Another Part of the Forest.
Barry Nelson (Actor) .. Hewson
Born: April 16, 1920
Died: April 07, 2007
Trivia: Of Scandinavian stock, Barry Nelson was no sooner graduated from the University of California-Berkeley than he was signed to an MGM contract. Most of his MGM feature-film assignments were supporting roles, though he was given leads in the 1942 "B" A Yank in Burma and the 1947 "Crime Does Not Pay" short The Luckiest Guy in the World. While serving in the Army, Nelson made his Broadway debut in the morale-boosting Moss Hart play Winged Victory, repeating his role (and his billing of Corporal Barry Nelson) in the 1944 film version. Full stardom came Nelson's way in such Broadway productions of the 1950s and 1960s as The Rat Race, The Moon is Blue and Cactus Flower. He repeated his Broadway role in the 1963 film version of Mary Mary, and both directed and acted in Frank Gilroy's two-character play The Only Game in Town (1968). Nelson starred in a trio of 1950s TV series: the 1952 espionager The Hunter, the 1953 sitcom My Favorite Husband, and the unjustly neglected Canadian-filmed 1958 adventure series Hudson's Bay (1959). Oh, and did you know that Nelson was the first actor ever to play Ian Fleming's secret agent James Bond on television? Yep: Barry Nelson portrayed American spy Jimmy Bond on a 1954 TV adaptation of Fleming's Casino Royale. Nelson died of unspecified causes on April 7, 2007, while traveling through Bucks County, Pennsylvania. He was 84.
Everett Sloane (Actor) .. Marriner
Born: October 01, 1909
Died: August 06, 1965
Birthplace: New York City, New York, United States
Trivia: Manhattan-born Everett Sloane first set foot on-stage at age seven, in the role of Puck in a school production of A Midsummer Night's Dream. At 18, he dropped out of the University of Pennsylvania to join a stock company. Poor reviews convinced Sloane that his future did not lie in the theater, so he secured a job as a Wall Street runner -- only to return to acting after the 1929 crash. He went into radio, playing anything and everything (he was the standard voice of Adolph Hitler on "The March of Time"), then made his Broadway bow with Orson Welles' Mercury Theater. Welles brought Sloane to Hollywood in 1940 to play the wizened Mr. Bernstein in the cinema classic Citizen Kane; Sloane remained a Mercury associate until 1947, when he played the crippled attorney Bannister in Welles' Lady From Shanghai. Outside of the Welles orbit, Sloane was seen in the 1944 Broadway hit A Bell for Adano, and starred as the ruthless business executive in both the television and screen versions of Rod Serling's Patterns. Sloane's additional TV work included a 39-week starring stint on the syndicated series Official Detective, the voice of Dick Tracy in a batch of 130 cartoons produced in 1960 and 1961, and several episodic-TV directorial credits. Reportedly depressed over his encroaching blindness, Everett Sloane committed suicide at the age of 55.
Shai Ophir (Actor) .. Bourdette
Charles Davis (Actor) .. Night Watchman
Born: May 20, 1933
Died: December 12, 2009
Hal Thompson (Actor) .. Albert
Born: August 28, 1899
Died: March 03, 1966
John O'Leary (Actor) .. Head Security Officer
Born: May 05, 1926
Patrick Westwood (Actor) .. Lab Technician

Before / After
-

Mannix
02:05 am