The Twilight Zone: A Penny for Your Thoughts


07:30 am - 08:00 am, Tuesday, November 11 on Syfy HDTV ()

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About this Broadcast
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A Penny for Your Thoughts

Season 2, Episode 16

A bank clerk (Dick York) finds that he's able to hear other people's thoughts, which leads to trouble. Miss Turner: June Dayton. Mr. Bagby: Dan Tobin. Smithers: Cyril Delevanti. Sykes: Hayden Rorke. Driver: Frank London.

repeat 1961 English HD Level Unknown
Sci-fi Anthology Suspense/thriller Cult Classic

Cast & Crew
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June Dayton (Actor) .. Miss Turner
Dan Tobin (Actor) .. Bagby
Cyril Delevanti (Actor) .. Smithers
Hayden Rorke (Actor) .. Sykes
Frank London (Actor) .. Driver
Dick York (Actor) .. Hector B. Poole
Patrick Waltz (Actor) .. Mr. Brand
Harry Jackson (Actor) .. Brand
Anthony Ray (Actor) .. Newsboy
Tony Ray (Actor) .. Newsboy

More Information
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Did You Know..
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June Dayton (Actor) .. Miss Turner
Born: August 24, 1923
Died: June 13, 1994
Trivia: Primarily an actress of stage and television, June Dayton occasionally appeared in feature films. Born Mary June Wetzel, she took her stage name from her native Dayton, OH, and made her Broadway debut in the 1940s. Those remembering the early-'50s television series The Aldrich Family will recognize her for playing Mary Aldrich during the 1952-1953 season. After that, she guest starred on numerous series through the mid-'70s, including Inner Sanctum, My Favorite Martian, Land of the Giants, and The Six Million Dollar Man. She would also show up in a few television movies such as Letters From Three Lovers (1973) and Something for Joey (1977). She made her feature film debut in 1963, appearing in the Norman Vincent Peale biopic One Man's Way and Twilight of Honor.
Dan Tobin (Actor) .. Bagby
Born: January 01, 1910
Died: November 26, 1982
Trivia: Throughout Hollywood's golden age and TV's "typecasting" era of the '50s and '60s, there would always be a demand for American actor Dan Tobin. After all, somebody had to play all those stuffed-shirt executives, snotty desk clerks, officious male secretaries, tight-fisted bankers and tuxedoed, mustachioed stiffs to whom the heroine was unhappily engaged before the hero came along. Tobin was a welcome if slightly pompous presence in such films as Woman of the Year (1941), Bachelor and the Bobbysoxer (1947) The Big Clock (1948) and The Love Bug Rides Again (1973). On television, Tobin had semiregular stints on I Married Joan, My Favorite Husband and Perry Mason, as well as innumerable guest bits on sitcoms and anthologies. Dan Tobin was also a frustrated screenwriter, at least according to scenarist George Clayton Johnson; while working together on a 1960 episode of Twilight Zone, Tobin cornered Johnson and described his concept for a fantasy script about a gambler who could read his opponent's minds -- a talent which failed when he came up against an opponent who couldn't speak English!
Cyril Delevanti (Actor) .. Smithers
Born: February 23, 1889
Hayden Rorke (Actor) .. Sykes
Born: August 19, 1987
Died: August 19, 1987
Birthplace: Brooklyn, New York, United States
Trivia: An alumnus of the American Academy of Dramatic Arts, Brooklyn-born Hayden Rorke became a member of the original Walter Hampden theatrical company in the early '30s (he ended up the last surviving member of that hardy troupe). While serving in WWII, Rorke appeared in both the road company and film versions of the all-serviceman musical This Is the Army. He would make 70 Broadway appearances in his career, in additional to some 50 films and nearly 400 TV shows. Though usually unbilled, Rorke was instantly recognizable in roles calling for erudition and urbanity, notably in such films as An American in Paris (1951) and The Robe (1953). Among his many TV assignments was the role of CBS radio announcer John Daly (though his character was not identified by name) in the Pearl Harbor episode of the CBS historical series You Are There; he also co-starred in the two-part pilot for an intriguing 1951 science fiction series Project Moonbase, which didn't make it as a series but was released as a theatrical feature. Still essaying small movie roles into the 1960s, Hayden Rorke finally achieved a fame (and generous screen time) in the continuing role of flustered air force psychiatrist Dr. Bellows on the fanciful TV sitcom I Dream of Jeannie (1965-1970).
Frank London (Actor) .. Driver
Dick York (Actor) .. Hector B. Poole
Born: September 04, 1928
Died: February 20, 1992
Birthplace: Fort Wayne, Indiana, United States
Trivia: Actor Dick York started out as a child performer on radio, playing important roles in such airwaves favorites as Jack Armstrong, the All-American Boy. In the early '50s, York began showing up in New York-based instructional films, including a now-infamous reel about proper dating etiquette. Establishing himself as one of Broadway's most versatile young character actors, he was seen in such major productions as Tea and Sympathy, Bus Stop, and Night of the Auk. In films from 1955, York's most famous movie role was schoolteacher Bertram Cates in Inherit the Wind, the 1960 dramatization of the Scopes Monkey Trial. Though a prolific TV guest star, he didn't settle down on a weekly series until 1962, when he co-starred with Gene Kelly and Leo G. Carroll in a short-lived video adaptation of Going My Way. Two years later, he landed his signature role: Darren Stephens, the eternally flustered husband of glamorous witch Samantha Stephens (Elizabeth Montgomery), in Bewitched. He remained with the series until 1969, when a recurring back ailment (the legacy of an on-set injury suffered while filming the 1959 feature They Came to Cordura) forced York to relinquish the role of Darren to Dick Sargent. Though he was for all intents and purposes retired from acting, York remained active on behalf of several pro-social causes. He was the founder of Acting for Life, an organization designed to help the homeless help themselves. Living a spartan existence in Grand Rapids, MI, an increasingly infirm Dick York tirelessly continued giving of himself for the benefit of others until his death from emphysema in 1992.
Patrick Waltz (Actor) .. Mr. Brand
Born: December 06, 1924
Trivia: Actor Patrick Waltz -- who entered movies professionally as Philip Shawn -- was a leading man and supporting player who was busy in television and occasional feature films for just over 20 years. Born in Akron, OH, in 1924, where he grew up as Jack Waltz, he landed a starring role his first time out in motion pictures in the low-budget but critically successful drama The Sun Sets At Dawn (1950), as a condemned man facing execution. Alas, despite some good notices, he soon discovered that work -- even as the star -- in a low-budget production of a Poverty Row studio wasn't the career boost that it might otherwise have been. Most of the work he got over the year that followed as Philip Shawn was in television. He also had what were mostly uncredited appearances as Patrick Waltz (or Pat Waltz) in a handful of television and low-budget movie dramas over the next few years, on series such as The Adventures of Dr. Fu Manchu, Circus Boy. Sugarfoot and The Gale Storm Show. In 1958, he played what was probably his best known -- and certainly his most important -- movie role, as Lt. Larry Turner, the navigator and self-styled Lothario of the space crew in the delightfully campy science fiction/adventure Queen Of Outer Space. As a real "operator" with the ladies who finds himself part of a crew stranded on Venus -- depicted as a planet populated entirely by beautiful women -- he had some of the best lines in the movie. Waltz revealed an ability as a charming scene stealer. He was also, apparently, at least as charming off camera as well, as he ended up romancing his on-screen paramour Lisa Davis from the movie -- the two were married in the summer of 1958, less than six months after shooting the picture, and they had three children before their divorce in 1971. Alas, Waltz never got another movie role that good again, and his television work was confined to supporting parts, and often very small ones, for the rest of his career. He died of a heart attack in Los Angeles in 1972, at age 47.
Harry Jackson (Actor) .. Brand
Anthony Ray (Actor) .. Newsboy
Tony Ray (Actor) .. Newsboy
Born: November 24, 1937

Before / After
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