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Night Gallery

Classic Anthology Series

About This Show

From Wikipedia

Night Gallery is Rod Serling’s follow-up series to The Twilight Zone that aired on NBC from 1970 to 1973. Serling functioned both as the on-air host of Night Gallery and as a major contributor of scripts, although he did not have the same control of content and tone as he did on The Twilight Zone.

Serling appeared in an art gallery setting and introduced the macabre tales that made up each episode by unveiling paintings (by artist Tom Wright) that depicted the stories.

Night Gallery regularly presented adaptations of classic fantasy tales by authors such as H. P. Lovecraft, as well as original works, many of which were by Serling himself.

The series was introduced with a pilot TV movie that aired on November 8, 1969, and featured the directorial debut of Steven Spielberg, as well as one of the last acting performances by Joan Crawford. Unlike the series, in which the paintings merely accompanied an introduction to the upcoming story, the paintings themselves actually appeared in the three segments, serving major or minor plot functions.

 

"Night Gallery" was part of a rotating anthology series called "Four-In-One," This 1970-1971 television series rotated four separate shows. _also included "McCloud" (1970), _"SFX" (1970)_ and _"Psychiatrist, The" (1970)_. Two, "Night Gallery" and "McCloud" were renewed for the 1971-1972 season with ‘McCloud’ becoming the most popular and longest running.

 

Night Gallery was nominated for an Emmy Award for its first-season episode “They’re Tearing Down Tim Riley’s Bar” as the Outstanding Single Program on U.S. television in 1971. In 1972, the series received another nomination (Outstanding Achievement in Makeup) for the second-season episode “Pickman’s Model.”

 

The series attracted criticism for its use of comedic blackout sketches between the longer story segments in some episodes, and for its splintered, multiple-story format, which contributed to its uneven tone. Despite these distractions, Serling produced many distinguished teleplays, including “Camera Obscura,” “The Caterpillar” (based on a short story by Oscar Cook), “Class of ’99,” “Cool Air” (based on a short story by H.P. Lovecraft), “The Doll,” “Green Fingers,” “Lindemann’s Catch,” and “The Messiah on Mott Street.” Notable non-Serling efforts include “The Dead Man,” “I’ll Never Leave You—Ever,” “Pickman’s Model,” “A Question of Fear,” “Silent Snow, Secret Snow,” and “The Sins of the Fathers.”

By the final season, Serling, stung by criticism and ignored by the show’s executives, all but disowned the series.

 In order to pump up the number of episodes that were available for syndication, the 60-minute episodes were reedited into a 30-minute time slot, with many segments either severely cut or extended by using newly shot scenes and stock footage to fill up the time. Meanwhile, episodes of a short-lived supernatural series from 1972, The Sixth Sense, were also incorporated into the syndicated version of the series, with Serling providing newly filmed introductions to those episodes.

Who Talked About This Show

  • Tom Bosley
  • Phyllis Diller
  • Gerald Perry Finnerman
  • Nolan Miller
  • Leonard Nimoy

Resources

Wikipedia article on Night Gallery

YouTube video player - HTML5 compatible.

All Interviewee clips on this show

  • Tom Bosley
    • Tom Bosley on his role as Sidney Resnick in the NBC pilot for Night Gallery, a supernatural anthology series on NBC written by Rod Serling and directed by Steven Speilberg
      Clip begins at: 06:00
  • Phyllis Diller
    • Phyllis Diller on guest starring on the Night Gallery episode "Pamela's Voice" (airdate: January 13, 1971)
      Clip begins at: 07:08, Duration: 01m 58s
  • Gerald Perry Finnerman
    • Gerald Finnerman on lighting episodes of Night Gallery
      Clip begins at: 18:18, Duration: 03m 02s
  • Nolan Miller
    • Costume designer Nolan Miller on working with Joan Crawford on Night Gallery
      Clip begins at: 19:50, Duration: 04m 13s
  • Leonard Nimoy
    • Leonard Nimoy on directing the Rod Serling's Night Gallery episode "Death on a Barge"
      Clip begins at: 23:04, Duration: 02m 03s
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  • Classic Anthology Series generic link

    For more CLASSIC ANTHOLOGY SERIES show pages, visit the Archive's Classic Anthology reference page.

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