Twitch Upon a Star (70 page)

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Authors: Herbie J. Pilato

BOOK: Twitch Upon a Star
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Although Lizzie lived a colorful life, textured with various hues, she did not have super powers like
Samantha
or even
Tabitha,
but she retained a super spirit. Even in her darkest hour, she shined her bright light, and we all basked in her glow.

With or without conscious clarity of her mission, she accomplished extraordinary levels of charitable work, via the fame by which she felt sometimes burdened. For her it was the worst of times, the best of times. The fun, enchanting woman that bewitched us all was periodically bothered and bewildered by an era that she helped create. She seemed much too ready and only strong enough to “pop out” one last time, possessing until the end a complex inner glow and beauty that was coupled with an insecurity that at times was publicly perceived as unassuming poise, and yet a legitimate poise, refined in the finishing school of life.

Overwrought by an underlining thread of sorrow that seeped into, was expressed by, and heralded in her later dramatic TV films, her psyche may have been drained. Pummeled by colorectal cancer, her body had no chance of recovery. Overpowered and racked with emotion, she may not have lost the will to live, but merely succumbed to the difficult decision to die.

Yet before it was too late, prior to the unbearable pain, there was a break in the black cloud of her turmoil. Knowing Lizzie, she realized it was okay to be remembered and so dearly loved by so many people so many years after she turned the world on with her twitch. She realized that, in the eyes of those who love truly, in the
big picture
, flaws and blemishes, physical or otherwise, are endearing, identifiable, and ultimately acceptable, leading to growth of the soul.

From this perspective, and in the eyes of millions, she remains a
supernatural
presence in the fondest way. Her physical being is no longer here, but her metaphysical spirit remains with countless performances: recorded on television, in film, online, in audio, in print, in word, and in deed.

Although not especially religious, she was a spiritual person. For as she once said, rather profoundly, in reflecting on the true priorities of her life and career, “I think of God as the beauty of life. It's loving and being loved.”

For family members, friends, colleagues, and countless fans, she was and remains both loving and loved. Elizabeth Montgomery may be gone from this world, but Lizzie is nowhere near forgotten by this world. She lives on in her work and in the cherished memories of those who knew her personally and in what has come to be known in certain esoteric circles as the collective subconscious.

Along this mystical, magical stream of thought, some believe our journey is mostly a spiritual one, with our final destination likened to a rocket soaring into space. The pieces of us that we don't need, namely, all the negative stuff, melt away as we move closer to what some call the “Light,” until all that is left is the little capsule that holds our soul.

If true, and why not believe it so, then Lizzie's capsule is missing her father's critical voice, her own self-doubt, the failed relationships, the dark performances, the Emmy losses, the political divide, her missteps, and any and all disease.

All that's left are the positive, productive thoughts—the happy horseback rides, the victories, all of the hugs and kisses she gave and received, her carefree spirit, the countless hours of laughter she instilled by way of her more joyful performances, the generous acts of loving-kindness that she displayed and experienced, and the indelible spark of intelligence that gleamed in her pretty green eyes—all bundled together, magnified, and multiplied somewhere
above
. It is her good deeds, fine work, and noble heart, mind, and soul which have become her immeasurable, priceless, and immortal legacy on Earth.

As her friend Bud Baker wrote nearly fifty years ago, using one of her favorite words, “Bad tomorrows don't exist for her,” from here on in, “they're all going to be good for her. That's the great rudder in the turbulent waters of show business, this sense of balance. There is always going to be a dawn and green grass and sun, kids to play with and footballs to kick…. She's having
fun
.”

In this sense, Elizabeth's … Lizzie's … Lizbel's ethereal essence is somewhere beautiful, nose-wriggling the light fantastic, leaving Hollywood to wonder if it will ever again emanate a more luminary … twitch upon a star.

“We are quicksilver, a fleeting shadow, a distant sound. Our home has no boundaries beyond which we cannot pass. We live in music, a flash of color. We live on the wind and in the sparkle of a star.”

—The
Bewitched
witches' anthem

APPENDIX
L
IVE ON
S
TAGE

Brigadoon
(summer stock, circa 1952)

Biography
(summer stock, Luise Rainer Company, circa 1952)

Late Love
(National Theatre and the Booth Theatre, Broadway, 1953)

Opened: 10-13-53 Closed: 1-2-54 Performances: 95

The Loud Red Patrick
(Ambassador Theatre, Broadway, 1956)

Opened: 10-3-56 Closed: 12-22-56 Performances: 93

Romanoff and Juliet
(summer stock, Plymouth Theatre, 1956)

Opened: 10-10-56 Closed: unknown Performances: 389

Cat on a Hot Tin Roof
(Bell Theatre, Los Angeles, 1978)

Opened: 3-5-78 Closed: 3-11-78 Performances: approximately 9

Love Letters
(1989, The Promenade, Off-Broadway/Edison Theatre on Broadway)

Opened: 10-31-89 Closed: 1-21-90 Performances: 96

TV G
UEST
S
TAR
R
OLES

Robert Montgomery Presents
(NBC, 1950–57, 60 minutes, twenty-eight episodes):

“Top Secret” (12-3-51), “The Half-Millionaire a.k.a. The Vise” (7-6-53), “Two of a Kind” (7-13-53), “A Summer Love” (7-20-53), “Anne's Story” (7-27-53), “Duet for Two Hands” (8-3-53), “Red Robin Rides Again” (8-10-53), “Pierce 3098” a.k.a. “Whom Death Has Joined Together” (8-27-53), “Grass Roots” (8-24-53), “Our Hearts Were Young and Gay” (2-15-54), “Once Upon a Time” (5-31-54), “In His Hands” (6-28-54), “The Expert” a.k.a. “The Marriage Expert” (7-5-54), “Story on Eleventh Street” (7-12-54), “It Happened in Paris” (7-19-54), “Patricia” (7-26-54), “Home Town” (8-2-54), “About Sara Caine” (8-9-54), “Personal Story” (8-23-54), “A Matter of Luck” (8-30-54), “The People You Meet” (9-6-54), “Ten Minute Alibi” (9-13-54), “The Baobab Tree” (4-23-56), “Dream No More” (7-21-56), “Catch a Falling Star” (7-23-56), “Southern Exposure” (7-30-56), “The Company Wife” (8-27-56), “Mr. Parker's Rhubarb” (9-3-56)

Armstrong Circle Theatre
(NBC/CBS, 1950–63, 30/60 minutes, two episodes):

“The Right Approach” (6-2-53), “The Millstone” (1-19-54)

Kraft Television Theatre
(NBC, 1947–58, 60 minutes, six episodes):

“The Light is Cold” (9-22-54), “Patterns” (1-12-55, 2-9-55), “The Diamond as Big as the Ritz” (9-28-55), “The Last Showdown” (4-11-56), “The Long Arm” (7-11-56), “The Duel” (3-6-57)

Studio One in Hollywood
(CBS, 1948–58, 60 minutes, three episodes):

“Summer Pavilion” (5-2-55), “The Drop of A Hat” (5-7-56), “A Dead Ringer” (3-10-58)

Appointment with Adventure
(CBS, 1955–56, 60 minutes, two episodes):

“Relative Stranger” (11-20-55), “All Through the Night” (2-5-56)

Warner Brothers Presents
(ABC, 1955–56, 60 minutes): “Siege” (2-14-56)

Climax!
(CBS, 1954–58, 60 minutes): “The Shadow of Evil” (5-24-56)

Playhouse 90
(CBS, 1956–60, 90 minutes): “Bitter Heritage” (8-7-58)

Suspicion
(NBC, 1957–59, 60 minutes): “The Velvet Vault” (5-19-58)

The DuPont Show of the Month
(CBS, 1957–61, 90 minutes): “Harvey” (9-22-58)

Cimarron City
(NBC, 1958–60, 60 minutes): “Hired Hand” (11-15-58)

Alfred Hitchcock Presents
(CBS, 1955–62, 30 minutes): “Man with a Problem” (11-16-58)

The Loretta Young Show
(NBC, 1953–61, 30 minutes): “Marriage Crisis” (2-15-59)

The Third Man
(BBC, syndicated in U.S., 1959–65, 30 minutes): “A Man Takes a Trip” (4-15-59)

Riverboat
(NBC, 1959–61, 60 minutes): “The Barrier” (9-20-59)

Johnny Staccato
(NBC/ABC, 1959–60, 60 minutes):
Tempted
(11-19-59)

Wagon Train
(NBC, 1957–65, 60 minutes): “The Vittorio Bottecelli Story” (12-16-59)

The Tab Hunter Show
(NBC, 1960–61, 30 minutes): “For Money or Love” (9-25-60)

Alcoa Presents: One Step Beyond
(ABC, 1959–61, 30 minutes): “The Death Waltz” (10-4-60).

The Untouchables
(ABC, 1959–63, 60 minutes): “The Rusty Heller Story” (10-13-60)

The Twilight Zone
(CBS, 1959–64, 30/60 minutes): “Two” (9-15-61)

Thriller
(NBC, 1960–62, 60 minutes): “Masquerade” (10-30-61)

Frontier Circus
(CBS, 1961–62, 60 minutes): “Karina” (11-9-61)

Checkmate
(CBS, 1960–62, 60 minutes): “The Star System” (1-10-62)

Alcoa Premiere
(ABC, 1961–63, 60/30 minutes): “Mr. Lucifer” (11-1-62)

Saints and Sinners
(NBC, 1962–63, 60 minutes): “The Home-Coming Bit” (1-7-63)

Boston Terrier
(6-11-63, 30 minutes, ABC): “Salem Witch Hunt”

Burke's Law
(ABC, 1963–66, 60 minutes, two episodes): “Who Killed Mr. X?” (9-27-63), “Who Killed His Royal Highness?” (2-21-64)

Rawhide
(CBS, 1959–66, 60 minutes): “Incident at El Crucero” (10-10-63)

77 Sunset Strip
(ABC, 1958–64, 60 minutes): “White Lie” (10-25-63)

The Eleventh Hour
(NBC, 1962–64, 60 minutes): “The Bronze Locust” (11-6-63)

Bewitched
(ABC, 1964–72)

Season One (1964–65)

1) “I
Darrin
, Take This Witch,
Samantha
”; 2) “Be It Ever So Mortgaged”; 3) “Mother, Meet What's His Name?”; 4) “It Shouldn't Happen to a Dog”; 5) “Help, Help, Don't Save Me”; 6) “Little Pitchers Have Big Fears”; 7) “The Witches Are Out”; 8) “The Girl Reporter”; 9) “Witch or Wife”; 10) “Just One Happy Family”; 11) “It Takes One to Know One”; 12) “… And Something Makes Three”; 13) “Love is Blind”; 14) “
Samantha
Meets the Folks”; 15) “A Vision of Sugar Plums”; 16) “It's Magic”; 17) “A is for Aardvark”; 18) “The Cat's Meow”; 19) “A Nice Little Dinner Party”; 20) “Your Witch is Showing”; 21) “Ling Ling”; 22) “Eye of the Beholder”; 23) “Red Light, Green Light”; 24) “Which Witch is Which?”; 25) “Pleasure O'Riley”; 26) “Driving is the Only Way to Fly”; 27) “There's No Witch Like an Old Witch”; 28) “Open the Door, Witchcraft”; 29) “Abner Kadabra”; 30) “George the War-lock”; 31) “That Was My Wife”; 32) “Illegal Separation”; 33) “A Change of Face”; 34) “Remember the Main”; 35) “Eat at Mario's”; 36) “
Cousin Edgar

Season Two (1965–66)

37) “Alias
Darrin Stephens
”; 38) “A Very Special Delivery”; 39) “We're in for a Bad Spell”; 40) “My Grandson, the Warlock”; 41) “The Joker is a Card”; 42) “Take Two Aspirins and Half a Pint of Porpoise Milk”; 43) “Trick or Treat”; 44) “The Very Informal Dress”; 45) “And Then I Wrote”; 46) “Junior Executive”; 47) “
Aunt Clara's
Old Flame”; 48) “A Strange Little Visitor”; 49) “My Boss the Teddy Bear”; 50) “Speak the Truth”; 51) “A Vision of Sugarplums”; 52) “The Magic Cabin”; 53) “Maid to Order”; 54) “And Then There Were Three”; 55) “My Baby the Tycoon”; 56) “
Samantha
Meets the Folks”; 57) “Fastest Gun on Madison Avenue”; 58) “The Dancing Bear”; 59) “Double Tate”; 60) “
Samantha
the Dressmaker”; 61) “The Horse's Mouth”; 62) “Baby's First Paragraph”; 63) “The Leprechaun”; 64) “Double Split”; 65) “Disappearing
Samantha
”; 66) “Follow that Witch (Part One)”; 67) “Follow that Witch (Part Two)”; 68) “A Bum Raps”; 69) “Divided He Falls”; 70) “Man's Best Friend”; 71) “The Catnapper”; 72) “What Every Young Man Should Know”; 73) “The Girl with the Golden Nose”; 74) “Prodigy”

Season Three (1966–67)

75) “Nobody's Perfect”; 76) “The Moment of Truth”; 77) “Witches and Warlocks Are My Favorite Things”; 78) “Accidental Twins”; 79) “A Most Unusual Wood Nymph”; 80) “
Endora
Moves in for a Spell”; 81) “Twitch or Treat”; 82) “Dangerous Diaper Dan”; 83) “The Short Happy Circuit of
Aunt Clara
”; 84) “I'd Rather Twitch Than Fight”; 85) “Oedipus Hex”; 86) “
Sam's
Spooky Chair”; 87) “My Friend Ben (Part One)”; 88) “
Samantha
for the Defense (Part Two)”; 89) “A Gazebo Never Forgets”; 90) “Soap Box Derby”; 91) “
Sam
in the Moon”; 92) “Ho Ho the Clown”; 93) “Super Car”; 94) “The Corn is as High as a Guernsey's Eye”; 95) “The Trial and Error of
Aunt Clara
”; 96) “Three Wishes”; 97) “I Remember You … Sometimes”; 98) “Art for
Sam's
Sake”; 99) “Charlie Harper, Winner”; 100) “
Aunt Clara's
Victoria Victory”; 101) “The Crone of Cawdor”; 102) “No More Mr. Nice Guy”; 103) “It's Wishcraft”; 104) “How to Fail in Business with All Kinds of Help”; 105) “Bewitched, Bothered and Infuriated”; 106) “Nobody But a Frog Knows How to Live”; 107) “There's Gold in Them There Pills”

Season Four (1967–68)

108) “Long Live the Queen”; 109) “Toys in Babeland”; 110) “Business, Italian Style”; 111) “Double, Double Toil and Trouble”; 112) “Cheap, Cheap”; 113) “No Zip in My Zap”; 114) “Birdies, Bogeys and Baxter”; 115) “The Safe and Sane Halloween”; 116) “Out of Synch, Out of Mind”; 117) “That Was No Chick, That Was My Wife”; 118) “Allergic to Ancient Macedonian Dodo Birds”; 119) “
Samantha's
Thanksgiving to Remember”; 120) “Solid Gold Mother-in-Law”; 121) “My, What Big Ears You Have”; 122) “I Get Your Nanny, You Get My Goat”; 123) “Humbug Not Spoken Here”; 124) “
Samantha's
Da Vinci Dilemma”; 125) “Once in a Vial”; 126) “Snob in the Grass”; 127)” If They Never Met”; 128) “Hippie, Hippie, Hooray”; 129) “A Prince of a Guy”; 130) “McTavish”; 131) “How Green Was My Grass”; 132) “To Twitch Or Not To Twitch”; 133) “Playmates”; 134) “
Tabitha's
Cranky Spell”; 135) “I Confess”; 136) “A Majority of Two”; 137) “
Samantha's
Secret Saucer”; 138) “The No-Harm Charm”; 139) “Man of the Year”; 140) “Splitsville”

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