| October 11, 
                1956. Purple Heart Honoree, Edward Rod Serling has been out of 
                the military for 9 years. As a paratrooper he was injured by shrapnel. 
                Now, for the last four years he has been working in the television 
                industry as a writer.
 
 This evening, Thursday night at 9:30 on Playhouse 90, he is to 
                reach a pinnacle of success when his 90 minute drama becomes the 
                first ever original story to be broadcasted live on national tv. 
                The preceding 3 weeks of rehearsal for Requiem of a Heavyweight 
                went by with only one glitch. One of the actors, long time comedic 
                star Ed Wynn, is appearing in his first dramatic role, and as 
                his co-starring son said "He was just awful."
 
 Rod Serling had wanted to take his own name off the credits in 
                fear of the story being a failure. They wanted to cut Ed from 
                the cast, and they even held secret rehearsals with an under-study. 
                Finally, towards the deadline of the show, Ed's character took 
                shape and all felt the evening would be a success.
 
 The only other problem Rod knew he would experience is the nervousness 
                of watching his show. In the directors control room Rod would 
                stand behind the director and comment on the actors: whether they 
                were doing their lines right or not. It got to the point where 
                one of his directors, John Frankenheimer, had told Rod that he 
                needed to leave.
 
 Being in live tv wasn't new to Rod. He had been writing for 4 
                years for television but he acquired his first national attention 
                in January '55 when his play Patterns was broadcasted on Kraft 
                Television Theater. It was a huge critical success and was also 
                the first drama ever to be repeated on national television.
 
 This night on Playhouse 90 was no different for his nerves. Within 
                the first 10 minutes his Ed Wynn fears got to him and he left 
                the control room before being asked to leave. Outside the door 
                he bumped into casting director Ethel Winant. They got into a 
                discussion of the shows success and how Rod wouldn't be able to 
                enjoy the actual production until he saw the Kinescope filmed 
                version. A new thought popped up into Rod's head that the Kinescope 
                was not working properly. Last weeks show, Forbidden Area, didn't 
                get filmed because the film camera wasn't loaded properly.
 
 Walking into the dark room with Ethel, Rod heard the whirring 
                of the projector but wanted to get a closer look. While arched 
                over the Kinescope, Ethel let the door shut and when Rod straightened 
                up he bumped the Kinescope. It was just a second, but in that 
                second the live airways being transferred into the tv, out of 
                the tv and into the film camera, escaped in the black room. Rod 
                froze. The transmission beam caught him in the eye and he now 
                found himself outside of the projector room, outside of the studio, 
                and inside of a different room. Where he was he didn't know. Two 
                distorted figures started to approach him and about 8 seconds 
                from the flood of light he was back in the Kinescope room. "Ethel?" 
                he said.
 
 Ethel was still in the room. She could tell that her eyes were 
                affected by the flood of light but it was too dark to tell. They 
                went outside of the room. Rod's eyes did not feel any different 
                and Ethel's eyes took just a little while to re-dialate to the 
                normal lights.
 
 Something had triggered in Rod. He had gone home from the show 
                feeling that he was holding a memory that he needed to bring out. 
                When he got a chance to be alone he sat in the darkness and tried 
                to concentrate on his experience of that evening. Slowly he felt 
                that an image was being drawn to him. He felt he was losing his 
                sense of smell and touch. To his vision it looked like the fabric 
                of his eyes were being taken away. He experienced people, and 
                emotions, and different eras, and even a realm beyond earth. They 
                were all being brought to his consciousness. He was moving, but 
                he was no longer in his home. The visions lasted for hours and 
                he became fully conscious of the hypnosis he had gone through 
                over 9 years earlier in Roswell, NM. He finally lost consciousness.
 
 When he woke up the next morning he wanted to share his experience, 
                but he knew the most important thing as a writer was to put it 
                down in writing. He went to his dictaphone where he normally would 
                record his plays and act out all of the characters. He turned 
                on the dictaphone and said, "There is a fifth dimension beyond 
                that which is known to man. It is a dimension as vast as space 
                and as timeless as infinity. It is the middle ground between light 
                and shadow, between science and superstition, and it lies between 
                the pit of man's fears, and the summit of his knowledge."
 
 After remembering the government hypnosis, Rod felt a sense of 
                worry about who he was going to tell. He didn't want to have a 
                government conspiracy on his hands and he also didn't want to 
                do anything to endanger his family and friends. He felt that he 
                should tell his story to another military man, his director friend, 
                John Frankenheimer. Frankenheimer, 6 years younger than Serling, 
                had heard of military hypnosis during his time in the Air Force. 
                He remembers the psychiatrist on the base asking him if he would 
                ever consider being hypnotized. Frankenheimer said he wasn't against 
                it but he never was approached about it again.
 
 Serling told Frankenheimer all about moving the Kinescope and 
                they actually watched Requiem for a Heavyweight to see the moment 
                where the movie camera is bumped from the tv. This happened in 
                the early part of the show when the Doctor was telling the prizefighter 
                that he could no longer fight. His moment of walking out and closing 
                the door was when Rod bumped the Kinescope.
 
 Rod continued to tell Frankenheimer about what he remembers from 
                the hypnosis, being in Roswell, and also how the light in the 
                dark kinescope room had triggered his memories. Frankenheimer 
                allowed for there to be truth to his story, but he didn't want 
                to just believe it outright. After discussing it at length, the 
                question came up on whether there were any women being hypnotized. 
                Serling had not remembered women being with him and the other 
                12. Frankenheimer suggested that they find a woman confidant to 
                bounce these stories off of. The spoke to Ethel Winant.
 
 Since she was in the Kinescope room with Serling, they thought 
                she would be a good person to keep the story to herself. She did 
                serve during WW2 at warehouses of Lockeed Aircraft riveting p-38's. 
                Ethel didn't have the experience Rod did. When the door shut behind 
                her in the Kinescope room, she had turned around to reopen it. 
                She remembered the light and also that it must have been really 
                bright to hurt her eyes when her back was against the Kinescope.
 
 After hearing Rod's story, she certainly didn't think that she 
                was part of a hypnosis governmental plan, but her imagination 
                was strong enough that she knew not to disregard Rod's tale just 
                because it went beyond the normal everyday-life happening. She 
                thought that he possibly was experiencing something that had truth 
                behind it. She reminded him that others believe that some kind 
                of craft had crashed in New Mexico. Until Rod's story, she had 
                believed what she had heard on tv, that it was a craft identified 
                as American Military.
 
 Rod continued to have flashes of memory and they became more detailed. 
                He knew that also the memories could be temporary. He made up 
                his mind that he needed to write them down in a form that he could 
                understand but that were coded enough so no one else would. He 
                wanted to write them as fictionalized accounts and also write 
                them with just enough information that anyone who possibly had 
                a similar experience would see and understand. He knew he had 
                to focus on producing these accounts and he knew that he couldn't 
                do this and also keep his current job writing solely for Playhouse 
                90.
 
 Rod shocked the writing world when he decided to go on his own 
                to write a series he called the Twilight Zone. His success as 
                a live television writer was at an all time high. He just received 
                another Emmy, this one for Requiem for a Heavyweight. To the rest 
                of the entertainment world, he was making the wrong choice. As 
                writer Christopher Conlon later wrote, "It was an announcement 
                that sent shock waves through the industry; it was as if Ernest 
                Hemingway had declared he would stop writing novels and instead 
                concentrate on comic books." (Christopher Conlon in Southern California 
                Sorcers as read in http://rodserling.com/csorcerers.htm)
  
                Another 
                  link that Rod was experiencing was remembering pieces of why 
                  the hypnosis had begun. His memories were vague. He knew there 
                  was an FDR connection, and one about apparitions in Holland 
                  and also about the artist from Holland, MC Escher. Escher was 
                  at his greatest success in America around the time that Serling 
                  came into knowledge of his new dimension. Rod remembers laughing 
                  to himself when reading about Escher and his designs he called 
                  "patterns", because his own first great success came with his 
                  show that he had named "Patterns". Also Eschers themes in artwork 
                  were about an approaching infinity, something that Rod felt 
                  was brought to him. Serling felt that he was a guinea pig for 
                  the government to experience this higher realm when they themselves 
                  wouldn't approach it. He found a quote by Escher that echoed 
                  his feelings, "[Mathemeticians] have opened the gate leading 
                  to an extensive domain, but they have not entered this domain 
                  themselves . . . [they are] more interested in the way in which 
                  the gate is opened than in the garden lying behind it. 
 It gave him an eerie feeling when thinking about it, and if 
                  the government had also somehow used Escher as one of their 
                  subjects. Escher had tried to enlist in the military when he 
                  was in his 20's but he was rejected. Maybe the government of 
                  the Netherlands had been years ahead of America in hypnosis 
                  and they didn't want Escher in the military until they were 
                  able to properly use his mind. His family, both being involved 
                  in government, probably were following governmental orders and 
                  keeping tabs on MC and allowing for a time in the future when 
                  they would deliver their son up to the military psychiatrists.
 
 Serling wrote for almost 2 years, getting his thoughts on paper. 
                  During this time he also was getting other plays performed on 
                  Playhouse 90. He kept in touch with Frankenheimer and Winant. 
                  During this time, three of his plays, shown on Playhouse 90, 
                  are directed by Frankenheimer. Through conversations he had 
                  with Frankenheimer, he saw Escher-esque ideas that were similar 
                  between them. Escher had a curiosity with objects being in prison 
                  and being freed. This furthered his belief that Frankenheimer 
                  also was used for hypnosis. He asked Frankenheimer to look through 
                  his first Playhouse 90 play, Forbidden Area, and see if there 
                  were any themes he felt drawn to. He also offered him some ideas 
                  he had about a future script about a government takeover plot. 
                  Frankenheimer was drawn to these themes and also felt he wanted 
                  to explore the ideas of the government hypnotizing their own 
                  soldiers. In 1957 Frankenheimer directed his first motion picture, 
                  Young Stranger. He hated it.
 
 After Twilight Zone was in progress, Serling wanted to explore 
                  the possibility that other people were a part of this government 
                  experiment from 1947. He felt a connection to Requiem for a 
                  Heavyweight, and thought that his writing this script may have 
                  been from some of his influences experienced under hypnosis. 
                  He himself was a boxer while in the war. The character he wrote 
                  about was a fighter that had been lead for 14 years into boxing 
                  rings, never knowing that his life was being controlled by his 
                  manager, who turned against him. The first scene, of the original 
                  broadcast, has the fighter coming to the viewing audience in 
                  a daze. Not really knowing where he is and being taken into 
                  a room, only to come in and out of consciousness with a bright 
                  light in his face and people, who to him were distorted, looking 
                  over him.
 
 Serling wondered if this was his own memories of when he first 
                  felt a presence of the other dimension. As if influenced by 
                  the FDR hypnosis, he decided to have his script produced for 
                  tv in the Netherlands. Serling decided, though, to change the 
                  ending of the script before it went out. In the original, the 
                  fighter leaves his hard life and goes back to Tennessee to begin 
                  again with only memories to haunt him. In the new version, the 
                  fighter is from New Mexico but doesn't get sanctuary from his 
                  past. Instead he is put in front of others and ridiculed for 
                  his heritage.
 
 In 1959 the show came out in the Netherlands as Requiem Voor 
                  een Zwaargewicht. It had fair success, but Serling never knew 
                  of the 11-year old boy from The Hague who connected to the script. 
                  His name was George Kooymans. Too young to think that he was 
                  being affected by Serling's script, Kooymans became obsessed 
                  with Serling's work and especially to a director that Serling 
                  worked with, John Frankenheimer. The Frank name carried weight 
                  in Holland, that of Hitler's most famous victim who hid in Amsterdam, 
                  Anne Frank. Kooymans took to director and writer, and 2 years 
                  later in 1961 he started a band. Like Serling, he became obsessed 
                  with the themes he saw in Serling and Frankenheimer. Life, death, 
                  God, angels, devils, space ships, imprisonment. He didn't know 
                  why he was connected to them but he constantly had to write 
                  lyrics, the way Serling had to write Twilight Zone scripts.
 
 In 1962, Requiem for a heavyweight became a motion picture. 
                  It contained the new ending and Serling also had a new cast 
                  inserted. It starred tv sensation Jackie Gleason
 
 In the 60's, after Frankenheimer had further researched Serling's 
                  scripts, he decided to take on a project directing a movie that 
                  would be the brightest light in his career. The film dealt with 
                  hypnosis, government hypnosis that would make a normal soldier 
                  into an assassin. The soldier, with a rifle, would kill an American 
                  political figure without knowing what he had done. The film 
                  came out in 1962 and would be Frankenheimer's greatest success 
                  and the greatest monkey on his back. It would also confirm to 
                  Serling that Frankenheimer had also been under direct hypnosis 
                  and the two of them had been mislead into writing and directing 
                  scripts that would carry out a message.
 
 One year 
                  after the film, a former marine was arrested for shooting and 
                  killing the president. The assassin, who used a rifle, his name 
                  was Lee Harvey Oswald. The actor who played the assassin in 
                  the movie was Lawrence Harvey. The president was John F. Kennedy. 
                  His closest friend, Frank Sinatra, was the main protagonist 
                  in Frankenheimer's movie. 5 years later Frankenheimer would 
                  suffer déjà vu when one of his closest friends, presidential 
                  nominee Robert Kennedy was assassinated. Frankenheimer had droven 
                  Robert that day from their home to the the Ambassador Hotel 
                  in Los Angeles. 
 After JFK's shooting, Sinatra had the movie removed from circulation. 
                  It stayed out of the public eye for 25 years. The movie company, 
                  United Artists, continued to fight with Sinatra over this issue.
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