Lincoln Discussion Symposium

Full Version: The Twilight Zone: The Passerby
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I just saw this episode which I didn’t really remember. Then at the very end- who is portrayed? Abraham Lincoln! And a really outstanding one at that! Are you all familiar with this episode?
(11-01-2020 08:15 PM)LincolnMan Wrote: [ -> ]I just saw this episode which I didn’t really remember. Then at the very end- who is portrayed? Abraham Lincoln! And a really outstanding one at that! Are you all familiar with this episode?

I had not seen see this episode previously.

Here is the part Bill is citing: CLICK HERE.
The presenter is a dead ringer for Lincoln. Excuse the expression!
(11-02-2020 06:02 AM)RJNorton Wrote: [ -> ]
(11-01-2020 08:15 PM)LincolnMan Wrote: [ -> ]I just saw this episode which I didn’t really remember. Then at the very end- who is portrayed? Abraham Lincoln! And a really outstanding one at that! Are you all familiar with this episode?

I had not seen see this episode previously.

Here is the part Bill is citing: CLICK HERE.

“The valiant never taste of death but once.
Of all the wonders that I yet have heard,
It seems to me most strange that men should fear;
Seeing that death, a necessary end,
Will come, when it will come.” – Julius Caesar, act ii, sc. 2.
(11-02-2020 06:29 AM)LincolnMan Wrote: [ -> ]The presenter is a dead ringer for Lincoln. Excuse the expression!

The actor's name is Austin Green.
He played President Abraham Lincoln in Medic: Black Friday (1955), The Twilight Zone: The Passersby (1961), and The Story of Mankind (1957).
https://www.imdb.com/name/nm0337619/?ref_=tt_cl_t6
(11-02-2020 06:54 AM)David Lockmiller Wrote: [ -> ]
(11-02-2020 06:02 AM)RJNorton Wrote: [ -> ]
(11-01-2020 08:15 PM)LincolnMan Wrote: [ -> ]I just saw this episode which I didn’t really remember. Then at the very end- who is portrayed? Abraham Lincoln! And a really outstanding one at that! Are you all familiar with this episode?

I had not seen see this episode previously.

Here is the part Bill is citing: CLICK HERE.

“The valiant never taste of death but once.
Of all the wonders that I yet have heard,
It seems to me most strange that men should fear;
Seeing that death, a necessary end,
Will come, when it will come.” – Julius Caesar, act ii, sc. 2.

Love the Shakespeare quote!
James Gregory was in that episode - loved him in Barney Miller
(11-02-2020 08:42 PM)LincolnMan Wrote: [ -> ]
(11-02-2020 06:54 AM)David Lockmiller Wrote: [ -> ]

“The valiant never taste of death but once.
Of all the wonders that I yet have heard,
It seems to me most strange that men should fear;
Seeing that death, a necessary end,
Will come, when it will come.” – Julius Caesar, act ii, sc. 2.

Love the Shakespeare quote!

Bill, I went online to see if Lincoln had used this Shakespeare quote, but I found first this interesting quote and historical observation:

In 1849, Abraham Lincoln sought to be federal commissioner of lands. He lost that post and was offered the territorial governorship of Oregon as a consolation prize. Under the influence of his wife Mary, Lincoln turned it down. When a congressman from Chicago later suggested that his decision had been providential, Lincoln replied: “Yes, you are probably right,” adding, “I have all my life been a fatalist. What is to be, will be; or, rather, I have found all my life, as Hamlet says, ‘There’s a divinity that shapes our ends, Rough-hew them how we will.’” (Isaac N. Arnold, The Life of Abraham Lincoln (Lincoln, Neb.: Bison Books, 1994), 81.

And, here is the source of the Lincoln-Shakespeare connection: Churchill, Lincoln, and Shakespeare, By LEWIS E. LEHRMAN| December 16, 2016

I went back online to the previously cited source and found this interesting little story:

William Stoddard recalled one night when the President sat in his box, awaiting the curtain: “…there were present an abnormal number of opera glasses, all of which from time to time were aimed at our box….One of the President’s oversensitive critics had a seat away back toward the entrance, and his soul, if he had one, was moved within him. He arose on his feet and shouted out something like this: ‘There he is! That’s all he cares for his poor soldiers.’

“The President did not move a muscle, but another party, in uniform, was instantly up, declaring vociferously, ‘De President haf a right to his music! Put out dot feller! De President ees all right! Let him haf his music!’ There was a confused racket for a few seconds, and then the luckless critic went out of the theater, borne on the strong arms of several boys in blue who agreed with their German comrade as to the right of Abraham Lincoln to as much theatrical relief as they themselves were having.”

(William O. Stoddard, Lincoln’s Third Secretary (Hicksville, N.Y.: Exposition Press, 1955), 165.)
Thank you David. Enjoyed your research!
(11-02-2020 11:11 PM)JMadonna Wrote: [ -> ]James Gregory was in that episode - loved him in Barney Miller

Agree. Loved him and the whole cast really.
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