| We've identified the story all right, but the TV show is turning out to be a real "Twilight Zone" moment! The 1962 adaptation on the British TV series, "Out of this World," starring Jane Asher, is by far the best contender, being the right vintage, except for a few little details: the website where I found it says only 13 episodes were ever made, and the only one still in existence is Asimov's "Little Lost Robot." Also, I don't remember the actors being British. The radio play and the two movies are automatically out of the running because what I saw was black-and-white, on television, certainly aired after we got color TV, and almost certainly before 1989! It was several years after I read the story. According to my handy reference list, I finished the book containing this story on May 7, 1978. My idea of where I might have seen this was, KREM, a Spokane station, had the "First and Last Golden Days of Television" around 1975. It proved so successful they had a "Second and Last Golden Days of Television" and continued for several years; it can't have been more than 10 or 12, so I'm guessing this took place early to mid-1980s, several years after I read the story, but probably before 1989! (Their marathons ran in early September, but even if this was part of one, I don't suppose folks at the station would know now.) My recollection is this: I caught a few minutes of the show, which I got the impression was an episode of Hitchcock or some suspense program, as my mom was watching. I can just picture the girl in it, too. If I could see a picture of Jane Asher in "Out of this World" I could tell immediately if this was her. This girl was older than the one in the story, who was 16. I would guess the actress to be perhaps some 10 years older than that. She kind of resembled Lois Lane on the 1950s "Superman" series, had that sort of short dark haircut, the classic facial structure and slightly overly-dramatic manner of some actresses of that time, what I mean is she was like someone out of the original "Invasion of the Body Snatchers" as far as style. I felt the show to be extremely low-budget, like slightly lower-tech than "Star Trek," with just a sort of stage to represent the space ship, elevator door to be the storage closet door she came out of, and so on. I KNOW it was this story as I immediately recognized it, and being on my way somewhere, did not want to stop to watch. When I came home, Mom said she had shut it off--she "couldn't stand the suspense," but wanted to know the ending, which I told her. This has me baffled. I was just so sure it would turn out to be a Hitchcock episode! |