Darkroom (TV series)

{{Short description|Television series}}

{{Use mdy dates|date=March 2025}}

{{Infobox television

| image =

| caption =

| genre = Horror
Fantasy
Thriller

| runtime = 60 mins.

| creator =

| developer =

| executive_producer = Peter S. Fischer

| producer =

| location = Universal Studios - 100 Universal City Plaza, Universal City, California, USA

| director = {{Plainlist|

}}

| starring =

| narrated = James Coburn

| opentheme = David Shire

| endtheme =

| country = United States

| company = Universal Television

| network = ABC

| first_aired = {{Start date|1981|11|27}}

| last_aired = {{End date|1982|1|15}}

| num_episodes = 7 (16 segments)

| list_episodes = List of Darkroom episodes

}}

Darkroom is an American thriller anthology television series produced by Universal Television{{cite book |last1=Muir |first1=John Kenneth |title=Terror Television: American Series, 1970-1999 |date=February 25, 2013 |publisher=McFarland |isbn=978-1-4766-0416-9 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=yxpDUAFrwfwC&dq=Darkroom+NBC&pg=PT154 |access-date=August 8, 2022 |language=en}} that aired on ABC from November 27, 1981, to July 8, 1982.{{cite book |last1=Brooks |first1=Tim |last2=Marsh |first2=Earle F. |title=The Complete Directory to Prime Time Network and Cable TV Shows, 1946-Present |date=June 24, 2009 |publisher=Random House Publishing Group |isbn=978-0-307-48320-1 |page=328 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=w8KztFy6QYwC&dq=Darkroom+NBC&pg=PA328 |access-date=August 8, 2022 |language=en}} Each 60-minute episode featured two or more stories of varying length with a new story and a new cast, but each of the episode wraparound segments was hosted by James Coburn. Among the performers who appeared on the series were Esther Rolle, Helen Hunt, Claude Akins, Richard Anderson, Lawrence Hilton-Jacobs, Carole Cook, David Carradine, Billy Crystal, Pat Buttram, Brian Dennehy, Lawrence Pressman, Dub Taylor, Rue McClanahan, Lloyd Bochner, Ronny Cox, R. G. Armstrong, Jack Carter, and June Lockhart.

Opening narration

The title sequence featured a dolly-in through the corridors of a house to a safe-lighted darkroom in a crawlspace under the stairs. James Coburn's voice could be heard over this dolly-in, narrating it as follows:

{{Blockquote|You're in a house. Maybe your own... maybe one you've never seen before. You feel it. Something evil. You run, but there's no escape... nowhere to turn. You feel something beckoning you... drawing you into the terror that awaits you in the Darkroom!Television Introductions: Narrated TV Program Openings since 1949 By Vincent Terrace}}

As Coburn's voiceover reached the point with "no escape... nowhere to turn," the camera turned toward various walls and closed doors.

Syndication

The Sci Fi Channel aired the show in the mid-1990s, including the pilot episode. USA Network also reran the show at one point in the 1980s. It was also available for streaming on NBC's official website.{{cite web |title=Darkroom |url=https://www.nbc.com/darkroom/about |website=NBC |access-date=February 22, 2022}}

Episodes

{{Episode table |background=#000000 |overall= |title= |director= |writer= |airdate= |episodes=

{{Episode list

| EpisodeNumber=1

| Title=Closed Circuit / Stay Tuned, We'll Be Right Back

| WrittenBy = {{StoryTeleplay|s=Carter Scholz|t=Alan Brennert}}, Simon Muntner

| DirectedBy = Rick Rosenthal, Paul Lynch

| OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1981|11|27}}

| ShortSummary = Aging reporter Greg Conway (Robert Webber) suspects his fellow anchor Arthur Desmond (John Randolph) has been replaced with a double. In spite of protests from his producer Linda Beckwith (Mary Frann) and network head Bill Bellamy (Richard Anderson), Greg continues to investigate and discovers that the network has replaced Desmond and several others with computer simulations, while the real people are allowed to live out their lives in luxury. Despite his initial reluctance, Conway is persuaded into allowing a simulation of him to take over his career and allow him to follow his dreams of traveling the world, getting married, and writing a novel. As he prepares to leave for Paris, Bellamy has him abducted and reveals that he must keep Conway imprisoned so that the network can sustain the illusion. Bellamy then leaves as Conway futilely begs him not to.


A man (Lawrence Pressman) discovers his crystal radio is in contact with the U-Boat that sunk his father’s ship in World War II.

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{{Episode list

| EpisodeNumber=2

| Title=The Bogeyman Will Get You / Uncle George

| WrittenBy = {{StoryTeleplay|s=Robert Bloch|t=Robert Bloch}}, Peter S. Fischer

| DirectedBy = John McPherson, Rick Rosenthal

| OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1981|12|04}}

| ShortSummary = A teenager (Helen Hunt) is convinced by her horror movie loving sister that a recent string of murders was perpetrated by a vampire, and she begins to suspect an old acquaintance (Randy Powell) is the vampire.


After the death of Uncle George, a couple (Claude Akins and June Lockhart) hire a homeless man (Dub Taylor) to impersonate him so they can get his pension check.

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{{Episode list

| EpisodeNumber=3

| Title=Needlepoint / Siege of 31 August

| WrittenBy = Violet Pullbrook, {{StoryTeleplay|s=Davis Grubb|t=Peter S. Fischer}}

| DirectedBy = Paul Lynch, Peter Crane

| OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1981|12|11}}

| ShortSummary = An elderly woman (Esther Rolle) uses voodoo to take revenge on a pimp (Lawrence Hilton-Jacobs) who took advantage of her granddaughter from beyond the grave.


A Vietnam veteran turned farmer (Ronny Cox) buys his son a military playset, but he keeps hearing battle noises in the night and he discovers the toy soldiers are alive.

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{{Episode list

| EpisodeNumber=4

| Title=A Quiet Funeral / Make Up

| WrittenBy = Robert Bloch / {{StoryTeleplay|s=Robert R. McCammon|t=Jeffrey Bloom}}

| DirectedBy = Curtis Harrington

| OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1981|12|18}}

| ShortSummary = A gangster (Robert F. Lyons) attends the funeral of his partner (Eugene Roche), whom he double crossed and killed, and finds himself in for a nasty surprise.


A down-on-his-luck guy (Billy Crystal) buys the makeup case of a dead actor from his widow (Signe Hasso), who claims that the makeup allowed him to literally become his characters. After discovering the makeup allows him to literally become whatever character is inscribed in the container, he decides to get back at his sleazy boss (Brian Dennehy).

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{{Episode list

| EpisodeNumber=5

| Title=The Partnership / Daisies / Catnip

| WrittenBy = {{StoryTeleplay|s=William F. Nolan|t=Christopher Crowe}}, {{StoryTeleplay|s=Fredric Brown|t=Peter S. Fischer}}, Robert Bloch

| DirectedBy = John McPherson, Paul Lynch, Jeffrey Bloom

| OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1981|12|25}}

| ShortSummary = A biker (David Carradine) is lured by an old man (Pat Buttram) to a dilapidated funhouse to meet his mysterious partner.


A philandering botanist (Lloyd Bochner) develops a machine that reads the minds of daisies, which greatly interests his unaware wife (Rue McClanahan).
After killing an old woman rumored to be a witch in a hit-and-run, a local troublemaker (Cyril O'Reilly) is stalked by her pet black cat.

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{{Episode list

| EpisodeNumber=6

| Title=Lost in Translation / Guillotine

| WrittenBy = Mary Ann Kasica & Michael Scheff, {{StoryTeleplay|s=Cornell Woolrich|t=Peter Allan Fields}}

| DirectedBy = Rick Rosenthal

| OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1982|01|08}}

| ShortSummary = An unscrupulous archaeologist (Andrew Prine) hires a translator (Michael Zand) to translate a scroll that contains a spell that gives one power over one’s enemies.


In 19th century France, a man (Frank M. Bernard) sentenced to die by the guillotine and his lover (Patti D'Arbanville) decide to exploit a loophole in the law that states that should the executioner die on the day of the execution, the condemned man will go free.

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{{Episode list

| EpisodeNumber=7

| Title=Exit Line / Who's There? / The Rarest of Wines

| WrittenBy = {{StoryTeleplay|s=Richard Levinson & William Link|t=Peter S. Fischer}}, Brian Clemens, Gerald K. Siegel

| DirectedBy = Peter Crane, Paul Lynch

| OriginalAirDate={{Start date|1982|01|15}}

| ShortSummary = A talented young actor (Stan Shaw) and his agent (Jack Carter), both try desperately to convince an influential theater critic (Samantha Eggar) to change her negative opinion of his performance in a revamped version of Othello.


A man (Grant Goodeve) tries to convince his neighbor (Michael Lembeck), who intends to murder his wife out of his belief she cheated on him, not to do the deed.
Following the death of their mother, her ne'er-do-well son (Henry Polic II) is upset she has left him her house and possessions and her company to his more responsible sister (Judith Chapman). When she refuses to give him part of the company, he begins tormenting her by dissipating his share of the estate and selling the things that mean the most to her.

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References

{{Reflist}}