I am, of course talking about the classic "Twilight Zone" episode, 1960's "A Stop At Willoughby." It haunted me the first time I saw it, and I have written about it on here before, but the tune "Beautiful Dreamer" caught my attention on this viewing.
Why? Well, so many relate to this story, the idea of being able to abandon the pressures of one's life for something more ideal and serene. Hell, my last two years at work mirrored Garth Williams' (James Daly) experience
The song "Beautiful Dreamer" is about dreams, of coming beauty, of abandonment of sorrow. It promises things most of us long for at one time or another, just as Garth Williams yearns for Willoughby. For many can retreat to Willoughby via sleep or reverie fueled fantasies.
But for Garth, who was more desperate, it became a need to escape that resulted in..... well, I won't tell viewers unfamiliar with it.
Serling was dissing the pressures of the modern world, and I have to wonder if that included the conventions of heterosexual marriage at the time. Just watch the scenes between Garth and his wife Janie (Patricia Donahue). I went through the same thing with relatives, who demanded I get a job day one after finishing college! Fuck them! I found my way!
And fortunately, the life I forged turned out to be my own Willoughby.
As Rod Serling said, "It comes with sunlight, and serenity, and is a part of the Twilight Zone."
4 comments:
Good for you, forging your own path!
Why must there be So much pressure and judgment!
To “succeed” in school, career, relationships, physical appearance...
I prefer my own definition of success!!!
If a man does not keep pace with his companions, ,perhaps he hears the beat of a different drummer. Let him step to the music that he hears, however measured or far away...
Victoria,
It took me a long time to come to terms with
all this. My youth, good and bad, was all about
finding out how I am and accepting it. You could
not pay me to go through adolescence again.
Victoria,
The older I get the gladder I am I did
not follow the conventions of the day. I
might still be living in my hometown, in
my house or nearby, regretting I did not
follow the NYC path.
Oh, me too!!!
I am far, far away from my hometown in Pennsylvania.
I don’t even like to Think about it
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