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'Way Out

  • TV Series
  • 1961
  • 25m
IMDb RATING
7.8/10
202
YOUR RATING
'Way Out (1961)
DramaFantasyHorrorMysterySci-FiThriller

Macabre 25-minute tales delving into horror, fantasy, and sci-fi. Dahl's disconcerting monologues introduce twisted stories involving undertakers, frogs, and murdering rivals with ground tig... Read allMacabre 25-minute tales delving into horror, fantasy, and sci-fi. Dahl's disconcerting monologues introduce twisted stories involving undertakers, frogs, and murdering rivals with ground tiger's whiskers.Macabre 25-minute tales delving into horror, fantasy, and sci-fi. Dahl's disconcerting monologues introduce twisted stories involving undertakers, frogs, and murdering rivals with ground tiger's whiskers.

  • Stars
    • Roald Dahl
    • Paul Tremaine
    • George Turner
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.8/10
    202
    YOUR RATING
    • Stars
      • Roald Dahl
      • Paul Tremaine
      • George Turner
    • 30User reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Episodes14

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    TopTop-rated1 season1961

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    Top cast83

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    Roald Dahl
    Roald Dahl
    • Self - Host…
    • 1961
    Paul Tremaine
    • Self - Announcer
    • 1961
    George Turner
    • John Ventry…
    • 1961
    Lois Smith
    Lois Smith
    • Louise
    • 1961
    John McGiver
    John McGiver
    • Mr. Rana
    • 1961
    Henry Jones
    Henry Jones
    • William Pearl
    • 1961
    Don Keefer
    Don Keefer
    • George Atterbury
    • 1961
    Constance Ford
    Constance Ford
    • Freda Mansfield
    • 1961
    Milton Selzer
    Milton Selzer
    • Hervey
    • 1961
    Alfred Ryder
    Alfred Ryder
    • Michael Drake
    • 1961
    Philip Coolidge
    Philip Coolidge
    • Professor Ernest Lydecker
    • 1961
    Moultrie Patten
    • George Carver
    • 1961
    Fritz Weaver
    Fritz Weaver
    • Dr. Landy
    • 1961
    Madeleine Sherwood
    Madeleine Sherwood
    • Cora Tench
    • 1961
    Charlotte Rae
    Charlotte Rae
    • Hazel Atterbury
    • 1961
    Barbara Baxley
    Barbara Baxley
    • The Woman
    • 1961
    Anthony Dawson
    Anthony Dawson
    • George Frobisher
    • 1961
    Rosemary Murphy
    Rosemary Murphy
    • Bernice Lydecker
    • 1961
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews30

    7.8202
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    Featured reviews

    10thegalaxybeing

    Excellent & hard to find

    This is a sadly overlooked anthology series which only ran from March to July 1961 (14 episodes). Although it had the low budget look of the early drama anthologies, it was quite unique and twisted. It often contained dialog that was both creepy and amusing. The series was hosted by Roald Dahl and he did an excellent job of setting up the mood for the stories. His monologues were clever, somewhat like Alfred Hitchcock. The stories themselves included such diverse plots as a man who has a chemical that can change facial features by touching up photos, an actor who can't remove his Quasimoto make-up, a new neighbor who can turn people into frogs, a married man who falls in love with a decapitated woman kept alive by electricity (with a light bulb for a head!), a woman who keeps waking up from nightmares only to find she is still dreaming, an undertaker who seems willing to help murderers "dispose of the body", an actress who discovers that during night rehearsals actors are really murdered & a dying old professor who is given an offer by a doctor to keep his brain alive in a tank after his body is dead. This show aired the 1/2 hour before The Twilight Zone on Friday nights. Seeing them as a child was quite frightening. Now seeing the only 5 stories that I could find as an adult, I can see how well written they were. I am really hoping this series shows up on DVD. At only 14 episodes, the whole series would make a great set.
    8sexythomasjefferson

    Lady with Light Bulb for a Head! Timeless Horror

    I was seven years old when I saw this episode, and these many many years later it still is in place as one of the creepiest concepts and images I have ever experienced. Hope to see this one day on DVD, or on TV someplace. Far scarier and more unsettling -- at least this one episode that has stayed alive in my head -- than anything else, except perhaps some segments of "Thriller" with Karloff. Glad to see other people remembering this with the same intensity as I have! Obviously there were lots of us kids staying up and devouring this material, and funny that of all these, basically only "The Twilight Zone" and "The Outer Limits" still resonate in any major way. "T Zone" because of the number of episodes became a classic, "Outer Limits" because of its sheer excellence despite a low # of episodes. Almost no hope for something like "Way Out" to have a life in syndication, which obviously it didn't. Hopefully this will resurface for us soon!
    9BrentCarleton

    Constance Ford grips in "I Heard You Calling Me."

    In one of the few extant episodes of the long defunct, "Way Out" actress Constance Ford takes the audience on a roller coaster ride not soon to be forgotten.

    Though accomplished at all types of portrayals, Miss Ford's stock in trade was the vulpine proletariat tart--a woman who will stop at nothing to get where she's going, and doesn't make any bones about it! Consider her a more cerebral, subdued, and streamlined Shelley Winters type.

    In "I Heard You Calling Me" she holds the audience in the palm of her hand all the way--it's a real tour de force, inasmuch as she's doing it "live on tape." As the telephone calls from beyond exert their growing menace over her, we watch her go from casual indifference, to hard nosed annoyance, to trembling rage, to nauseated panic, and finally to whimpering, resigned, child like submission--pathetically assuming a fetal position as she drops the receiver to the floor in anticipation of her impending doom.

    At a recent screening, all attendees were impressed, most especially an astute 16 year old boy. "We don't have anything this good on now," he remarked as Mr. Dahl sardonically concluded the teleplay.

    No, we don't, and the loss is ours. Another forgotten jewel in Mr. Susskind's crown.
    8guanche

    Very creepy and unsettling. Surprisingly so for a mainstream show.

    The "galaxybeing" did a good job of describing this series and did so with a great deal more specificity than I could. The show was genuinely frightening. I do remember the episode about the love affair with the headless "electric woman". It gave me nightmares as a child. One of the most chilling things about the show (I hope I'm remembering this correctly) was the lead in at the beginning. I recall hands sticking up out of sand and writhing to the tempo of beatnik bongo drums. As the drum crescendo increased in intensity, the hands would burn up.

    No wonder it lasted just fourteen episodes in the days of Ward and June Cleaver! Definitely ahead of its time.
    tomneiman

    Similar show to Way Out

    Does anybody remember the TV show Great Ghost Tales. This show was very similar to Way Out. First, it was filmed live in New York City. Second, the show came on at 8:30 P.M. CST. Like Way Out, the show was short lived. Great Ghost Tales ran for 12 episodes, Way Out for 14. Fourth, Richard Thomas of The Waltons fame starred in one episode of Way Out and one episode of Great Ghost Tales. Way Out aired on CBS from 3/31/61 to 7/14/61. Great Ghost Tales aired on NBC from 7/6/61 to 9/21/61. The show replacing Great Ghost Tales was Hazel. A viewer would almost get the impression that Great Ghost Tales was a continuation of Way Out on another network with another announcer, Frank Gallop. On Way Out the episode that frightened me the most was "I Heard You Calling Me" about a woman who drowned 49 years ago aboard the Titanic. She haunted the room on the 7th floor of a hotel in London. On Great Ghost Tales, it was "A Phantom of Delight". This episode was about a woman who died forty years ago on her wedding day. Wearing her wedding gown, she would haunt her bedroom that was left locked and untouched by her parents.

    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      Show's official title ('Way Out) actually begins with an apostrophe, to indicate that it is short for Away Out.
    • Quotes

      Roald Dahl: I have a maiden aunt in Norway who was actually rolled out of bed onto the floor three nights running, by a ghost. But then she lives in what was once a very old trysting place. About 400 years ago, they bricked up a naughty girl in the wall of that room: that sort of thing always produces a ghost. If your wife is extremely delicate, and you tickle her to death, that will produce a ghost, too - so you have to be careful. We have another one for you next week at the same time. Good night and sleep well.

    • Connections
      Featured in Science Fiction: A Journey Into the Unknown (1994)

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    FAQ14

    • How many seasons does 'Way Out have?Powered by Alexa

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • March 31, 1961 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Filming locations
      • New York City, New York, USA
    • Production companies
      • CBS Television Network
      • CBS Television Network
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 25m
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.33 : 1

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