List of Night Gallery episodes


The horror anthology series Night Gallery began on December 16, 1970 and ended on May 27, 1973, with three seasons and 43 episodes. It was created by Rod Serling and broadcast on NBC. This list does not include the 25 episodes of The Sixth Sense which were edited into Night Gallery for syndication.

Series overview

Episodes

Pilot: 1969

Season 1: 1970–71

Season 2: 1971–72

TitleDirected by:Written by:Original air date

Season 3: 1972–73

Syndication-only segments

Unproduced scripts

Throughout the run of the series, several scripts were either rejected or left unproduced for various reasons.
;"Let Me Live in a House"
Based on a story by Chad Oliver,the story delt with questions of existence and identity, the kafkaesque "puppets on a stage" concept, a concept previously explored to its fullest extent on The Twilight Zone.
;"Nightmare Morning"
An adaptation of Robert A. Heinlein's "They", A delusional patient in a New York Hospital who believes his reality has been manufactured by an alien culture as a zoo environment for him, earth's last survivor, his delusion turns out to be real.
;"Reflections"
An inferior retread of "The Cemetery".
;"Let Me Tell You about the Dead"
Based on Graham Greene's "A Little Place off the Edgware Road", it tells of a man named Craven, who tries to convince others of his delusion that the dead have been rising from their graves, in a second story thread, there is a ripper-type killer on the loose, both story threads merge when Craven meets one of the ripper's victims, zombified, in a darkened movie theater.
;"Quartette Doomed"
A thinly disguised take on Agatha Christie's "And Then There Were None", stocked with characters out of a poor radio drama: the loudmouthed Texas Oil Man, The Effete Society Columnist, The Obsequious Backstabbing Assistant, The Gold-Digging Ex-Chorus Liner, they are invited to witness the reading of a dead mystic's will, instead of bequeathing to them his riches, he hands them all death sentences for their part in ruining his life, for the rest of the play, the four characters try to avoid the circumstances of their demise.
;"The Onlooker" - Written By Rod Serling
Follows the story of a cold-eyed hit man who loses his professional cool, then his life, when he tries to escape a mysterious man who dogs his trail, Death.
;"How Does Your Garden Grow"
An adaptation of John Collier's short story "Green Thoughts", a well-written character study involving an Old Gardener, his Cat, a pair of dotty neighbors, a Young Girl calming go be the widow of the old Gardener's dead son, and a man-eating plant.
;"The View Of Whatever" - Written By Rod Serling
With its familiar theme of nostalgia and loss, it tells the story of Joe Sprague, who suffers the loss of his only son during the Vietnam war, in deep depression, he develops a desperate desire to escape from a present he hates, taking form as a strange delusion, he claims that his childhood past can be viewed from his bedroom window, it is now a portal into 1930s Binghamton, New York, a perennial summer day with parks and band concerts and children on bikes, Sprague's family doctor, Ike Colby, is sympathetic, assuming him that everyone desires a return to innocence, he relates a cherished moment from his past: stationed on Haiti during the war, Colby shared with a French nurse a love affair so passionate "that it would make Browning stumble for words", sympathy, though, is not enough. Ultimately, the despairing Sprague takes his chance and steps through that window — and it is once again summer. He is ten years old, savoring his mother's lemonade before heading off to play with his neighborhood pals. He looks pensively into the camera as we dissolve to the present from which he escaped. His family is distraught at finding him missing, Colby tries to console them, but as he looks out Sprague's bedroom window, the portal shows him his own past: a wave-lapped shore in a tropical setting — and a familiar, dark-haired woman beckoning. As the vision fades, Colby finds comfort in knowing, that Joe Sprague has finally gone home.
;"Where Seldom Is Heard" - written by Gene Kearney
A mere vignette, an extended sketch with its punch line turning on Hunchbacked bell ringer Quasimodo's deafness.