Quantum Leap Play It Again Seymour
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Play It Once again, Seymour was the ninth episode of Season 1 of Breakthrough Bound, also the ninth series episode overall. Written by Tom Blomquist, the episode, which was directed by Aaron Lipstadt, originally aired on NBC-TV on May 17, 1989.
Synopsis [ ]
It's the early on 1950s and Sam has leaped into the body of a New York City individual detective, Nick Allen. Apart from the fact that Allen bears a striking resemblance to Humphrey Bogart, Sam feels that he has leaped into a inexpensive lurid novel, something that proves to be all too accurate when he realizes that he knows the story and is constantly having a sense of déjà vu. With his partner murdered, Sam has to not only observe the murderer but launch the career of a prospective writer.
Plot summary [ ]
April fourteen, 1953: Sam leaps into a New York Urban center area private detective with an uncanny resemblance to the Hollywood screen fable, Humphrey Bogart. He must not but discover the killer of his detective partner but as well avoid becoming the killer's next victim.
As Sam leaps in, he is holding a gun and standing over the body of a dead human being with a bullet in his back. The police burst into the room and identify Sam under arrest. While he is taken to a prison jail cell, Sam discovers that he is a private detective named Nick Allen (the leapee is played by Tony Heller) and that the dead human was his partner, Phil Grimsley. Looking in the mirror of his holding jail cell, Sam is astonished by the striking resemblance his analogue shares with Humphrey Bogart. Al tells Sam that his mission is to near likely find Phil's murderer, which offers Sam relief as information technology ways he is non the killer.
Sam begins experiencing a feeling of déjà vu and predicts that he will be prepare gratis every bit the bullet that killed Phil does non to match his gun. Moments later, his prediction comes truthful as a detective enters the room to release Sam from prison house. Al believes Sam's prognostication was simple coincidence, simply Sam doesn't call up and then.
As Sam arrives at Gotham Towers, the apartment edifice where Nick lives, he continues to experience an inexplicable familiarity with his surroundings. Before meeting them, he is correctly able to identify three men standing around in the antechamber: Lionel (Paul Linke), the edifice supervisor, Chuck (Steve Nevil), the elevator operator, and Seymour (Willie Garson), a nerdish male child who works at the news stand and hero worships Nick. Both Lionel and Chuck offering condolences over Phil's death and ask nigh Phil's widow, Allison Grimsley (Claudia Christian), for whom both men hold an attraction. Seymour tells them that he heard a "dropper named Klapper" was responsible for Phil'south murder. He is confident that Sam will notice the killer.
Sam rides the lift to his office along with Chuck. Chuck asks him if he'll ask Allison on a engagement for him but, realizing that his request was distasteful, rapidly recants. Sam walks away, shaking his head in disgust. Before entering his office, Sam'southward sense of déjà vu informs him that someone unsafe awaits him. It is Allison, Phil's attractive bombshell of a widow. Allison throws herself into Sam'due south arms. She says that, upon hearing that he was arrested, she was worried the police might take discovered the 2 of them were having an affair. Sam asks if she knows anybody named Klapper, and Allison responds that she heard Phil having a nightmare about him in one case. Though she is saddened past Phil'south expiry, she is pleased that, with his passing, the two of them can finally be together.
After Allison leaves, Sam begins searching through the office and finds an autobiographical manuscript Nick had been authoring. Sam now realizes that he has read the published book, thus explaining his déjà vu and how he knows all the people in Nick'due south life. Sam tells Al that, co-ordinate to the volume, Nick and Allison were deeply in love just too loyal to Phil to human activity on their feelings. He believes that he must observe Phil's killer so the two of them may live happily ever after. Unable to call back how Nick'due south book concluded, he asks Al to locate a re-create to help him find the killer.
As Sam leaves his office, Seymour tells him a source has revealed that Klapper volition be actualization at the Blue Island club that night. Seymour eagerly wishes to join him on the hunt for the killer. As the two ready to step into the elevator, the lift is absent and all that sits below is a long shaft. Sam clings to the cables and pulls himself away from certain expiry. He turns to see Seymour slumped unconscious against the wall, having fainted at the sign of danger. Lionel and Chuck investigate the faulty elevator. Chuck says that the condom latch was cleaved. Withal, Lionel says Chuck is to blame for not doing his job properly and monitoring the elevator.
Seymour apologizes for Sam's nearly-death experience and admits that he has always been a jinx. He was abandoned as a child and raised in an orphanage where he grew upward mostly in a library. Seymour reveals that he wants to be a detective just like Nick.
When they get in at the bottom of the stairs, Allison is waiting. She tells them they cannot go to the Blue Island, as that is where Phil went the night he was killed. Sam says he has to go in guild to observe the killer. Allison insists on coming with him.
That dark, the iii of them get to Blue Isle. Seymour at present says that his source reveals that Klapper may be a woman. As Sam goes to the bar to guild drinks, Al produces the volume that Sam has read. It is a murder-mystery book that was never completed by Nick, equally he was killed before publication. Al tells him that Nick was murdered at LaGuardia Aerodrome that night and that, subsequently his death, Allison and Seymour were never seen again. Sam suggests that the murderer must take killed them and hid the bodies. Withal, Al believes that Allison killed Nick, fled with Seymour, so murdered him too. Sam is angry that Al would suggest that Allison is the murderer, while Al accuses Sam of allowing his hormones to guide his thinking. Sam lashes out at Al, proverb that he is the ane who allows hormones and alcohol to deject his judgment. Al is offended and uncomfortably leaves Sam backside, alert him to stay away from LaGuarida Airport.
Since Klapper has not shown up at the Bluish Island, Sam, Allison, and Seymour make up one's mind to exit. While Seymour races off to hail downwards a cab, a gunman emerges from the alleyway and begins firing at Sam. Sam dives for encompass and escapes with only a graze to his cheek, while the gunman gives up and flees. When Seymour finally arrives with a cab, Sam blames him for taking so long to arrive. He also accuses Seymour of being a nerd and tells him to finish pestering him. They return to Nick's apartment where Sam goes off to get his gun, while Seymour flees from the cab, hurt and embarrassed by Sam's comments.
When Sam returns to the lobby, he finds Seymour sobbing. Sam apologizes for his comments and claims to have made them to stop Seymour from coming with him to find Klapper. Equally the ii return outside, they find the cab containing Allison is missing.
Sam and Seymour catch a cab to LaGurdia Airport. Sam takes the opportunity to repent to Al for offending him. He also admits that Al may accept been right, and that Allison may in fact be the killer.
When they arrive at the airport, Sam tells Seymour they should carve up up. While Sam is mistaken for Humphrey Bogart past a young Woody Allen (Kevin Mockrin), Seymour is confronted by Lionel, who pulls a gun on him and forces him into the airport hangar. Lionel has Allison tied upwards in one of the planes, and soon chokes Seymour to unconsciousness. Al guides Sam to the plane, while Lionel fires random ammunition in his direction. Lionel confesses that he killed Phil and then he could be with Allison. When Lionel finally runs out of ammo and has to reload, Sam arrives, sticks a gun in his chest, and arrests him.
Lionel is taken abroad past constabulary, while Sam comforts Allison. Allison figures they might besides use the tickets Lionel purchased to go away together. Sam tells Allison to board the plane and that he will join her. As she walks off, Seymour approaches him and admits that, after nearly being killed by Lionel, he is no longer interested in becoming a detective. Sam suggests that he become a crime writer instead. Seymour keenly accepts the thought and walks off. Though Sam is eager to join Allison on the plane, Al reveals that Sam's mission was to assist launch Seymour as a novelist and that, having done then, it is time to leap...
Kisses with History [ ]
Sam meets a young Woody Allen, who would have been 17 years old at the time.
Sam introduces the term "main squeeze" into the colloquial.
Trivia [ ]
More or less, a similar technique was used, as with the pilot episode of Quantum Jump, some of the background uses stock footage as one tin come across the different quality from the groundwork equally with the foreground.
The Science of Leaping [ ]
This is ane of only three times that Sam leaps beyond his birthdate of Aug. eight, 1953. The other ii were the episodes "The Americanization of Machiko" (Aug. 4) and "The Spring Dorsum" (June 15, 1945). In the latter, Sam was able to aim his leap into Al's fourth dimension period, but no explanation is given for how Sam was able to technically leap outside of his lifetime in the other examples. It'due south possible that Sam could bound in after his appointment of formulation, only this is only a theory.
Mike Badger Evans Says: "The writer is wrong hither at that place were not 3 but four episodes set up outside his own timeline." The iv episodes were:
- "Play It Over again, Seymour" (1x09)
- "The Amaricanization of Machiko" (2x3)
- "The Leap Back" (4x01)
- "The Jump Between the States" (5x20), when he leaped to September 1862.
Actually the author may be right but for the wrong reason. I regard Sam having leaped outside his timeline 3 times equally on "the Leap Dorsum", Sam did non Bound , Al Did . Therefore, the fourth dimension would have been within his timeline.
No, No. The second poster is exactly right! Sam DID spring to a time before his birth in "The Jump Back." Although the episode did primarily focus on Al's leap, Sam leapt into Tom Jarrett at the very end of the episode. The explanation given was that he had enough of Al's brain matter in his head to leap out of his own lifetime.
Sam's altogether is given explicitly as August viii, 1953 in "The Pilot Episode," and is repeated many times throughout the series. "Play It Again, Seymour" and "The Americanization of Machiko" taking place while Sam was in the womb (without proverb so explicitly) may reverberate Bellisario's own pro-life viewpoints. At no time in the series does the generally liberal-minded Sam Beckett endorse or even mention a woman'due south right to cull, except obliquely in "8 1/ii Months," in which he claimed to accept a feeling that carrying the child to term was the correct thing to exercise.
However, "Mirror Image," in which Sam symbolically leaps non just to the engagement of his nativity, just to the moment of this nascence, seems to suggest his birth is the focal point rather than his conception. Of course, by this time, the series had evolved in other means from its original inception as well.
Donald Bellisario has stated that the reason that Sam was able to leap outside his own lifetime in such episodes such as "Play it once more, Seymour" and "The Americanization of Machiko" is because Sam'due south life began at the moment of conception rather than his actual nascency.
- Another component to this that could aid explain things is the fact that in the final episode, Sam is told he has the ability to control his leaps. To whatever extent information technology'southward true, which given the ending would suggest information technology's at least partly true, then the reason Sam largely leapt within his ain lifetime might have been considering that had been his entire theory for leaping, which was meant to be confined to travel through time within his own lifetime; and equally such he may have subconsciously restricted himself. If he wasn't consciously aware of how much he was influencing the leaps or restricting them, it's as well plausible the occasions he defied those limitations were the result of some other factors that played into his leaps, like whatsoever drew Sam to the people and moments in history where he was near needed; or it could be chalked up to his swiss cheese brain not remembering when he was born during those instances.
Backside the Scenes [ ]
- Guest star Claudia Christian would get on to star in the popular and acclaimed sci-fi series Babylon v.
- Willie Garson (Seymour) would return to the show in Flavor 5 to play Lee Harvey Oswald in the episode of the aforementioned proper noun.
- The terminate of this episode featured a bound-out into the events of "What Price Gloria?" when originally aired. This episode had in fact already been shot (Hulu lists the episode as part of the first season, and uses the code 0111), and was intended as the side by side year'due south season opener. However, "Honeymoon Express" was eventually aired as the second-season premiere, and "Gloria" was pushed back to the fourth episode of the flavour. In reruns on the USA Network and the Sci-Fi Channel, a new leap-in was manufactured from the end of "Seymour" to the beginning of the master action of "Honeymoon Express." Ironically, Sam actually has a jump in between those two episodes - as a firefighter at the beginning of "Express" - but no leap-in footage was shot.
- Sam mentions Magnum P.I., which doesn't make sense to anyone past that twelvemonth. Donald P. Bellisario, the writer of virtually of the episodes in Magnum P.I. is also a co-writer of this episode of Quantum Leap.
Music [ ]
- Young At Heart
- Y'all, You, Yous
- Blue Moon
- Red Sails In The Dusk
- As Time Goes By
Podcast [ ]
http://quantumleappodcast.com/episodes/flavor-ane/008-play-it-again-seymour/
v - e - d Quantum Leap Flavour One |
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● Genesis: Part I ● Genesis: Role II ● Star-Crossed ● The Right Manus of God ● How The Tess Was Won ● Double Identity ● The Color of Truth ● Camikazi Child ● Play Information technology Again, Seymour ●. |
Source: https://quantumleap.fandom.com/wiki/Play_It_Again,_Seymour_%28episode%29
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