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{{Sidebar episode
 
{{Sidebar episode
|topimage=437.jpg
+
|topimage=Ds145kin.jpg
  +
|number=431
 
|timeline= [[1796]]
 
|timeline= [[1796]]
 
|narrator= [[Alexandra Moltke]]
 
|narrator= [[Alexandra Moltke]]
 
|writer= [[Ron Sproat]]
 
|writer= [[Ron Sproat]]
 
|director= [[Lela Swift]]
 
|director= [[Lela Swift]]
|airdate= [[Template:February 27|February 27]], [[1968 productions|1968]]
+
|airdate= [[Template:February 27|February 27]], [[1968 productions|1968]]<br><small>(Tuesday)</small>
|tapedate = [[Template:February 21|February 21]], 1968
+
|tapedate = [[Template:February 21|February 21]], 1968<br><small>(Wednesday)</small>
  +
|video =[[The Complete Original Series#Collection 8|Complete: Disc 47]]
|video =
 
  +
<br>[[Collection 6|Collection 6: Disc 3]]
 
|prevep= [[436|←]]
 
|prevep= [[436|←]]
 
|nextep= [[438|→]]
 
|nextep= [[438|→]]
|bottomimage=437g.jpg}}
+
|bottomimage=437g.jpg
  +
}}
  +
[[Victoria Winters|Victoria]] is convicted of [[witchcraft]] and sentenced to hang.
   
 
== Synopsis ==
 
== Synopsis ==
  +
 
'''Teaser'''
 
'''Teaser'''
: ''A seance has been held in the great house at Collinwood, a seance that has suspended time and space, and sent one girl on an uncertain and frightening journey into the past, back to the year 1795. Fear of the unknown has turned others against her, and placed her very existence in peril. And the forces of evil, which have surrounded her fate, now threaten a deadly end to her journey.''
 
   
 
: ''A [[séance]] has been held in the great house at [[Collinwood]], a séance which has suspended time and space, and sent one [[Victoria Winters|girl]] on an uncertain and frightening journey into the past, back to the year [[1795]]. Fear of the unknown has turned others against her, and placed her very existence in peril. And the forces of evil, which have surrounded her fate, now threaten a deadly end to her journey.''
Peter tries to talk Vicky into telling the truth at the trial. Victoria becomes hysterical trying to wake herself from the nightmare she's living. Trask convinces Nathan to testify again, this time he claims that Victoria had him under a spell. Vicky takes the stand and gives the real date of her birth. She tells of her journey from the future and offers the book she brought with her as evidence. She is convicted of witchcraft and sentenced to hang. Victoria fainted after hearing this.
 
   
  +
[[Peter Bradford]] has retrieved the [[Collins Family History Book]] and brings it to the jail where he tries to talk [[Victoria Winters]] into telling the truth at her trial. She doesn't think the judges will believe her but Peter says that it is the only chance they have left. She'll be convicted and hung unless the judges change their minds.
Peter has the book for more evidence of Vicky’s innocence, Nathan comes in and they talk. More of the joke, “Mr. Trask,” and Trask correcting, “Rev. Trask.” It is Monday and Trask wants Nathan to testify that he was bewitched by Vicky and that’s why he helped Barnabas and Vicky. Nathan won’t say another word against that girl, he states.
 
   
  +
'''Act I'''
As a child Vicky tells Peter she had nightmares and she would always wake herself up after the car crashed or the monster caught her or whatever and then wake herself up…uhm, why wouldn’t she wake herself up before the finale horror if she could? “It’s gone on for too long! It’s got to stop!!!” Peter slaps her.
 
   
  +
[[Reverend Trask]] and [[Nathan Forbes]] meet in the courtroom before the trial begins. Trask wants Nathan to testify again, this time claiming that Victoria had him under a spell. Nathan is appalled at the suggestion and refuses. Trask threatens to harm his military career and lets Nathan reconsider his decision. Victoria tells Peter how, as a child, she often had nightmares but would always be able to wake herself up. She becomes hysterical, convinced that this is all a dream although she is unable to wake herself now. Peter slaps her, then holds her until the jailer comes to take her to the courtroom.
Nathan is forced by Trask to re-testify with Trask leading him terribly and Peter not saying a word about Trask’s leading of Nathan. Nathan says, “Perhaps I’d been bewitched.” Peter cross examines Nathan about the first time he met Vicky and how Nathan tried to kiss her.
 
   
  +
'''Act II'''
Vicky testifies that she was born in 1946 and was raised in a foundling home in New York. She left there in 1966 to be governess to a boy named David. She tells them she was in the drawing room and was knocked unconscious and found herself at the Old House, the house being 150 years younger. She tells them that everyone, even Nathan Forbes, has a counterpart there. Then they present the book! Natalie saw it and Josette saw it…The book was published in 1965 and is a history up to 1964 with photographs.
 
   
  +
Nathan is called to testify again. When Trask asks if it's true that he helped Victoria earlier because of his friendship with [[Barnabas Collins]], Nathan changes his story. He tells the court that it is possible that he had been bewitched. Peter cross-examines Nathan about the first time he met Victoria and how Nathan tried to kiss her. Peter suggests that Nathan helped Victoria because he was attracted to her, not because he was under a spell. Nathan is dismissed and Peter calls Victoria to the stand. She begins her testimony by stating that she was born in 1946.
Trask cross examines Vicky and does a good job of making her look even more guilty, making her tell that the “meeting” that sent her to 1795 was in reality a séance where she and others tried to call up the dead! He even makes her admit she took part in séances before that time! Vicky tells the truth. Trask calls her a bride of the devil and that she flies through time.
 
   
  +
'''Act III'''
The judges deliberate and after an hour it is 5pm and they still have not reached a decision. Trask tells Nathan he just tried to make him see the error of his ways, not blackmail him. Nathan has the urge to tell the judge everything about Trask. At 5:30 the judges return. Nathan hopes they free Vicky. The verdict is that they find her guilty and she will be hanged until dead. Vicky passes out.
 
   
  +
Victoria describes how she was raised in a foundling home in New York. She left in 1966 to be governess to a boy named [[David Collins]] in Collinsport. She tells them she was in the [[drawing room]] at [[Collinwood]] and was knocked unconscious. When she awoke, she was at the [[Old House]], 150 years in the past. She tells them that everyone, even Nathan Forbes, has a counterpart there. She also tells about the Collins Family History Book that she brought with her from the future while Peter presents the book as evidence. Peter finishes his examination of Victoria by asking if she is a witch. She denies the charge. Trask cross-examines Victoria about the events leading up to her unconsciousness. She is forced to tell Trask that she participated in a séance just before she was transported to 1795. Trask calls her a bride of the devil and declares that she must die.
== Memorable quotes ==
 
*[[Peter Bradford|Peter]]: Vicky, I wish I could tell you that the law was simply a matter of evidence, facts, proof... But it isn't. Emotions Count.
 
   
  +
'''Act IV'''
*[[Victoria]]; I'm beginning to learn that.
 
   
 
The judges deliberate and after an hour they still have not reached a decision. While comforting Victoria, Peter declares his love for her. She says their situation is hopeless but Peter is not deterred. Nathan accuses Trask of blackmail but he claims he was showing him the error of his ways. Nathan has the urge to confess everything to the judges. The judges return; Nathan hopes Victoria is freed. The judges find her guilty of witchcraft and sentence her to be hanged until dead. Victoria collapses.
*[[Peter Bradford|Peter ]]: This is a frightened little village, so we have to show them that they have nothing to fear from you.
 
   
 
== Memorable quotes ==
*[[Victoria]]: I was born in the year nineteen hundred and forty-six.
 
  +
 
: '''[[Peter Bradford|Peter]]''': Vicki, I wish I could tell you that the law was simply a matter of evidence, facts, proof... but it isn't. Emotions count.
 
: '''[[Victoria Winters|Victoria]]''': I'm beginning to learn that.
  +
----
 
: '''Peter''': This is a frightened little village, so we have to show them that they have nothing to fear from you.
   
 
== Dramatis personae ==
 
== Dramatis personae ==
  +
*[[Roger Davis]] as [[Peter Bradford]]
 
*[[Alexandra Moltke]] as [[Victoria Winters]]
+
* [[Roger Davis]] as [[Peter Bradford]]
*[[Jerry Lacy]] as [[Reverend Trask]]
+
* [[Alexandra Moltke]] as [[Victoria Winters]]
*[[Joel Crothers]] as [[Nathan Forbes]]
+
* [[Jerry Lacy]] as [[Reverend Trask]]
  +
* [[Joel Crothers]] as [[Nathan Forbes]]
  +
* [[Hal White]] as 2nd Judge (uncredited)
  +
* [[Tom Gorman]] as 3rd Judge (uncredited)
  +
* [[199|←]] [[Anthony Goodstone]] [[664|→]] as Bailiff (uncredited)
  +
* [[Peter Murphy]] as Gaoler (uncredited)
   
 
== Background information and notes ==
 
== Background information and notes ==
  +
*The original colour print of this episode is gone, but a black and white version still exists.
 
  +
=== Production ===
*Victoria gives her year of birth as 1946.
 
  +
 
* The original color videotape of this episode is lost, however a black and white [[kinescope]] version exists.
  +
* [[Hal White]] replaces [[Hansford Rowe]] in the role of 2nd Judge.
  +
* The clock in the courtroom is an {{w|Aaron Willard}} clock. Aaron Willard was a [[Boston]] clock maker known for making relatively inexpensive clocks, inexpensive compared to other clock makers of the time, and as a result, his clocks were more affordable to the less wealthy. He manufactured clocks from 1785 to 1823.
  +
  +
=== Story ===
  +
 
* [[Victoria Winters|Victoria]] gives her year of birth as 1946.
  +
* How incredibly dumb it is for Victoria to tell the court she attended a [[séance]] just before finding herself in the past. This practically guarantees a death sentence. Anyone in this situation would make up another story. [[Peter Bradford|Peter]] should be furious at her for stupidly ruining his case. ''(Stupid or not, some people actually believe in telling the truth when under oath.)''
  +
* '''[[TIMELINE]]''': Day 176 takes place. Peter got the [[Collins family history book]] last night. The judges are going to deliver their verdict today. 2pm: Victoria in her jail cell. It was the "other day" when [[Nathan Forbes|Nathan]] testified (occurred in [[433]]). 5pm: An hour since the trial ended. 5:30pm: Verdict revealed.
   
 
== Bloopers and continuity errors ==
 
== Bloopers and continuity errors ==
  +
*The year Victoria went to work as a governess is given as 1966. ''(This is the first time that a year of 1966 has been mentioned in reference to the episodes aired in 1966, [[1]] to [[135]]. There is no way to reconcile this as that run of episodes take place over no more than month and can be assumed to be part of 1967, it's the only way for the year to plausibly change to from 1967 to 1968 after Victoria’s return to the present considering no time passes in present whilst she is in the past.)''
+
* [[Victoria Winters|Victoria]] says she went to work as a governess at [[Collinwood]] in [[1966]]. This is the first time that a year of 1966 has been mentioned in reference to the episodes aired in [[1966 productions|1966]], [[1]] to [[135]]. There is no way to reconcile this as the on-screen passage of time indicate that that run of episodes take place over no more than a month, and as such can be presumed to be part of [[1967]], as it's the only way for the year to plausibly change from 1967 to [[1968]] after Victoria's return to the present considering no time passes in the present whilst she is in the past. ''(It's common soap opera practice to match the date in sync with the real-world date, even though it rarely matches the time elapsed in the narrative. Viewers don't usually keep track of narrative elapsed time.)''
[[Category:Dark Shadows episodes]]
 
  +
* Peter Bradford is not very good at math. Victoria has just said that she came to Collinwood in 1966, then Peter says she was transported 150 years back in time. That would make the present year 1816, not 1795. Or if you consider that the séance took place in 1967, then it's 1817. In any case, the writers seem to be rather haphazard with the numbers they throw out. ''(People very often use round and approximate numbers while talking rather than having to do more complex arithmetic in their heads. 1966 is close to 1950, 1795 is close to 1800, so it is quite natural to round the time difference to 150 years.)''
  +
==External Links ==
  +
<span class="">[http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0866110/?ref_=tt_ep_nx Dark Shadows - Episode 437 on the IMDb]</span>
  +
  +
[https://darkshadowseveryday.com/2014/07/15/episode-437/ Dark Shadows Every Day - Episode 437 - There's Just Us]
  +
  +
[http://www.collinsporthistoricalsociety.com/2018/02/the-dark-shadows-daybook-february-21.html The Dark Shadows Daybook - Episode 437][[Category:Dark Shadows episodes]]

Revision as of 16:14, 2 May 2019

437 Gallery
437
Number

431

Timeline

1796

Narrator

Alexandra Moltke

Writer

Ron Sproat

Director

Lela Swift

Broadcast

February 27, 1968
(Tuesday)

Recorded

February 21, 1968
(Wednesday)

Video

Complete: Disc 47
Collection 6: Disc 3

437 Gallery
We have 7 images of Dark Shadows 437

Victoria is convicted of witchcraft and sentenced to hang.

Synopsis

Teaser

A séance has been held in the great house at Collinwood, a séance which has suspended time and space, and sent one girl on an uncertain and frightening journey into the past, back to the year 1795. Fear of the unknown has turned others against her, and placed her very existence in peril. And the forces of evil, which have surrounded her fate, now threaten a deadly end to her journey.

Peter Bradford has retrieved the Collins Family History Book and brings it to the jail where he tries to talk Victoria Winters into telling the truth at her trial. She doesn't think the judges will believe her but Peter says that it is the only chance they have left. She'll be convicted and hung unless the judges change their minds.

Act I

Reverend Trask and Nathan Forbes meet in the courtroom before the trial begins. Trask wants Nathan to testify again, this time claiming that Victoria had him under a spell. Nathan is appalled at the suggestion and refuses. Trask threatens to harm his military career and lets Nathan reconsider his decision. Victoria tells Peter how, as a child, she often had nightmares but would always be able to wake herself up. She becomes hysterical, convinced that this is all a dream although she is unable to wake herself now. Peter slaps her, then holds her until the jailer comes to take her to the courtroom.

Act II

Nathan is called to testify again. When Trask asks if it's true that he helped Victoria earlier because of his friendship with Barnabas Collins, Nathan changes his story. He tells the court that it is possible that he had been bewitched. Peter cross-examines Nathan about the first time he met Victoria and how Nathan tried to kiss her. Peter suggests that Nathan helped Victoria because he was attracted to her, not because he was under a spell. Nathan is dismissed and Peter calls Victoria to the stand. She begins her testimony by stating that she was born in 1946.

Act III

Victoria describes how she was raised in a foundling home in New York. She left in 1966 to be governess to a boy named David Collins in Collinsport. She tells them she was in the drawing room at Collinwood and was knocked unconscious. When she awoke, she was at the Old House, 150 years in the past. She tells them that everyone, even Nathan Forbes, has a counterpart there. She also tells about the Collins Family History Book that she brought with her from the future while Peter presents the book as evidence. Peter finishes his examination of Victoria by asking if she is a witch. She denies the charge. Trask cross-examines Victoria about the events leading up to her unconsciousness. She is forced to tell Trask that she participated in a séance just before she was transported to 1795. Trask calls her a bride of the devil and declares that she must die.

Act IV

The judges deliberate and after an hour they still have not reached a decision. While comforting Victoria, Peter declares his love for her. She says their situation is hopeless but Peter is not deterred. Nathan accuses Trask of blackmail but he claims he was showing him the error of his ways. Nathan has the urge to confess everything to the judges. The judges return; Nathan hopes Victoria is freed. The judges find her guilty of witchcraft and sentence her to be hanged until dead. Victoria collapses.

Memorable quotes

Peter: Vicki, I wish I could tell you that the law was simply a matter of evidence, facts, proof... but it isn't. Emotions count.
Victoria: I'm beginning to learn that.

Peter: This is a frightened little village, so we have to show them that they have nothing to fear from you.

Dramatis personae

Background information and notes

Production

  • The original color videotape of this episode is lost, however a black and white kinescope version exists.
  • Hal White replaces Hansford Rowe in the role of 2nd Judge.
  • The clock in the courtroom is an Aaron Willard clock. Aaron Willard was a Boston clock maker known for making relatively inexpensive clocks, inexpensive compared to other clock makers of the time, and as a result, his clocks were more affordable to the less wealthy. He manufactured clocks from 1785 to 1823.

Story

  • Victoria gives her year of birth as 1946.
  • How incredibly dumb it is for Victoria to tell the court she attended a séance just before finding herself in the past. This practically guarantees a death sentence. Anyone in this situation would make up another story. Peter should be furious at her for stupidly ruining his case. (Stupid or not, some people actually believe in telling the truth when under oath.)
  • TIMELINE: Day 176 takes place. Peter got the Collins family history book last night. The judges are going to deliver their verdict today. 2pm: Victoria in her jail cell. It was the "other day" when Nathan testified (occurred in 433). 5pm: An hour since the trial ended. 5:30pm: Verdict revealed.

Bloopers and continuity errors

  • Victoria says she went to work as a governess at Collinwood in 1966. This is the first time that a year of 1966 has been mentioned in reference to the episodes aired in 1966, 1 to 135. There is no way to reconcile this as the on-screen passage of time indicate that that run of episodes take place over no more than a month, and as such can be presumed to be part of 1967, as it's the only way for the year to plausibly change from 1967 to 1968 after Victoria's return to the present considering no time passes in the present whilst she is in the past. (It's common soap opera practice to match the date in sync with the real-world date, even though it rarely matches the time elapsed in the narrative. Viewers don't usually keep track of narrative elapsed time.)
  • Peter Bradford is not very good at math. Victoria has just said that she came to Collinwood in 1966, then Peter says she was transported 150 years back in time. That would make the present year 1816, not 1795. Or if you consider that the séance took place in 1967, then it's 1817. In any case, the writers seem to be rather haphazard with the numbers they throw out. (People very often use round and approximate numbers while talking rather than having to do more complex arithmetic in their heads. 1966 is close to 1950, 1795 is close to 1800, so it is quite natural to round the time difference to 150 years.)

External Links 

Dark Shadows - Episode 437 on the IMDb

Dark Shadows Every Day - Episode 437 - There's Just Us

The Dark Shadows Daybook - Episode 437