Turn Left at Mount Everest (Playhouse 90) explained

Series:Playhouse 90
Season:2
Episode:29
Guests:
Prev:The Right Hand Man
Next:The Dungeon

"Turn Left at Mount Everest" was an American television play broadcast on April 3, 1958, as part of the second season of the CBS television series Playhouse 90. Del Reisman wrote the teleplay, as an adaptation of a stage play by Lowell Barrington. Peter Lorre and Fess Parker starred.[1]

Plot

A comedy in which Private Linus Powell (Fess Parker) stows away on a B-17 flying from China across the Himalayas at the end of World War II to reunite with his British girlfriend in Calcutta. While Powell sleeps, the crew bails out in a monsoon, and Powell is left behind with a half-loaded Asian man played by Peter Lorre, who tries to guide Powell over the Himalayas.[2]

Reception

Television critic William Ewald described it as "a pretty peculiar stab" at light comedy. While he found some scenes that "almost made it", he concluded that the production "as a whole ... didn't have it. Its situation and characters were only mildly amusing and its dialogue lacked sustained spark."[3]

Critic Hope Strong wrote that the production aspired to be "deliciously droll" but ended up with "drizzly drivel."[4]

Another critic, Fred Remington, was amused by the production, writing that Fess Parker "just plays himself, and a very agreeable, entertaining self it is."[5]

Cast

The following performers received screen credit for their performances:[1]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Playhouse 90, Season 2. Classic TV Archive. February 26, 2021.
  2. News: TV Key Previews. The Sacramento Bee. April 3, 1958. D9. Newspapers.com.
  3. News: 'Turn Left at Everest' Just Didn't Have it. The Press Democrat. April 4, 1958. 13. Newspapers.com.
  4. News: A Citizen Views TV. The Lima Citizen. April 6, 1958. 23. Newspapers.com.
  5. News: Fess Parker Provides Bright Comedy In Playhouse 90. The Pittsburgh Press. Fred Remington. April 4, 1958. 27. Newspapers.com.