Person or Persons Unknown

For novel by Bruce Alexander, see Person or Persons Unknown (novel).
"Person or Persons Unknown"
The Twilight Zone episode
Episode no. Season 3
Episode 27
Directed by John Brahm
Written by Charles Beaumont
Featured music Stock
Production code 4829
Original air date March 23, 1962
Guest appearance(s)

Richard Long: David Gurney
Frank Silvera: Doctor Koslenko
Shirley Ballard: Wilma #1
Julie van Zandt: Wilma #2
Betty Harford: Woman Clerk
Edmund Glover: Sam Baker
Michael Keep: Policeman
Joe Higgins: Bank Guard
John Newton: Mr. Cooper
Robert McCord: Man on Steps Eating Apple

Episode chronology

"Person or Persons Unknown" is episode 92 of the American television anthology series The Twilight Zone.

Opening narration

Cameo of a man who has just lost his most valuable possession. He doesn't know about the loss yet. In fact, he doesn't even know about the possession. Because, like most people, David Gurney has never really thought about the matter of his identity. But he's going to be thinking a great deal about it from now on, because that is what he's lost. And his search for it is going to take him into the darkest corners of the Twilight Zone.

Plot

David Gurney wakes up to find that nobody knows him, and all evidence of his identity had disappeared. He is placed in an insane asylum; however, he manages to escape, after a doctor named Koslenko tries to tell him that David Gurney doesn't exist, yet Gurney thinks that someone or something wants to blot him out. He finds a photograph of himself and his wife together. However, when the police arrive with the psychiatrist, the picture has somehow changed and portrays Gurney alone. He throws himself to the ground and wakes up in his bed. The whole adventure was a bad dream. His wife gets up from the bed and talks to him from the bathroom, where she removes cream from her face. When she emerges, Gurney is horrified to discover that, even though she acts and talks the same way, his wife does not look at all like the wife he knows.

Closing narration

A case of mistaken identity or a nightmare turned inside out? A simple loss of memory or the end of the world? David Gurney may never find the answer, but you can be sure he's looking for it in the Twilight Zone.

See also

References

    Sources

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