This graphic novel biography of Rod Serling opens
with Serling on an airplane, talking with a fellow passenger about his
life. The moody black and white
illustrations are reminiscent of the old Twilight
Zone program, as I am sure the author intended.
I was vaguely aware of some of Serling’s background;
as a fan of both TZ and later Night Gallery, I felt I had grown up
listening to his stories. What I didn’t
know, and what Shadmi vividly portrays, is the source material that informed
his writing. Serling joined the military
in 1943, an undersized Jewish boy who wanted to be a paratrooper and fight the
Germans. He was turned down because he
was too short, but with the determination—some would say bull-headedness—he
persisted until he was sent to training. Many didn’t make the cut; for Serling,
failure was not an option.
But no training in the world can really prepare one
for war. Serling’s disappointment at
being sent to the Pacific instead of Europe was soon shattered as death and
destruction became real. The war would haunt his dreams the rest of his life.
Post-war, he went to college and decided he wanted
to become a writer, a thing much easier said than accomplished. The subtitle of the book is Rod Serling
and the Birth of Television, which is entirely accurate. This was the Golden Age of live dramas, where
an infant industry tried to find its footing.
Serling wrote script after script, meeting rejection at every turn,
until he finally broke through with a teleplay entitled “Patterns.”
But he still hadn’t found the formula that would let
him say what he wanted. Sponsors,
executives, censors, etc. seemed to be intent on gutting his work, rendering it
innocuous. The suggestions to “improve”
his script about Emmett Till are jaw-dropping. It was a chance remark that led Serling to a
revelation that would revolutionize television.
The book doesn’t stop there, but tells us about
Serling’s life post-TZ. I admire
Shadmi for showing us Serling warts and all; this book neither idolizes nor
demonizes him. It does portray a
complicated, haunted man who made an impact on our culture.
This is an excellent resource for anyone interested
in either Serling or early television.
Shadmi has appended an extensive bibliography. I also enjoyed his afterword, in which he
explained how he came to do the book. It’s a fitting book for its subject; I
think Serling might have approved.
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