The New Exhibit

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The New Exhibit
The Twilight Zone episode

Rod Serling poses in a publicity photo for "The New Exhibit"
Episode no. Season 4
Episode 115
Written by Jerry Sohl (credited to Charles Beaumont)
Directed by John Brahm
Guest stars Martin Balsam : Martin Lombard Senescu
Will Kuluva : Mr. Ferguson
Maggie Mahoney : Emma Senescu
William Mims : Dave
Marcel Hillaire : Guide
Milton Parsons : Henri Desiré Landru
David Bond : Jack the Ripper
Billy Beck : Hare
Production no. 4866
Original airdate April 4, 1963
Episode chronology
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"I Dream of Genie" "Of Late I Think of Cliffordville"
List of Twilight Zone episodes

"The New Exhibit" is an episode of the American television anthology series The Twilight Zone.


Contents

[edit] Opening narration

Martin Lombard Senescu, a gentle man, a dedicated curator of "Murder's Row" in Ferguson's Wax Museum. He ponders the reasons why ordinary men are driven to commit mass murder. But Mr. Senescu does not know that the ground work has been laid for his own special kind of madness and torment in the Twilight Zone.

[edit] Synopsis

Martin Senescu works at a respected wax museum. His boss and good friend, Mr. Ferguson, informs him that the museum will close, to be replaced by a shopping market. Dispirited, Martin asks one request; that he can spare the five figures from his department. These wax figures are in fact replicas of five murderers. Mr. Ferguson complies and Martin takes the figures home, much to the dismay of his wife, Emma. They keep the figures in the basement, under high air conditioning and constant care. Terrified of them, Emma doesn't know what to do. She seeks the advice of her brother, Dave, who tells her to shut off the air conditioning, melting Martin's collection. She sneaks out of bed one night and tries to shut off the air conditioner, whilst being watched by the wax figure of Jack the Ripper. A smiling Jack pivots his knife-wielding hand towards Emma, who screams in horror.

The next morning, Martin discovers his wife dead and Jack's bloody knife. He talks to Jack as if the figure is a real person, explaining that what he did was wrong. He buries Emma's body to conceal Jack's crime. The next day, Emma's brother visits Martin, curious to her whereabouts. Martin nervously rushes him out of the house. Dave then sneaks into the basement through the back entrance of the house and eyes the wet cement where his sister is buried. While examining the area, the wax figure of ax-wielding Albert W. Hicks watches him. Suddenly, something kicks a cement tool at Dave. Dave's eyes bulge as he looks up in horror.

Martin comes down later to find the carnage left by Hicks. He yells at Hicks, and once again hides the evidence.

Several days later, Ferguson comes to visit Martin. Happily, Ferguson tells Martin that the figures have been sold to a legendary wax museum in Brussels.[1] Martin is sadly forced to give up the wax figures he's so greatly cared for. Martin, although clearly disappointed, brings down tea to celebrate. Ferguson then examines the figures, measuring them to be shipped to Brussels. The wax figure of rope handling Henri Landru eyes him. As soon as Ferguson turns around, Landru lowers the rope around his neck.

Martin walks downstairs carrying a tray of cups of tea and treats. He finds Ferguson strangled on the floor. Unstabilized, Martin yells at the figures, saying that even through all he's done for them, cleaning them, caring for them, they had to kill his best and only friend. As he yells, the emotionless faces of the figures stare back at him. Martin grabs a crowbar, planning to smash each and every one of them to bits. He eyes Landru, saying "he's first" for killing Ferguson.

Suddenly, the wax figures get up off their feet and slowly creep towards Martin. Martin stares in horror. Their faces unmoving, they all torment him, convincing him he was the one that murdered his wife, brother in-law and best friend, not them. Martin backs up into a wall and screams in horror as the figures close him in.

Some time later, a tour guide introduces the wax figures of Jack the Ripper, Albert W. Hicks, Henri "Bluebeard" Landru, Hare and Burke. However, there is a new addition to this exhibit: a wax figure of Martin Senescu, who actually killed his wife, brother in-law and best friend.

[edit] Closing narration

The New Exhibit became very popular at Marchand's. But of all the figures, none was regarded with as much dread than Martin Lombard Senescu. It was something about the eyes, people said; it's the look one often gets after taking a quick walk through the Twilight Zone.

[edit] Twilight Zone Links

[edit] External links

[edit] References

  1. ^ Marc Scott Zicree (1989). The Twilight Zone Companion, 2nd edition, Hollywood, California: Silman-James Press, 352. ISBN 1879505096. 
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