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"Little Girl Lost" is episode 91 of the American television anthology series The Twilight Zone. It is about a young girl who has accidentally passed through an opening into another dimension. Her parents and their friend attempt to locate and retrieve her. It is based on the 1953 science fiction short story by Richard Matheson.
"Little Girl Lost" (The Twilight Zone), an episode of the television series The Twilight Zone"Little Girl Lost", an episode of the TV series Mannix "Little Girl Lost", an episode of the TV series Bonanza
In "Shadow of the Past" (October 7, 1961) of the NBC western series The Tall Man, Aidman is cast as Ben Wiley, the father of Sue Wiley, the latest girlfriend of Billy the Kid. Aidman was cast as George Ellsworth, an official with the United States Embassy in Warsaw , Poland , in the three-part 1963 episode "Security Risk" of the CBS anthology ...
A schoolteacher named Helen Foley finds a strange and very serious little girl named Markie on the stairs outside her apartment. She is singing "Twinkle, twinkle, little star". The girl seems to know her and tries to jog her memory about a man she saw earlier that day. The man arrives at Helen's door as Markie, frightened, runs out the back way.
Mrs. Gann will be in for a big surprise when she finds this under Jenny's pillow, because Mrs. Gann has more temper than imagination. She'll never dream that this is a picture of Old Ben, as he really looks, and it will never occur to her that eventually her niece will grow up to be an honest-to-goodness queen — somewhere in The Twilight Zone.
In reality, Brikette was a non-talker; on The Twilight Zone she was modeled after Chatty Cathy, a popular talking doll manufactured by Mattel at the time "Living Doll" aired. The voices for both Chatty Cathy and Talky Tina were provided by June Foray, one of the leading voice actresses of the era. [3]
Gordon was born in Saint Paul, Minnesota, the daughter of film director Bert I. Gordon and his wife, Flora (Lang) Gordon. She began her career, at age eight, as a last-minute substitute for another young actress in 1958's Attack of the Puppet People, directed by her father, who subsequently directed her in three additional films — The Boy and the Pirates, Tormented (both 1960) and 1966's ...
Angela Cartwright was born in Altrincham, Cheshire, England, in 1952.When she was one year old, her family moved to Los Angeles via Canada. [2] She made her first film appearance at the age of three years as Paul Newman's character's daughter in Somebody Up There Likes Me (1956), and appeared with Rock Hudson and Sidney Poitier in Something of Value (1957). [3]