American Scandal - Twlight Zone Accident | It's Going to be Big | 2
Episode Date: February 24, 2026After casting two children in vital roles, production on John Landis’ segment of Twilight Zone: The Movie moves onto its climactic Vietnam village sequence. Be the first to know ...about Wondery’s newest podcasts, curated recommendations, and more! Sign up now at https://wondery.fm/wonderynewsletterListen to American Scandal on the Wondery App or wherever you get your podcasts. Experience all episodes ad-free and be the first to binge the newest season. Unlock exclusive early access by joining Wondery+ in the Wondery App, Apple Podcasts or Spotify. Start your free trial today by visiting wondery.com/links/american-scandal/ now.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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American Scandal uses dramatizations that are based on true events.
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It's July 15, 1982, in the city of Rialto, California, 50 miles east of Los Angeles.
37-year-old Dan Allingham pulls up alongside a low-level.
slung building on the edge of the local airport.
Allingham is the unit production manager on the John Landis segment of Twilight Zone the movie.
And in his role as UPM, Allingham is responsible for day-to-day logistics on the production,
which is already shooting back in L.A.
But today, his job has taken him to the offices of Western helicopters.
This charter company earns most of its money moving heavy equipment or helping farmers with crop control,
but Western also has a growing sideline supplying aircraft to the moon.
movie business. The company owns a Huey helicopter that would be perfect for Landis' big Vietnam
war finale, and its low rates have caught the attention of the Twilight Zone team. At $800 an hour,
Western charges a third less than more established companies. So Allingham is hopeful they'll be
able to provide the production what they need. He's shown into the wood-paneled office of the president
of the company, Claire Meriwether. After a few minutes of small talk, Meriwether suggests they take a look
at the aircraft outside.
The company's helicopters are lined up on the tarmac.
Meriwether leads Allingham over to the large military chopper at the far end.
Yeah, well, here she is.
The bell UH1B.
You know her as a hewing.
Allingham runs a hand over the helicopter's dark, green, aluminum skin.
Wow, it's big.
What is it?
40 feet long?
Yep, just a little under.
Yeah, much larger than it looks on TV.
So if this is your first time seeing one, you didn't serve them.
No, I was one of the lucky ones.
Maryweather nods at the helicopter.
Well, this bird did. She's ex-Army.
We bought her from the Maryland State Police, actually.
So she's been around a block a time or two.
That she has, but she still flies beautifully in the right hands.
You spoke to Dorsey, right?
Yeah, on the phone yesterday, is he here?
Dorsey Wingo is Western's director of operations and its chief pilot.
Maryweather appears across at the company's maintenance yard.
Yeah, he'll be around somewhere.
He flew one of these in Vietnam, you know.
Logged 900 hours, so it should be perfect for what you're.
what you have in mind. Sounds like it. But does he have any movie experience? He's done,
I think, three pictures now. It's not a complicated stunt work you need, right? Just routine maneuvers,
hovering and turning, that sort of thing? Yeah, that's right. Well, then he'll do just fine.
Well, great. So what do you say we go back inside and get this all signed off?
Mary Weather pauses for a moment. Well, there is one thing. I want to know you'll take good care of her.
Well, of course we will. See, we hired out a Hughes 500 to another production last year,
and it came back with $10,000 worth of rotor damage. Oh, what happened?
some kind of pyrotechnic special effect, an explosion.
I don't know what you call it.
A mortar?
Oh, yeah, sounds right.
Well, it went off at the wrong time.
Debris hit the chopper and made a real mess.
Oh, man, could have been a lot worse, too.
Now, my understanding is you're planning to use these mortars as well, right?
Yeah, there will be some special effects on set.
But our mortar guy, he's the best in Hollywood, seriously.
He'll make sure the explosions aren't anywhere near the helicopter.
Well, that's good to hear, you know, because I'm fond of her, you know?
Maryweather pats the chomper affectionately, and Allingham smiles.
I promise, we'll bring her home in one piece.
We have a mantra on set, Mr. Merriweather.
It's simple, and it applies to everyone from the director right down to the caterers.
Safety first.
With Dan Allingham's assurances that his helicopter will be treated properly,
Claire Maryweather signed on the dotted line.
So as Allingham drives back to Los Angeles, he's pleased with his afternoon's work.
He's got the helicopter they need at a good price, too.
But filming on the Vietnam Village set is scheduled to begin in less than a week,
and two other crucial components for the sequence are still missing.
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And this is American Scandal.
By mid-July, 1982,
John Landis' segment of the Twilight Zone,
The Movie, was progressing well.
Filming on the Universal Backlot in Los Angeles had finished,
and the production had moved on to Franklin Canyon in Beverly Hills.
There, the crew filmed Vic Morrow's lead character
encountering the Ku Klux Klan.
Still ahead, though, was the most ambitious sequence in the entire movie.
This nighttime scene was set in a Vietnamese village
and would feature a boy and a girl being rescued from an attack by an American helicopter.
But the movie's casting agents had been uneasy with the children's involvement.
They believed what the production had in mind violated state labor codes,
so they declined to help fill the roles.
Instead, the task of finding suitable actors fell to Twilight Zone's producer George Fulsey Jr.
Falsy had worked with John Landis for more than a decade and had total belief in him.
He was sure that together they were going to the very top of Hollywood
and he wasn't going to let anything stand in their way.
He would get Landis what he needed, no matter what.
This is episode two.
It's going to be big.
It's July 16, 1982 on the set of Twilight Zone the movie
at the Franklin Canyon Reservoir in Los Angeles, California.
Producer George Falsy Jr. makes his way past the trailers and equipment trucks
toward the catering area.
Gathered around a table in the corner are two families with young children talking excitedly.
Folesy's strides.
over a broad smile on his face.
A few days ago, Fulsey was on the verge of despair.
He needed to find a boy and girl for the Vietnam Village sequence, but he didn't
know where to look until he remembered a psychiatrist friend who volunteered at a community
center with a large Asian clientele.
With this friend's help, Fulsey had now found two young actors, seven-year-old Mika
Din Lee, the son of two refugees from Vietnam, and six-year-old Renee Chen, the daughter
of Taiwanese immigrants.
Fulsey has invited them to the set today to meet with the director John Landis,
and after introducing himself, Fulsey takes a seat at the table
and explains what the children will have to do if they pass their audition.
So this is what's going to happen.
You two are going to be playing kids who live in a village by the river,
but there's a war going on, and somehow, during an attack by the bad guys,
you two get left behind.
Renee and Mika stare at Fulsey, their eyes wide.
Sounds a little scary, right?
But that's when you meet a stranger, a kind of.
man who protects you and carries you across the river to somewhere safe.
It's really a small part of the movie, but perhaps the most important.
In fact, I think you two will steal the show.
Reney and Mika smile shyly.
Folesy smiles back until out of the corner of his eye, he spots John Landis.
Oh, here comes the man himself.
Hey, John, John! Landis walks over.
John, these are the great kids I was telling you about.
Everyone, this is John Landis.
He's the director of the movie, the guy who tells us all what to do.
John, I'd love you to meet Renee and her mom and dad.
Hello, nice to meet you.
And this little future movie star here is Mika.
His dad couldn't make it tonight, but this is his mom.
Hello, it's a pleasure.
Now, John, I was just telling everyone about the great finale we've got planned
and how important these kids will be to the entire movie.
Oh, yeah, it's going to be huge, it's going to be spectacular.
We're going to have this big helicopter and these big explosions going off everywhere.
It's going to be awesome.
Across the table, foals he sees the parents exchange glances,
but he smiles reassuringly.
It'll be just like watching fireworks.
You like fireworks, kids, right?
Fourth of July and all that?
Two children nod.
Well, this will be even better.
Now, could you all excuse it for just a moment?
There's something I need to discuss with John, but I'll be right back.
Folesy gets to his feet, and he and John step away from the families.
Well, what do you think?
You ask for adorable, and I think that's what we've got.
Land as peers over at the children.
What do you think they weigh, like 40 pounds?
Something like that, they're skinny.
Should be easy enough for Victor Carey, right?
I think so. So you're happy with them? We can get them signed up. Landis nods and slaps Fulsey on the arm.
I knew you'd find them. Tell them I'll see them at Indian Dunes next week.
George Fulsey Jr. returns to the families and assures them that what they're planning is perfectly safe.
The helicopter and the explosions will all look dramatic on the big screen, but that's just movie magic.
Kids will never be in any real danger. What he doesn't tell the parents is what they are doing is illegal.
There are strict rules in California governing the use of children on movie sets,
and they do not permit nighttime shoots with helicopters and explosive special effects.
If word of the children's involvement gets out,
the studio or the authorities will almost certainly shut them down,
so Falsy is doing everything he can to keep it all a secret.
Copies of the scripts are kept under lock and key,
the call sheets which record who needs to be on set and when,
omit the children entirely,
and any other documents that might reveal the children.
truth are kept away from prying eyes. So with these precautions in place, filming at Indian
Dunes gets underway on the evening of July 20th, 1982. Indian Dunes is a popular location
for Hollywood productions. Just outside L.A., it's crucially still within the studio zone,
an imaginary 30-mile radius of Hollywood where union, cast, and crew have to cover their own
transportation costs. So it's the ideal spot for a production looking to save money. The property also has
over 600 acres of varying landscapes, from green hills to forests to flat deserts to jungle-like riverbeds.
Importantly for the Twilight Zone team, it's especially well suited to shooting at night.
Although it's less than an hour's drive from downtown Los Angeles, it seems far more remote.
Directors can choose wide, dramatic angles without any worries about the background being spoiled by city lights.
And for the finale of Twilight Zone the movie, the production has chosen a spot on the property on the banks of the Santa Clarita
River. It's a dramatic location, with large cliffs framing the scene, and on a sandy strip of
land beside the water, the production team has built 11 Vietnamese-style huts out of bamboo,
thatch, cardboard, and tree branches. It's here that Vic Morrow's character Bill Connor
will discover two stranded children and rescue them from an attacking American helicopter.
The script calls for Connor to pick them up and carry them across the river under constant rocket
in gunfire. But the destruction of the village will be the last scene to be shot. First, they
have to film the confused Conner's arrival in Vietnam. The script has him hop across time and space
inhabiting the bodies of people the bigot Conner has hated, a Jew and Nazi France, an African-American
facing the KKK. And now in the final sequence, he finds himself in Vietnam, hiding from a group of
Viet Cong soldiers. Once they pass, though, he spots a squad of American GIs and rushes out toward them
shouting, help, I'm an American. But they only see a Vietnamese civilian, an open fire.
As the crew finished setting up the shot, Vic Morrow takes up his position, half submerged in the
river. He's exhausted, because although the shoot for John Landis's segment is not a long one,
it's very physical and almost every scene is a chase. Morrow has used a stunt double for the more
dangerous shots, like when his character had to shimmy along a high ledge to escape Nazi
soldiers. But for the most part, it's been Morrow. He's been doing all the running and jumping.
So now, warily, Morrow prepares for more of the same. For this shot, Director John Landis
wants the banana plants behind Morrow to be shredded by a hail of gunfire as he leaps aside
at the last moment. So just off camera, special effects foreman Paul Stewart waits with
an air-powered gun. He fires small marble-like projectiles that should be enough to rip apart
the vegetation. Soon, the shout of action echoes across the set and the
camera whores. Moro flings himself into the water as Stewart opens fire. But Landis quickly
calls cut. He's not happy with the effect. Many of the marbles are just bouncing off the large leaves
instead of shredding them. There's no sense of danger. It doesn't look real, so they'll need to
try something else. Waiting out of the water, Morro takes a seat because this could take a while.
He smiles a thank you at a production assistant, who brings him a towel to keep him warm,
then listens in as Landis and Stewart debate what to do.
Landis is almost hopping he's so worked up.
Morrow shakes his head.
Landis doesn't ever seem to get tired.
Stewart suggests using squibs, small explosive charges,
that will rip the banana plants apart on cue,
but when Landis hears how long it'll take the setup,
he rejects the idea.
They don't have the time.
So Stewart suggests a simpler solution,
using live ammunition.
When Morrow hears this, he strides over
and demands to know what the plan is.
Stuart explains that he has some Remington 12-gauge shotguns in his truck.
A few blasts from those should give Landis the effect he's after.
But Morrow is deeply uncomfortable with the idea.
Sounds like they'll be shooting almost right at him.
Stewart reassures him that he'll be well clear of the plans before they open fire.
Still, Morrow insists that they all walk through the scene several times before he agrees to anything.
So with Morrow reluctantly on board, the camera is reset and once again,
then, on cue, he jumps into the water.
He swims over to where Paul Stewart and the two other special effects men are waiting with
the guns.
They pull him clear, then lower their weapons and blast the banana plants to pieces.
Calling cut once again, Landis smiles.
It's just what he was looking for.
The idea is that in the finished film, the gap between Morrow's dive and the plants being
destroyed will be edited out to make it look like he only just avoids the gunfire.
But to several of the crew around Indian dunes,
Bringing guns and live ammunition onto set, all seems like an unnecessary risk,
especially to save only the time to set up squibs.
Still, the shot is in the can, and no one got hurt, so production can move on.
Dawn is approaching by the time they finished shooting for the night,
and the exhausted cast and crew head home.
But they won't get long to rest.
They'll all need to be back at Indian Dunes the following afternoon for the final night of filming.
But while the production team tries to sleep,
In the Pasadena home of the Lee family, seven-year-old Mika is wide awake and counting down the hours.
Mika loves movies, so when his dad told him that he had the chance to appear in a real Hollywood picture, it was like a dream come true.
Mika doesn't much care about the $500 the producers have promised.
Instead, he's fixated on becoming a movie star.
A few hours later, the studio van arrives, with producer George Falsy Jr. having come to pick them up himself.
The entire family's coming along.
Mika, his mom and dad, and his little brother.
They all pile into the van, which then drive south to Cerritos.
There they pick up Renee Chen and her family before looping back around and heading north to Indian dunes.
Mika is bouncing on his seat all the way through the Hollywood Hills.
After about an hour and half in the van, they finally turn off the state highway and head down a dirt track.
It's still a few miles to the location, and as Mika peers out the window, eager for his first glimpse of the set,
George Folsey turns around from the front seat.
Smiling, he asks if the kids are excited, and Mika nods enthusiastically.
Then Fulsey looks at the parents.
He thanks him for letting the kids come along, but says that if anyone asks why they're all here,
they should answer that they're friends of his visiting the set.
Luckily, there are a lot of guests expected tonight.
It's the last day of principal photography, and a party is planned afterward,
so the Lee and Chen families should blend right in.
They just have to make sure they don't mention the five.
$500 they're being paid or the fact that their children have come here to work.
No one is to know about that until the shots John Landis needs are safely in the can.
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aren't the days you might think. Sure, everyone knows July 4th, 1776, but there are many other
days that are maybe even more influential and certainly more scandalous. So come out to see me
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On the afternoon of July 21, 1982, pilot Dorsey Wingo flies up to Indian dunes from Rialto in the rented Huey helicopter.
At 36 years old, Wingo is the director of operations for Western helicopters.
He's never worked on a movie as big as this before, but he has other relevant experience.
He's a Vietnam veteran.
After landing at a makeshift helipad just downstream of the location, the chopper is prepared for its big scene.
A studio artist arrives and adds authentic military-style nose art below the cockpit,
a large eagle with the words fly-by-night and blazoned underneath a production in-joke.
With that done, Wingo conducts several reconnaissance flights over the village set
to get the lay of the land while it's still light.
He doesn't want to run into any trees or power lines later when shooting gets underway,
and once he's satisfied, he returns to the helipad.
Two-fifty-calibre machine guns are then strapped to the sides of the Huey,
along with a powerful night sun searchlight.
Finally, Wingo puts on a familiar Vietnam-era flight suit
and takes to the skies for his first scene.
He is joined on board the helicopter by unit production manager Dan Allingham.
He'll be operating the searchlight,
making sure its beam stays on the actors below.
A unit production manager like Allingham
wouldn't normally be expected on set,
let alone be placed in charge of a major special effect.
But that's the ethos of John Landis's Twilight Zone team,
Everyone is pitching in to get the segment made on time and on budget.
The first setup is a simple one that won't involve any actors or special effects.
Instead, Dorsey Wingo just has to pilot his chopper over the cliff at the back of the set
while the camera captures his arrival from the village below.
It should be a relatively quick shot, the perfect warm-up for the more complex scenes planned for later in the night.
Wingo maneuvers the helicopter into position above the village set.
Landis has explained how he wants the helicopter,
to emerge from behind a particular tree on the edge of the cliff.
It sounded easy enough when Wingo was given the instructions,
but now that he's up in the air,
he's struggling to work out which tree Landis means.
He turns to Dan Allingham, who's sitting in the chair next to him.
Hey, Dan, is this the right tree?
Hold on, I'll check with John.
Allingham is wearing a radio headset connected directly to John Landis,
who is standing on the ground beside the camera 100 feet below.
John, how are we looking?
Wingo can't tell exactly what Landis is.
saying, but he doesn't sound happy. Allingham tries to call me.
All right, all right, John, all right. We'll move and try again. He looks back to Wingo.
He says it's not the right tree. That sounds like he threw some other words in there, too.
Well, I figured you didn't need to hear those. He says we need to move over to the left three trees.
His left or ours? Let me ask. John, yeah, sorry, do you mean your left or our left?
Okay, got it. Yeah, I got it. He leans over to Wingo and points. He leans over to Wingo and points.
points out the side of the helicopter.
His left, our right.
Okay, all right, no problem.
As the helicopter hovers over the cliff,
Wingo peers down trying to count the trees.
But from this angle, in the dark,
it's hard to make out what's a tree
and what's a shrub or a rock.
Wingo takes his best guess.
But before he can even ask whether he's got it right,
there's another angry outburst over the radio.
Allingham again tries to act as media.
Okay, John.
Okay, I get it.
We'll try one more time.
It's not exactly like parking a car, you know. It's pitch black up here. Just give us a chance.
Man, the guy needs to keep his shirt on. I'm sorry, Dorsey. You're doing a great job.
John just gets a little excited and talks like that sometimes. He's under a lot of pressure, you know.
There's a lot riding on him. I get that. So I guess we try the next tree. We try the next tree,
though they all look the same to me.
While Dorsey Wingo struggles to get the Huey into position, the children wait in a dressing room trailer a mile from set.
Mika Din Lee and Renee Chen are tired and bored.
Movie making isn't as much fun as they thought it would be.
After all the excitement of their journey to set,
Mika and Renee have had nothing to do for hours.
They've been able to nap a little,
but other than a brief trip to the caterer's truck,
have not even left the trailer.
And it's past midnight by the time the children are finally called.
Mika and Renee are taken to makeup,
where they change into dirty rags
and have dirt powder applied to their faces.
then they're driven up to the village set.
By now, it's almost 2 a.m., and the mood among the filmmakers is tense.
They're behind schedule.
Landis eventually got the shot of the helicopter above the cliff,
but a complicated setup of Vic Morrow arriving in the Vietnamese village
has also taken hours to get right.
So as Mika and Renee take their places inside one of the huts by the water's edge,
there are strained faces all around them.
But director John Landis tries to keep the energy up,
Kneeling in front of the children, he explains the scene once more.
It's their first encounter with Vic Morrow's character.
After finding Morrow asleep in a hut, Mika and Renee must pretend that they hear an American helicopter in the sky
and then run to hide behind Morrow.
Mika and Renee are nervous, excited, and exhausted.
This combination at first just makes them shy, but then they get the giggles.
One of them sets off the other and several takes are ruined before Landis comes over to speak with
again. Although he's also tired and under pressure, Landis doesn't take it out on the kids.
Not unkindly, but still firmly, he asks them to take it more seriously. After that,
Mika and Renee settled down, and at around 4.30 in the morning, they finally managed to complete the
scene. By now, blue-gray light is seeping over the cliff-tops at Indian dunes. It's approaching
dawn, and it's clear that the final shots involving the helicopter and explosions won't be
film tonight after all. So producer George Fulsey Jr. approaches Mika and Renee's parents.
He hands them an envelope each with the promised $500 in cash inside. Apologetically,
Fulsey then asks if the children could come back again the next night to finish the movie.
At first, the parents are reluctant. They've all been on set for 10 hours. They're tired too,
and some of them have to go to work later. But eventually they agree their kids can return.
Bolsey thanks him and promises that the van will pick them up again that afternoon just as before.
After the two families are taken home to get some rest, the production crew clears the set.
The planned rap party is canceled and everyone's told to report back at Indian Dunes the following evening.
As the crew packs up around him, second assistant director Andy Howes completes some paperwork
that has to be sent back to the production office in L.A.
As second AD is House's job to handle logistics on set.
He's in charge of the call sheet and making sure all the actors are where they need to be,
when they need to be, and in the right costume and makeup.
And now that production has gone over schedule, and they've had to extend the shoot by an extra night,
there's a lot for House to do.
But there's one thing he doesn't mention in his production reports, any involvement by Mika and Renee.
Ever since he came onto the project as 2nd AD last month,
House has been uncomfortable with the use of children in the final scene.
And after reading the script for the first time,
he suggested filming the kids on a soundstage
or using life-sized dolls or dwarf stunt people instead,
but he was told it wouldn't look real enough.
Unwilling to push the disagreement with his bosses too far,
he went along with their decision to hire Mika and Renee illegally,
but he still doesn't like it.
Returning to his production reports,
he soon approached by Jack Tice,
one of the film's fire safety officers.
There are six of them on the Twilight Zone production.
Their presence is a legal requirement
due to the flammable special effects being used.
The officers are there to make sure things are done safely,
and they bring tanks, hoses, and water trucks with them
to tackle any fires that might break out.
Making small talk, Tice says to House
that they've actually worked together on a movie before.
House doesn't remember, though,
until Tice mentions that he often has another job,
he's not just a fire officer,
he also works as a studio teacher and chaperone for child actors.
Immediately, House forgets all about his paperwork,
because if Tice has seen Mika or Renee, he could report the production to the California Labor Department.
But Tice doesn't say anything about the children, and as they talk some more,
House realizes that Tice was stationed up on the cliffs above set all night.
He never saw any of the filming, so he doesn't even know there are children in the cast.
It's then that House realizes he has a decision to make.
He could tell the truth.
The Twilight Zone team was lucky this time, but there's another night's shooting ahead,
And if Tice is stationed anywhere near the set, he'll almost certainly spot the kids and shut the production down.
And having taken part in this deception, House could then be in trouble himself.
But it takes a brave man in Hollywood to stand up to powerful producers and directors.
House decides not to say a word.
Instead, as Tice walks away, he scribbles down a note and slips it into the bundle of papers he's sending back to the production office,
a warning for the filmmakers that Jack Tice could be a problem.
On July 22nd, 1982, director John Landis is a man under pressure.
He came into the Twilight Zone project off the back of several movies where he went over budget and over-schedule.
So he was determined to show everyone that he could keep control of a production.
But now his segment of Twilight Zone the movie has slipped into an additional day,
and he's cost Warner Brothers tens of thousands of dollars in overrun costs.
So he cannot afford any more delays.
Tonight is his last shot of getting it right.
But it won't be easy.
The three most complicated shots in the entire movie need to be completed before the sun comes up tomorrow.
The first shot will be what the production team calls The Rescue.
In this scene, Vic Morrow's character grabs the two Vietnamese children under each arm
and dashes away from the village toward the river while being chased by the American chopper.
Then comes the rage scene, where Morrow raises his fist and shouts at the helicopter firing at him.
Finally, there's a shot of Morrow and the kids,
in the river, desperately wading through the water as the village explodes behind them in a
spectacular inferno. Each setup will be captured from different angles by up to six cameras.
Precise timing will be required. The pyrotechnic effects alone will make the setups challenging,
but then there's the helicopter and the two children, and as Landis has learned from the night
before, neither of those elements are entirely within his control. But if there's one thing he's
not worried about, it's his lead actor. Vic Moore,
has been everything Landis hoped for.
The role of Bill Connor is a highly physical one,
and Landis has demanded a lot from Morrow over the past three weeks.
There have been plenty of action scenes for the veteran to navigate,
but in the movie's quieter moments,
Morrow has taken the opportunity to show his range,
and he's conveyed exactly the kind of rugged vulnerability
that Landis was after when he created the character in the first place.
But while Landis may be feeling pleased with the results of their collaboration,
Morrow himself is more conflicted.
As he rests up at home during the day on July 22nd,
he shares some of his worries in a phone call with his old friend and lawyer, Al Green.
Lying back on his couch, Morrow stretches out and rubs his sore muscles.
Oh, Al, I don't know. Maybe this is just what sets are like these days.
Well, what do you mean?
Don't get me wrong. I know this is a huge opportunity for me, and I'm grateful.
I was beginning to wonder where the next job was going to come from, you know,
but I've seen some things I don't like.
Yeah, such as?
Well, drinking, even some drugger.
use. On set? Yeah. Wasn't like that when I was starting out. You want me to get involved here?
No, no, no. I can have a talk with Falsy right now. No, no, no. They'll just think I'm an old man complaining.
Most of them are just kids, you know. Landis is barely 30. Even Fulsey can only be in his early 40s,
and I don't want you to know how young some of the others are. I guess that's Hollywood now.
Well, Vic, look, if you're uncomfortable, if you're seeing things to make you nervous, we should say something.
Morrow hesitates, and green presses for an answer.
Look, give it to me straight. Do you feel unsafe on this set?
It's not that I'm afraid or anything. I've done plenty of action scenes in my time.
On combat, I had squibs going off around me all the time, but this one does feel different.
Slopier somehow.
Did I tell you they use live ammunition in one shot?
A scene you were in?
Well, yeah, I was out of the way by the time they opened fire, but I didn't like it.
And then there's this helicopter.
You have to ride in a helicopter?
doctor? That was not in your contract.
No, no, I'm not in it, but you know I don't like them.
Oh, Vic, one phone call. That's all it would take.
If what you're saying is true, it wouldn't be a violation of your contract.
30 seconds, and you're off that picture. Just give me the word.
Morrow is silent. In a way, it's tempting. He is exhausted.
Ah, no, I'll leave it alone. I need this too much.
You sure?
Yeah, yeah, I'll soldier through. I mean, it's just one more night, right?
A few hours later, Vic Morrow is on set once again at Indian Dunes.
Shooting is scheduled to begin at 9.30 p.m.
And as Morrow heads to his trailer to get ready,
the location beside the Santa Clarita River is alive with activity.
A bulldozer rumbles through the shallow water beside the village,
flattening out the riverbed.
Later, Morrow will be running in that water with the kids under his arms,
and the crew doesn't want anything under the surface tripping him up.
Meanwhile, among the bamboo and cardboard huts that line the shore,
the special effects team has carefully prepared the pyrotechnics.
All this work is overseen by producer George Fulsey Jr.
But Fulsey has plenty of other things on his mind.
By now, he knows all about the fire safety officer Jack Tice
and his second job as studio teacher and chaperone for child actors.
As such, Tice is a serious threat to production.
So even though they're not due on set for a few hours,
Fulsey has devised a plan to keep Mika Dyn Lee and Renee Chen out of sight
and away from Jack Tice.
He gathers his senior crew members together in a hurried conference.
They all know that as fire safety officer, Jack Tice, is free to wander wherever he wants.
But yesterday, he stationed himself behind the cliffs at the back of the set.
The flat grasslands there are especially vulnerable.
Stray embers from the explosive effects could easily start a fire there.
And that risk hasn't gone away, so Falsy hopes that Tice will be positioned there again.
If he is, they won't have a problem.
he won't be able to see the children from behind the cliff,
but there's no guarantee, and Tice could choose to stand somewhere else.
So Fulsey suggests they keep close tabs on him at all times,
and if they have to, try to steer him away from the set.
As for the two children, Mika and Renee will again be kept in a trailer with their parents
for as long as possible.
And if any of the crew need to refer to them on the radio,
they aren't to say their names or call them kids or anything like that.
They're just to say the Vietnamese.
Then Folsey reminds his crew that yesterday they got away with it without even knowing the danger they were in.
Hopefully, with more preparation, they'll be lucky again tonight.
And they'll have to be because Falsey knows they won't be able to keep the charade going much longer.
Earlier in the day, the unit production manager Dan Allingham had a phone call from the studio.
One of the executives at Warner Brothers had noticed a discrepancy in the production reports.
From reading the script, the executive knew there were children involved in the final Vietnamese
village sequence, but the paperwork from Indian Dunes made no mention of any child actors or welfare
officers on set. Allingham managed to brush the man off with an excuse, saying he was up in the
helicopter for the entire shoot yesterday, but he promised to look into it. That bought some time,
but Folsey knows when the executive calls again, he'll be expecting an answer. At that point,
they'll have to own up and face the consequences. The studio will be angry. They'll definitely
get a fine from the authorities, but Folsey tells himself that by then they should have
everything they need, and he's sure when people see the finished product, all will be forgiven.
The helicopter, the explosions, Vic Morrow saving two children, it's all going to be something
spectacular. From Wonder 8, this is episode two of the Twilight Zone accident for American scandal.
In our next episode, John Landis' explosive finale goes tragically wrong, and an investigation begins
into who was to blame. If you'd like to learn more about the accident on the set of Twilight Zone the movie,
we recommend the book Special Effects by Ron Lebrecht and Outrage's Conduct by Stephen Farber and Mark Green.
This episode contains reenactments and dramatized details.
And while in most cases we can't know exactly what was said, all our dramatizations are based on historical research.
American Scandal is hosted, edited, and executive produced by me, Lindsay Graham for Airship,
audio editing by Jake Sampson, sound design by Gabriel Gould, music by Thron.
This episode is written in research by William Simpson, fact-checking by Alyssa Jung,
Perry, managing producer Emily Burr, development by Stephanie Jens, senior producer Andy Beckerman.
Executive producers are William Simpson for airship and Jenny Lauer Beckman and Marshall Louis for
Wonderry. To listen to the rest of this season of American scandal, start your free trial of Wondry
Plus in the Wondery app, Apple Podcasts or Spotify. With Wondry Plus, you can listen to other incredible
history podcasts like American History Tellers, History Daily, Tides of History and more. Download the Wondry app
today.
