#557335
Piano Man
Original Air Date: March 27, 1991
Written by: Ed Scharlach
Directed by: James Whitmore, Jr.
Leap Date: November 10, 1985
This time: Sam leaps into a pianist. One of the patrons, Janelle, makes a special request. After Sam plays and sings that number, a woman named Loraine wants to talk to him, after stepping on his foot and knocking over the tip glass. The two have a songwriting history, and a romantic history, together. She is madly in love with a man named Carl but wants to make sure there are no loose ends, something Carl agreed to as well. Lorraine phones him that things are working out.
The bartender wants to take Janelle home and borrows Sam’s car. Finding out his leapees name of Chuck rather than his alias, Al discovers that he died in a car explosion, which happens outside the bar at that moment. They go out to see what happened and a goon approaches. After accidentally shooting Sam in the leg. Loraine takes off in her car and the goon follows.
Al finds out that Chuck is a witness to a crime and has been on the road ever since. They outwit the goon but Loraine is a bit of a klutz and runs out of gas. They go to a local diner where Sam calls the sheriff for assistance while Loraine calls Carl to give him an update.
Al arrives to say that the Sheriff will come and finish the job; he is not on their side. They run out and hit the road. Loraine gives Carl an update. Furious, he insists that she and Sam meet him at a nearby airfield, him being a pilot and all. Sam agrees though Al believes they are better if Loraine is not around. Sam breaks up with her and she drives off. Al says that she is run off the road. Sam grabs a nearby truck, along with a nearby rifle, and heads off after her.
Loraine meets up with Carl who seems a little preoccupied with what happened, particularly Sam. It turns out that Carl is an alias as well and he is the one trying to kill them. Lorraine manages to kill ‘Carl’ courtesy of a falling engine. They get back together. Sam leaps …
… into a man blowing out a lot of birthday candles. Some women in lingerie approach him to offer congratulations.
Fact check: Don’t all roadside diners in the county have a perfectly tuned piano ready to play? Along with a patron ready to dance with the proprietress?
Stop talking to yourself: We do get Sam singing twice in this episode, but he does not talk to us at all.
Only Sam can see and hear: Al come in real quick but does not have any information on who Sam leaped into or why Sam is there. It is a little hard with the three main characters having aliases.
Mirror images that were not his own: Sitting down at the bar, Sam sees himself in the mirror.
It’s a science project: The goon in this episode would wish he had stormtrooper accuracy. At least they shoot in the right direction. He shoots at a fleeing car in two entirely different directions.
Let’s up the rating: Janelle clearly has a thing for Sam. Loraine and Sam/Chuck made beautiful music together as well although that was literal in addition to figurative.
One more time: “His name is Carl Morgan and he’s very successful and he doesn’t live on the road and most importantly he loves me very much.” “I wonder why she’s sitting on a bar stool next to you.”
Lorraine and Al both making good points.
Trivial Matter: The title to this episode is a famous Billy Joel song. Just as this episode has several assumed names that song also has two ‘voices.’
Put right what once went wrong: “I figure if I was going to sing it would be better with lyrics.” This is a very well put together hour with strong writing and acting. The script is smart with Al not knowing who Sam is and needing to pry the information out of Loraine. Sam and the antagonist are operating under assumed names which makes figuring out what happened a little more difficult. We also have a fully fleshed character in Loraine. We do not just hear about her clumsiness (though we do get not one but two dialogue sequences where Loraine talks about the troubles that seem to follow her past boyfriends and their troubles abroad, such as them going to New Orleans but Sam’s luggage going to Iran) there are demonstrations throughout the hour. We see her having issues long before she causes Carl to be crushed by an engine, perfectly capping off the boss fight set piece.
As Loraine, Marietta DePrima has the chops and pipes required. She is not proud of her ‘curse,’ but can convey her dialogue perfectly and has amazing chemistry with Bakula. The two are great with each other and they make beautiful music together even when they are not at the piano. Even when Al is around, they are in perfect synch with each other. She is a joy to watch and Sam plays the recipient of information very well. Sam Clay plays Carl with good grace and understanding though he does make the metamorphosis to demanding boyfriend to bad guy in the final act. It all works and fits together in the end.
All in all, this may seem a bit derivative of season two’s “Her Charm,’ because it very much is but the hour is done pretty well and with these great performances you can forgive the writers for reaching back into the sack and building on prior successes. Lorainne gets along better with Sam for the most part, at least.
It is not all perfect, though. Two characters and fridged for this episode to happen. Also, the driving is very obviously green screened, to the point where it is a little distracting when Sam turns the wheel and does not turn it back. These are not enough to make an otherwise enjoyable episode horrible, but it does bring things down a bit.
Original Air Date: March 27, 1991
Written by: Ed Scharlach
Directed by: James Whitmore, Jr.
Leap Date: November 10, 1985
This time: Sam leaps into a pianist. One of the patrons, Janelle, makes a special request. After Sam plays and sings that number, a woman named Loraine wants to talk to him, after stepping on his foot and knocking over the tip glass. The two have a songwriting history, and a romantic history, together. She is madly in love with a man named Carl but wants to make sure there are no loose ends, something Carl agreed to as well. Lorraine phones him that things are working out.
The bartender wants to take Janelle home and borrows Sam’s car. Finding out his leapees name of Chuck rather than his alias, Al discovers that he died in a car explosion, which happens outside the bar at that moment. They go out to see what happened and a goon approaches. After accidentally shooting Sam in the leg. Loraine takes off in her car and the goon follows.
Al finds out that Chuck is a witness to a crime and has been on the road ever since. They outwit the goon but Loraine is a bit of a klutz and runs out of gas. They go to a local diner where Sam calls the sheriff for assistance while Loraine calls Carl to give him an update.
Al arrives to say that the Sheriff will come and finish the job; he is not on their side. They run out and hit the road. Loraine gives Carl an update. Furious, he insists that she and Sam meet him at a nearby airfield, him being a pilot and all. Sam agrees though Al believes they are better if Loraine is not around. Sam breaks up with her and she drives off. Al says that she is run off the road. Sam grabs a nearby truck, along with a nearby rifle, and heads off after her.
Loraine meets up with Carl who seems a little preoccupied with what happened, particularly Sam. It turns out that Carl is an alias as well and he is the one trying to kill them. Lorraine manages to kill ‘Carl’ courtesy of a falling engine. They get back together. Sam leaps …
… into a man blowing out a lot of birthday candles. Some women in lingerie approach him to offer congratulations.
Fact check: Don’t all roadside diners in the county have a perfectly tuned piano ready to play? Along with a patron ready to dance with the proprietress?
Stop talking to yourself: We do get Sam singing twice in this episode, but he does not talk to us at all.
Only Sam can see and hear: Al come in real quick but does not have any information on who Sam leaped into or why Sam is there. It is a little hard with the three main characters having aliases.
Mirror images that were not his own: Sitting down at the bar, Sam sees himself in the mirror.
It’s a science project: The goon in this episode would wish he had stormtrooper accuracy. At least they shoot in the right direction. He shoots at a fleeing car in two entirely different directions.
Let’s up the rating: Janelle clearly has a thing for Sam. Loraine and Sam/Chuck made beautiful music together as well although that was literal in addition to figurative.
One more time: “His name is Carl Morgan and he’s very successful and he doesn’t live on the road and most importantly he loves me very much.” “I wonder why she’s sitting on a bar stool next to you.”
Lorraine and Al both making good points.
Trivial Matter: The title to this episode is a famous Billy Joel song. Just as this episode has several assumed names that song also has two ‘voices.’
Put right what once went wrong: “I figure if I was going to sing it would be better with lyrics.” This is a very well put together hour with strong writing and acting. The script is smart with Al not knowing who Sam is and needing to pry the information out of Loraine. Sam and the antagonist are operating under assumed names which makes figuring out what happened a little more difficult. We also have a fully fleshed character in Loraine. We do not just hear about her clumsiness (though we do get not one but two dialogue sequences where Loraine talks about the troubles that seem to follow her past boyfriends and their troubles abroad, such as them going to New Orleans but Sam’s luggage going to Iran) there are demonstrations throughout the hour. We see her having issues long before she causes Carl to be crushed by an engine, perfectly capping off the boss fight set piece.
As Loraine, Marietta DePrima has the chops and pipes required. She is not proud of her ‘curse,’ but can convey her dialogue perfectly and has amazing chemistry with Bakula. The two are great with each other and they make beautiful music together even when they are not at the piano. Even when Al is around, they are in perfect synch with each other. She is a joy to watch and Sam plays the recipient of information very well. Sam Clay plays Carl with good grace and understanding though he does make the metamorphosis to demanding boyfriend to bad guy in the final act. It all works and fits together in the end.
All in all, this may seem a bit derivative of season two’s “Her Charm,’ because it very much is but the hour is done pretty well and with these great performances you can forgive the writers for reaching back into the sack and building on prior successes. Lorainne gets along better with Sam for the most part, at least.
It is not all perfect, though. Two characters and fridged for this episode to happen. Also, the driving is very obviously green screened, to the point where it is a little distracting when Sam turns the wheel and does not turn it back. These are not enough to make an otherwise enjoyable episode horrible, but it does bring things down a bit.
Get away from the military with artists, politicians and criminals in Classification: Civilian.
The best of times for the Federation and the Klingon Empire: Second Star to the Right
The best of times for the Federation and the Klingon Empire: Second Star to the Right