The Streets of San Francisco (1972–1977): Season 3, Episode 4 - Mask of Death - full transcript

John Davidson's best acting performance (in the eyes of nearly everyone associated with the show) comes when he plays a nightclub entertainer who dresses up as a famous female torch singer. Unfortunately he is schizophrenic, and becomes her and him -- at the same time. Even worse, "she" is a psychotic killer. Watch for a chilling scene where "he" talks to "her" in a mirror.

Miss Carol, a very
pleasant evening to you.

Hey, baby.

Missed you at the party.

Why don't you take off your
coat and hat and stay a while?

I got it.

Relax, Carol.

What's your drink?

Sherry.

Oops. You got me.

Wait a minute.

Isn't, uh, sweet vermouth
a kissing cousin?



Hmm?

Are you surprised I came?

You said you would.

Here we go.

The weapon was a
narrow gauge shaft,

probably steel.

It was plunged in directly
here, below the sternum,

it was twisted up, and
piercing the right ventricle,

the left articular appendage
and the pulmonary artery.

Now, the medical
examiner suggests

it was a darning needle,
or a machinist's bit

or a surgical instrument.

Or an ice pick or an
upholstery needle.

Let me ask you something.



If you were going
to stick someone,

would you make that
kind of fancy detour?

Not if I didn't know
where I was headed.

- Like, maybe a doctor.
- Maybe.

Hm.

Hey, Woody.

How you doing, Woody?

Ah, don't ask.

What?

A couple of weeks
ago, a crick in my neck,

last week, two teeth pulled.

Now... Ooh...

and I think I got
rheumatism or something.

What, in-in your funny bone?

Ho-ho-ho.

What's the bad word?

Well, now, do you think

you could reach back
about eight months?

- What'd I do?
- I'll tell you what you didn't do.

You didn't solve a murder.

- Oh.
- Oh.

John Willard, businessman,
staying at the Pierre Hotel.

Oh, that little dilly.

Somebody punched a hole in
him right under his breastbone.

Skewered his heart.

Hey, you gentlemen
have something?

A twin in every respect.

Our victim's name
is Harvey Ross.

He's on the road like your guy
in town for a sales convention.

He's dealing in costume jewelry.

The only thing is,

there's no samples
missing from his case.

My guy had a
roll of bills on him

would have choked a horse.

We ruled out robbery
in that one, too.

An M.O. like this,

we're after the
same sickie, all right.

Woody, you consider a woman?

Yeah, I walked that
around for a while.

But... a female predator

that uses eye shadow
and pantyhose...

A rare species, my friend.

But not quite
extinct, my friend.

Maybe it's arthritis.

Hey, your guy married?

Yeah, yeah. He's got three kids.

He's living in Palo Alto.

A player?

Well, we haven't
talked to his wife yet.

We thought we'd
get a little more

before we got
into that with her.

What hotel?

Pierre.

Same as my guy.

Place is so big,

nobody noticed anybody coming in

or going out when
it happened, right?

Right.

I'll get it.

Lieutenant Stone.

Oh, yes, Mr. Ganz.

Thanks for calling back.

Okay, I'll see you at 5:00.

I'm sorry. You
come to these things

hoping to get away from work,

and you got to
do more than ever.

That's quite all
right, Mr. Ganz.

Yeah, Harvey Ross was attending

the same convention
as you, then?

Yeah, yeah. It
really blew my mind

when I got back
here this morning

and heard about
what had happened.

You were out,
uh, all last night?

Little gal from Sausalito.

She gave me her card.

She sculpts.

Yeah, uh, uh, you
know, uh, statues.

She's... She shows her stuff

on a little shop over
at, uh, Chestnut.

And you were with Mr. Ross
earlier in the evening?

That's right.

Well, we talked to some of

the other members of your group,

and they all seem
to say that, uh...

you were the last
person they saw him with.

That, uh, could be, could be,

but he wasn't in any, uh,
pain when I left the party.

What party was that?

Oh, real fancy
shindig she threw.

Bobo Stanfield.

The oil well Stanfields?

We were there. Really.

Yeah, you know how it is

when you're doing
the small-town shuffle.

You get to New York,
Frisco, you go for broke.

Yeah, I-I didn't know
anybody there, but this Ross...

He was a real operator.

You know what he says?

He says, well, I've been
invited by some-some girl

he'd met in a... in a
bar the night before.

Yeah. And then,
she didn't even come.

Did he mention her name?

Uh... I don't think so, no.

Did he leave the party with you?

No. I clicked with
a chick, you know.

And then... then I le... I left.

You know, the... the
sculptor... sculptress.

Um... uh...

Sherry. That...

That's-that's what her name was.

Uh, check with her.

Check with Sherry.

We'll do that. Thanks a lot.

- Right.
- Bye.

♪ While tearing
off a game of golf ♪

♪ I may make a
play for the caddie ♪

♪ But when I do, I
don't follow through ♪

♪ 'Cause my heart
belongs to Daddy ♪

♪ If I invite a boy some night ♪

♪ To dine on my
fine fin and haddie ♪

♪ I just adore his
asking for more ♪

♪ But my heart
belongs to Daddy ♪

♪ Well, my heart
belongs to Daddy ♪

♪ And I know I
could never be bad ♪

♪ Yes, my heart
belongs to Daddy ♪

♪ Da-da, da, da-da,
da, da-da, da ♪

♪ Well, I want to
warn you, laddy ♪

♪ I think you're
perfectly swell ♪

♪ But my heart
belongs to Daddy ♪

♪ 'Cause my Daddy...
He treats me so well. ♪

Betty, if you don't
fix this zipper...

Yeah, fine.

Mm-hmm. I'll slash my wrists.

I just hung up with
Green in Vegas.

He wants an answer
on that August thing.

And there's a local talk
show wants you for Thursday.

No, forget it, Lori.

People who watch
talk shows don't pay

to see our kind
of entertainment.

Out!

Everybody... out.

All right, everyone...

Honey, I got to get a
measurement on this now.

Out, out.

If there's anything
you want, just holler.

- All right, bye...
- But the Vegas thing.

There's gonna be a
new one tomorrow night.

- Carol, I have to give them an answer...
- Out, Sam.

It doesn't get to you, does it?

What?

You blind or something?

The whole... the whole
Carol Marlowe number.

Ten minutes after
the last curtain call,

it's still hanging on.

Sam, you've been around
show people all your life.

Oh, sure, it takes a long
time getting into character,

and you got to have
time to turn it off, but,

16 years, I never
saw one like ours.

We... We've got us
an original one, Lori.

Believe me.

Look who's telling who.

♪♪

Ken?

Yeah.

Hey, you okay?

Yeah.

Lori went on back to the house.

Listen, this Vegas thing, huh?

We got us one dynamite
year coming up, Kenny.

With Carol Marlowe
back in the act,

they're all screaming for you.

I'm telling you, it's
this nostalgia thing.

Carol Marlowe rides again.

Up, up and away.

Sam, shut up.

My head is killing me.

The Carol Marlowe bit is out.

Okay?

She's dead, Sam.

Hey, Ken, baby.

I mean it.

I mean it, Sam.

I don't want to hear another
word about Carol Marlowe.

She's out.

Oh, they're early.

Hurry up, Frank, make me decent.

Law and order have arrived.

Thank you, Martin.

Forgive me, gentlemen, I
meant to be ready for you.

Mrs. Stanfield, I'm
Lieutenant Stone

and this is Inspector Keller.

Shouldn't take too
long, Mrs. Stanfield.

Oh, that's unfortunate.

Uh, would you gentlemen
care to join me in a drink?

No, no, thank you.

You don't mind if I have
another one, do you?

Not at all.

- You gave a party the other evening.
- That's right.

Would it be possible
to have the guest list?

I'll have a copy made for you.

Here's the man I mentioned
to you over the phone.

Oh, yes.

I'm afraid that he was a
pathetic, lecherous boor.

You remember him, then?

There are some men

that are terribly hard
to forget, Inspector.

Had you ever seen
him before the party?

No, but I think if Ken
Scott hadn't pulled him off

when he did, I, uh,

well, I would have
slapped him in the face.

Ken Scott, did you say?

Yes, the actor... Well,
an impressionist, really.

He came in and he, uh,
he did a few of his bits

and, uh, kept it from being a
bad scene that I didn't need.

We understand
Mr. Ross was invited

by a lady he met in
a bar the night before.

You know who that would be?

No, but if you ever find out,
I would like to know that, too.

I mean, I certainly don't need

a person with that kind
of taste around here, do I?

Did you see him leave the party?

Mm, not likely.

I would have applauded, I...

I did see Ken locking
him in a corner.

Read him the
house rules, I guess.

Well, if there isn't something
else you'd like to tell us,

maybe, uh, maybe
we ought to leave.

Fine, I'll find
that list for you.

Thank you.

Oh, there was one other thing.

- What's that?
- I don't know if it means anything to you,

but he got a phone call, later
on in the evening, from a girl.

Did you answer the phone?

No, no, I don't answer
the phone around here.

Well, how do you
know it was from a girl?

I saw him.

Uh, see, a man has a different
way of talking to a woman

on the phone than
to another man.

Why don't you prove
it to yourself, Inspector,

and call me sometime?

Okay.

Did you get the actor's name?

Yeah.

♪ A kiss on the hand
may be quite continental ♪

♪ But diamonds are
a girl's best friend ♪

♪ A kiss may be grand,
but it won't pay the rental ♪

♪ On your humble flat ♪

♪ Or help you at the Automat ♪

♪ Men grow cold ♪

♪ As girls grow old ♪

♪ And we all lose our
charms in the end ♪

♪ But square-cut
or pear-shaped ♪

♪ These rocks don't
lose their shape ♪

♪ Diamonds are a
girl's best friend ♪

♪ There may come a time
when a lass needs a lawyer ♪

♪ But diamonds are
a girl's best friend ♪

♪ There may come a time ♪

♪ When a hard-boiled employer
thinks you're awful nice ♪

♪ But get that ice
or else no dice ♪

♪ He's your guy
when stocks are high ♪

♪ But beware when
they start to descend ♪

♪ It's then that those louses ♪

♪ Go back to their spouses ♪

♪ Diamonds are a
girl's best friend ♪

♪ I don't mean rhinestones ♪

♪ Diamonds ♪

♪ Diamonds ♪

♪ Diamonds are a girl's ♪

♪ Best friend. ♪

Thank you very much,
ladies and gentlemen.

Uh, you were a
wonderful audience tonight.

I know my act is
a little bit weird...

I still have my nails on.

Uh, you were a great
audience tonight.

Many people don't actually
understand what I do

and they're very shocked
when they come to see me work.

It's not so much the
act that shocks them,

it's when they get the check.

Actually, people really
don't understand what I do,

let's face it.

Give you an example...
Couple months ago in Miami

a nice elderly couple
came walking backstage

and they were so excited,
they wanted to congratulate me.

They couldn't believe

that a woman could
impersonate a man so well.

You were a smash, milord.

Mm, stick around for my encore.

Of course, we didn't
fill all the requests,

but you don't listen...

Oh, Sam, that was a great
show. Are you kidding?

Mr. Scott.

- I loved it.
- Mr. Scott?

- Yes, sir.
- I'm Lieutenant Stone.

Lieutenant.

What unit, Stone?

I was in the Marines,
believe it or not.

They're from the police, Ken.

Oh, the police?

Oh... I hope you don't
bust me, gentlemen.

I'm clean, I'm clean.

Honey, are you going to
do Marilyn tomorrow night?

Oh, yes.

Ooh... on the second show.

We're investigating

a homicide, Mr. Scott.

We understand
you were at a party

at Bobo Stanfield's
the other night...

That's right.

With a man named Harvey Ross.

He got killed a few hours later.

Aha, maybe that's
an omen or something.

Uh, Mr. Scott... you
talked to the victim.

He was the man who made
a play for Mrs. Stanfield.

Bobo?

Ah, yeah, I remember that creep.

Bought himself six
feet of earth, huh?

Lori, Lori,

some calla lilies for his grave.

The calla lilies
are in bloom again.

Lieutenant, maybe if
you got to the point...

Sam, please, cool it.

Guys, look...

I saw him, I lectured
him, and I just forgot him.

Did you see him leave
the party with anybody?

I don't know.

I, I left early.

He was still hanging around.

Officers, I...

I do hope I've been
helpful, yes, I do.

Do you have the feeling you
just came off another planet?

That's showbiz.

Showbiz, huh?

Well, maybe I
shouldn't knock it.

He plays to full houses every
night; we come up empty-handed.

We have nothing to talk about.

Oh, yes, we do.

Look, I'm beat.

Why don't you go crawl
in a tomb somewhere?

Just get off my back.

You know why I'm here.

I don't know anything anymore.

You took me out
of the act again.

I warned you the first time,

but you wouldn't listen.

What are you going to do, love?

Turn me in?

You murdered two men.

Trash... I killed trash.

You know as well as I
do the kind they were.

It's wrong.

How dare you judge me.

I'm Carol Marlowe, and
don't you ever forget it.

Let go of me, Carol.

Tell me I'm in the act again.

No.

There's only one way
to deal with you, love.

Sorry,

but I miss my audiences.

Carol... Carol.

Don't do it again, please.

Carol!

Same murder weapon, Mike.

When did it happen, Bernie?

Oh, five, six hours ago
maybe; not much more.

Mike, this is Mr. Winkler.

I think he's got
something for us.

I'm on a double shift, so
I must have been on duty

when this happened
last night, don't you know?

Mr. Winkler, the
medical examiner figures

the victim has been
dead for about six hours.

Well, I... it was a quarter
to 3:00... a.m., that is...

When I saw this woman
coming out of the elevator.

Uh...

I'm what you call a film buff...

Pictures from the
'30s, don't you know?

Uh, oh, they don't make
them like that no more, no, sir.

That's right, they don't
make 'em like that, no, sir.

And you figure that
there's a connection

between the lady you saw...

And the old movies.

Her clothes... right out of
Ruby Keeler in Footlight Parade.

She was wearing
a hat, too, Mike.

Yeah, with a veil, you
know, like they used to.

- Uh-huh.
- Maybe a hatpin.

- A hatpin.
- Yeah.

Yeah, yeah, maybe.

Go on, continue.

Well, uh...

I-I sort of followed her.

A man don't get to see

a swell-looking gal
like that much anymore.

- Where did she go?
- Oh, just a block.

And sitting there
waiting for her

is this big limousine that
looks like it just come out

of Gloria Swanson's
garage, don't you know.

Did you get the license number?

Uh, no, sir, uh...

too busy trying to
figure out if it was a '33

or '34 Brewster.

'33 or '34 Brewster?

Uh, the, uh, manager
advises me that Mr. Winkler

is a very responsible employee.

With a high of 78 tomorrow.

The next Bay area weather
forecast on the noontime news.

Headlining the local
news, James Waters,

a pharmaceutical salesman
staying at the Hotel Athena,

was found murdered
after he failed to respond

to a wake-up call
early this morning.

An employee of the Hotel
Athena is reported to have seen

a possible female
suspect leaving the hotel

just after the crime
was committed.

Police have described
the mystery woman

as a Caucasian, 30 to 35,

dressed in the
style of the '30s.

She was seen entering
a chauffeur-driven

antique automobile
shortly before 3:00 a.m.

It is the second such
murder this past week,

the other occurring at the
Hotel Pierre on Thursday night.

Still bad?

Yeah.

- I'm gonna call a doctor.
- No. Lori...

Headaches like that
aren't natural, Ken.

There has to be
something that can be done.

I don't need a doctor!

All right.

Maybe you don't need me, either.

Lori... Lori...

I-I'll be all right.

I... I'll be all right in
just a couple of minutes.

No, Ken.

And as long as you
keep lying to yourself,

pressing yourself, you're
never going to be well.

- Look, I'm not sick.
- You're exhausted!

- No!
- You're so drained,

you don't know anything
about yourself anymore.

How could you?

Think about what you do.

Every day, you have
to masquerade around

so perfectly that people
can't tell what sex you are.

I mean, what kind of
concentration does that take?

What kind of tension does
that have to put you under?

Okay, okay,
I-I'll... I'll tell Sam

to cancel the next
couple of dates.

That won't do it, Ken.

You tell Sam to
find a new client.

You can't keep on
with the act, Ken.

That kind of
pressure isn't normal.

That kind of
transformation isn't normal.

It's breaking you.

You have to stop it,
Ken, you have to quit.

I can't.

I mean, how do I live?

Your life doesn't depend
on that damned act!

Mine does.

What?

I said...

mine does.

Ken...

Ken, don't.

Oh, dear God.

Please, please,
see a doctor, Ken.

You won't be seeing me anymore.

Go.

Run.

Tramp.

This is where I live.

You don't belong here anyway.

Mr. Scott?

Mr. Scott, sir?

Mr. Scott, sir?

Mr. Scott?

- What is it, Raymond?
- Oh.

I wanted to tell you, sir.

I'm afraid I find it necessary
to leave your employ.

I regret the
suddenness, sir, but...

Why do you address
me that way, Raymond?

You know who I am.

Yes... madam.

Now, then, what's
all this about leaving?

Well, it's my cousin, sir...

madam, the one in Toronto.

She's been ill and...

I don't believe you, Raymond.

It's about last night, isn't it?

Last night?

When we went out.

You know, don't you, Raymond?

I really must be going, madam.

You finally know.

Who have you told, Raymond?

No one.

I've told no one.

And I won't, I swear.

I believe you, Raymond.

I... I do believe you.

The girl I saw was real elegant.

Walked just so, don't you know?

I'll look all you want,

but I don't think
I'm gonna fi...

This is gonna sound like I'm
off my nut, but I think I do know

where I can get a
picture of her for you.

Listen, we just got
something from DM...

H-Hold it for a minute. Hold it.

- Huh?
- Finish your thought.

Well, there was this
big movie star in the '30s.

Committed suicide just
before the war broke out.

Carol Marlowe. Remember her?

I sure do.

And you feel the lady you
saw looked like Carol Marlowe?

You ain't gonna have
nobody in these mug shots

come any closer... nobody.

Thank you.

Thank you, Mr. Winkler.

We'll keep in touch.

Oh. Sorry.

Force of habit.

You know, I think we
were just handed a tip.

What tip, old movies?

Carol Marlowe, the
actress, one of the greatest.

Just as great as Mae West,

- Garbo, Hepburn...
- So?

That's why everyone
still does imitations of her.

Imitations...

- What, Ken Scott?
- That's right.

Female impersonator.

Maybe that ties with
what I got from DMV.

Registration...

A '34 Brewster.

Hmm, Ken Scott.

I wonder if he was here
entertaining eight months ago?

Why?

- The first murder.
- I'll call his agent.

No, don't call agents;
they just mean trouble.

Listen, let's go to the library.

- You got a library card?
- No, but I got connections.

Steve. Steve, come here.

- What do you got?
- Read the dates.

October 4... Yeah, he
was in town October 13.

Mm-hmm. Along with
everybody else in San Francisco.

But, crazy as it sounds...

I think we're really
on to something.

Okay, we got three
bios on Carol Marlowe.

She was a very, very kinky lady.

They got one chapter in
here you're not gonna believe.

Well, don't believe everything
you read on film people.

They're human beings
just like anybody else.

What are you talking
about? The lady killed herself.

Her mother's a
juicer, her father...

Guess what he did for a living.

Traveling salesman.

That's right, a salesman...
Away from home all the time.

She never forgave him.

She blamed him
for all her hang-ups.

Now...

I may be reverting back
to my old psych classes,

but it could be she's
killing her father

every time she kills
one of the salesmen.

Why "she"?

We're talking about a guy.

Ken Scott.

Oh, yeah.

Okay, I got a picture
of her, anyway.

It was taken in 1939.

That's her chauffeur
Raymond Howard.

- In a limousine.
- Yeah.

Could be a '34 Brewster.

Yeah, that's what
the author said, yeah.

- He does, huh?
- Yeah.

Well, let's go and find out
what Mr. Scott has to say.

Well, you see, uh,

there was a car
seen in the area.

It was one of those, um...

oh, classics that
people like to collect.

1934 Brewster.

And you found out
that I own one, right?

That's right.

Yeah. Belonged to Carol Marlowe.

Matter of fact,
that's why I bought it.

- I happen to be a very big fan.
- I see.

Of course, we know that there
isn't one person in a thousand

who can tell you the difference
between a '34 Brewster

and a, uh...

what, a '29 Dusenberg.

So what?

So were you driving
the car last night?

No. I never drive that car.

- I drive a Ferrari.
- Of course. A Brewster's

driven by a chauffeur,
isn't it, Mr. Scott?

You have a chauffeur?

- Yes, I do.
- What's his name?

His name is Raymond.
Uh, Raymond Howard.

How long has he worked for you?

I don't know, not long.

A year, maybe. He, uh...

he worked for Marlowe, too.

Brought him out of retirement
just to drive me around.

It's all just... part
of the act, huh?

Lieutenant, everything
I do is part of the act.

I mean, Officer, it's my life.

Two minutes, Ken.

Okay. Look, guys, the fella

you're looking for couldn't
possibly have been Raymond.

I mean, he would never
take that car out on his own.

Well, now, we're
not looking for a guy.

We're looking for
a gal. A woman.

Well, I'm even more sure it
couldn't have been my car, then.

Uh, Officers, that's
my music starting up.

You'll have to excuse me.

I have to get into
character, yes, I do.

Right! Is there anything else?

No, no. No,
there's nothing else.

Thank you very
much for your time.

Right!

No problem, Officer.

Diamonds are a
girl's best friend.

It's like dealing with a
three-headed monster.

You don't know
which head to talk to.

Yeah, and one of
'em may be a killer.

Now, look at this.

There's a bunch
of those up there.

Okay, that's it.

Put out an APB
on that chauffeur.

- What's his name.
- Right.

And then I want a complete
profile on Mr. Ken Scott.

Okay.

Insurance, schools,
service, medical, everything.

Everything right down
to his birth certificate.

Listen, put that
thing away, will you?

Before I bust
you for petty theft.

No, no, no. We... No,
we understand that.

This would be
strictly confidential.

We just need some
background information,

and your wife
suggested that we...

Right. Right.

No, a half hour will be fine.

Doctor, thank you
very much. Good-bye.

Dr. Thompson at
the county hospital.

He can see us in half an hour.

You know, it says here

when he was in the
Marines, he was a medic.

A medic. He's got to
know about anatomy.

He sure does.

Are you thinking
what I'm thinking?

Yep.

Then you think that
maybe he killed those guys

and used Carol Marlowe as bait?

Or she's using him?

Come again?

Her personality.

He could be so bent,

he doesn't know
whether he's killing or not.

You think he's schizoid?

Well, is there anything in
those reports that tell us that?

Well, I don't know.

Says here, Kenneth Jackson
Scott was born in 1940.

Dropped out of school in 1959
to become a medic in the Marines.

Three years of service,

four years of Academy
of Performing Arts,

some stage work, and...

He was a big hit on the road

in a thing called
Charley's Aunt.

Yeah, that figures.

What does?

Charley's Aunt...it's a play

about a guy who dresses
up as a woman, his aunt.

It is, huh?

You know it, right?

Do I know it? Oh.

♪ Once in love with Amy ♪

♪ Always in love with Amy ♪

♪ La, la-la,
la-la, la-la, la... ♪

I saw Ray Bolger do
it, right here in town.

So how does that figure?

Well, how does it figure?

It figures that, uh,

just because he's a
female impersonator

doesn't make him a basket case.

I knew a guy in Guadalcanal...
A Marine, a sergeant...

Did a terrific imitation
of Carmen Miranda.

♪ La cucaracha, la cucaracha ♪

♪ La-ta, di-di, di-di ♪

♪ La cucaracha... ♪

You must have been
on that island a long time.

Yeah, I sure was.

What about Ken Scott?

Ken Scott?

Well, let's see.

Ken Scott.

He lives on Beacon
Hill in an old mansion

his grandfather built in 1910.

He was in shipping.

His father, Andrew Scott,
was a merchant seaman.

Divorced in 1951.

Wait a minute. He's a sailor.

Yep.

He's travelling a lot like
a travelling salesman.

I don't know.

Nothing here says
he's a psycho, though.

How about that
medical insurance?

Anything from that?

We're seeing the
doctor in half an hour.

You think he's gonna
give us something?

He's a shrink.

Now, as far as I know,

his disturbance is related
strictly to his profession.

Well, how's that, Doc?

Well, like most
stage performers,

that is, people who
act out other lives,

impersonate other individuals,

Mr. Scott has developed
a highly-refined sense

of psychic dualism.

That is to say, one
can actually believe

that he knows how
another person,

another personality, might react

to a particular set
of circumstances.

Feel as the other
person might feel.

It's a form of role-playing.

Is it possible that someone
who has an imagination

as highly-developed
as Scott could be, uh,

dominated by the personality?

Oh, it's rare.

Is it possible?

Well, yes, if the
person is pressed

to the point of
acute exhaustion.

You know, I've read a
lot of documented cases

about people who have
more than one personality.

Now, is it possible

that a personality can
do something violent,

and the other personality
not know anything about it?

Are you saying, Lieutenant,

that Ken Scott has
killed someone?

Doc, what I'm saying is

that the guy we're looking
for could be very, very sick.

Especially if
he's killing people

under the influence

of a personality
named Carol Marlowe.

He talk to you about
Carol Marlowe?

Yes.

That was one of his concerns.

Well, it's one of ours now.

Thank you very much.

Good-bye.

Where's Raymond? How
come he doesn't open up?

I don't know.

He's probably upstairs.

Raymond?

Sam, why don't you go
fix yourself a drink, huh?

Okay?

Raymond?

♪♪

Killing in October
was on the 13th,

he saw Thompson on the 15th.

You think it's possible
he could be conscious

of what he's doing
part of the time?

I don't know anything
about all that mumbo-jumbo.

The only thing I know is,
I want to put an end to it.

- How do you want to handle it?
- Straight.

But the guy's confused.
All we can do is help him.

He'll get all the help
he needs in the hospital.

Have you forgotten that
he's killed three guys already?

And they were all very
sympathetic, you know.

You've just had a vacation!

Sam, I'm telling you,
you cancel the tour.

You listen to me, Kenny.

We got contracts!

You leave me
holding an empty bag,

and I-I'm gonna
sue you, so help me.

I'm going to Acapulco tomorrow.

Do you want to make
the arrangements or not?

Okay, go ahead.
Do what you want!

But when you get
back, don't call me, baby.

Call my lawyer.

You know what I think?

I think you're nuts.

Sam.

I'm sorry.

Sure, kid.

Too bad.

You... you had a great future.

Is Mr. Scott in?

Yeah, he's, uh, up in the study.

Can we, uh...?

Go right on up.

♪♪

♪♪

Mike?

Yeah.

That's it for the APB
on the chauffeur.

♪♪

Hey, get...

Are you all right?

Just... just a little too close.

A little... a little too close.

Hey, look.

That's probably the last time
they'll have that up in lights.

Yeah.

You know, he's even got
a hit album out now, too?

Those kind of
hits, I don't mind.

Yeah, he was good.

Yeah, maybe too good.