Quantum Leap List of Lists
                            compiled by Mark Holtz
                           (Revised April 7, 1993)

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Index
~~~~~
Upcoming Episode Information
Episode Listings
Working Titles
Folks Who Saw Al and Sam
Whose Else In The Chamber?
Don't Examine This Too Closely
Thanks To.....
1995199519951995199519951995199519951995199519951995199519951995199519951995199
                                  "Ho boy!"
                      Upcoming Episode Information.....

We know you're all supporting the show...but unfortunately it's not reflected
in the Nielsens. We think it's time to let NBC know how we feel about the time
slot: we want the old one back!

It's time to write to: Warren Littlefield, President
                      NBC Television
                      3000 W. Alameda Ave.
                      Burbank, CA 91523

A letter or card with the words: LEAP US BACK TO WEDNESDAYS AT TEN, signed
with your name and address should do it.

Memphis Melody - (April 20th) Sam leaps into Elvis prior to being discovered.

Mirror Image - (Season Finalle) (May 18th) "It will be "the most unusual
Quantum Leap you will ever see." You'll see people you've seen before --
Richard (Capt. Galaxy) Herd, Brad (Jimmy) Silverman, John (Jimmy's bro)
DiAquino. It will explain _somewhat_ who or what is leaping Sam around and
why. Don Bellisario will do a cameo. Al fans will like it a lot."
[=][=][=][=][=][=][=][=][=][=][=][=][=][=][=][=][=][=][=][=][=][=][=][=][=][=][
All descriptions beginning with the reference [from old guide] refer to the
"Quantum Leap Episode Guide" by Kitty Woldow, Debbie Brown, and Jason E.
Dzembo.

First Season
~~~~~~~~~~~~
Genesis                                       Written by: Donald P. Bellisario
September 13, 1956                                 Directed by: David Hemmings
Aired: March 26, 1989

 Sam has prematurely entered the Quantum Leap chamber, and has randomly
 leaped in a Air Force test pilot, leaving his memory "swiss-cheesed". Ziggy
 thinks that, by flying the X-2 to Mach 3, he should accomplish what he has
 to do to return to the project. Instead, he saves the pilot's wife and baby,
 and when the pilot's son tosses Sam the baseball, Sam leaps, and ends up on
 a minor league baseball team. Sam gets a chance to speak with his father,
 then manages to hit a in-field home run. (2 hour movie)


Star Crossed                                         Written by: Deborah Pratt
June 15, 1972                                          Directed by: Mark Sobel
Aired: March 31, 1989

 Sam has leaped into Dr. Bryant, a somewhat sleazy literary professor at a
 catholic college. He has to prevent a co-ed from attaching to him/Dr. Bryant
 and ruining her life. However, Sam also sees this as a opportunity to save
 his love with Donna Elise, and causes Al to be forceably dragged from the
 chamber for giving out information relating to Donna...against committee
 rules.

 Historical Reference: Sam breaks into the Watergate hotel.


The Right Hand of God                                    Written by: John Hill
October 24, 1974                                  Directed by: Gilbert Shilton
Aired: April 7, 1989

 Sam leaps into a boxer in Sacramento, CA who has been throwing fights, and
 whose contact has been inhereted by a group the nuns. The nuns are hoping
 that Sam is able to win a fight in order finance a new chapel.

 Historical Reference: Sam partially pays off the mob by betting on Muhammad
 Ali in the "Thrilla' in Manilla".


How the Tess Was Won                             Written by: Deborah Arakelian
August 5, 1956                                         Directed by: Ivan Dixon
Aired: April 14, 1989

 As a veterinarian in rural Texas, Sam has to save the life of a piglet and
 contest for the hand in marriage of the heiress to a large ranch.

 Historical Reference: Sam suggests to a young man named Buddy (with
 thick-rimmed glasses) that he change his lyrics from "Piggy Soo-ee" to
 "Peggy Sue."


Double Identity                               Written by: Donald P. Bellisario
November 8, 1965                                   Directed by: Aaron Lipstadt
Aired: April 31, 1989

 Sam has leaped into a mafia hitman, and has no clue of what to do, since
 Ziggy has taken everything off-line in order to attempt a forced leap home.
 However, when the forced leap fails, Sam know what to do: get Frankie and
 his girlfriend, a hairdresser, together.

 Historical Reference: The great northeastern blackout.

NOTE: The leaping effect is changed from a simple white flash to a flash with
some lines shoting towards/away from Sam.


The Color of Truth                                   Written by: Deborah Pratt
August 8, 1955                                      Directed by: Michael Vijar
Aired: May 3, 1989

 Sam has leaped into an aging black man in a prejudiced South, whose belief
 in equality causes a violent reaction. His mission: To prevent the wife of
 the former state governor from being killed at a train crossing.


Camikazi Kid                                            Written by: Paul Brown
June 6, 1961                                         Directed by: Alan J. Levi
Aired: May 10, 1989

 As Cam Wilson, a high school "dork" with a bad case of acne, Sam has to stop
 the marriage of the leapee's sister, Cheryl, to an abusive drinker with an
 explosive short fuse in three days.

 Historical Reference: Sam and Al run into a young black kid named Michael in
 the men's room of a hotel. Sam does some moves which Michael emulated.


Play It Again, Seymour       Teleplay by: Scott Shepard & Donald P. Bellisario
April 14, 1953                    Story by: Teleplay writers and Tom Blonquist
Aired: May 17, 1989                                Directed by: Aaron Lipstadt

 With the looks that could pass for Boogie, Sam is a private investigator who
 is looking for the murderer of his parents before he is killed himself.

Second Season
~~~~~~~~~~~~~
NOTE: The leap sequence changes to the blue lines outstretched with lightning
going through Sam, which is still used today.

Honeymoon Express                             Written by: Donald P. Bellisario
April 27, 1960                                     Directed by: Aaron Lipstadt
Aired: September 20, 1989

 While Al is at a Congressional hearing to defend the funding of Project
 Quantum Leap, Sam has leaped into a cop on his honeymoon who has to defend
 his life against a jealous ex-husband. His newlywed bride father,
 incidentally, is a US Senator who is a golfing buddy of Eisenhower.


Disco Inferno                                           Written by: Paul Brown
April 1, 1976                                     Directed by: Gilbert Shilton
Aired: September 27, 1989

 [from old guide] As a stuntman, Sam is to save the life of his persona's
 younger brother, and he also has to influence the obsessive father of the
 pair to allow the younger son to go his own way, into c&w music rather than
 stuntwork.


The Americanization of Machiko                      Written by: Charlie Coffey
August 4, 1953                                    Directed by: Gilbert Shilton
Aired: October 11, 1989

 [from old guide] As a sailor returning from Japan, Sam brings a foreign wife
 to a small town, then has to fight against the predjudice of both a scheming
 former lover and his "mother" to gain acceptance for the Japanese bride.


What Price Gloria?                                   Written by: Deborah Pratt
October 16, 1961                                     Directed by: Alan J. Levi
Aired: October 25, 1989

 [from old guide] In his first sojourn as a female, Sam is a gorgeous
 secretary and has to cope with sexual harassment by the boss, a suicide
 attempt by the roommate, and the effect his looks have on Al's natural
 tendencies.


Blind Faith                                         Written by: Scott Shepherd
February 6, 1964                                 Directed by: David J. Phinney
Aired: November 1, 1989

 Sam leaps into Andrew Ross, a blind pianist. Sam, however, can still see,
 and has to save his girlfriend from her overprotective single mother -- and
 a serial killer stalking New York City.

 Historical Reference: Sam passes by the limo containing the Beatles.

Good Morning, Peoria                              Written by: Chris Ruppenthal
September 9, 1959                                 Directed by: Michael Zinberg
Aired: November 8, 1989

 Rock and roll is about to hit it big in America. However, when Sam leaps
 into Howlin' Chick Hooooowwwwwwwwllllll, rock and roll is about to be
 extinguished at WOF 730 AM in Peoria thanks to a blue law passed by the city
 council. Sam vows to fight back by barricading himself and the owner and
 playing non-stop rock, despite the power being cut off and the transmitter
 being cut off.

 Historical Reference: Cubby Checker (appearing as himself) drops by with the
 demo "The Twist."

Thou Shalt Not...                                       Written by: Tammy Ader
February 2, 1974                                    Directed by: Randy Roberts
Aired: November 15, 1989

 [from old guide] Sam's task as a rabbi is to keep his brother's wife from
 ruining her life by falling for a sleazoid author's seduction, and then to
 help the family begin getting over the year-old death of their son.

 Historical Reference: Sam performs the Heimlich maneuver on Dr. Heimrich at
 a bake sale.

Jimmy                         Written by: Paul M. Belous & Robert Wolterstorff
October 14, 1964                              Directed by: James Whitmore, Jr.
Aired: November 22, 1989

 [from old guide] Mainstreaming the mentally retarded isn't a popular concept
 yet, and Sam's job is to gain acceptance for Jimmy, the "slow' young man
 he's leaped into, so that he doesn't end up back in the institution.


So Help Me God                                       Writtem by: Deborah Pratt
July 29, 1957                                         Directed by: Andy Cadiff
Aired: November 29, 1989

 [from old guide] While he can't even remember much of Perry Mason, Sam finds
 himself the lawyer defending a young woman accused of killing the son of the
 most powerful man in a small Louisiana town.


Catch A Falling Star                                    Written by: Paul Brown
May 21, 1979                                 Directed by: Donald P. Bellisario
Aired: December 6, 1989

 [from old guide] Sam leaps into, Ray Hutton, the understudy for the role of
 Cervantes seconds before curtain time. His mission: prevent the drunken star
 from falling and seriously injuring himself during one of the performances
 of Man of LaMancha. Sam isn't helped by the fact that he meets his old piano
 teacher he had a crush on at the age of fifteen, and that the star also has
 his eye on her.


A Portrait for Troian       Teleplay by: Scott Shepherd & Donald P. Bellisario
February 7, 1971                          Story by: John Hill & Scott Shepherd
Aired: December 13, 1989                          Directed by: Michael Zinberg

 [from old guide] Sam goes totally Johnathan MacKenzie as he tries to keep a
 beautiful young widow from joining her husband at the bottom of a lake, and
 proving she's being gaslighted by her younger brother who's been spending
 her money.


Animal Frat                                       Written by: Chris Ruppenthal
October 19, 1967                                  Directed by: Gilbert Shilton
Aired: January 3, 1990

 [from old guide] Trapped in the body of "Wild Thing", a typical frat jock,
 Sam still has to win the confidence of a campus radical in time to stop her
 from blowing up the chemistry building as a protest against the war in
 Vietnam.


Another Mother                                       Written by: Deborah Pratt
September 30, 1981                              Directed by: Joseph L. Scanlan
Aired: January 10, 1990

 [from old guide] Playing the divorced mother of three, Sam's job of keeping
 the teenage son from disappearing, supposedly as a runaway, is made more
 interesting by the youngest daughter being able to see both him as he really
 is, and Al.


All-Americans                    Written by: Paul Brown & Donald P. Bellisario
November 6, 1962                                      Directed by: John Cullum
Aired: January 17, 1990

 [from old guide] Keeping his best friend from throwing the high school
 championship football game, which would lose them both their scholarship
 offers, Sam also gets the two families to consolidate.


Her Charm                   Teleplay by: Deborah Pratt and Donld P. Bellisario
September 26, 1973          Story by: Paul M. Belous, Robert Wolterstorff, and
Aired: February 7, 1990               Teleplay writers
                                                     Directed by: Chris Welch

 [from old guide] Trying to protect a woman witness from a mob hit is not so
 easy for G-man Sam when the FBI seems to have an informant confounding his
 attempts to hide her.


Freedom                                           Written by: Chris Ruppenthal
November 22, 1970                                    Directed by: Alan J. Levi
Aired: February 14, 1990

 [from old guide] Rather than saving his grandfather's life, Sam has to
 escape from jail and elude the sheriffs long enough to get them both to the
 reservation so the old man can die at home.


Good Night, Dear Heart                                  Written by: Paul Brown
November 9, 1957                             Directed by: Christopher T. Welch
Aired: March 7, 1990

 [from old guide] Rather than saving the damsel of the episode, who
 supposedly committed suicide, Sam is the coroner trying to prove that she
 was murdered and find out by whom.


Pool Hall Blues                                      Written by: Randy Holland
September 4, 1954                                  Directed by: Joe Napolitano
Aired: March 14, 1990

 [from old guide] To save the small bar run by his granddaughter, as well as
 keep her from a fate worse than death at the hands of the loan shark holding
 a note on the place, Sam has to play professional pool.


Leaping In Without a Net                            Written by: Tommy Thompson
November 18, 1958                            Directed by: Christopher T. Welch
Aired: March 28, 1990

 [from old guide] Sam remembers he's afraid of heights when he leaps into a
 trapeze artist whose sister wants him to catch her when she does a triple
 without a net. Dad is not enthused, as this is exactly how mom bought it
 some years back.


Maybe Baby                                Written by: Paul Brown & Julie Brown
March 11, 1963                                    Directed by: Michael Zinberg
Aired: April 4, 1990

 [from old guide] Babysitting a kidnapped tot and a flakey, compulsively
 lying stripper keeps Sam busy as they cross Texas on the run from the legal
 father and a squad of cops.


Sea Bride                                            Written by: Deborah Pratt
June 3, 1954                                       Directed by: Joe Napolitano
Air Date: May 2, 1990

 [from old guide] Aboard an ocean liner, Sam must stop the marriage of a
 young man's ex-wife to a mobster. In the process, he finds himself in one
 heck of a mess in the ship's garbage compartment.


M.I.A.                                        Written by: Donald P. Bellisario
April 1, 1969                                     Directed by: Michael Zinberg
Aired: May 9, 1990

 [from old guide] When Sam leaps into the life of an undercover cop, Al tells
 him that his mission is to convince a navy nurse that her MIA husband is
 still alive, and to prevent her from marrying the lawyer she meets on the
 day Sam leaps in. A series of coincidences causes Sam to wonder about the
 true nature of his mission.


Third Season
~~~~~~~~~~~~
The Leap Home                                 Written by: Donald P. Bellisario
November 25, 1969                                  Directed by: Joe Napolitano
Aired: September 28, 1990

 Sam leaps home to his family family farm, where he meets his family, and has
 the opportunity to win his high school's basketball championship, while
 trying to save his own family from their sad fates. [Scott Bakula also plays
 Sam's father]


Vietnam                                       Written by: Donald P. Bellisario
April 7, 1970                                     Director by: Michael Zinberg
Aired: October 5, 1990

 Sam leaps into Navy SEAL in his brother, Tom Beckett's, squad. Now sam must
 choose wheather to ensure a successful mission or save his brother's life.


Leap of Faith                                      Teleplay by: Tommy Thompson
August 19, 1963            Story by: Nick Harding, Karen Hall & Tommy Thompson
Aired: October 12, 1990                       Directed by: James Whitmore, Jr.

 [from old guide] Sam finds himself in one holy mess as a priest in
 Philadelphia, trying to help an alcoholic priest deal with a killer and the
 death of a young parishoner.


One Strobe Over the Line                          Written by: Chris Ruppenthal
June 15, 1965                                     Directed by: Michael Zinberg
Aired: October 19, 1990

 Sam has leaped into a fashion photographer who must protect a fashion model
 dependent on amphetamines, thanks to her agent.


The Boogieman                                     Written by: Chris Ruppenthal
October 31, 1964                                   Directed by: Joe Napolitano
Aired: October 26, 1990

 Ying and yang collide when Sam leaps into a horror novelist whose home is
 being used as a haunted house during Halloween. Incidentally, there's this
 goat which keeps showing up.....

 Historical Reference: Sam and Al discover that the kid neighbor's name is
 Stevie, his mother is named Mrs. King. Stevie's love interest is named
 Carrie, who Sam thinks is out to get Stevie. Stevie's dog is named Cujo.

 WARNING: When discussing this episode, refer to this episode as "The
 Halloween Episode" in the interest of all concerned.


Miss Deep South                                     Written by: Tommy Thompson
June 7, 1958                                     Directed by Christopher Welch
Aired: November 2, 1990

 [from old guide] As Darlene Monte, a contestant in the "Miss Deep South"
 beauty pageant, Sam must come to the aid of an innocent contender who faces
 disgrace after posing for naughty pictures taken by a sleazy pageant
 photographer.


Black On White On Fire                               Written by: Deborah Pratt
August 11, 1965                                    Directed by: Joe Napolitano
Aired: November 9, 1990

 [from old guide] Sam leaps into a black med student engaged to a white woman
 in order to ensure that he and his fiancee survive the Watts riot together.


The Great Spontini                Written by: Christy Dawson & Beverly Bridges
May 9, 1974                                   Directed by: James Whitmore, Jr.
Aired: November 16, 1990

 Sam has leaped in amateur magician and escape artist Harry Spontini, and has
 to prevent Harry long lost wife from taking his daughter away.

 NOTE: In this episode, the handlink is replaced with a lego-type handlink,
 which is still being used today.


Rebel Without a Clue                   Teleplay by: Randy Holland & Paul Brown
September 1, 1958                          Story by: Nick Harding & Paul Brown
Aired: November 30, 1990                      Directed by: James Whitmore, Jr.

 [from old guide] As a motorcycle gang member named "Bones", Sam finds
 himself an uneasy rider who has to prevent a Kerouac-inspired young woman
 from meeting her death on the road.


A Little Miracle             Teleplay by: Sandy Fries & Robert A. Wolterstorff
December 24, 1962                                        Story by: Sandy Fries
Aired: December 21, 1990                          Directed by: Michael Watkins

 It's Christmas Eve, and Sam is a valet named Pierson to a wealthy
 developer/scrooge, who vows to demolish a Salvation Army mission before New
 Years.


Runaway                                                 Written by: Paul Brown
July 4, 1964                                     Directed by: Michael Katelman
Aired: January 4, 1991

 [from old guide] On a cross-country car trip, Sam, as 13-year-old Butchie
 must contend with a sadistic older sister and a mother who may run away from
 an unfulfilling marriage in search of "The Feminine Mystique".


8 1/2 Months                                         Written by: Deborah Pratt
November 15, 1955                             Directed by: James Whitmore, Jr.
Aired: March 6, 1991

 Sam has gone where no man has gone before: Into the body of pregnant
 teenager Billie Jean Crocket. He has to stop her from making the second
 biggest mistake of her life: Giving her baby up for adoption.


Future Boy                                          Written by: Tommy Thompson
October 6, 1957                                   Directed by: Michael Switzer
Aired: March 13, 1991

 Sam is "Future Boy", sidekick to eccentric star Moe Stein aka "Captain
 Galaxy", on a 1950's kids show, "Captain Galaxy and the Time Troopers". Moe
 is building a time machine in his basement based upon a time string theory
 he has, but his daughter wants him committed.


Private Dancer                                          Written by: Paul Brown
October 6, 1979                                      Directed by: Debbie Allen
Aired: March 20, 1991

 Sam is "Rod the Bod", a chippendale dancer, who has to help a deaf waitress
 become a dancer in a professional dance group instead of dying from AIDS due
 to prostitution.


Piano Man                                             Written by: Ed Scharlach
November 10, 1985                             Directed by: James Whitmore, Jr.
Aired: March 27, 1991

 Sam is a lounge lizard named Joey Dinardo who is on the run from the mob.
 And now, having been discovered by his ex-partner and ex-girlfriend, they
 must keep running to save both of their lives.


Southern Comforts                                   Written by: Tommy Thompson
August 4, 1961                                   Directed by: Chris Ruppenthal
Aired: April 3, 1991

 [from old guide] It's the best little cat-house in New Orleans.  No, it's
 the Gilbert Labonte Sewin' & Quiltin' Academy. Sam finds himself the
 proprietor of this worthy establishment, having to prevent the mysterious
 death of a resident who doesn't belong there.


Glitter Rock                                      Written by: Chris Ruppenthal
April 12, 1974                                        Directed by: Andy Cadiff
Aired: April 10, 1991

 Sam is a British rock star in danger of being killed after a performance.

 Historical Reference: Madonna was originally supossed to be the girl in the
 autograph line, but she refused.


A Hunting We Will Go                               Written by: Beverly Bridges
June 18, 1976                                         Directed by: Andy Cadiff
Aired: April 18, 1991

 It's a leap from hell as Sam becomes a bounty hunter handcuffed to a
 embezzler who will stop at nothing to escape from Sam


Last Dance Before An Execution                      Teleplay by: Deborah Pratt
May 12, 1971                     Story by: Bill Begelow, Donald P. Bellisario,
Aired: May 1, 1991                         and Deborah Pratt
                                                 Directed by: Michael Watkins

 "Oh, god", Sam says when he leaps in strapped into an Electric Chair. But, a
 last minute stay gives Sam, who has leaped into a Cuban-American accused of
 murder, 48 hours to prove himself innocent.


Heart of a Champion                                 Written by: Tommy Thompson
July 23, 1955                                      Directed by: Joe Napolitano
Aired: May 8, 1991
Written by: Tommy Thompson

 Sam leaps in wrestling partner and brother Terry, who must stop Ronnie from
 competing in the title match which could lead to death due to a hidden
 health problem.


Nuclear Family                                          Written by: Paul Brown
October 26, 1962                              Directed by: James Whitmore, Jr.
Aired: May 15, 1991

 Sam leaps right smack in the middle of the Cuban missle crisis in Florida as
 a fallout shelter salesman, and has to defuse a protentially explosive
 situation in the family.


Shock Theater                                        Written by: Deborah Pratt
October 2, 1954                                    Directed by: Joe Napolitano
Aired: May 22,1991

 Right after leaping in, Sam receives electro-shock treatment, and starts
 reliving some of his past leaps. Now, it's Al's turn to fulfil the mission
 as a hologram, and then, to prevent losing contact and to leap, Sam has to
 receive another electroshock treatment.


Fourth Season
~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The Leap Back                                 Written by: Donald P. Bellisario
June 15, 1945[/September 18, 1999]                Directed by: Michael Zinberg
Aired: September 18, 1991

 The second electroshock has caused Sam and Al to simuleap, and Sam is back
 at Project Quantum Leap, while Al is a returning World War II POW. But a
 jealous fiancee threatens to kill the person Al has leaped into, and Sam has
 to leap again to save Al.


Play Ball                                           Written by: Tommy Thompson
August 6, 1961                                     Directed by: Joe Napolitano
Aired: September 25, 1991

 As a pitcher on a minor league team, Sam must decide if he's there to help a
 fellow team member, get the leapeee back into the majors, or babysit the
 team mascot. To further complicate things, he has to resist the advances of
 the team owner's daughter.


Hurricane                                         Written by: Chris Ruppenthal
August 17, 1969                                   Directed by: Michael Watkins
Aired: October 2, 1991

 Sam is a deaputy sheriff in a small Mississippi town who has to stop one
 killer while surviving another: a major hurricane named Camille.


Justice                                               Written by: Toni Graphia
May 11, 1965                                           Directed by: Rob Bowman
Aired: October 9, 1991

 Sam leaps in as he is made a member of the Klu Klux Klan in the south. Now,
 he has to save the life of a young civil rights leader who is trying to
 register black voters.


Permanent Wave                                     Written by: Beverly Bridges
June 2, 1983                                         Directed by: Scott Bakula
Aired: October 16, 1991

 Sam has leaped into Frank Bianca, a hairstylist in leather pants. Right
 after leaping in, a murder occurs, and Sam must protect young murder
 witness.


Raped                                              Written by: Beverly Bridges
June 20, 1980                                     Directed by: Michael Zinberg
Aired: October 30, 1991

 Sam has leaped into a young woman right after being raped, and has to bring
 the perpetrator, the son of the pillar of the community, to justice.


The Wrong Stuff                                         Written by: Paul Brown
January 24, 1961                                   Directed by: Joe Napolitano
Aired: November 6, 1991

 Sam goes ape when he leaps into Bobo, a chimpanzee involved in the space
 program.


Dreams                                               Written by: Deborah Pratt
February 28, 1979                                   Directed by: Anita Addison
Aired: November 13, 1991

 A very strange leap occurs when Sam finds himself a detective investigating
 a gruesome murder. Things go from bad to worse when Sam starts experiencing
 flashbacks from the leapee.


A Single Drop of Rain                             Teleplay by: Richard C. Okie
September 7, 1953                   Story by: Richard C. Okie & Don Bellisario
Aired: November 20, 1991                          Directed by: Virgil W. Vogel

 [from old guide] A devastating drought will be the ruin of a small town
 unless Sam can live up to the claims of Billy Beaumont, the rainmaker he
 leaps into.  He must not only try to make it rain, he must keep 'his' family
 together in the process.


Unchained                                            Written by: Paris Qualles
November 2, 1956                                  Directed by: Michael Watkins
Aired: November 27, 1991

 It isn't hell, but it's close: Sam leaps into a convict on a chain gang.
 Together, he and a fellow convict named Boone must escape.


The Play's the Thing                               Written by: Beverly Bridges
September 9, 1969                                 Directed by: Eric Laneuville
Aired: January 8, 1992

 Sam leaps into a young actor in love with an older, aspiring singer. Hamlet
 never looked so good. ;)


Running For Honor                             Written by: Robert Harris Duncan
June 11, 1964                                           Directed by: Bob Hulme
Aired: January 15, 1992

 In this controversal episode, Sam is a track star in a Naval college who
 must prevent the murder of his ex-roomate, who was expelled because he was
 gay, by a group of bigoted cadets.


Temptation Eyes                                         Written by: Paul Brown
February 1, 1985                               Directed by: Christopher Hibler
Aired: January 22, 1992

 A serial killer is stalking San Francisco. Sam has leaped into Dillion
 Powell, a tv reporter, in order to save the next victum: A psychic who
 discover's Sam's true identity.


The Last Gunfighter                Teleplay by: Sam Rolfe and Chris Ruppenthal
November 28, 1957                                          Story by: Sam Rolfe
Aired: January 29, 1992                            Directed by: Joe Napolitano

 Sam finds himself in the life of Tyler Meanes, a old gunfighter who is a
 teller of tall tales. However, a old friend has strolled into town for one
 last shootout at high noon.


A Song for the Soul                                  Written by: Deborah Pratt
April 7, 1963                                     Directed by: Michael Watkins
Aired: February 26, 1992

 Sam is a backup singer in a black, amatuer Supreme'es-like group in 60's who
 must prevent a member of a group from falling for a sleazy night club owner.


Ghost Ship                    Written by: Paris Qualles & Donald P. Bellisario
August 13, 1956                                     Directed by: Anita Addison
Aired: March 4, 1992

 Sam is a co-pilot who is flying over the Bermuda triangle. However, one of
 the passengers is suffering appendicitus, and the pilot is suffering
 flashbacks from flying over the Triangle during World War II.


Roberto!                                          Written by: Chris Ruppenthal
January 27, 1982                                     Directed by: Scott Bakula
Aired: March 11, 1992

 Sam is Roberto!, a Geraldo-like talk show host in Santa Fe, New Mexico, who,
 with an asthmatic rival/co-worker, try to unravel a coverup at a local
 chemical company.


It's A Wonderful Leap                     Teleplay and Directed by: Paul Brown
May 10, 1958                         Story by: Danielle Alexandra & Paul Brown
Aired: April 1, 1992

 Sam is a taxi driver named Max Greenman in New York City who is trying to
 earn enough money to earn his own tag, a license to drive his own cab. Help
 comes in the form of a woman who claims to be a guardian angel.

 Historical Reference: During one fare, Sam is carrying a father and a boy.
 Sam tells the boy that one day, there will be skyscrapers all over
 Manhatten, and that there'll be a tall, glass tower where he was letting
 them off. The doorman opens the door and says, "Good Evening, Mr. Trump" to
 the father, who, in turn, says "Come along, Donald."


Moments to Live                                     Written by: Tommy Thompson
May 4, 1985                                        Directed by: Joe Napolitano
Aired: April 8, 1992

 Sam is soap opera heart throb. However, a obsessed fan kidnaps him and uses
 him in order to help bear a child.


The Curse of Ptah-Hotep                           Written by: Chris Ruppenthal
March 2, 1957                                      Directed by: Joe Napolitano
Aired: April 22, 1992

 [from old guide] As Dale Conway, an Egyptologist currently on a dig, Sam
 seems to almost be on a vacation from normal leaps: reading hieroglyphics,
 searching lost tombs and, of course, visiting Egypt. But, between an
 encroaching sandstorm, computer glitches back at the project, and a 3000
 year old curse, Sam has very little time to play in the sand.


Stand Up                                             Written by: Deborah Pratt
April 30, 1959                                    Directed by: Michael Zinberg
Aired: May 13, 1992

 Sam is a stand up comedian who is part of a comedy trio. However, two
 members of the trio are arguing with each other, even through they love each
 other, and the female part of the argument is being wooed by a sleazy casio
 owner.


A Leap For Lisa                               Written by: Donald P. Bellisario
June 25, 1957                                 Directed by: James Whitmore, Jr.
Aired: May 20, 1992

 Sam leaps into Al back in his younger days...who is accussed of murder.
 However, when Sam accidentally afters history, it could mean a different
 future at the project.


Fifth Season
~~~~~~~~~~~~
Lee Harvey Oswald                             Written by: Donald P. Bellisario
October 5, 1957 - November 22, 1963           Directed by: James Whitmore, Jr.
Aired: September 22, 1992

 "Lee, look!" Sam has leaped into the life of Lee Harvey Oswald, and leaps
 through various portions of Oswald's life up until that fateful day in
 Dallas. (2 hour movie)


Leaping Of The Shrew            Written by: Richard Okie & Robin Jill Bernheim
September 27, 1956                                   Directed by: Alan J. Levi
Aired: September 29, 1992

 [from old guide] It's Robinson Crusoe with a twist when Sam leaps into a
 Greek sailor stranded on a deserted island with a beautiful young rich woman
 who appears to be less than fond of him and their stranded situation.


Nowhere To Run                                      Written by: Tommy Thompson
August 10, 1968                                      Directed by: Alan J. Levi
Aired: October 6, 1992

 Sam leaps into a Marine Captain whose legs were amputaed after a mishap in
 Vietman. Now, he has a double mission: Saving the leapee's marriage with a
 wife who can't quite cope with his injuries, and his roomate who is
 considering suicide because he is paralyzed from the neck down.


Killin' Time                                        Written by: Tommy Thompson
June 18, 1958                                     Directed by: Michael Watkins
Aired: October 20, 1992

 It's a tricky situation as Sam leaps into an escaped killer who is holed up
 in a house holding a mother and daughter hostage. To make matters worse, the
 real killer has escaped from the waiting room, causing Al to go after the
 escapee, leaving Gooshi in charge.


Star Light, Star Bright                            Written by: Richard C. Okie
May 21, 1966                                   Directed by: Christopher Hibler
Aired: October 27, 1992

 Sam leaps into 79-year-old man whose son wants to have committed for seeing
 UFO's. Sam tries to keep the family together and to avoid the sinister plans
 of the military, all before the next anticipated UFO sighting.


Deliver Us From Evil                                Written by: Tommy Thompson
March 19, 1966                                          Directed by: Bob Hulme
Aired: November 10, 1992

 Sam leaps again into Jimmy. However, it's not a smooth reunion, as ying and
 yang once again collide, this time with the help of an amoral leaper.


Trilogy, Part I: One Little Heart                    Written by: Deborah Pratt
August 8, 1955                                Directed by: James Whitmore, Jr.
Aired: November 17, 1992

 Sam leaps into a sheriff deputy in a small town whose daughter, Abagayle
 (sic), is accussed of two murders: A neighbor's husband, and the daughter
 named violet.


Trilogy, Part II: For Your Love                      Written by: Deborah Pratt
June 14, 1966                                 Directed by: James Whitmore, Jr.
Aired: November 24, 1992

 Sam leaps into Abagayle's fiancee, and has to save Abagayle for a lynch mob
 who believes that a boy who has disappeared was murdered by Abagayle.


Trilogy, Part III: The Last Door                     Written by: Deborah Pratt
July 28, 1978                                 Directed by: James Whitmore, Jr.
Aired: November 24, 1992

 Sam once again gets involved in Abagayle's life, when he is called to defend
 Abagayle for murdering the mother of Violet.

 NOTE: Trilogy, Part I, was originally aired as a one-hour episode. Trilogy,
 Parts II and III were originally aired together as a two-hour movie.


Promised Land                     Written by: Gillian Horvath & Tommy Thompson
December 22, 1971                                    Directed by: Scott Bakula
Aired: December 15, 1992

 [from other guide] Sam leaps back to Elk Ridge, Indiana to help save the
 lives of the Walters boys as they try to save their farm from a banker with
 designs on getting rich from foreclosure.


A Tale Of Two Sweeties                         Written by: Robin Jill Bernheim
February 25, 1958                              Directed by: Christopher Hibler
Aired: January 5, 1993

 [from other guide] As a horse-playing, traveling brush salesman, Sam finds
 himself with two wives and two families. Although Ziggy predicts that Sam's
 mission is to choose between the two lives, the choice is made more
 difficult by the fact that there's only a 50/50 chance that he'll choose the
 right one.  As if things weren't bad enough, Sam finds that his penniless
 host owes a pair of bookies some big bucks.


Liberation                            Written by: Chris Abbott & Deborah Pratt
October 16, 1968                                        Directed by: Bob Hulme
Aired: January 12, 1993

 [from other guide] Leaping into a housewife and mother of two on the verge
 of women's lib, Sam must prevent the death of his daughter during a sit in,
 while con- vincing the girl's father that his marriage can survive a
 liberated wife and daughter.


Dr. Ruth                                       Written by: Robin Jill Bernheim
April 25, 1985                                    Directed by: Stuart Margolin
Aired: January 19, 1993

 [from other guide] While Sam is in 1985, running her radio talk show,
 playing matchmaker to her producers, and trying to help a young secretary
 who's being sexually harassed by her boss, Dr. Ruth Westheimer spends her
 time in the Waiting Room, counseling Al on his feelings towards his five
 wives, as well as his relationship with Tina.

 Historical Reference: Sam encounters Anita Hill.


Blood Moon                                          Written by: Tommy Thimpson
March 10, 1975                                       Directed by: Alan J. Levi
Aired: February 9, 1993

 [from other guide] As an eccentric, possibly vampiric, artist just outside
 of London, Sam must bear with Al's superstitions, while trying to prevent
 the death of his host's young wife, at the hands of a couple who are taking
 a sacrificial ceremony in honor of the "blood moon."


Evil Leaper II: Return                             Written by: Richard C. Okie
October 8, 1956                                    Directed by: Harvey Laidman
Aired: February 23, 1993

 [from other guide] As Arnold Watkins, better known as The Midnight Marauder,
 Sam has to persuade a fraternity to stop using chicken races as a part of
 their hazing ceremonies, while Al tries to convince Arnold to stop trying to
 get himself killed in retaliation for his parents' deaths twelve years
 earlier. When Alia, the evil leaper, appears on the scene, Sam becomes
 determined to take her with him when he leaps.


Evil Leaper III: Revenge                             Written by: Deborah Pratt
September 16, 1987                                   Directed by: Debbie Allen
Aired: February 23, 1993

 [from other guide] Having simo-leaped, both Sam and Alia find themselves
 trapped in a women's prison, accused of murdering a fellow inmate. Their
 efforts to unmask the real killer are not their top priority as the two
 attempt to keep Alia's location hidden from her observer, Zoey, who leaps
 into the same place and time, determined to make Alia pay for her betrayal.

 NOTE: Evil Leaper II and III were originally aired together as a two-hour
 movie.


Goodbye, Norma Jean                                Written by: Richard C. Okie
April 4, 1960                                  Directed by: Christopher Hibler
Aired: March 2, 1993

 [from other guide] As chauffer to Marilyn Monroe, Sam must try to prevent
 Marilyn's tragic death. But when a well-meaning plan backfires, it could
 mean the end of Marilyn's career, even if her life is saved.


The Beast Within                                     Written by: John D'Aquino
November 6, 1972                                     Directed by: Gus Trikonis
Aired: March 16, 1993

 [from other guide] Sam leaps into Henry Adams, one of a trio of friends who
 fought in Vietnam and came home each with their own personal scars and the
 memory of a lost buddy. He has to save the life of a friend, Roy, as well as
 of a young boy, Daniel, who ventures into the woods of Washington looking
 for proof of Bigfoot.


The Leap Between The States  Written by:
September 20, 1862           Directed by:
Aired: March 30, 1993

 Sam takes a leap out of his lifetime through his DNA chain into the life of
 his great-grandgather Captain John Becket during the Civil War. There, he
 has to save the life of a slave.


Memphis Melody               Written by: ???
???                          Directed by: ???
Aired: April 20, 1993

 [To be aired]


Mirror Image                 Written by: Don Bellisario
???                          Directed by:
Aired: May 13, 1993

 [To be aired]


Working Titles
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
"Leaping On A String" ->  "Leap To Judgement" -> "Lee Harvey Oswald"
"When Venus Smiles" -> "Leaping Of The Shrew"

Folks Who Saw Al and Sam
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The Color of Truth - Al is somehow able to make himself heard.

Blind Faith - Chopin, Andrew's seeing eye dog, see Sam and Al as themselves.

A Portrait for Troian - Al and the Imaging Chamber door is heard by Troian's
brother

Another Mother - Theresa, a young child, sees both Sam and Al.

Vietnam - The combat photographer, when fatally shot, is able to see Al before
dying.

A Little Miracle - A rich person is able to see Al, thanks to his brainwaves
being close to Sams.

Last Dance Before An Execution - A young girl helps Al tell an attorney where
a missing bullet in a church is.

Shock Theater - The mentally disturbed population of the institution saw Al.

Hurricane - A drink thinks he's able to see Sam.

Justice - A group of young kids is able to see Al.

Temptation Eyes - A psycic is able to see Sam and sense the presence of Al.

It's a Wonderful Leap - A woman who is an angel is able to see Sam and Al.

Deliver Us From Evil - Alia is able to see Sam once they touch.

A Tale of Two Sweeties - The young girls see Sam and Al as themselves.

Whose Else In The Chamber?
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Shock Theater - Dr. Beeks is seen in the chamber by holding Al's hand.

Raped - The leapee appears in the chamber with Al in order to testify.

Killin' Time - While Al is off chasing the escaped leapee, Gooshi appears to
Sam in the chamber

The Unseen Leapees
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Shock Theater - Sam leaps into Sam Beterman, however, whenever Sam looks in
the mirror, he sees the personality he is emulating.

Unchained - Sam never has a chance to see who he leaped into.

Don't Examine This Too Closely
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Disco Inferno - The episode takes place during the filming of 'Earthquake', a
1974 motion picture. The date given, however, is 1976.

Good Morning, Peoria - Al is reflected off the station's glass.

Leap of Faith - The priest is reading about the kid who got killed by the
train. He shows the headline to Sam, and to the right of the main story was a
story about Bangladesh asking for flood assistance. The only problem was that
the leap took place in 1963. Bangladesh didn't even become a country until
1971. Before that, it was East Pakistan!!!

Lee Harvey Oswald - There are several errors, including a translated sentence
that begins with a lowercase letter. The date on the screen is clearly stated
by be February, 1999, minor until you consider that Al refers to "The Leap
Back", a leap that Sam should have forgotten AND takes pace on September 17,
1999.

Dr Ruth - The episode takes place in 1985, but Al says that he checks on
6,000+ 'Annies' in 1984. Also, the phone in the kitchen was off the hook. How
did she call 911 from the bedroom? Two lines in an apartment? Highly unlikely.
Also, it was highly unlikely the the kitchen phone became disconnected for
some reason (even with the chord unplugged, the receiver is still 'off the
hook').

Blood Moon - A girl passes out, and Sam takes the pulse...with his thumb!

QLQLQLQLQLQLQLQLQLQLQLQLQLQLQLQLQLQLQLQLQLQLQLQLQLQLQLQLQLQLQLQLQLQLQLQLQLQLQL
                                Thanks to....

Sally "Lucky Bitch" Smith - For her frequent visits to the Quantum Leap
                           production offices, and the news she brings back.

Mary Allison, Alan Cantu, Debbie Brown, Jason E. Dzembo, "G.", Mike
Gaines, Newton Loui, Brian S. Thorn, Kitty Woldow
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