Late Night Retro Television Review: Highway to Heaven 4.21 “A Dolphin Song For Lee: Part One”


Welcome to Late Night Retro Television Reviews, a feature where we review some of our favorite and least favorite shows of the past!  On Thursdays, I will be reviewing Highway to Heaven, which aired on NBC from 1984 to 1989.  The entire show is currently streaming on Tubi and several other services!

This week, Mark finally gets the stuff.

Episode 4.21 “A Dolphin Song For Lee: Part One”

(Dir by Michael Landon, March 9th, 1988)

After he complains for the hundredth time about not having “the stuff,” Mark finally gets the boss’s attention in this episode.  Suddenly, Mark is the one who doesn’t need to eat, who knows where to go for the assignment, and who instinctively realizes that the young woman they’ve been assigned to help — Lee (Bess Meyer) — desperately needs a bone marrow transplant.  Meanwhile, Jonathan becomes human yet again.

That’s not a bad idea for a story, though it’s hard not to notice that this is the second time that Jonathan’s gone from being an angel to being mortal during season four.  One would think that either Jonathan or Mark would have noted this fact but neither one does.  Maintaining continuity has not been season four’s strong point.

As for the story itself, it’s pretty simple but then again, it’s only Part 1 of a two-parter.  Lee refuses to get the bone marrow transplant because she fears her parents won’t be able to afford it.  Using “the stuff,” Mark essentially commands a local news producer to do a story on Lee and her need for a transplant.  In a scene that feels like a fantasy today, we see people apparently all across the country watching the news story on Lee.  One guy in a bar yells at everyone to be quiet so he can hear the story.  It feels incredibly dated and almost too earnest for its own good, if just because it’s hard to imagine people actually sitting around the TV and watching a network newscast nowadays.  (It’s also hard not to wonder if Mark essentially zapping the producer and taking over his mind is a good example of what the Boss wants done with the stuff.  That’s not something that Jonathan has ever done, even though it would have made things a lot simpler.)

People across the country donate money so that Lee can get her operation.  Lee’s cancer goes into remission but the “To Be Continued” announcement at the end of the episode feels a bit ominous.  If Lee’s going to be okay, why does the story need to be coninuted?

We’ll find out next week!

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