tv Today NBC November 4, 2016 10:00am-10:57am EDT
10:00 am
on your train "for doctor c. ames willoughby." "doctor"! well, it's ridiculous and i'm not gonna do it. i am not gonna take you to silver creek. anybody can see, it's perfectly obvious that when the governor wrote this he thought you were a man. a female sawbones out in this country-- that's enough, major. i am a doctor, and that letter instructs you to take me to silver creek no m mter what your personal opinion might be. well, let me tell you something, missy. you may know something about doctorin', i don't know. but i happen to know something about silver creek and the country and the town and the people! and i am not gonna be rereonsible for taking you alone out into that country. then you refuse to abide by the instructions of that letterer oh, forget that letter, will ya? i'm responsible for the people in my wagon train! let me tell you something. i purchased a wagon, and all of my things are stored in it, ready to go. now, i'm going to silver creek
10:01 am
10:02 am
10:03 am
something i can do for you, lady? this man is sick. can you help me get him on the couch? dy? he's drunk. i tell you he's sick. i'm a doctor. lady, if you're a doctor, i'm the stork. ( giggles ) ( laughs ) hey! you know how to wake up a drunk! ( laughter continues ) what saloon do you work in? i'm gonna come over and watch you dance sometime. come on, stananup. stand up. where do you live? i'll see that you're taken home. i'm not interested. i told you, i'll come and watch you dance sometime. bartender: better hurry, doctor. baby's reaea! ( snoring )
10:04 am
who this man is, where he lives? he ain't from around these parts. and-- if you can believe a drunk-- his name is grover. he's just passing through on that wagon train of major adams'. over by foster's pond on the north side of town. hank, get these leaders straightened out. what the devil do you think i'm trying to do?! simmons! if you can't handle that team, much obliged, hawkes. i can handle my horses, major. but there just ain't no sense in... i just can't figure it out. she was bound and determined last night. well, it's no skin off of my nose. i told her to be on time. who'd you tell, major? doctor willoughby, a woman doctor. a female sawbones?! that's that's been holding us up all morning? i can't find her no place. wellllwe're not gonna wait any longer. i told her to be here at the crack of dawn. we're not gonna wait. we're gonna go on. and bart ain't here neither. bart? where is he?
10:05 am
yourself a horse and go into town and get him. more waiting! why do you waste your time on that drunk? we got company. bart grover's no good, and you know it! whoa! well, doctor willoughby. what's your hurry? you're only an hour late! ? that's right, bart grover. have y seen well, the pele on this wagon train are your responsibility. have you seen him? do you know where he is? yes, he's right back there. bill! give me a hand. let's get this fella out of this wagon. now, don't move hihi loie here,ady- octor." "doctor," "lady"--i n't care what you call yourself. i gave in to you last ght against my better judgment, but if you think you're gonna tell me
10:06 am
he's sick, all right-- like a sponge. he's just plain drunk. he needs medical attention. if he doesn't get it, he'll get pneumonia. can tell by the color of his skin he has a liver ailment. it might tn into stomach pooning. come on, bill, we've wasted enough time already with this. i'm sorry to have delayed your start. well, if any ofu need med, i am a doctor. lver cek. ( crowd murmuring. imagine--a woman doctor. whoever heard of such a thing? and if she is a doctor, and has to take care of a man... major, i am gointo need your help. that'll be the day. ( chuckling ) what can i do for you, ma'am? to take care of your friend, help me get down off this wagon. now, listen, you'iven me enough aeady.
10:07 am
'd be kind enoughto dve the wag i'm not goa drive this-- i can't attend to your friend ive and dre wagon at the same time ll, go get a driver up here. fifi time of day to get started. i gave bart grover strict orders not to leave this camp last night. dr. willoughby: it seems to me, major adams, that y possess a great proficiency for issuing orders and a deplorable lack of proficiencyy in their enforcement. now, look here. i-- major, i shouldn't have s sd that. he! giyup here! ha ha ha ha! ? ? if you're on medicare, remember, the open enrollment period is h he.
10:08 am
decembererth. so call unitedhealthcare to enroll... in a plan that could give you the benefits and stability you're looking for, an aarp medicarecompmpte plan insured through unitedhealthcare. what makes it completete it can combine medicare parts a and b, which is your hospital and doctororoverage with part d prescription drug coverage, and more, all in one simple plan for a low monthly premium or in some areas, an aarp medicarecomplete plan offers you benefits like an annual physical, preventive screeningng and most immunizations all for a $0 copay. you'll also haha access to a local network of doctors and much more. you can get routine vision and hearing coverage, a fitness membership to help you stay active, and worldwide emergency care. for prescriptions, you'll pay the plan's lowest price,
10:09 am
for a 90-day supply of your tier 1 and tier 2 drugs, delivered right to your door. in fact, our medicare advantagag plan members saved an average of over $4,500 last year. now is the time to look at your options. start getting the benefits of an aarp medicarecomplete plan insured through unitedhealthcare. unitedhealthcare has been helping medicare beneficiaries for over 30 years. we'll connect you with the right people, help schedule your appointments, and with renew by unitedhealthcare, you can learn about t althy living and earn rewards, too. remember, medicare open enrollment ends december 7th. call unitedhealthcare today about an aarp medicarecomplete plan. you can even enroll right over the phone. don't wait. call unitedhealthcare or go online now.
10:10 am
the people on this train are really not such bad people once you get to know 'em. it's just that they're-- you don't have to apologize for them, major. i'veveeen a doctor for a number of years, that would offend me because of my chosen profession. i'm sure of that. you must a very sensitive and observant man to have noticed. you know, the people on your wagon train are relatively nice. back in boston they used to throw stones through my windows and hoot at me on the street. it's shocking to see how abusive people can be when they don't understand and become intolerant. the interesting thing is that women are the most abusive.
10:11 am
well...no, i... i don't guess i could. you see... i don't really know much about women. well, that's very honest. itit rare to find a man who would admit it, major. you know, there's no need to be so formamaout here. why don't you just call me seth? all right. my name's carol. carol, huh? i must say it suits you better than "doctor." why does carol suit me better than doctor? well, ma'am, you can't deny that you're a mighty pretty woman, but-- but what? do you think because i'm a doctor i'm not a woman? that i wouldn't like to have a home and children and a husband to share all my problems and pleasures? well, if that's what you think, you're wrong!
10:12 am
you don't know anything about women. well, no, ma'am, i don't. i never been married. outside of the women on the wagon train, i just don't see many. that just shows you-- i would have wagered you were a married man. i might have been, but...she died. i'm sorry. i didn't mean to pry. she must have been very lovely. she was. but... i guess that was just meant to be, that's all. seth...do you believe that there is a predestined plan to our lives? that what's to happen will happen no matter what we want or do? well, carol, i can only speak for myself, but i really think i'm doing what i was meant to do. sure, i've got some regrets about things that have happened in the past,
10:13 am
and as for the future, i'd like to believe that everything that's gonna happen is gonna happen for the best. well, i might not have put it just that way... but i think you and i have a lot in common. i think we could become very good friends. i think we better go back to camp. about your friend mr. grover. k so much? i don't mean how did it become a drug or a crutch to him, i know how, medically, but what i want to know is why. if i knew that, there's a possibility i could help him. well, carol... i've known bart grover practically all my life, and that's quite a while. see, we grew up together, we we always real good friends. then when the war came along, all the others just got right behind that b bss band
10:14 am
but not bart. he was kind of a pacifist, i guess-- said he didn't believe in killing people. and nobody could dispute how right the man was. but that didn't keep other people from poking fun at himm just because he wasn't in uniform. i poked fun at him, too. i think that's why he finally joined up. from there on in, everything went wrong for bart. that he not only loved, but he just really worshipped. and the army and the fighting and everything just almost drove him out of his mind. he wasn't a bad soldier-- he didn't drink and carouse or gripe-- whatever was bothering him, heheept to himself. finally, when the war was over, bart went home.
10:15 am
had run off with some other man. well, bart just fell into a thousand little pieces. somehow he was never able to... get those pieces backckogether again. that's when he found the bottle. i'll just never forgive myself for prodding him into the army. anyhow, we brought him out to the west, to the big sky and the great, great open country, d. but it hasn't worked. oh, carol, it's... it's a real tragedy. poor fella-- he can't see anything, he can't hear anything, think anything, he's just--
10:16 am
yeah, charlie, here i am. bart found a ather one of them bottles he had stashed away and he's dead drunk-- and sick, too. he's still s sing that same thing over and over-- "i'm gonna kill 'em both, i'm gonna kill 'em both." where is he now? gave him that little treatment, put him in the female sawbones' wagon. then i come to tell you about it. i'll take care of him, major. i hope you can. ho! what do you want to do, major? just keep the people back. nothin' they can do for 'em now.
10:17 am
10:22 am
think he's got a chance? i've done all i can. doctor... i think i better tell you... we may be in for some real troubl i just don't understand it. mccullough's out there someplace, but-- of course, he could have passed through here before this happened-- do you think there's any possibility that he coululcome to long enough for us to learn anything about it? i've given him caffeine, that's a stimulant for his heart. all we can do now is wait. ma'am, i can't get that grover to eat. i'll shove it down this throat if you say so. no, i better see him.
10:23 am
i brought you some stew. i know how you feel, but you have to eat. how could you know how i feel? do you know what it's like to have a belly that feels as if it's full of feathers? you haven't had any nourishment in days. why? please? no thanks...mother. i don't know why i bother with you. "i swear by apollo the physician, "by aesculapius, hygeia, and panacea, "and i take to witness all the gods, all the goddessese
10:24 am
"in every house where i enter, "i will enterr only for the good of my patients, "keeping myself far from all intentional ill-doing and seduction "and especially from the plples of love with women or men, "be they free or slaves. "all that may come to my knowledge "in the exercise of my profession "or outside of my profession "or in daily commerce with men "that should not be spread ababad "if i keep this oath faithfully, may i enjoy my life and practice my art." that's why you bother with me... to practice your art, doctor. without a patient, how can you practice? you're a fool-- the worst kind-- an educated fool. and i've taken all the insults i intend to take. now, eat this, or i'll go out and get some of the men
10:25 am
if you want to help me, you get me a drink. if you're any kind of doctor at all, you'll get me a drink. let's stop playing games. i don't care what you think. please. he hasn't moved. i think he's breathing easier, though. seth, have you got any liquor? well, yeah, but-- for him? no. oh. bart wants a drink, huh? i need a bottle right away. well, you're not gonna get it.
10:26 am
ta know that as well as i do. let him suffer it out-- he'll get over it. if he gets too ornery, we'll just hog-tie him. we've done it before. you refuse to give it to me? i most certainly do. must i remind you that he's a sick man? all right, he's a sick man. you're the doctor, you get him well. but i'll be goldarnene if i'm gonna let you try to cure fire with fire where that fella is concerned. oh, carol, why don't you give up? let us take care of bart. quit worrying about him. best cure i know of for a drunk is a set of well-placed knuckles. it's much better than all your medicines and all your attention. major, i haven't got the time or the patience to hear your theories. i know you're the boss of this wagon train, bubuyou've got to have respect for me as a doctor. you can refuse to give me the liquor, but i think it's only fair to warn you that you'll be forcing me to use my limited supply of medical alcohol, which could endanger somebody else's life if they need it. carol, will you listen-- ( sighs ) all right...
10:27 am
there ya are. just remember, this is your idea, not mine. stop looking at me like that! get out! get out! leave me alone! what's the matter with you? don't you understand that you and all women make me sick?! a doctor! a woman doctor! ha ha! or are you a woman? what are you? you're nothing! you're as nothing as i am!
10:32 am
10:33 am
aaaaaah! keep him down. easy, easy. now, relax. the indians are gone. you're amongst friends. can you hear me? the indians are gone and you're among friends. can you tell us what happened? can you hear me? can you tell us what happened? a fight... over indian girl. r... the chief...big elk. lord help us--big elk. where's...my brother? they killed him. they murdered him.
10:34 am
10:35 am
if we live through i i ( crack ) bart, what the devil are you doing out here? let's get back to the wagons. you know, seth, the stars look different than when you look at them through the bottom of a bottle. a couple of white trappers have killed an indian chief. we've got trouble-- real trouble. i can smell the dew on the dry grass
10:36 am
rt, there are indians out here. e, they can smell you a mile away. if you don't listen to me and come on, you're gonna be seeing more stars than you ever saw in the bottom on a bottle. now, come on. w ng borsuup? huh--that's funny-- been a long time since i cared whether the sun does come up. how long ago, seth... was the war over? what? six years, bart. six years. six years?
10:38 am
unless flint's too far out ahead of us, chances are he knows about this indian flare-up. if he does, and if nothing had happened to him, why, he's probably headed on to fort stad... and no use talking about going back at all-- we're closer to fort stad than we are anyplace else. he gets through,h, we'll have little to worry about. i sure hope he gets through. well, good morning, doctor.
10:39 am
will ya? we're gonna pull out as soon as we can. rig your wagons for battle. tell every single driver to keep up close and to circle up at the first sign of i iian attack. i don't care if they hear the order or not- circle up and get ready for a fight. any wagon pulls out of line, we haven't got time to stop and pick 'em up, pull 'em back in again. is that clear? indians! let 'em try and touch me! take cover! stand fast! make no move that looks like resistance! no firing whatsoever unless i give the order!
10:40 am
10:41 am
10:42 am
10:43 am
happens to be a friend of mine. that wouldn't t ve made any difference except for one thing-- big elk is still alive. white feather wants an eye for an eye and a tooth for a tooth, so i've made a deal with him. i'm going back to their village with them and try to save big elk's life. how badly is he wounded? i don't know, doctor, except they told me at had a bullet right here. oh, they did s one thing, yes-- that the wound was all full of evil spirits, which means that it's infected. is get the bullet out and cauterize the wound that bullet could be in his lung or close to his heart. i realize that, but it's a gamble i had totoake. it's the only chance we had. i can perform the operation. you sure can, doctor. but it's dangerous going back with those indians. i'm willing. all right, doc. you're not gonna get any argument out of me on that score. as far as i'm concerned, you're the boss of the surgical department. i just hope you're a good doctor, 'cause if there's anything i don't want to be, it's a dead hero.
10:44 am
charlie, go get her a horse. bill, you know, there not gonna let you move this train out of here if flint comes back with any troopop don't let them or anybody else make any issue of it until you know exactly our circumstances. clear? yes, sir. seth. if anything happens to her... and the indians don'kill you, .
10:47 am
10:48 am
what are you gonna do? well, i haven't got a choice, seth. i've got to open up that area. you keep him as immobile as you can. he'll probably lose consciousness, but in the meantnte he's gonna feel a great deal of pain. you don't have to worry about that. he may feel the pain, bubuhe won't move a muscle-- not this old fella. all right. hand me that scalpel, the one on the end. what's happening? oh, lord. he wants me to do it. i forgot about that-- some of these tribes have real strict rules... they won't let a woman be a medicine man. we'd be fighting a tradition of over a hundred years. we just haven't got a chance, carol.
10:49 am
they won't let you do it. well, then, you're gonna have to do it. listen, in the army i helped amputate legs and things like that, but this is too delicate, i can't do this. you have no choice-- you have to. carol-- you can do it if you'll do just exactly as i tell you. all right. now take the scalpel just barely cut it, and make an incision from there to there. right here? yeah. now, easy... that's it. easy. light. that's it. now... now take this and clamp it onto the skin right here. here? just the very edge.
10:50 am
own. let your instrument lay. here? yes. now take your scalpel again and cut into that muscle right there. cut the muscle? just enough so you can separate it. right here? that's right. that's enough. that's--that's it. now separate it and see-- easily. don't tear it, just move them apart. well, it did hit that big rib. there are the splinters. there it is, seth. there. do you see it? yeah. now, seth, take this instrument-- this is what you're going after the bullet with-- and go right down intotohe wound. easy. take it very gently.
10:51 am
does it feel like you're hitting metal there? yeah, i feel it. all ght. now, very easily turn your-- turn your probe-- that's right, easily-- so that you feel that you're surrounding it. like that? that's right. all right. have you done it? now clamp it. there. now, seth, you're going to bring the bullet out-- you're going to bring the bullet out very slowly, but straight up, pulling it. all right?
10:52 am
10:53 am
( coughing ) bill, this grover is making me nervous-- walking up and down like a wildcat in a cage ever since they left. well, i know how he feels, charlie. you know, you don't have any brains at all-- we're in a lot of trouble. even if dr. willoughby's lucky enough to get big elk all patched up, they been gone too long, and we're running out of time and chance. maybe i'm not very bright, but i'm smart enough to know this: if we don't get grover a bottle, he's liable to go berserk. and d a man ever had an excuse to get drunk, he's got one, and so have we. i'll go get the juju
10:54 am
10:55 am
i saw you talking to bart. what's the matter with him, do you know? think he's got t tt glint in his eye for a bottle? i don't think you're gonna have to worry about anymore. bartrt found himself. he knows what he wants. yeah... i know what he wants, too. he wants you. well, yes, he-- he wanted me. and it pained me to have to tell him that that could never be. you see, the mosos important thing for bart was to find someone to love again. oh, carol, you're wasting-- seth, i'm not going on with you. you-- big elk is going to need medical attention for at least two weeks, and i've got to stayayere and see that he pulls through. two weeks?! i can't hold up this train for two hours, let alone two weeks! i don't expect you to. where did you get this idea now? this morning you were just as happy to get out of that teepee as i was. i came out of that teepee thinking only as a woman.
10:56 am
when i got to thinking about what we had done, two things etched in my mind-- one, admiration for your fortitude, but shame for me that i would walk out on a sick man who really needs my help. so now you're changing your mind again, huh? you're getting just like a woman again, huh? just a couple of days ago wild horses couldn't have stopped you from fulfilling your mission to silver creek, and now, just because of some ungrateful redskin, you're going to throw your whole-- you are as stubborn as you are strong. how you gonna get therer i don't know how i'm going to get there. if i could persuade you, i can certainly persuade white feather to get me there safely. and there's one other thing-- don't ever forget this-- i took an oath once, and i'm never going to give it up. you said it once yourself, seth--
10:59 am
? roll along ? ? wagon train ? ? rollin' o or prairie where there ain't no grass ? ? pullin' over mountains where there ain't no pass ? ? sittin' on a board, eyein' the weather ? ? prayin' to the lord we stay together ? ? side by side on the wagon train ? ? roll along ? ? pickin' up a passenger in every town ? ? wonderin' if he's ever gonna shoot you u wn ? ? sittin' on a board, eyein' the weather ? ? prayin' to the lord we stay together ? ? side by side ?
11:00 am
45 Views
IN COLLECTIONS
WRAL (NBC) Television Archive Television Archive News Search ServiceUploaded by TV Archive on