Ben Casey

All Episodes 1961 - 1966

  • Ended
  • #<Network:0x00007f96ef961698>
  • 1961-10-03T02:00:00Z
  • 1h
  • 6d 9h (153 episodes)
  • United States
  • English
  • Bing Crosby Productions
  • Drama
Ben Casey is an American medical drama series which ran on ABC from 1961 to 1966. The show was known for its opening titles, which consisted of a hand drawing the symbols "♂, ♀, ✳, †, ∞" on a chalkboard, as cast member Sam Jaffe intoned, "Man, woman, birth, death, infinity." Neurosurgeon Joseph Ransohoff was a medical consultant for the show and may have influenced the personality of the title character.

153 episodes

Series Premiere

1961-10-03T02:00:00Z

1x01 To the Pure

Series Premiere

1x01 To the Pure

  • 1961-10-03T02:00:00Z1h

Dr. Ben Casey is at odds with the medical board, particularly Dr. Zorba and Dr. Jensen, because of his manner toward interns. Under a reprimand, Casey tries to persuade the board to approve neurosurgery on nine-year-old Pete Salazar. After the first of three operations on the boy, Casey is accidentally jabbed with a needle while administering a rabies test to a female patient. During his thirty-day wait for a life-or-death prognosis, he is given permission to resume the surgery.

1961-10-10T02:00:00Z

1x02 But Linda Only Smiled

1x02 But Linda Only Smiled

  • 1961-10-10T02:00:00Z1h

Little Cathy Reed is brought to the hospital for emergency treatment after an auto accident. Casey prepares a blood transfusion, but her mother won't consent.

1961-10-17T02:00:00Z

1x03 The Insolent Heart

1x03 The Insolent Heart

  • 1961-10-17T02:00:00Z1h

Dr. Michael Waldman, a former professor of Casey's and a former colleague of Zorba's, comes to the hospital with a cardiovascular ailment diagnosed as fatal. Casey and Zorba want to try a new surgery on him, but the medical board is opposed.

1961-10-24T02:00:00Z

1x04 I Remember a Lemon Tree

1x04 I Remember a Lemon Tree

  • 1961-10-24T02:00:00Z1h

Dr. Karl Anders is a brilliant surgeon, and Zorba wants to keep him on at the hospital. But Anders is concerned with illnesses of his own—he's addicted to morphine, and suffers from leukemia.

1x05 An Expensive Glass of Water

  • 1961-10-31T03:00:00Z1h

Casey has Walter Tyson for a patient, the president of a large corporation in difficulties, who makes treatment impossible by ordering him about. Zorba and Dr. Jensen try to dissuade him from withdrawing, because his patient is a big donor to the hospital.

1961-11-07T03:00:00Z

1x06 The Sound of Laughter

1x06 The Sound of Laughter

  • 1961-11-07T03:00:00Z1h

Tony Romano, a struggling nightclub comic, suffers a cranial seizure. Dr. Casey operates, but Tony is left a paraplegic.

1x07 A Few Brief Lines for Dave

  • 1961-11-14T03:00:00Z1h

Dr. Dave Taylor returns to the hospital to do research, but Dr. Casey diagnoses him as a ""hospital bum"" afraid of competition, and also treats a woman's hypochondria.

1961-11-21T03:00:00Z

1x08 Pavane for a Gentle Lady

1x08 Pavane for a Gentle Lady

  • 1961-11-21T03:00:00Z1h

By degrees to the bare facts.

1961-11-28T03:00:00Z

1x09 My Good Friend Krikor

1x09 My Good Friend Krikor

  • 1961-11-28T03:00:00Z1h

Orderly Nick Kanavaris' good friend Krikor Dakopian is committed by his family to the psychiatric ward. Dr. Casey, however, thinks the ailment is likely to be responsive to neurosurgery.

1961-12-05T03:00:00Z

1x10 The Sweet Kiss of Madness

1x10 The Sweet Kiss of Madness

  • 1961-12-05T03:00:00Z1h

Dr. Alan Reynolds' mental state is not improved by constant pressure from his wife to be a successful neurosurgeon. The strain increases when he treats an abused 10-year-old boy. Dr. Casey forestalls an unnecessary operation, and tries to persuade Dr. Reynolds to receive treatment.

Expectant mother Ellen Parker loses her child after an auto accident. Casey examines her and finds that she is subject to chronic seizures, and these, not the accident, are responsible for the loss of her baby.

Dr. Casey operates on Billy Harris, a holdup man shot and paralyzed, but he's also concerned about the policeman, who may have been too keen and might be mentally hampered.

1962-01-02T03:00:00Z

1x13 And If I Die

1x13 And If I Die

  • 1962-01-02T03:00:00Z1h

""The faith that looks through death."" (Wordsworth)

1962-01-09T03:00:00Z

1x14 A Memory of Candy Stripes

1x14 A Memory of Candy Stripes

  • 1962-01-09T03:00:00Z1h

Recollections.

A clean, well-lighted place.

1962-01-23T03:00:00Z

1x16 A Story to Be Softly Told

1x16 A Story to Be Softly Told

  • 1962-01-23T03:00:00Z1h

Between you, me and the nurse's station.

He's not quite himself, or is he?

1962-02-06T03:00:00Z

1x18 Give My Hands an Epitaph

1x18 Give My Hands an Epitaph

  • 1962-02-06T03:00:00Z1h

Post-scriptum to a surgeon's operating life.

1x19 Victory Wears a Cruel Smile

  • 1962-02-13T03:00:00Z1h

From another point of view.

1x20 Odyssey of a Proud Suitcase

  • 1962-02-20T03:00:00Z1h

A piece of baggage.

1962-02-27T03:00:00Z

1x21 Behold a Pale Horse

1x21 Behold a Pale Horse

  • 1962-02-27T03:00:00Z1h

""And his name that sat on him was Death.""

A decorated aviator with an alias goes into surgery.

A consummation devoutly to be wished.

1x24 Monument to an Aged Hunter

  • 1962-03-20T03:00:00Z1h

Souvenirs and trophies.

1x25 All the Clocks are Ticking

  • 1962-03-27T03:00:00Z1h

As time goes by.

A Texas rose.

A vision of loveliness.

1x28 And Eve Wore a Veil of Tears

  • 1962-04-24T03:00:00Z1h

Sorrow and pity.

Might and main.

Qualifications for the deed.

So oft it chances in particular men That (for some vicious mole of nature in them, As in their birth, wherein they are not guilty, Since nature cannot choose his origin) By the o'ergrowth of some complexion, Oft breaking down the pales and forts of reason, Or by some habit, that too much o'erleavens The form of plausive manners—that (these men, Carrying, I say, the stamp of one defect, Being nature's livery, or fortune's star) Their virtues else, be they as pure as grace, As infinite as man may undergo, Shall in the general censure take corruption From that particular fault. The dram of evil Doth all the noble substance of a doubt, To his own scandal. Hamlet

Season Finale

1962-05-29T02:00:00Z

1x32 When You See an Evil Man

Season Finale

1x32 When You See an Evil Man

  • 1962-05-29T02:00:00Z1h

The patient and the ill.

Season Premiere

1962-10-02T02:00:00Z

2x01 Mrs. McBroom and the Cloud Watcher

Season Premiere

2x01 Mrs. McBroom and the Cloud Watcher

  • 1962-10-02T02:00:00Z1h

""But one thing is needful.""

It's a long shift that has no surgery.

A painstaking diagnosis.

1962-10-23T02:00:00Z

2x04 Legacy from a Stranger

2x04 Legacy from a Stranger

  • 1962-10-23T02:00:00Z1h

How do you repay such a debt?

2x05 Go Not Gently into the Night

  • 1962-10-30T03:00:00Z1h

""Brave in his burning pride.""

To hell and gone.

1962-11-13T03:00:00Z

2x07 Of All Save Pain Bereft

2x07 Of All Save Pain Bereft

  • 1962-11-13T03:00:00Z1h

Last straws.

1962-11-20T03:00:00Z

2x08 And Even Death Shall Die

2x08 And Even Death Shall Die

  • 1962-11-20T03:00:00Z1h

The tautological imperative.

A gentle occupation.

""Season of mists and mellow fruitfulness...""

1962-12-11T03:00:00Z

2x11 I Hear America Singing

2x11 I Hear America Singing

  • 1962-12-11T03:00:00Z1h

I hear America singing, the varied carols I hear; Those of mechanics—each one singing his, as it should be, blithe and strong; The carpenter singing his, as he measures his plank or beam, The mason singing his, as he makes ready for work, or leaves off work; The boatman singing what belongs to him in his boat—the deckhand singing on the steamboat deck; The shoemaker singing as he sits on his bench—the hatter singing as he stands; The wood-cutter's song—the ploughboy's, on his way in the morning, or at the noon intermission, or at sundown; The delicious singing of the mother—or of the young wife at work—or of the girl sewing or washing—Each singing what belongs to her, and to none else; The day what belongs to the day—at night, the party of young fellows, robust, friendly, Singing, with open mouths, their strong melodious songs. Come! some of you! still be flooding The States with hundreds and thousands of mouth-songs fit for The States only. Walt Whitman, Leaves of Gr

""Oh what hard luck stories they all hand me.""

A sabbath diversion.

It is of the Lord's mercies that we are not consumed, because his compassions fail not. They are new every morning: great is thy faithfulness. The Lord is my portion, saith my soul; therefore will I hope in him. Lamentations

2x15 A Cardinal Act of Mercy (1)

  • 1963-01-15T03:00:00Z1h

Dr. Casey tries to help a lawyer kick her morphine habit, but encounters resistance, lies and manipulation when she gets a guileless young man to smuggle dope into her hospital room. He is visiting his mother, who is in the hospital for treatment of injuries received in a beating. (Part 1 of 2)

2x16 A Cardinal Act of Mercy (2)

  • 1963-01-22T03:00:00Z1h

1963-01-29T03:00:00Z

2x17 Use Neon for My Epitaph

2x17 Use Neon for My Epitaph

  • 1963-01-29T03:00:00Z1h

The business has its allure.

He thought he saw an Albatross    That fluttered round the lamp: He looked again, and found it was    A Penny-Postage Stamp. ""You'd best be getting home,"" he said:    ""The nights are very damp!"" ... He thought he saw an Argument    That proved he was the Pope: He looked again, and found it was    A Bar of Mottled Soap. ""A fact so dread,"" he faintly said,    ""Extinguishes all hope!"" Lewis Carroll, The Mad Gardener's Song

Although he's still an intern, Jimmy Peabody is raising funds to finance a medical clinic of his own, and one of the sources he's depending on is wealthy Adam Garrett, an elderly patient at County General.

1963-02-19T03:00:00Z

2x20 A Hundred More Pipers

2x20 A Hundred More Pipers

  • 1963-02-19T03:00:00Z1h

The great rouse.

2x21 Suffer the Little Children

  • 1963-02-26T03:00:00Z1h

""Of such is the kingdom of Heaven.""

1963-03-05T03:00:00Z

2x22 Rigadoon for Three Pianos

2x22 Rigadoon for Three Pianos

  • 1963-03-05T03:00:00Z1h

An old dance.

2x23 The White Ones Are Dolphins

  • 1963-03-12T03:00:00Z1h

The ones that got away...

A wandering minstrel, he, with some disfigurement.

1963-04-02T03:00:00Z

2x26 Father Was an Intern

2x26 Father Was an Intern

  • 1963-04-02T03:00:00Z1h

The occupant and the resident.

2x27 Rage Against the Dying Light

  • 1963-04-16T03:00:00Z1h

""Do not go gentle into that good night."" (Dylan Thomas)

2x28 La Vie, La Vie Intérieure

  • 1963-04-23T03:00:00Z1h

The well-furnished habitation.

The Sparrow in the Zoo No bars are set too close, no mesh too fine To keep me from the eagle and the lion, Whom keepers feed that I may freely dine. This goes to show that if you have the wit To be small, common, cute, and live on shit, Though the cage fret kings, you may make free with it. Howard Nemerov

1963-05-07T02:00:00Z

2x30 Lullaby for Billy Dignan

2x30 Lullaby for Billy Dignan

  • 1963-05-07T02:00:00Z1h

Homage to Millet's Angelus.

Season Finale

1963-05-14T02:00:00Z

2x31 Hang No Hats on Dreams

Season Finale

2x31 Hang No Hats on Dreams

  • 1963-05-14T02:00:00Z1h

Castles in Spain.

Season Premiere

1963-09-10T02:00:00Z

3x01 For This Relief, Much Thanks

Season Premiere

3x01 For This Relief, Much Thanks

  • 1963-09-10T02:00:00Z1h

A father assaults his son over a youthful fascination with Nazism.

1963-09-19T02:00:00Z

3x02 Justice to a Microbe

3x02 Justice to a Microbe

  • 1963-09-19T02:00:00Z1h

The long arm of the law of nature.

""That's an old Spanish proverb.""

1963-10-03T02:00:00Z

3x04 Allie

3x04 Allie

  • 1963-10-03T02:00:00Z1h

A character out of the movies.

3x05 If There Were Dreams to Sell

  • 1963-10-10T02:00:00Z1h

If there were dreams to sell,       What would you buy? Some cost a passing bell;       Some a light sigh, That shakes from Life's fresh crown Only a rose-leaf down. If there were dreams to sell, Merry and sad to tell,       And the crier rang the bell,       What would you buy? A cottage lone and still,       With bowers nigh, Shadowy, my woes to still,       Until I die. Such pearl from Life's fresh crown Fain would I shake me down. Were dreams to have at will, This best would heal my ill,       This would I buy.

""Unfelt, unheard, unseen..."" (Keats)

""Love doth know no fullness nor no bounds."" (Keats)

Little drops of water, Little grains of sand, Make the mighty ocean And the pleasant land. So the little moments, Humble though they be, Make the mighty ages Of Eternity. So the little errors Lead the soul away From the paths of virtue Far in sin to stray. Little deeds of kindness, Little words of love, Help to make earth happy, Like the Heaven above. Julia A. F. Carney, ""Little Things""

1963-11-07T03:00:00Z

3x09 Light Up the Dark Corners

3x09 Light Up the Dark Corners

  • 1963-11-07T03:00:00Z1h

Fear of the unknown.

Alice laughed. ""There's no use trying,"" she said: ""one CAN'T believe impossible things."" ""I daresay you haven't had much practice,"" said the Queen. ""When I was your age, I always did it for half-an-hour a day. Why, sometimes I've believed as many as six impossible things before breakfast."" Lewis Carroll. Through the Looking Glass

3x11 Fire in a Sacred Fruit Tree

  • 1963-11-21T03:00:00Z1h

""A fence around the void.""—Hawaiian saying

The title is reportedly the command of King Admetos in Gluck's Alceste.

1963-12-05T03:00:00Z

3x13 My Love, My Love

3x13 My Love, My Love

  • 1963-12-05T03:00:00Z1h

Irreducible affinities.

3x14 From Too Much Love of Living

  • 1963-12-12T03:00:00Z1h

From too much love of living, From hope and fear set free, We thank with brief thanksgiving Whatever gods may be That no life lives for ever; That dead men rise up never; That even the weariest river Winds somewhere safe to sea. Swinburne, ""The Garden of Proserpine""

The indeterminate.

Those caissons go rolling along.

Dr. Ernest Farrow, a once brilliant neurosurgeon, is sent to County General for a refresher course. Learning that Farrow is paralyzed by self-doubt and recurring nightmares from the death of a patient, Casey attempts to assuage his colleague's fears and coax him back into the operating room.

A chip off the old block.

The imponderables of personality.

... whose name was Job; and that man was perfect and upright, and one that feared God, and eschewed evil.

1964-01-30T03:00:00Z

3x21 One Nation Indivisible

3x21 One Nation Indivisible

  • 1964-01-30T03:00:00Z1h

Rare blood demands a coast-to-coast search.

Figments.

MRS. MALAPROP: You are not like Cerberus, three gentlemen at once, are you? Sheridan, The Rivals

Life and the ""stinking fist"".

1964-03-05T03:00:00Z

3x26 The Lonely Ones

3x26 The Lonely Ones

  • 1964-03-05T03:00:00Z1h

Isolation.

3x27 Keep Out of Reach of Adults

  • 1964-03-12T03:00:00Z1h

Wise in their own conceits.

1964-03-19T03:00:00Z

3x28 Dress My Doll Pretty

3x28 Dress My Doll Pretty

  • 1964-03-19T03:00:00Z1h

A peculiar treatment plan.

The seed of Mustard is the smallest grain, And yet the force thereto is very great, It hath a present power to purge the brain, It adds unto the stomach force and heat: All poison it expels, and it is plain, With sugar 'tis a passing sauce for meat. She that hath hap a husband bad to bury, And is therefore in heart not sad, but merry, Yet if in show good manners she will keep, Onions and Mustard-seed will make her weep. The Englishmans Doctor.    &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Or, The School of Salerne,    &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Or, Physical observations for the perfect Preserving of the body of Man in continual health Sir John Harington, 1608

3x30 Make Me the First American

  • 1964-04-02T03:00:00Z1h

An original.

The good-humored M.D.s.

...and riseth up again.

Season Finale

1964-04-23T03:00:00Z

3x33 Evidence of Things Not Seen

Season Finale

3x33 Evidence of Things Not Seen

  • 1964-04-23T03:00:00Z1h

The substance of things hoped for.

Season Premiere

1964-09-15T02:00:00Z

4x01 August is the Month Before Christmas

Season Premiere

4x01 August is the Month Before Christmas

  • 1964-09-15T02:00:00Z1h

It being reckoned that Jesus was actually born in September.

From the wreck of my past, which hath perish'd,    Thus much I at least may recall, It hath taught me that which I most cherish'd    Deserved to be dearest of all: In the desert a fountain is springing,    In the wide waste there still is a tree, And a bird in the solitude singing,    Which speaks to my spirit of thee. Lord Byron

""There is a march of science; but who shall beat the drums for its retreat?"" (Charles Lamb)

1964-10-06T02:00:00Z

4x04 Autumn Without Red Leaves

4x04 Autumn Without Red Leaves

  • 1964-10-06T02:00:00Z1h

""The summer is over...""

1964-10-13T02:00:00Z

4x05 You Fish or You Cut Bait

4x05 You Fish or You Cut Bait

  • 1964-10-13T02:00:00Z1h

The proverb put to the test.

The power of personality.

4x07 Woods Full of Question Marks

  • 1964-10-27T03:00:00Z1h

The punctuated forest. Autism and deafness in children.

1964-11-10T03:00:00Z

4x08 A Thousand Words are Mute

4x08 A Thousand Words are Mute

  • 1964-11-10T03:00:00Z1h

A picture is most eloquent.

The classical Rx, yet Dr. Swanson fails to inspire respect.

L'amour et la mort.

The Freudian prescription.

1964-12-08T03:00:00Z

4x12 Courage at 3 A.M.

4x12 Courage at 3 A.M.

  • 1964-12-08T03:00:00Z1h

""As to moral courage, he [Napoleon] had very rarely found it, he said, that of two hours past midnight; which is to say, courage unawares.""

The whirligig of 3/4 time.

The threshold of knowledge.

4x15 Where Does the Boomerang Go?

  • 1965-01-12T03:00:00Z1h

The parabolic return. A scientist from Australia on his last legs.

1965-01-19T03:00:00Z

4x16 Pas de Deux

4x16 Pas de Deux

  • 1965-01-19T03:00:00Z1h

A romantic ballet.

Working in the hospital milieu.

Cleopatra and the clepsydra.

Looking Forward When I am grown to man's estate I shall be very proud and great, And tell the other girls and boys Not to meddle with my toys. Robert Louis Stevenson

Various strings and attachments.

Shadow and substance.

Dr. Green practices the best medicine, but Dr. Zorba and Dr. Casey are rather saturnine on his manner.

4x23 Minus That Rusty Old Hacksaw

  • 1965-03-16T03:00:00Z1h

Modern medicine.

1965-03-23T03:00:00Z

4x24 Eulogy in Four Flats

4x24 Eulogy in Four Flats

  • 1965-03-23T03:00:00Z1h

The key of mourning.

1965-03-30T03:00:00Z

4x25 Three Li'l Lambs

4x25 Three Li'l Lambs

  • 1965-03-30T03:00:00Z1h

""To a close shorn sheep, God gives wind by measure."" (George Herbert)

1965-04-13T03:00:00Z

4x26 A Slave is On the Throne

4x26 A Slave is On the Throne

  • 1965-04-13T03:00:00Z1h

Gen. 41:41

Euthanasia. ""Journeys end in lovers' meeting, Every wise man's son doth know.""—Twelfth Night

A change of management.

A memorable rapprochement.

Season Finale

1965-05-18T02:00:00Z

4x31 A Horse Named Stravinsky

Season Finale

4x31 A Horse Named Stravinsky

  • 1965-05-18T02:00:00Z1h

A mount with a legendary moniker.

Season Premiere

1965-09-14T02:00:00Z

5x01 War of Nerves

Season Premiere

5x01 War of Nerves

  • 1965-09-14T02:00:00Z1h

The surgeon's secret.

5x03 A Nightingale Named Nathan

  • 1965-09-28T02:00:00Z1h

""Were I a nightingale, I would act like one."" (Epictetus)

Le Médecin Malgré Lui

A proverb of great pith.

1965-10-19T02:00:00Z

5x06 What to Her is Plato?

5x06 What to Her is Plato?

  • 1965-10-19T02:00:00Z1h

An academic debate.

5x07 Francini? Who is Francini?

  • 1965-10-26T02:00:00Z1h

Introduction and variations.

Rules of the game.

A lifetime of hard work seems undesirable for an intern.

It couldn't be called ungentle, But how thoroughly departmental. Frost

1965-11-23T03:00:00Z

5x11 When Givers Prove Unkind

5x11 When Givers Prove Unkind

  • 1965-11-23T03:00:00Z1h

Rich gifts wax poor, to the noble mind.

1965-11-30T03:00:00Z

5x12 The Man from Quasilia

5x12 The Man from Quasilia

  • 1965-11-30T03:00:00Z1h

Another county heard from.

To see the night before.

""Like a patient etherized upon a table.""

""Tell the truth or trump—but get the trick."" (Twain)

""And let slip the dogs of war.""

Meantime we shall express our darker purpose. Give me the map there. Know that we have divided In three our kingdom: and 'tis our fast intent To shake all cares and business from our age; Conferring them on younger strengths, while we Unburthen'd crawl toward death. King Lear

You can get there from here.

The agony and the estimate: trigeminal neuralgia, the tic douloureux.

Whistling in the dark.

5x21 Weave Nets To Catch The Wind

  • 1966-02-08T03:00:00Z1h

Courts adieu, and all delights, All bewitching appetites; Sweetest breath, and clearest eye, Like perfumes go out and die; And consequently this is done, As shadows wait upon the sun. Vain the ambition of kings, Who seek by trophies and dead things, To leave a living name behind, And weave but nets to catch the wind. O you have wrought a miracle, and melted A heart of adamant: you have compris'd In this dumb pageant, a right excellent form Of penitence. John Webster, The Devil's Law-Case

1966-02-17T03:00:00Z

5x22 Lullaby for a Wind-Up Toy

5x22 Lullaby for a Wind-Up Toy

  • 1966-02-17T03:00:00Z1h

The unmoved mover.

5x23 Where Did All the Roses Go?

  • 1966-02-22T03:00:00Z1h

""No gardener has died within rosaceous memory."" (Beckett)

You pays your money and you takes your choice.

Season Finale

1966-03-22T03:00:00Z

5x26 Then, Suddenly, Panic

Season Finale

5x26 Then, Suddenly, Panic

  • 1966-03-22T03:00:00Z1h

""Fear in a handful of dust."" (Eliot)

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