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Number Six is the central character in the 1967–1968 television series The Prisoner. The unnamed character in the original TV series was played by series co-creator Patrick McGoohan. For one episode, "Do Not Forsake Me Oh My Darling", Number Six was portrayed by Nigel Stock due to McGoohan being away filming the movie Ice Station Zebra. [1]
The Prisoner is a British television series created by Patrick McGoohan, with possible contributions from George Markstein. [2] McGoohan portrays Number Six, an unnamed British intelligence agent who is abducted and imprisoned in a mysterious coastal village after resigning from his position. [3]
6 3 Number Six thinks he has a means to tell the prisoners from the warders. "Hammer into Anvil" Roger Woddis: 1 December 1967: Patrick Cargill: 12 10 14 12 10 14 Number Six takes revenge on a sadistic Number Two for the death of another prisoner. "It's Your Funeral" Michael Cramoy: 8 December 1967: Derren Nesbitt Andre Van Gyseghem: 8 11 10 10 ...
Instead, Number Six – having woken up – looks out of his window to see the helicopter carrying The Colonel landing. The incidental music is also different in this sequence. McGoohan appears only at the very beginning and the very end of the episode, the role of Number 6 (after the mind transfer) being played the rest of the time by Nigel Stock.
As Number Two is about to ask who assisted Number Six, Number Six states that there is a question that the "General" cannot answer. Number Two arrogantly accepts the challenge; when Number Six feeds his brief question into the "General", the computer begins to sputter and emit smoke after its data banks fail to find the answer to the question.
Drugged, Number Six is subjected to an ultra-sonic treatment which lobotomises him. At the last second, Number Eighty-six shuts off the ultrasound. Number Six wakes up, apparently docile, returns to the community, and is welcomed by all. In his flat he sees his cup of tea being drugged by Number Eighty-six and pours it away.
St. Maximilian Maria Kolbe, patron saint of journalists, prisoners, and drug addicts, ... In May, Kolbe was transferred to Auschwitz and given the prisoner number 16670.
On the first two nights, Six is sedated through his evening tea, brought to Number Fourteen's laboratory, injected with the drug, and connected to the machine. Two and Fourteen watch events unfold in Six's visions of the party, and then insert, separately, the dossiers for "A" and "B", agents with known ties to Six.