So many great things about this episode, one of my favorites of the whole series!T.Q. wrote: ↑Wed Feb 10, 2021 3:56 pm
February 12, 1981
[CBS 9:00] Magnum, P.I. [Reg]: Lest We Forget
Season 1, episode 10
W: Donald P. Bellisario D: Lawrence Doheny
With David Palmer (Dutch Mueller), June Lockhart (Diane Westmore Pauley - 1981), Anne Lockhart (Diane Westmore - 1941), Miguel Ferrer (Bobby Wickes - 1941), Scatman Crothers (Tickler), Jose Ferrer (Judge Robert Caine), Elizabeth Lindsey (Kiki), Sonny Ching (Maku), Patricia Herman (Jessie), Remi Abellira (Moki), Reri Tava Jobe (Hostess).
A man nominated to be a Justice on the U.S. Supreme Court asks Magnum to find a woman he last saw on December 6, 1941, when he was a young Navy ensign and she was a hooker.
First, the casting of the parent/child actors - June & Anne Lockhart and Jose & Miguel Ferrer was brilliant. I don't know if it was done before, but I hadn't seen it prior. It lends a realism to the visuals that they really couldn't do otherwise. Eleanor Ross, the casting director gets major props for that, she even scored Scatman Crothers!. (note, she was casting director for 8 episodes - Adelaide, All Roads Lead to Floyd, Thicker Than Blood, The Curse of the King Kamehameha Club, Lest We Forget, Missing in Action, The Ugliest Dog in Hawaii and Never Again... Never Again)
The opening scene channeling From Here to Eternity and featuring Glenn Miller's "Moonlight Serenade" set the perfect tone. (Is there a better musical timestamp than "Moonlight Serenade"? IMO it's one of the great recordings of all time and never fails to transport me in time right where they want me to be) Speaking of music, then there's the intro music as Thomas is meeting Judge Caine on the beach (which you can get here: https://magnum-mania.com/Audio/Meeting_Judge_Caine.html which is another one of those great Post/Carpenter compositions.
Next there's the story itself. A show set in Hawai'i has to at least acknowledge the Pearl Harbor attack, especially one that takes place only 30 years later, and this one does it very well. The timeslips (a phrase I stole from Chris Claremont and John Byrne's great Uncanny X-Men run from the early 80s) tell the story and as noted about these early episodes, the editing here shines - much more of a cinematic feel.
The climatic scene where Diane Pauley & Judge Craine are reunited using the backdrop of the U.S.S. Arizona Memorial also lets the show acknowledge the sacrifices and loss of life that day. Classily well done.
Then there's the subplot about the bridge game . . . as always the dynamic between Thomas and Higgins makes even a subpar episode worthwhile but this, this is one of the best in the series. Seeing Higgins and the Lads catering to Thomas is worth the price of admission!
There's also another more subtle under current from the first season that shows up, that Thomas knows a lot of "society" and influential people on the island (think Agatha Kimball in Don't Say Goodbye, ep. 15)
Best exchange:
"Who's playing for Mrs. Ashmore?"
"Why, no one. The funeral is today, the game is tomorrow."
"What a strange little man"
We also get a second appearance of my "white whale" shirt

This is easily one of my most watched episodes of the series.