Television history is filled with legendary time travelers, often making for great episodes. One who was dealt a particularly bad hand, however, was body-hopping hero Sam Beckett (Scott Bakula) in the long-running sci-fi series “Quantum Leap.” Making its debut on NBC in 1989, the show followed Beckett, who accidentally sends himself back into the past and ends up in a body that doesn’t belong to him. The good news is he’s not alone. With the help of Admiral Al Calavicci (Dean Stockwell) in holographic form and mini supercomputer Ziggy (voiced by Deborah Pratt), the group tries to figure out how to get Sam out of whatever year and body he stumbles into and one step closer to home.
Like many great sci-fi shows, “Quantum Leap” utilized the fantastical prospects of the future to bring to light the very real and relevant issues of the present. It was this creativity, along with the chemistry between Bakula and Stockwell, that hooked audiences and earned the show an Emmy and a Golden Globe. With that kind of success, you’d think that a show like “Quantum Leap” would’ve gone out on a high note. Despite its acclaim, ratings had begun to slide, and NBC ultimately chose not to renew the series. Instead, not only was the show canceled, but “Quantum Leap” also ended with one of the bleakest finales in television history.
Sam never returned home in Quantum Leap
It may have started strong, but “Quantum Leap” did not hold viewers’ attention long enough to go out on a respectable high. Viewership issues plagued the series as early as its third season, prompting fans to write in and demand that the show continue. Conventions and fan clubs formed to show how much support the series had, helping it continue into a fourth season. A fifth season was as far as the series went, ending on a note that still does not sit right with fans.
In the show’s final episode, “Mirror Image,” Sam’s last leap leads to a mind-bending chapter where he finds himself back in his own aged body on the day of his birth. The episode ends with Sam doing the good deed of leaping back to meet Beth (Susan Diol), the ex-wife of his best friend, Al, who left his pal and remarried. Sam asks her to wait for Al, which, as revealed in the closing moments, changes the timeline. “Beth never remarried. She and Al have four daughters and celebrate their 39th wedding anniversary in June. Sam never returned home.” It was a cliffhanger that broke fans’ hearts, one that was never planned and would never be rectified, even when “Quantum Leap” was revived 29 years later.
Even a Quantum Leap reboot couldn’t undo the damage
When the curtains closed on “Quantum Leap” in 1993, creator Donald P. Bellisario spoke about how things unfolded, offering his best attempt at a farewell for fans. “I wasn’t going to write a this-is-it kind of episode because I don’t think that ‘Quantum Leap’ is finished,” Bellisario explained to the Los Angeles Times. “So I wrote a show that gives some of the reasons that he’s been leaping around… but at the end, it’s wide open as to what he’s going on to next.”
The closest thing fans would get to an answer was in the “Quantum Leap” reboot, which saw Raymond Lee as a new leaper called Ben Song, who ends up in the same predicament as Sam. While the new “Quantum Leap” could’ve used some tweaks, the show did reference the original series and even included an appearance from Diol reprising her role as Beth. Unfortunately, it didn’t last as long as the original, and the “Quantum Leap” reboot was canceled after two seasons. It’s a shame that while Bellisario had plans for the future, Sam is still, for now, stuck in the past. Whether an answer will ever come as to whether Sam made it home, only time will tell.

































































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