An obsessed young woman waits decades for her husband's body to emerge from the ice, after he fell from a mountain.
Stella Ballister (Patricia Owen) receives the horrifying news that her husband met with an untimely demise while mountain climbing. Newly married, Stella asks for the retrieval of her husband's body - but the task proves impossible when the corpse accidentally falls into a deep crevasse, where no human eyes or hands can reach him. Mark (James Donald), having feelings for Stella, stays by her side, a close friend and nothing more. Forty year later, still trying to get over the news of the accident, Stella learn that the glacier has moved. Hiring a crew to help prospect her husband out of the ice, they find the body preserved and untouched. Stella views the body of her husband one last time.
Hitchcock suspense story set "known for its titles. Simple outline of the screen showing Hitchcock chubby comic outline, program music - Charles Gounod's "Funeral March for a Marionette" sounded Hitchcock's shadow from the right side of the screen, then go to the center of the screen with comic contour overlap. He will likely be greeted with the audience "Good evening". (The theme song of the program is recommended by Bernard Herrmann, Hitchcock's long-term partner.) That comics contour by nine strokes, Hitchcock own creation. The opening title sequence in many movies and TV shows in numerous exaggerated interpretation. The outline of that comic, and the use of Gounod's "Funeral March of a Marionette" as the theme song and other techniques together with Hitchcock in popular culture has left an indelible impression. After the end of Hitchcock in the titles to appear again, and then a humorous introduction to a story in a very spacious studio or set inside story scene, and his monologue written especially for him by James B. Allardice. Each episode to shoot at least two different versions of the story introduces the opening. A version for the American audience, usually parody the recently very popular in advertising, or to get sponsorship for fun, which leads to an ad. Another version for European audiences, usually content to joke with Americans spending. The last few quarters program, opening the contents of filming the Hitchcock of programs in French and German international speech, a reflection of him in real life can be fluent in two languages. Hitchcock in the basic end of the show and the opening, but the main satisfactorily answer the end of the story rather than a joke. He told TV Guide said that his murderer has been arrested this content to be repeated is a necessary moral etiquette. 25 minutes from the beginning of each episode broadcast in 1962 extended to 50 minutes and named "The Alfred Hitchcock Hour" Hitchcock only directed 268 episodes of "Hitchcock suspense story set 17 episodes and the extension of the program and then with John Forsythe directed an episode of "I Saw the Whole Thing". The last episode aired on June 26, 1965, and sold to several television stations broadcast the enduring vitality.