The Foster Portfolio
Kurt Vonnegut's Monkey House - S1 - E7
Jon Cryer plays "Slippy" Carter, an arrogant investment advisor who is tired of "nickel and dime accounts" and dreams of being on Nelson Rockefeller's payroll. Instead, he has to content himself with the likes of Hebert J. Foster (Nick Blake), a mild-mannered produce clerk living in a modest neighbourhood with his strait-laced wife and a young daughter. Carter and his assistant (Katie Wolfe) are in for a surprise when they discover that, appearances to the contrary, Foster is really a millionaire. The upstanding citizen and model husband and father has been concealing his true circumstances from his wife in order to be able to justify his weekend job - playing jazz piano at the Bluebeat Cellar, a smoke-filled, slightly seedy dive.
Kurt Vonnegut's Monkey House: Season 1 - 7 Episode s
1x1 - Next Door
May 12, 1991
A boy, home alone when his parents are out, sees trouble in a nearby apartment and seeks help from a radio DJ.
1x2 - The Euphio Question
May 12, 1991
A scientist discovers a strange musical transmission from space, which elicits a drug-like euphoric response in all who hear it.
1x3 - All The King's Horses
May 12, 1991
When a US government plane goes down over Cuba, a revolutionary decides to play a game of chess with real human lives on the line.
1x4 - Fortitude
December 21, 1992
1x5 - More Stately Mansions
January 3, 1993
1x6 - Epicac
February 21, 1993
1x7 - The Foster Portfolio
April 4, 1993
Jon Cryer plays "Slippy" Carter, an arrogant investment advisor who is tired of "nickel and dime accounts" and dreams of being on Nelson Rockefeller's payroll. Instead, he has to content himself with the likes of Hebert J. Foster (Nick Blake), a mild-mannered produce clerk living in a modest neighbourhood with his strait-laced wife and a young daughter. Carter and his assistant (Katie Wolfe) are in for a surprise when they discover that, appearances to the contrary, Foster is really a millionaire. The upstanding citizen and model husband and father has been concealing his true circumstances from his wife in order to be able to justify his weekend job - playing jazz piano at the Bluebeat Cellar, a smoke-filled, slightly seedy dive.