Scripter
Robert W. Lenski adapted G.D. Gearino's novel
What the Deaf-Mute Heard for this Hallmark Hall of Fame comedy. It was filmed in Wilmington, North Carolina, by director
John Kent Harrison. During the '40s, single mother Helen (
Bernadette Peters) boards a bus for Barrington, Georgia, with her 10-year-old son Sammy (
Frankie Muniz). She tells him not to say a word. The two are separated when she exits the bus and is carried away, leaving the sleeping Sammy to travel to Barrington by himself. Because Sammy won't speak, bus-station manager Norm assumes he's mute and deaf. Norm gives Sammy a cot in the back of the station, and he's fed by widower Norm's friend Lucille (
Judith Ivey), owner of the adjacent cafe.
Years pass, but the grown Sammy (
Matthew Modine), working as a handyman, still remains silent. Well-to-do widow Tynan (
Claire Bloom) orders him about when she has him clean porch furniture. Her snobbish son Tolliver (
Jake Weber), who steals church money, treats Sammy with contempt. Tolliver's sister Tallasse (
Anne Bobby) likes Sammy, and she confides in Sammy, thinking he can't hear what she's saying. Her father and Sammy's mother, they learn, both loved the Weill-Gershwin song, My Ship. Throughout Barrington, the locals have learned to trust Sammy, but eventually, joyful junkman Thacker (
James Earl Jones) stumbles onto Sammy's secret.
Bernadette Peters is heard singing My Ship during the closing credits.
What the Deaf Man Heard first aired November 23, 1997 on CBS. ~ Bhob Stewart, All Movie Guide