“Lost and Found” originally aired after “Ghosts” in a
two-hour block, but it’s not the second part of “Ghosts.” TheWB loved its “WB
Events” which were no more than a two-hour block for one show. The network kept
Everwood off the air for so long in 2006 because of its poor ratings; so it was
anything but a WB event. Between “Ghosts” and “Lost and Found,” the latter is
the better episode. This episode brings things back from the past. Andy and
Edna had a subplot all their own. Amy learned about the abortion her father
performed in season one. Ephram rediscovered the piano. The episode title
suggests the theme of the episode. Julia’s words, in her letter to Ephram, the
one he read at the end of “Good to Go”, urges her son to retreat into the past
should he ever feel lost, to the purest place in the heart, because it is there
he’ll find his way again. It’s true of all the characters in “Lost and Found”.
When Harold doubted his ability to be a father again,
especially to a child from a different culture, a different race, with unknown
medical records and an unknown age, Rose brought to him his own children’s
problems on paper to show him he already accomplished what he thought himself
incapable of accomplishing.
Ephram found happiness when he returned to the piano at the
memorial for Will after feeling uncertain he’d find such joy playing again. He
told Reid of his worry that he used the piano as a crutch for his happiness. If
he played and it made him a sick a second time, what thing, aside from Amy’s
love, would make him happy? Such a worry’s not limited to eighteen year olds.
Some experience it all their lives. But he found it, the joy, when he played in
tribute of his mentor. A one-night stand
with a girl whose name he couldn’t bother to remember didn’t cure his lonely
ache, but a whirl with the piano did. Better still, Andy watched Ephram play at
the end in a mirror image of the end of the “Pilot”. This time, father and son
were at peace and past the move to Everwood and Madison. They made it. What a
lovely ending.
Elsewhere, Amy’s in her Joey Potter arc. So, characters that
experience a self-discovery arc always find a new passion and a new mentor.
Joey found art and Jack (well, she re-discovered art after her Dawson period).
Buffy found Professor Walsh. Amy finds a professor mentor. The writers gave Amy
the ‘obnoxious freshman’ storyline. She has experienced a wider world than she
knew in high school. Her newfound knowledge and causes drove a wedge between
her and Hannah. She doesn’t want to talk about Ephram, but Hannah does, because
it’s the only common ground they have now. Self-discovery arcs rarely last.
Joey forgot art and tried to seduce Dawson later. Buffy learned Walsh was a
villain. Nothing dramatic happens for Amy. She doesn’t know she’s in a phase.
The Andy/Edna subplot is my favorite part of “Lost and
Found”. It’s a return to the early seasons when they worked together, when she
was the first person to welcome and embrace Andy, and their story is poignant
because of the connection they still share. Edna met Andy and Delia when she was his
little girl, but she’s older, growing up, lashing out at her father, and she
sees that Andy needs to loosen up with her. Instead of disciplining her, he
needs to try to understand her. It’s also about Edna’s deep love for Irv, a
love so deep she doesn’t realize the physical toll his absence has on her. Maybe
Andy never forgot the image of them embracing in the falling snow outside his
office as he realized what’s possible in Everwood.
The writers didn’t know their episode would be held until
late March nor that it’d begin the show’s final run. It’s funny the way things
work.
Nancy Won wrote the episode. Perry Lang directed it.
Nancy Won wrote the episode. Perry Lang directed it.
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