This is a vintage original revised final script from the classic 1980's crime drama/mystery thriller television series, ALFRED HITCHCOCK PRESENTS, from Season 1, Episode 15, which was entitled, The Canary Sedan, written by Joan Twekesbury, in which a wife travels to Hong Kong to join her businessman husband, only to become haunted by the friendly spirit of his late Chinese lover. Since he still hasn't gotten over her, her spirit must help the wife win him back to join the afterlife. The cast includes Kathleen Quinlan, Peter Haskell, Adelle Lutz, Arsenio "Sonny" Trinidad, Beulah Quo, Ping Wu, and Michael Paul Chan.

This is a revised final script initially dated January 8, 1986 with the last of two revisions dated January 17, 1986. The episode consists of two acts in 26 pages on eye-rest green stock which were 3-hole punched and originally bound with two metal grommets between a cardstock front and back cover. A prior owner has removed the original covers and had the script spiral-bound with a black plastic comb binding, a clear front cover, and a black back cover. It is in very fine- condition with light signs of wear on the bottom left corners. There are no missing pages, tears, stains, or other flaws.

Alfred Hitchcock Presents is an American television anthology series created, hosted, and produced by Alfred Hitchcock, and aired on CBS and NBC between 1955 and 1965. It features dramas, thrillers, and mysteries. Between 1962 and 1965, it was renamed The Alfred Hitchcock Hour. Hitchcock himself directed a relatively small number of episodes. By the time the show premiered on October 2, 1955, Hitchcock had been directing films for over three decades. Time magazine named Alfred Hitchcock Presents as one of "The 100 Best TV Shows of All Time." The Writers Guild of America ranked it #79 on their list of the 101 Best-Written TV Series, tying it with Monty Python's Flying CircusStar Trek: The Next Generation and Upstairs, Downstairs. A series of literary anthologies with the running title Alfred Hitchcock Presents were issued to capitalize on the success of the television series. One volume, devoted to stories that censors would not allow to be adapted for broadcast, was entitled Alfred Hitchcock Presents: Stories They Wouldn't Let Me Do on TV — though eventually several of the stories collected therein were adapted.