Sleepy Hollow (Season 1)
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Sleepy Hollow (season 1) | |||
Season 1 DVD cover | |||
Country of origin | United States | ||
No. of episodes | 13 | ||
Broadcast | |||
Original channel | Fox | ||
Original run | September 16, 2013 – January 20, 2014 | ||
Season chronology | |||
Next → Season 2 | |||
List of Sleepy Hollow episodes |
The first season of the Fox television series Sleepy Hollow premiered on September 16, 2013, and concluded January 20, 2014, consisting of 13 episodes.
Contents |
Cast and characters
- See also: List of Sleepy Hollow characters
Main cast
- Tom Mison as Ichabod Crane (13 episodes)
- Nicole Beharie as Lt. Abigail "Abbie" Mills (13 episodes)
- Orlando Jones as Captain Frank Irving (12 episodes)
- Katia Winter as Katrina Crane (9 episodes)
Recurring cast
- Lyndie Greenwood as Jennifer "Jenny" Mills (9 episodes)
- Nicholas Gonzalez as Detective Luke Morales (6 episodes)
- John Cho as Officer Andy Brooks (6 episodes)
- Richard Cetrone, Jeremy Owens, Craig Branham and Neil Jackson as the Headless Horseman / Abraham Van Brunt (6 episodes)
- D. J. Mifflin, George Ketsios, and Derek Mears as Moloch (6 episodes)
- Clancy Brown as Sheriff August Corbin (4 episodes)
- John Noble as Henry Parrish / Jeremy Crane (4 episodes)
- Jill Marie Jones as Cynthia Irving (4 episodes)
- Amandla Stenberg as Macey Irving (4 episodes)
- Jahnee Wallace as Young Abigail Mills (4 episodes)
Guest cast
- Michael Roark as Detective Devon Jones (3 episodes)
- Patrick Gorman as Reverend Alfred Knapp (2 episodes)
- David Fonteno as Reverend Boland (2 episodes)
- Onira Tares as Grace Dixon (2 episodes)
- Craig Trow as Lachlan Fredericks (2 episodes)
- India Scandrick as Young Jenny Mills (2 episodes)
- Braden Fitzgerald as Young Jeremy Crane (2 episodes)
- Judd Lormand and Karen Beyer as Ancitif (2 episodes)
- Laura Spencer as Caroline (1 episode)
Episodes
No. overall | No. in season | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | Prod. code | U.S. viewers (millions) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 1 | "Pilot" | Len Wiseman | Story by: Roberto Orci & Alex Kurtzman & Phillip Iscove & Len Wiseman Teleplay by: Alex Kurtzman & Roberto Orci & Phillip Iscove | September 16, 2013 | 1AWL79 | 10.10 |
In the town of Sleepy Hollow, New York in 1781, Ichabod Crane (Tom Mison) decapitates the Headless Horseman in battle but is mortally wounded himself, and collapses. Both he and the Horseman awaken in 2013 in Sleepy Hollow. The latter kills the local sheriff, August Corbin (Clancy Brown), and Crane is inadvertently arrested for his murder by Corbin's former partner, Lieutenant Abbie Mills (Nicole Beharie). Crane asserts that not only is he innocent of the murder, but that he's actually just awakened after several centuries of entombment. Mills is inclined to believe Crane, and together they learn that the Horseman is actually Death, one of the Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse and is seeking his head to summon the other horsemen to bring about the Apocalypse. Mills and Crane recover the head before the Horseman does, thanks to a dream sent by Crane's wife (Katia Winter), executed centuries earlier for witchcraft. Crane and Mills also discover that Corbin had been keeping detailed files on the various mysteries of Sleepy Hollow. | |||||||
2 | 2 | "Blood Moon" | Ken Olin | Roberto Orci & Alex Kurtzman & Mark Goffman | September 23, 2013 | 1AWL01 | 8.59 |
Mills' superior Frank Irving (Orlando Jones) reluctantly allows her to work with Crane due to the events occurring in Sleepy Hollow; the two begin using Corbin's gathered archives of occult material. Elsewhere, Andy Brooks (John Cho), a former fellow police officer who was killed in the previous episode assisting the Headless Horseman, is reanimated and given new orders to resurrect the witch, Serilda of Abaddon (Monique Ganderton). Serilda completes the ritual for her resurrection by hunting down and killing the descendants of the magistrate who burnt her for witchcraft, but Crane and Mills destroy her with explosives. Mills has a dream/vision of Corbin, who tells her to not be afraid of '49' - the room number of a mental hospital where her sister Jenny (Lyndie Greenwood) resides. | |||||||
3 | 3 | "For the Triumph of Evil" | John F. Showalter | Story by: Phillip Iscove Teleplay by: Jose Molina | September 30, 2013 | 1AWL02 | 7.97 |
A psychoanalyst connected to the Mills sisters mysteriously commits suicide and Crane and Abbie Mills visit her sister at the institution. When others commit suicide as well, the Witnesses learn that the source of the mysterious deaths is the Mohawk dream spirit Ro'kenhronteys, or the Sandman. By entering the dream world of this spirit, they are able to resolve the problem and confront their past guilts and atone for them. When Mills goes to re-visit her sister, she learns that Jenny has escaped. | |||||||
4 | 4 | "The Lesser Key of Solomon" | Paul Edwards | Damian Kindler | October 7, 2013 | 1AWL03 | 7.96 |
Mills and Crane search for Jenny, tracking her down to a cabin belonging to Corbin. Mills further learns that Corbin had Jenny track down rare and often magical objects, such as a sextant. This object reveals an old map of Sleepy Hollow marking the hidden location of The Lesser Key of Solomon, a book that can open a doorway to the seventh circle of Hell. A secret group of Hessians aligned with the Horseman get their hands on both the sextant and the book, but Mills destroys the book and ends the ritual. The Witnesses also learn that the demon they are facing is named Moloch. | |||||||
5 | 5 | "John Doe" | Ernest Dickerson | Melissa Blake | October 14, 2013 | 1AWL04 | 7.59 |
A sickly boy suffering from an unknown disease is discovered in the woods and immediately put under CDC quarantine. Because the boy can only speak Middle English and says he is from Roanoke, Crane deduces that the child is from the lost Roanoke Colony from the 16th century. Investigating, the Witnesses discover a portal to a hidden village and the people within to be suffering from - but not dying from - the same illness, originating from the Horseman, Pestilence. The boy was lured out into the present to spread his disease, but Crane and Mills return him to his village, and the people both within and without the village are cured. | |||||||
6 | 6 | "The Sin Eater" | Ken Olin | Story by: Aaron Rahsaan Thomas Teleplay by: Alex Kurtzman & Mark Goffman | November 4, 2013 | 1AWL05 | 7.08 |
Crane is kidnapped by Freemasons and, after confirming his identity, they ask him to take poison that will kill both him as well as the Horseman (since their blood is linked occultly). Mills tracks down a Sin Eater named Henry (John Noble) so that Crane can be sanctified, and together they prepare for the Horseman's return that evening at nightfall. | |||||||