Rolfe
Adult human female
That's the definition of "The Monty Hall Problem."
Perhaps the OP did not state all of the details of the problem, assuming that the reader would know them all, but if you look up the problem on Wikipedia, they're there. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monty_Hall_problem .
How Monty actually behaved in his actual show isn't really relevant at this point - "The Monty Hall Problem" is a well-defined problem with a counterintuitive but well-defined solution.
Frankly, I'm not interested in what Wikipedia has to say, since I first solved this problem long before Wikipedia was born or thought of, and if I felt like it I could go edit the entry right now to read differently.
I have never seen anyone in the position of the OP come up with a fully-defined version of the puzzle. Invariably, the discussion progresses to the assumptions one has to make in order to solve the problem in the way it was probably originally intended to be solved. Only if it is clear that Monty is obliged to open a second door, and that when he does so he is obliged to reveal a goat, does the "well-defined" problem with its well-defined solution apply.
Simply relating what happens on a single iteration of the game, without any information about the ground rules or what might happen on other iterations, is not sufficient to solve the puzzle in the simple way in which it is usually understood.
Rolfe.