When Chekov first appeared in "Catspaw" and "Friday's Child," his first two episodes in production order, he was a fill-in science officer when Spock was away. That was his original job on the show. He didn't appear as a navigator until his third episode, "Who Mourns for Adonais?", and that was only in one brief scene before joining the landing party and being back in more of a junior-scientist role; I suspect they only stuck him at navigation so they didn't have to pay another actor to say "Entering standard orbit" (though that should've been Sulu's line, really). Then he was navigator throughout "Amok Time" and it stuck from then on. People are so used to thinking of Chekov as the navigator that they forget he was a science officer first (particularly these days now that the DVD sets are in airdate order instead of production order)..
One of my favorite scenes I've ever written is the conversation between La Forge and Scotty in Chapter 9 of A Time for War, a Time for Peace. Just an absolute blast to write, especially the comparison of two instances where each was in command of the Enterprise, in "A Taste of Armageddon" and "The Arsenal of Freedom," and how each responded to it.
He really is a strange character to introduce to a sci-fi audience in '67. I suppose he was brought in to appeal to a younger audience but, man, he is an odd duck. He's comic relief, but they only write recycled Russian jokes for him. He's there to appeal to a younger (female?) audience but he's not exactly an Adonis and he never gets to be cool.
I can just see GR brainstorming with his writers and asking them what's popular with 60's youth and them coming up with 1)The Monkees 2) Russians and 3)bad wigs. It's like they took Davy Jones and Illya Kuryakin in a blender and ended up with a guy who looks like a young Brother Theodore.
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.