According to the writer's guide quoted in The Making of Star Trek, Kirk's mother is alive as of the end of season 2.Kirk's father and older brother Sam survived into Kirk's adult years but we never learn anything about Kirk's mother.
According to the writer's guide quoted in The Making of Star Trek, Kirk's mother is alive as of the end of season 2.Kirk's father and older brother Sam survived into Kirk's adult years but we never learn anything about Kirk's mother.
Not evident in any series or movie, so, nope.According to the writer's guide quoted in The Making of Star Trek, Kirk's mother is alive as of the end of season 2.
Based on the limited references in TCOTK, isn't anybody curious (i.e. fan service) about which family member child Kirk was living with and probably murdered in front of him? Between his parents, only his mother is not given a backstory on screen, so, based on probabilities, mother is the leading candidate in my opinion. YMVV^^ I follow the Writer’s Guide unless it’s directly contradicted by what is onscreen in TOS. Since it was never contradicted onscreen then Kirk’s mother is still alive.
I usually agree with you on this...but I'm genuinely curious on Kirk's life changing backstory from TCOTK. I'm a confused mess grasping at scant straws.I certainly don’t count the JJverse as legitimate backstory for TOS.
"Erwin, let the damn cat out!"Schrodinger’s Mother.
Based on the limited references in TCOTK, isn't anybody curious (i.e. fan service) about which family member child Kirk was living with and probably murdered in front of him? Between his parents, only his mother is not given a backstory on screen, so, based on probabilities, mother is the leading candidate in my opinion. YMVV.
A big sticking point for me is Kirk stating his age as 34 in “The Deadly Years.” At that point in time it strikes me as a bit too young.
In WNMHGB Kirk has been in command of the Enterprise for at least a few months to perhaps a year or so. Presumably after the events of WNMHGB the Enterprise is refit and relaunched upon the familiar 5-year mission, and about two or so years later we get the events of “The Deadly Years.” Put together this suggests Kirk was given command of the Enterprise at about 30 or 31 years of age. Maybe it’s me, but that strikes me as maybe being a tad too young for him to get command of one of Starfleet’s finest ships, and considering every other starship Captain we see is older by easily ten years or more.
But what if we can’t take Kirk’s statement in “The Deadly Years” at face value? During that event Kirk is suffering from an accelerated aging condition that is no doubt messing with his mind as well as his body. We even see the effects on his mind. What if Kirk isn’t stating his age at that actual moment, but he is recalling his age when he achieved his life’s ambition: command of a starship, an ambition he is in threat of losing because of his diminishing capacity?
If Kirk is about 33-35 in WNMHGB then he could have met Mitchell fifteen years earlier when he was 18-20.
Just a thought.
Kirk seemed to do A LOT as a cadet/ensign:IIRC, In the story outline for “The Conscience of the King” it describes the Kirk was a teenaged cadet who happened to be on the planet when the whole Kodos thing went down. I’ll have to pull out the documents later and check the particulars.
- As was still on of Gary Mitchell's instructors at the Academy (TOS S1 - "Where No Man Has Gone Before")
If Captain Kirk is modeled on the also fictional Horatio Hornblower, that character also rose through the ranks quickly.
I believe Hornblower reached post-captain (which would now be commander) around age 29, then three more years to full captain level, which was quick but not unheard of (Lord Nelson was captain at 21!). But, he would only have to be promoted three times, versus six promotions for Kirk. Also in those days there was no school for officers so midshipmen were serving in the active fleet in their teens, which may have had a bearing on the early "Conscience of the King" idea mentioned by Maurice.
I did say modelled - not just wholesale copied.![]()
The "Short Treks episode "Ephraim and Dot" seems to have glimpses of scenes from TOS episodes. And the order of those scenes is different from the produciton order, and from the stardate order, and from the broadcast order of thsoe episodes. So if "Ephraim and Dot" is canonical with TOS, arbitrarily putting episodes in production order, stardate order, or broadcast order, is impossible, because there a clear examples of episodes not in any of those orders.
I'm just going to pop this in here, even if it's out of order. Hubby and I watched the first episode of Star Trek: The Animated Series this week, "Beyond the Farthest Star". I don't think I've seen this (or any TAS) since I was a little kid, but I *instantly* recognized the TAS "danger music", which was a nice surprise! I was 5 years old when this first aired - I can't find any information on if they re-ran these or not, but I think they did, so I may have been a little older when I saw them. Or not.![]()
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.