According to what I’ve read, one of the reasons that the character of Chekov was created was to appeal to teenagers/young adults and draw them to view Star Trek.
Therein lies my quandary : Walter Koenig was cast in the role and even with his early Beatle type wig he seemed a little too old for the task.
Your thoughts?
Woohoo, it's essay time!
What you wrote is completely true and suggests rather a lot, for which I'll juggle that with a bunch of tangents in typical manner: Especially with "The Monkees" being a hit, they wanted Chekov to not just look like a Davy Jones knockoff, but to also sound as much Russian as British (with the cod accent, often overdubbed, for which the 1970s were more known for if you can sit through a bunch of drama/spy series of that decade, but I digress because Walter didn't need dubbing. And who came up with the word "dubbing", anyway? /SeinfeldMode)
Also, back then - and even into the early-90s - it wasn't uncommon to have upper-20 if not lower-30 year-olds playing teenieboppers if they looked youngish enough,
possibly as they generally had more experience and able to take on more demanding and time-consuming roles than younger children but I'm just guessing. One TV show regularly cited with much ridicule and admonishment was "The Powers of Matthew Starr". Another might be the 1970s "Spiderman" show (1977-79, which means one also gets all that groovy disco fashion too!).
The fact they needed to do the "cousin Oliver" trope (albeit comparatively successfully, and eight years
before Cousin Oliver himself created the trope) already suggests that few in the network were jubilant over the ratings that season one had, especially for the costs involved in making it. Yet they also moved the timeslot for season 2 to the ever-reliable Friday (you know, when the target demographic was out at a restaurant or park or forest or movie theater back row or hotel in Encino or cemetery or wherever they like
to go because it's not dullsville at home) and thinking it would rake in tons of viewers then?
Lastly, thank goodness, with TOS trying to appeal to younger audiences by having younger looking folk act old, this may be why Wesley acts more like a teenager (albeit awkward type that the cool kids hated), Adric from Doctor Who being not dissimilar, and so on. Nowadays, regardless of age, it feels like so many shows now have adults acting like children?

There's a fun inversion of the juxtaposition...