JamesSmith
Lieutenant Commander
what if Janice Rand died during TOS's first season in the final episode: Operation -- Annihilate by a Denevan neural parasite?
what if Janice Rand died during TOS's first season in the final episode: Operation -- Annihilate by a Denevan neural parasite?
what if Janice Rand died during TOS's first season in the final episode: Operation -- Annihilate by a Denevan neural parasite?
She'd go to hell in a hair basket.
what if Janice Rand died during TOS's first season in the final episode: Operation -- Annihilate by a Denevan neural parasite?
It would have been a very gutsy thing for them to do in 1967. Alas, what might have been.
It would have been a very gutsy thing for them to do in 1967. Alas, what might have been.
Pike's male yeoman had just been killed off-screen in "The Cage", which is partly why Captain Pike was disgruntled about the arrival of Yeoman Colt.
The story of the male yeoman, Dermot Cusack, is told over the first few issues of Marvel/Paramount's "Early Voyages" comic series, recently collected as an omnibus by IDW.
It would have been a very gutsy thing for them to do in 1967. Alas, what might have been.
Pike's male yeoman had just been killed off-screen in "The Cage", which is partly why Captain Pike was disgruntled about the arrival of Yeoman Colt.
The story of the male yeoman, Dermot Cusack, is told over the first few issues of Marvel/Paramount's "Early Voyages" comic series, recently collected as an omnibus by IDW.
what if Janice Rand died during TOS's first season in the final episode: Operation -- Annihilate by a Denevan neural parasite?
She'd go to hell in a hair basket.
It would have been like Henry Blake dying on M*A*S*H. It would have darkened the rest of the series significantly.
I doubt this...Rand simply wasn't that important...as evidenced by her gradual exit from the series (e.g. being reduced to cameo appearances such as her role in The Conscience of the King.)
Her reduction to cameo in that episode is because she was simply to ill/unreliable at the time, fighting an addiction to diet pills and alcohol. GLW was signed to a lucrative 13-week contract, which meant she was an expense to the show even when the writers didn't give her much to do, whereas Nichelle Nichols and Majel Barrett were paid as day-players. Had she been healthier, or been able to complete the season, the writers might have developed her character more.
Rand was written out of early drafts of "The Galileo Seven" (replaced by Yeoman Mears) and "Dagger of the Mind" (fulfilling the role eventually changed to Dr Noel's character), the two episodes she calls her "least favourite".
I doubt this...Rand simply wasn't that important...as evidenced by her gradual exit from the series (e.g. being reduced to cameo appearances such as her role in The Conscience of the King.)
Her reduction to cameo in that episode is because she was simply to ill/unreliable at the time, fighting an addiction to diet pills and alcohol. GLW was signed to a lucrative 13-week contract, which meant she was an expense to the show even when the writers didn't give her much to do, whereas Nichelle Nichols and Majel Barrett were paid as day-players. Had she been healthier, or been able to complete the season, the writers might have developed her character more.
Rand was written out of early drafts of "The Galileo Seven" (replaced by Yeoman Mears) and "Dagger of the Mind" (fulfilling the role eventually changed to Dr Noel's character), the two episodes she calls her "least favourite".
However, in the end, who really noticed when the character was no longer there? I think we have some "2009 revisionism/glorification of Rand's role in the series" going on in this thread. The substitute series of "yeoman of the week" usually did as good a job as GLW.
a travesty that she wasn't written into the new franchise!
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