McCoy makes some of the same points later, when Spock shows up with the empty phaser power packs, so I'd say this scene was cut and the plot points distributed elsewhere in the episode.
The name 'Wu' is Chinese, but the actor who played him, Lloyd Kino, is almost certainly of Japanese ancestry. Kino (name probably shortened from Kinoshita) played many Japanese characters in his career, but (not surprisingly) played other ethnicities when work was offered - sometimes Chinese or "generic Asian", but also Vietnamese on at least one occasion.I live in Seattle which has a fair size Korean population. I always though the charactor of Wu was Korean, the episode was only about twelve year after the end of korean war, North Korean was and is a communist nation. Do we know the ethnicity of the actor who protrayed Wu?Still, we now know the episode took place c. 2268, less than 500 years after the United States of America was founded and just over 300 years after the People's Republic of China was established. So given that the war between Omega's America and China was at least a millennium ...
T'Girl
TRACY: They were afraid of me at first too. It's our white skin . . . Our similarity to the Yangs, the white savages. These Kohm villagers asked for help, Jim. Whatever spirit they may have once had has been whipped out of them by the savages. <snip> This is one of the last. But before the Yangs began decimating them, they apparently had a considerably advanced civilization. There are ruins of large cities out there.
TRACY: All right. As long as we're asking . . . suppose you were faced with incredibly vicious savages massing for a final attack that would wipe out the last trace of civilization on a whole planet. (indicates) And suppose you had enough phasers to stop it? Can you imagine the power of just five phasers in this culture? <snip> Jim . . . within 48 hours they'll slaughter every adult and child in this village....
Those lines seem awfully familiar. So either I have seen that scene in some version or another or I read a script version of it. (This seems unlikely as I don't believe I have ever actually perused the script version of anything.) Is it possible that the scene was part of the print & shown back in the early days of reruns?
OMG!That entire deleted scene is included in James Blish's print adaptation of the episode. Maybe that's where you know it from.
Tracy might be an example of a star fleet captain who adhered to the letter of the prime directive once too many times. There could of been other event, over the course of Tracy's career, where he stood to the side and bad things happen. A slow transition of thought took place. A crisis of conscience. One massacre too many made Tracy vow never again.And maybe the Spock thing wasn't racial afterall, but a way of making Tracy seem more righteous at first and those who follow the Prime Directive cold and heartless, only to wonder in the end if maybe it's more proper to ask questions first and not assume we always know what's best.
Mark
Yep. I recognized it right off from Blish's adaptation. As I was going through the thread I made the connection and was ready to identify it until I came across this post.Those lines seem awfully familiar. So either I have seen that scene in some version or another or I read a script version of it. (This seems unlikely as I don't believe I have ever actually perused the script version of anything.) Is it possible that the scene was part of the print & shown back in the early days of reruns?
That entire deleted scene is included in James Blish's print adaptation of the episode. Maybe that's where you know it from.
I am also a huge ERB fan and have all of his books save for one called "The Girl From Farris's", which I've never been able to find a hard copy of. (It's probably now availible for free online, though).
Christopher;3405321[QUOTE said:As for 892-IV, theirs is a culture which still practices slavery and a callous polytheism, similar to that of the Roman Empire of Earth, but not called that. This empire is hedonistic and stagnant despite its technological advances, but there is hope...a small but growing belief that all people are not only created equal, but have a responsibility to one another.
That's a take that hadn't occurred to me. I tend to think of 892-IV as a Preserver world, seeded with Romans, but I've never thought of a good rationalization for the use of American English. So maybe I could split the difference -- they're still Romans, but the parts about them speaking and writing English are apocryphal. Kirk didn't read the brand names in the magazine, he had them read to him by Septimus or one of the ex-slaves.
...they're still Romans, but the parts about them speaking and writing English are apocryphal. Kirk didn't read the brand names in the magazine, he had them read to him by Septimus or one of the ex-slaves.
...they're still Romans, but the parts about them speaking and writing English are apocryphal. Kirk didn't read the brand names in the magazine, he had them read to him by Septimus or one of the ex-slaves.
Actually, Kirk read the magazine to Spock and McCoy. All the text was in English, which we saw on-screen.
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